From the course: Migrating from VMware to Hyper-V
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Test virtual machine failover - Hyper-V Tutorial
From the course: Migrating from VMware to Hyper-V
Test virtual machine failover
- [Instructor] So now let's go ahead and take a look at what happens in a failover situation. As you can see, I've got the Failover Cluster Manager on screen, and I've got two virtual machines. I've got one called HA and I've got another called Windows Server 2025. And if you look at the Owner Node column, you can see where they're currently running. So the Windows Server 2025 virtual machine is running on Hyper-V-1 and the HA virtual machine is running on Hyper-V-3. So what happens if we have a node failure? To show you, I want to go ahead and take Hyper-V-3 offline. Now I'm not going to shut it down gracefully. Instead, I'm just going to abruptly power it off so that we can see what happens. Now the important thing to know is that a failover will eventually occur. However, that failover is not instantaneous. It takes a few minutes to complete. And the reason for that is really simple. Think about what your virtual machines are doing. They're using the cluster shared volume and that…
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Introduction to failover clustering2m 35s
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Creating a storage pool6m 53s
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Enabling the iSCSI initiators1m 31s
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Creating iSCSI targets8m 34s
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Creating a Cluster Shared Volume2m 51s
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Prepare for the cluster6m 21s
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Learn how to create the cluster4m 30s
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Making a new virtual machine highly available4m 56s
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Making an existing virtual machine highly available4m 41s
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Enable cluster-aware updating3m 4s
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Test live migration3m 32s
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Test virtual machine failover3m 50s
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