Designing and implementing your Hyper-V Server
Creating your own Hyper-V Server is usually pretty simple: build a server, install an operating system, install the Hyper-V role, and you’re ready to get started. In fact, you can even install the Hyper-V role on a Windows 10 or 11 Pro or Enterprise computer, if you need to run some VMs from your own desktop. While most hardware that is created these days fully supports the idea of being a hypervisor provider, some of you may try installing the Hyper-V role only to end up with the following error message:
Figure 14.1: Hyper-V compatibility error
Uh oh, that’s not good. This means one of two things: either my CPU really doesn’t support virtualization, or I simply have some settings turned off inside the BIOS on my server that prevent this from working. There are three considerations you should check on your server to make sure it is ready to run Hyper-V. First, you need to be running an x64-based processor...