From the course: Migrating from VMware to Hyper-V
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Creating a Cluster Shared Volume - Hyper-V Tutorial
From the course: Migrating from VMware to Hyper-V
Creating a Cluster Shared Volume
- [Instructor] So far, we've created an iSCSI target, and we've attached all of our cluster nodes to it. Now we need to create a cluster shared volume on top of the iSCSI target. So let's go ahead and do that. Right now I'm logged onto one of my HyperV servers, and what I'm going to do is right click on the Start button, and I'll choose Run. And I'm going to type diskmgmt.msc. And I'll press Enter. And this opens up the Windows Disk Management Console. The Disk Management Console shows all of the disks that are attached to the system. So if you look right here where my mouse pointer is, you can see disk zero. Disk zero is the system disk. So this is where Windows is installed. Next, we have disk one, and you'll notice that disk one shows a status of unknown. And right now, that disk is offline, and the space within the disk, which you can see just above my mouse pointer, is unallocated. So this is the iSCSI target that we've connected the node to. So what we need to do is we need to…
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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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