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    Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @creayt
      last edited by

      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

      @dashrender "Easier backups", how so? Seems less-easy.

      Can't be less easy. Can be the same or easier. You lose nothing, only gain options.

      Less easy because without virtualization all I have to back up are a folder of images and a small handful of MySQL data files. Adding virtualization for the benefits I perceive peeps here to be championing would require backing up the entire VMs, which is less easy not to mention a much much bigger backup footprint, no? What am I missing?

      Can't be less easy. Not possible. Literally, it's impossible to be less easy. Because ANY option you have with physical you retain with virtual, but with virtual you have more.

      By less easy I just mean less work, less things to back up. I'd still need to back up the same things with virtualization that I will without, but with virtualization there are additional things to back up is all I mean. Easy was a poor choice of words, sorry.

      What extra things do you think you need to backup with virtualization?

      The virtual machine(s).

      You are already backing those up. That's what you are backing up now. So nothing new.

      Sorry, think I mispoke. I'm not backing anything up but the MySQL data files and the image uploads.

      That's fine. Virtualization changes nothing. You need to back up nothing more. If you sense any additional needs with VMs, that means you have those needs today but are failing ot meet them. So you are likely discovering holes in your backup and recovery strategy that are bothering you, but you didn't realize until we mentioned the virtualization. But literally anything that works today will continue to work virtualized.

      creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • creaytC
        creayt @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

        @dashrender "Easier backups", how so? Seems less-easy.

        Can't be less easy. Can be the same or easier. You lose nothing, only gain options.

        Less easy because without virtualization all I have to back up are a folder of images and a small handful of MySQL data files. Adding virtualization for the benefits I perceive peeps here to be championing would require backing up the entire VMs, which is less easy not to mention a much much bigger backup footprint, no? What am I missing?

        Can't be less easy. Not possible. Literally, it's impossible to be less easy. Because ANY option you have with physical you retain with virtual, but with virtual you have more.

        By less easy I just mean less work, less things to back up. I'd still need to back up the same things with virtualization that I will without, but with virtualization there are additional things to back up is all I mean. Easy was a poor choice of words, sorry.

        What extra things do you think you need to backup with virtualization?

        The virtual machine(s).

        You are already backing those up. That's what you are backing up now. So nothing new.

        Sorry, think I mispoke. I'm not backing anything up but the MySQL data files and the image uploads.

        That's fine. Virtualization changes nothing. You need to back up nothing more. If you sense any additional needs with VMs, that means you have those needs today but are failing ot meet them. So you are likely discovering holes in your backup and recovery strategy that are bothering you, but you didn't realize until we mentioned the virtualization. But literally anything that works today will continue to work virtualized.

        Just to be clear, assuming a requirement is Windows, specifically what you all are suggesting is that

        Instead of using the host OS, I turn on Hyper V and use a single virtual machine per server and keep all other things identical?

        And in addition to the more abstract, general benefits you all believe in, some of which Scott has listed, the benefit you see is that I could potentially, in the case of a failure, if the virtual machine happened to live on a RAID array that wasn't the one that failed, copy that virtual machine to another host and just set it in motion rather than having to configure a new Host OS set up, presuming I had already configured another Host OS set up to move it to, right? Trying to put all of these ideas in concrete terms because I'm interested in learning, not challenging what you're saying with my questions, just trying to comprehend it all. I know you all are seasoned experts.

        Thanks for all of the help btw.

        DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • DustinB3403D
          DustinB3403 @creayt
          last edited by DustinB3403

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

          @dashrender "Easier backups", how so? Seems less-easy.

          Can't be less easy. Can be the same or easier. You lose nothing, only gain options.

          Less easy because without virtualization all I have to back up are a folder of images and a small handful of MySQL data files. Adding virtualization for the benefits I perceive peeps here to be championing would require backing up the entire VMs, which is less easy not to mention a much much bigger backup footprint, no? What am I missing?

