Dois excelentes livros sobre Hyper-V

hyper-v-book1hyper-v-book2

Vida longa e próspera pessoal! Hoje vou falar um pouco sobre esses dois excelentes livros que abordam virtualização e Hyper-V. Os dois são em inglês!

Eu recebo vários livros para avaliação, mas nem todos eu destaco ou recomendo, só os melhores mesmo. E esses dois títulos são muito bons!

hyper-v-book2Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V Cookbook – Leandro Carvalho

Um verdadeiro “livro de receitas” contendo vários procedimentos, do básico ao avançado, sobre o Hyper-V, essencial para todos os administradores de virtualização.

O Lendro é um amigo que eu prezo bastante e acompanho o trabalho dele há muito tempo. Foi uma honra poder fazer o review e postar o meu comentário na Amazon.

Compre na amazon!

Chapter 1: Installing and Managing Hyper-V in Full or Server Core Mode

Introduction

Verifying Hyper-V requirements

Enabling the Hyper-V role

Installing Windows Server 2012 and Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2012

Managing a Server Core installation using sconfig

Enabling and disabling the graphical interface in Hyper-V

Configuring post-installation settings

Chapter 2: Migrating and Upgrading Physical and Virtual Servers

Introduction

Performing an in-place upgrade from Windows Server 2008 R2
to Windows Server 2012

Exporting and importing virtual machines

Migrating virtual machines and updating their integration services

Converting VHD files to VHDX files

Migrating Virtual Machine storage using Storage Migration

Migrating virtual machines using Shared Nothing Live Migration

Converting physical computers to virtual machines

Chapter 3: Managing Disk and Network Settings

Introduction

Creating and adding virtual hard disks

Configuring IDE and SCSI controllers for virtual machines

Creating resource pools

Creating and managing virtual switches

Using advanced settings for virtual networks

Enabling and adding NIC teaming to a virtual machine

Configuring and adding Hyper-V Virtual Fibre Channel to virtual machines

Chapter 4: Saving Time and Cost with Hyper-V Automation

Introduction

Installing and running Hyper-V from a USB stick

Creating virtual machine templates

Learning and utilizing basic commands in PowerShell

Using small PowerShell commands for daily tasks

Enabling and working with remote connection and administration
through PowerShell

Chapter 5: Hyper-V Best Practices, Tips, and Tricks

Introduction

Using the Hyper-V Best Practices Analyzer

Setting up dynamic memory for virtual machines

Enabling remote management for Hyper-V in workgroup environments

Installing and configuring an anti-virus on host and virtual machines

Chapter 6: Security and Delegation of Control

Introduction

Configuring Windows Update for Hyper-V

Configuring Cluster-Aware Updating for cluster nodes

Delegating control in Hyper-V

Configuring Port ACLs

Installing and configuring BitLocker for data protection

Configuring Hyper-V auditing

Chapter 7: Configuring High Availability in Hyper-V

Introduction

Installing and configuring an iSCSI Target server in Windows Server 2012

Installing and configuring the Windows Failover Clustering feature

Enabling Cluster Shared Volumes 2.0

Using Live Migration in a cluster environment

Configuring VM Priority for Clustered Virtual Machines

Chapter 8: Disaster Recovery for Hyper-V

Introduction

Backing up Hyper-V and virtual machines using Windows Server Backup

Restoring Hyper-V and virtual machines using Windows Server Backup

Configuring Hyper-V Replica between two Hyper-V hosts
using HTTP authentication

Configuring Hyper-V Replica Broker for a Failover Cluster

Configuring Hyper-V Replica to use certificate-based
authentication using an Enterprise CA

Using snapshots in virtual machines

Chapter 9: Monitoring, Tuning, and Troubleshooting Hyper-V

Introduction

Using real-time monitoring tools

Using Perfmon for logged monitoring

Using VM Monitoring

Monitoring Hyper-V Replica

Using Resource Metering

Tuning your Hyper-V server

Using Event Viewer for Hyper-V troubleshooting

Appendix: Hyper-V Architecture and Components

Understanding Hypervisors

Hyper-V architecture

Hyper-V architecture components

Differences between Hyper-V, Hyper-V Server, Hyper-V Client, and VMware

hyper-v-book1Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V: Deploying Hyper-V Enterprise Server Virtualization Platform – Zahir Hussain Shah

O nome do autor é complicado, mas o livro é simples e claro! Esse eu recebi para review sem expectativas. Fui lendo aos poucos e não dá vontade de parar de ler!

