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Getting Started with Nano Server

You're reading from   Getting Started with Nano Server Automate multiple VMs and transform your datacenter

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782175223
Length 406 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Charbel Nemnom Charbel Nemnom
Author Profile Icon Charbel Nemnom
Charbel Nemnom
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Nano Server 2. Getting Started with Nano Server FREE CHAPTER 3. Deploying Nano Server in a Virtual Machine and on Physical Hardware 4. Deploying Hyper-V Cluster on Nano Server 5. Deploying, Managing, and Monitoring Nano Server with System Center 2016 6. Managing Nano Server with Windows PowerShell and Windows PowerShell DSC 7. Managing Nano Server with Third-Party Tools 8. Running Windows Server Containers and Hyper-V Containers on Nano Server 9. Troubleshooting Nano Server 10. Running Other Workloads on the Nano Server

Managing Nano Server with PowerShell DSC


As discussed in the previous section, most of the Windows PowerShell cmdlets that you are familiar with can establish a remote connectivity and manage a Nano Server instance.

The usage for Nano is different, depending on if it's virtualized or not. Nano as a VM is meant to be just an engine; it might live for 10 seconds or 10 days, it is just a part of a huge application platform (the purpose is to execute apps on servers). But when running Nano on a physical machine, it is basically a cloud infrastructure (Hyper-V, storage, clustering) and nothing else. Nano is double-edged with dual purpose.

Nano Server was designed for high density deployment. Imagine trying to manage 1,000 Nano Servers using GUI-based tools. These tools might be fine for managing a relatively small number of servers, but are simply not practical for managing large-scale deployments. Nano Server is not really meant to be managed by a domain when running virtualized, it is designed...

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