          Can't be less easy. Not possible. Literally, it's impossible to be less easy. Because ANY option you have with physical you retain with virtual, but with virtual you have more.

          By less easy I just mean less work, less things to back up. I'd still need to back up the same things with virtualization that I will without, but with virtualization there are additional things to back up is all I mean. Easy was a poor choice of words, sorry.

          What extra things do you think you need to backup with virtualization?

          The virtual machine(s).

          You are already backing those up. That's what you are backing up now. So nothing new.

          Sorry, think I mispoke. I'm not backing anything up but the MySQL data files and the image uploads.

          That's fine. Virtualization changes nothing. You need to back up nothing more. If you sense any additional needs with VMs, that means you have those needs today but are failing ot meet them. So you are likely discovering holes in your backup and recovery strategy that are bothering you, but you didn't realize until we mentioned the virtualization. But literally anything that works today will continue to work virtualized.

          Just to be clear, assuming a requirement is Windows, specifically what you all are suggesting is that

          Instead of using the host OS, I turn on Hyper V and use a single virtual machine per server and keep all other things identical?

          You never want to enable the hyper-v role.

          Download Hyper-v from the website, its completely free and is current. You'd be turning on an old version of Hyper-V which makes no sense.

          creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DashrenderD
            Dashrender
            last edited by

            That's mostly right.

            Though we don't suggest that you 'enable' Hyper-V. You need to install from scratch Hyper-V by itself, then create VMs inside that.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • creaytC
              creayt @DustinB3403
              last edited by

              @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

              @dashrender "Easier backups", how so? Seems less-easy.

              Can't be less easy. Can be the same or easier. You lose nothing, only gain options.

              Less easy because without virtualization all I have to back up are a folder of images and a small handful of MySQL data files. Adding virtualization for the benefits I perceive peeps here to be championing would require backing up the entire VMs, which is less easy not to mention a much much bigger backup footprint, no? What am I missing?

              Can't be less easy. Not possible. Literally, it's impossible to be less easy. Because ANY option you have with physical you retain with virtual, but with virtual you have more.

              By less easy I just mean less work, less things to back up. I'd still need to back up the same things with virtualization that I will without, but with virtualization there are additional things to back up is all I mean. Easy was a poor choice of words, sorry.

              What extra things do you think you need to backup with virtualization?

              The virtual machine(s).

              You are already backing those up. That's what you are backing up now. So nothing new.

              Sorry, think I mispoke. I'm not backing anything up but the MySQL data files and the image uploads.

              That's fine. Virtualization changes nothing. You need to back up nothing more. If you sense any additional needs with VMs, that means you have those needs today but are failing ot meet them. So you are likely discovering holes in your backup and recovery strategy that are bothering you, but you didn't realize until we mentioned the virtualization. But literally anything that works today will continue to work virtualized.

              Just to be clear, assuming a requirement is Windows, specifically what you all are suggesting is that

              Instead of using the host OS, I turn on Hyper V and use a single virtual machine per server and keep all other things identical?

              You never want to enable the hyper-v role.

              Download Hyper-v from the website, its completely free and is current. You'd be turning on an old version of Hyper-V which makes no sense.

              Do you mean Hyper V Server? The standalone thingee?

              JaredBuschJ DustinB3403D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch @creayt
                last edited by

                @creayt don't worry, we don't hold anything against you because you said in post one that you were a developer.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DustinB3403D
                  DustinB3403 @creayt
                  last edited by

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                  @dashrender "Easier backups", how so? Seems less-easy.

                  Can't be less easy. Can be the same or easier. You lose nothing, only gain options.

                  Less easy because without virtualization all I have to back up are a folder of images and a small handful of MySQL data files. Adding virtualization for the benefits I perceive peeps here to be championing would require backing up the entire VMs, which is less easy not to mention a much much bigger backup footprint, no? What am I missing?