O autor consegue um excelente mix de fundamentos e técnicas avançadas, apresentando o conhecimento de forma gradual. Se você não sabe nada de Hyper-V ou Virtualização, vai gostar do livro.

E se você já está acostumado com o Hyper-V, vai perceber que há bastante conhecimento extra nas entrelinhas, juto com técnicas e recomendações avançadas de vivência técnica do autor. Vale a pena!

Compre na Amazon!

Introduction

What is virtualization?

Why virtualization?

Types of virtualization

Server virtualization

Network virtualization

Storage virtualization

Server consolidation

Cloud computing

Chapter 1: Getting to Know Microsoft Hyper-V

Introducing Hyper-V

Hyper-V deployment scenario

Server consolidation

Physical-to-virtual and virtual-to-virtual conversions

Research and development

Business continuity and d
isaster recovery

Cloud computing

Hyper-V architecture

Hypervisor

Type 1 (bare metal) hypervisors

Type 2 (hosted) hypervisors

Monolithic hypervisors

Microkernel hypervisors

Insight into Hyper-V architecture

Parent partition

Child partition

Understanding Hyper-V parent partition

Hyper-V Virtual Machine Management Service

Virtual devices

Core devices (emulated devices)

Core devices (synthetic devices)

Plugin devices

Virtual machine bus

Features of Hyper-V

Hyper-V automation with PowerShell

Hyper-V dynamic memory improvements

Improved network virtualization and multitenancy

Hyper-V data offloading improvements

Hyper-V virtual machine replication

Resource metering for Hyper-V virtual workloads

Hyper-V support for large-sector disks

Virtual Fibre Channel for fabric connectivity

New virtual hard disk format

NIC teaming for host and guest machines

Hyper-V virtual switch improvements

Scalable virtualization infrastructure

Live storage migration

Hyper-V support for SMB

Hardware requirements

Processor

Storage

Disk types

Memory

Networking

Software requirements

Operating system version

Memory

Disk space

Physical server’s paging file requirements

Guest virtual machine’s paging file requirements

Hyper-V version comparison

Hyper-V Windows Server 2012 guest VM support

Guest server operating systems

Guest client operating systems

Licensing

Summary

Chapter 2: Planning, Designing, and Implementing
Microsoft Hyper-V

Planning and designing Hyper-V infrastructure

Microsoft Solution Accelerators

Hyper-V infrastructure planning and designing solution accelerators

Upgrading legacy Hyper-V servers to Windows Server 2012

Upgrading Hyper-V standalone server

Upgrading Hyper-V cluster servers

Installing Hyper-V server role

Hyper-V server role installation requirements

Installing a fresh Hyper-V server

Server Manager

Installing Hyper-V role using Server Manager

Installing Hyper-V with Windows Server Core

Introducing Windows Server Core

Benefits of using Windows Server Core Edition

Installing and managing Windows Server Core

Configuring and managing Windows Server 2012 Server Core

Adding Hyper-V server role for Windows Server Core

Configuring basic settings for Hyper-V server role

Hyper-V settings

Virtual hard disks

Virtual machines

Physical GPUs

NUMA spanning

Live migrations

Storage migrations

Replication configuration

Virtual Switch Manager

Creating a virtual machine

Summary

Chapter 3: Setting Up Hyper-V Replication

Introducing Hyper-V replication

Hyper-V Replica terminologies

Software requirements

Hardware requirements

Deployment scenario for Hyper-V Replica

Head office and branch office

Geographically dispersed datacenters

Managed services and hosting provider

Cloud service provider

Technical overview of the Hyper-V Replica feature

Replication Engine

Change tracking

Network module

Hyper-V Replica broker

Hyper-V Replica best practices

Security

Networking

Storage

Setting up Hyper-V Replica

Enabling Hyper-V replication

Enabling Hyper-V replication for standalone Hyper-V servers

Enabling Hyper-V replication for clustered Hyper-V servers

Configuring Hyper-V Replica

Configuring Hyper-V Replica for standalone virtual machines

Configuring Hyper-V Replica for a highly available virtual machine using
Failover Cluster Manager

