![]() To turn this feature on, try these instructions based on Red Hat instructions: Right when the computer is coming up from the black screen, press Delete, Esc, F1, F2, or F4. Re-run the first command to confirm the change. While most recent PCs support hardware virtualization, not all computer vendors enable this feature as shipped from the factory. Set-VMProcessor -VMName VMName -ExposeVirtualizationExtensions $true With the following PowerShell code, we can get the value, and then change the value from. Lastly, Virtualization Extensions need to enabled/set to TRUE.I gave it 16 as per system/hardware recommendations. Dynamic Memory disabled and provide a minimum of 96GB of memory. ![]() ![]() Azure Stack is currently in phase TP2 (Technical Preview 2) and this is the version I will be deploying and testing.īefore getting started with Azure Stack, your physical Windows Server 2016 box must have Nested Virtualization enabled.įirst things first, the VM will need to have: Here is a LINK for more information on Azure Stack. Parallels Desktop is the perfect solution as it comes with support for Hyper-V virtualization. If you are unaware of Azure Stack, in short, it allows organizations to have Azure (Cloud) on their own environment/datacenter. macOS offers no support for Hyper-V and hosted systems for Mac. I figured this post may be useful if you’re like me and testing out Azure Stack. Ravi Theja Madisetty on Restricting RDP (Remote Deskto… Securing Access to S… on Azure Service Endpoints versus… Ravi Yadav on SCCM 2012 R2 (Configuration Ma… ![]()
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