                  Can't be less easy. Not possible. Literally, it's impossible to be less easy. Because ANY option you have with physical you retain with virtual, but with virtual you have more.

                  By less easy I just mean less work, less things to back up. I'd still need to back up the same things with virtualization that I will without, but with virtualization there are additional things to back up is all I mean. Easy was a poor choice of words, sorry.

                  What extra things do you think you need to backup with virtualization?

                  The virtual machine(s).

                  You are already backing those up. That's what you are backing up now. So nothing new.

                  Sorry, think I mispoke. I'm not backing anything up but the MySQL data files and the image uploads.

                  That's fine. Virtualization changes nothing. You need to back up nothing more. If you sense any additional needs with VMs, that means you have those needs today but are failing ot meet them. So you are likely discovering holes in your backup and recovery strategy that are bothering you, but you didn't realize until we mentioned the virtualization. But literally anything that works today will continue to work virtualized.

                  Just to be clear, assuming a requirement is Windows, specifically what you all are suggesting is that

                  Instead of using the host OS, I turn on Hyper V and use a single virtual machine per server and keep all other things identical?

                  You never want to enable the hyper-v role.

                  Download Hyper-v from the website, its completely free and is current. You'd be turning on an old version of Hyper-V which makes no sense.

                  Do you mean Hyper V Server? The standalone thingee?

                  Yes, Hyper-V is a type 1 server.

                  If you are enabling the role, it means you are binding your licensing to that hardware for Windows Server. (which is a completely separate product).

                  creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DashrenderD
                    Dashrender
                    last edited by

                    The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                    JaredBuschJ creaytC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • JaredBuschJ
                      JaredBusch @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                      The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                      Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                      creaytC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • creaytC
                        creayt @DustinB3403
                        last edited by

                        @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                        @dashrender "Easier backups", how so? Seems less-easy.

                        Can't be less easy. Can be the same or easier. You lose nothing, only gain options.

                        Less easy because without virtualization all I have to back up are a folder of images and a small handful of MySQL data files. Adding virtualization for the benefits I perceive peeps here to be championing would require backing up the entire VMs, which is less easy not to mention a much much bigger backup footprint, no? What am I missing?

                        Can't be less easy. Not possible. Literally, it's impossible to be less easy. Because ANY option you have with physical you retain with virtual, but with virtual you have more.

                        By less easy I just mean less work, less things to back up. I'd still need to back up the same things with virtualization that I will without, but with virtualization there are additional things to back up is all I mean. Easy was a poor choice of words, sorry.

                        What extra things do you think you need to backup with virtualization?

                        The virtual machine(s).

                        You are already backing those up. That's what you are backing up now. So nothing new.

                        Sorry, think I mispoke. I'm not backing anything up but the MySQL data files and the image uploads.

                        That's fine. Virtualization changes nothing. You need to back up nothing more. If you sense any additional needs with VMs, that means you have those needs today but are failing ot meet them. So you are likely discovering holes in your backup and recovery strategy that are bothering you, but you didn't realize until we mentioned the virtualization. But literally anything that works today will continue to work virtualized.

                        Just to be clear, assuming a requirement is Windows, specifically what you all are suggesting is that

                        Instead of using the host OS, I turn on Hyper V and use a single virtual machine per server and keep all other things identical?

                        You never want to enable the hyper-v role.

                        Download Hyper-v from the website, its completely free and is current. You'd be turning on an old version of Hyper-V which makes no sense.

                        Do you mean Hyper V Server? The standalone thingee?

                        Yes, Hyper-V is a type 1 server.

                        If you are enabling the role, it means you are binding your licensing to that hardware for Windows Server. (which is a completely separate product).

                        Ah, good to know, thank you. Still kind of fresh on what Hyper V Server vs. Hyper V vs. Nano Server vs. Server Core all is, but I think I get it now.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • creaytC
                          creayt @JaredBusch
                          last edited by creayt

                          @jaredbusch said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                          @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                          The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                          Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                          I think since it's so small I can even just throw it on an SD card, right? These servers have slots for that ( then give the datacenter a back up SD card in case the first one fails ).