Configuring Hyper-V Replica for reverse replication

Monitoring Hyper-V Replica environment

Hyper-V virtual machine replication health checking

Performance monitoring for Hyper-V Replica virtual machines

Reviewing Microsoft Hyper-V VMMS logs for Hyper-V Replica

Summary

Chapter 4: Understanding Hyper-V Networking

Hyper-V virtual switch technical overview

Windows Server 2012 – a cloud-ready platform

Improved Hyper-V virtual network switch

Load balancing and failover (NIC teaming)

Quality of service and bandwidth management

Single root I/O

Extensible Hyper-V virtual switch

ARP/ND poisoning (spoofing) protection

DHCP guard

Port access control lists (ACLs)

Trunk mode to a VM

Network traffic monitoring

Configuring the Hyper-V extensible virtual network switch

Configuring the Hyper-V host virtual network switch

Types of Hyper-V virtual network switches

Configuring Hyper-V virtual machine network settings

Virtual network adapter types

Configuring advanced network settings

Implementing NIC teaming for Hyper-V host and guest

Native OS NIC teaming feature – the most awaited feature

NIC teaming requirements

NIC teaming architectural consideration

Configuring NIC teaming for the Hyper-V host

NIC teaming advanced settings

NIC teaming mode

Load-balancing mechanisms

Configuring NIC teaming for Hyper-V guest virtual machines

Summary

Chapter 5: A New World of Hyper-V Automation with
PowerShell

Introduction to PowerShell

Technical overview

Cmdlets

Cmdlets pipelining

PowerShell scripting

PowerShell Version 3.0 overview

Insight into Windows Server 2012 PowerShell (3.0)

PowerShell OS support

System requirements

Windows Management Instrumentation 3.0

Common Language Runtime 4.0

.NET Framework

WS-Management 3.0

Installing PowerShell 3.0

Managing Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V with PowerShell 3.0

PowerShell usage scenarios for Hyper-V management and automation

Research and development environments

Virtualized datacenter management

Cloud management and automation

Windows PowerShell 3.0 capabilities for Hyper-V

Example 1 – creating a new virtual machine

Example 2 – creating a new virtual network switch

Example 3 – configuring and attaching a virtual network switch
to a virtual machine

Example 4 – shutting down all virtual machines

Example 5 – starting all virtual machines in one step

Summary

Chapter 6: Insight into Hyper-V Storage

Understanding virtual storage

Improved Hyper-V storage

Virtual Fibre Channel connectivity for virtual machines

Working of Hyper-V Virtual Fibre Channel

Larger virtual hard disk support (up to 64 TB)

SMB-based virtual machine storage

Virtual machine live storage migration

Types of Hyper-V virtual storage

Virtual disk formats

Virtual hard disk (VHD)

Virtual hard disk (VHDX)

Virtual disk types

Dynamic disk

Fixed disk

Differencing disk

Pass-through disk

Virtual Fibre Channel SAN

Virtual machine storage settings

Virtual machine hard disk settings

IDE controller

SCSI controller

Hyper-V virtual hard disk utilities

Edit disk

Inspect disk

Hyper-V storage best practices

Dynamic disks are not good candidates for high disk I/O activity

Differencing disks can lead to data loss

Creating a production virtual machine’s snapshot with caution

Pass-through disks are recommended for databases

Frequently merging a virtual machine’s snapshot

Including virtual machine RAM for storage sizing

External storage migration and Hyper-V pass-through disk
availability for VM

Virtual machine application and server role placement – best practices

Summary

Chapter 7: Managing Hyper-V with System Center Virtual
Machine Manager

Overview of System Center Virtual Machine Manager (SCVMM)

The VMM management server

The VMM console

Self-Service Portal

The VMM database

The VMM library

What’s new in SCVMM 2012

Installing System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2012

System and hardware requirements

System requirements

Hardware requirements

Installing SCVMM management server, management console,
and Self-Service Portal server

