October 2019
Beginner
426 pages
10h 44m
English
When Hyper-V was introduced in Windows Server 2008, it supported the VHD format with a disk storage capacity of up to 2 TB. Due to this, VHD became the native disk storage of Hyper-V. But with the introduction of Windows Server 2012, Microsoft introduced another new Hyper-V feature – VHDX format – with a disk storage capacity of up to 64 TB. Just like that, VHDX replaced VHD by making the latter become a legacy disk storage format that is still being supported by Hyper-V on Windows Server 2019.
Now, let's understand what we mean by physical to virtual (P2V) conversions.
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