                          DashrenderD DustinB3403D JaredBuschJ 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • creaytC
                            creayt @Dashrender
                            last edited by

                            @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                            The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                            Makes sense, thx.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • DashrenderD
                              Dashrender @creayt
                              last edited by

                              @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                              @jaredbusch said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                              @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                              The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                              Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                              I think since it's so small I can even just throw it on an SD card, right? These servers have slots for that ( then give the datacenter a back up SD card in case the first one fails ).

                              Hyper-V doesn't do well on SD unless installed by an OEM.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • DustinB3403D
                                DustinB3403 @creayt
                                last edited by

                                @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                @jaredbusch said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                                Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                                I think since it's so small I can even just throw it on an SD card, right? These servers have slots for that ( then give the datacenter a back up SD card in case the first one fails ).

                                Hyper-V doesn't support installing to SD/USB. Just install it to a hard drive. Don't waste an SSD on it.

                                creaytC matteo nunziatiM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • creaytC
                                  creayt @DustinB3403
                                  last edited by

                                  @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                  @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                  @jaredbusch said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                  @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                  The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                                  Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                                  I think since it's so small I can even just throw it on an SD card, right? These servers have slots for that ( then give the datacenter a back up SD card in case the first one fails ).

                                  Hyper-V doesn't support installing to SD/USB. Just install it to a hard drive. Don't waste an SSD on it.

                                  These servers are 100% SSD, fortunately/unfortunately? 🙂

                                  DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • DashrenderD
                                    Dashrender
                                    last edited by

                                    Assuming you can give up 60 GB on the RAID 1, just install Hyper-V there, then use the remaining space for your VHD 😄 drive for your VM.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • creaytC
                                      creayt @DustinB3403
                                      last edited by

                                      @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                      @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                      @jaredbusch said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                      @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                      The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                                      Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                                      I think since it's so small I can even just throw it on an SD card, right? These servers have slots for that ( then give the datacenter a back up SD card in case the first one fails ).

                                      Hyper-V doesn't support installing to SD/USB. Just install it to a hard drive. Don't waste an SSD on it.

                                      GTK, thx.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DustinB3403D
                                        DustinB3403 @creayt
                                        last edited by

                                        @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                        These servers are 100% SSD, fortunately/unfortunately? 🙂

                                        Ok than OBR5 the entire thing, and install Hyper-V to the array. . .

                                        DashrenderD creaytC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DashrenderD
                                          Dashrender @DustinB3403
                                          last edited by

                                          @dustinb3403 said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                          @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                          These servers are 100% SSD, fortunately/unfortunately? 🙂

                                          Ok than OBR5 the entire thing, and install Hyper-V to the array. . .

                                          Different sized drives.

                                          DustinB3403D creaytC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • JaredBuschJ
                                            JaredBusch @creayt
                                            last edited by

                                            @creayt said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                            @jaredbusch said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                            @dashrender said in Is this server strategy reckless and/or insane?:

                                            The problem you run into here is that Hyper-V should be put on it's own drives. So you'll need another two drives in RAID 1 to run Hyper-V from, OR you could install Hyper-V on the current RAID1, and assuming there is enough storage space left over on that RAID 1, make the VM VHD for the boot portion of the VM, and on the RAID 0/5 make another VHD mapped into the same VM for the data.

                                            Close, I never even bother with a RAID for Hyper-V. I put it on a SATA drive instead of an array drive.

                                            I think since it's so small I can even just throw it on an SD card, right? These servers have slots for that ( then give the datacenter a back up SD card in case the first one fails ).

                                            Not as easy as you would think. It is not a fully support install t is why I use a SATA drive. The 620 should have an unused SATA port inside, but it may or may not have power for it without a cable being purchased. Cannot recall off the top of my head.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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