Configuring SCVMM basic settings

Creating and managing host groups

Creating a host group

Customizing host group properties

Adding a Hyper-V host into SCVMM

Creating and managing private c
loud with SCVMM

Assigning a cloud to a group of users

Creating a virtual machine using the SCVMM console

Creating a virtual machine template

Access to Self-Service Portal

Delegation of SSP rights

Creating and managing virtual machines with SSP

Summary

Chapter 8: Building Hyper-V High Availability and Virtual
Machine Mobility

Overview of Hyper-V high availability

Challenges in Hyper-V high availability with Windows Server 2008 R2

Unavailability of flexible virtual machine storage migration

Restrictions on adding more Hyper-V cluster nodes

Virtual machine live migration limitation

Manual patch management for Hyper-V host nodes

Network-attached storage (NAS) or File Server-based storage for virtual machines

What’s new in Windows Server 2012 for Hyper-V HA and VM mobility

Guest machine clustering capabilities with V-Fibre Channel

Enhanced live migration for mobility of virtual machines

Bigger clusters with more Hyper-V nodes

Up-to-date Cluster Shared Volumes and encrypted volumes

Virtual machine failover and management rules

Understanding Hyper-V high availability and failover clustering
core components

Server hardware

Cluster storage

Windows failover cluster shared storage

Cluster Shared Volumes (CSV)

Cluster networking

Hyper-V Cluster Public Network

Hyper-V Cluster Private Network

Hyper-V Live Migration Network

Preparing, creating, and configuring a Hyper-V failover cluster

Preparing Hyper-V failover cluster nodes

Preparing cluster nodes

Preparing Hyper-V failover cluster networks

Preparing Hyper-V failover cluster disks

Creating a Hyper-V failover cluster

Cluster configuration validation

Creating a Hyper-V failover cluster

Configuring a Hyper-V failover cluster

Adding CSV storage

Managing virtual machine mobility and migration

Virtual machine live migration

Working of live migration

Requirements for live migration

Live migration with shared storage

Shared nothing live migration

Live migration with SMB shared storage

Virtual machine quick migration

How quick migration works

Steps to perform quick migration

Live storage migration

Summary

Chapter 9: Hyper-V Security Hardening – Best Practices

Hyper-V and virtualization security pillars

Securing Hyper-V base operating system

Minimizing attack surfaces

Hyper-V management network isolation

Patch management

Antivirus protection and exclusions

Best Practice Analyzer for Hyper-V host

Securing Hyper-V virtual network switch

ARP spoofing protection

DHCP Guard

Router Guard

Port mirroring

Port ACL for network isolation

Delegating rights for Hyper-V management

Authorization Manager

Hyper-V delegation of authority with SCVMM 2012

Securing virtual machine storage

Specifying the default path for virtual machine storage

Encrypting virtual machine storage with BitLocker

Safeguarding guest virtual machines

Filesystem security for accessing virtual machines

Auditing for virtual machine resource access

Backing up virtual machines

Summary

Chapter 10: Performing Hyper-V Backup and Recovery

Hyper-V backup methodologies overview

Copying VHD/VHDX files

Exporting the virtual machine

Virtual machine snapshot

The Windows Server Backup feature

VSS-aware Hyper-V backups

Virtual machine online backups using Hyper-V integration services

Virtual machine save-state backups without Hyper-V integration services

Hyper-V backup considerations and best practices

Hyper-V backup networking considerations

Hyper-V backup software considerations

Hyper-V integration services

Storage considerations

Implementing Hyper-V virtual machine backup and recovery

Hyper-V backup and recovery with the Windows Server Backup feature

What’s new in Windows Server 2012 for the Windows Server Backup feature

Installing the Windows Server 2012 Backup feature

Configuring virtual machine backups with the Windows Server Backup feature

Performing virtual machine recovery using the Windows Server Backup feature

Hyper-V backup and recovery with System Center Data
Protection Manager

DPM technical overview

What’s new in System Center 2012 Data Protection Manager

Setting up DPM base infrastructure

Configuring Hyper-V backup with DPM protection groups

Performing Hyper-V recovery with System Center Data Protection Manager

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