ayoub Posted August 5, 2014 Share Posted August 5, 2014 hey im working on installing windows server 2012 R2 for company with 50 users. i want the server to act as AD + DNS + DHCP + SMB + ISCSI the server is a vm created by the Hyper-V i would like to know the material prerequisite so that my environment works perfectly thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roger H. Veteran Posted August 5, 2014 Veteran Share Posted August 5, 2014 Requirements aren't any different really compared to normal hardware. If you plan on doing iSCSI then you'll either want some dedicated drives to use pass-through or used a "FIXED" size VHDX to get good throughput. AD/DNS+DHCP roles aren't big power demanding stuff, especially for only 50 users. Is the Hyper-V Server running as a dedicated Server however or is it running as a Role to another Windows Server? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ayoub Posted August 5, 2014 Author Share Posted August 5, 2014 hey Roger the Hyper-V role running on a dedicated server thanks for help Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jason S. Global Moderator Posted August 5, 2014 Global Moderator Share Posted August 5, 2014 that's not going to require much at all. i'd just give it 2 cores and like 4GB ram. our DCs here are VMs and only have 1 vCPU. they sit idle all the time. Roger H. 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ayoub Posted August 6, 2014 Author Share Posted August 6, 2014 thank you Jason Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PGHammer Posted August 8, 2014 Share Posted August 8, 2014 Windows Server - since 2003 - has not been exactly *beastly* in terms of CPU requiremnts for the basic server, and even 2012R2 didn't change that. The rather shocking thing is that I found using it as a workstation or virtualization server, especially with Hyper-V, generally more stable than either Windows 7 OR Windows 8+ in the same role; however, it turns out that THAT is the case primarily due to what it lacks in comparison. 1. Even with the Desktop Experience (server/workstation role) installed, Windows Server is still not desktop Windows, despite the two having the same base of code since Windows XP Service Pack 2. Noticeably missing from Server 2012R2, compared to Windows 8, is DirectX - which means no desktop gaming on a server or workstation with that OS installed. (Paradoxically, Windows Server is actually a better platform for browser-based gaming, due to increased out-of-the-box security regarding browser extensions, plug-ins, and add-ons.) 2. Virtualization - Like Windows 8+, Server 2012R2 supports Hyper-V; unlike Windows 8+, Extended Processor Table support is an option - not a requirement. That also means that the floor for Windows Server 2012R2 overlaps with Windows 7 (in addition to Windows 8) - for example, you can install Server 2012R2 on as little as a Celeron E3400. 3. Workstation/server I/O - because 2012R2 is a server operating system, it does support features that you would expect FROM a server OS, such as LAN adapter teaming; however, Server 2012R2, like Server 2012, also supports dis-similar-adater teams (such as wired and wireless, or two different wireless adapters). In the case of 2012R2, it also supports most of Windows 8's - if not Windows 7's - drivers (Catalyst Unified from AMD and ForceWare from nVidia are directly supported, for example). Naturally, Server 2012 takes better advantage of hardware RAID than desktop Windows. 4. Lightweight fighter - Server 2012 and 2012R2 are light in terms of how much space the OS itself takes up - in fact, either is lighter than even 7 Home Premium, let alone 7 Ultimate, 8 Pro, or 8 ProWMC, even with Desktop Experience installed. The only feature you'd be lacking (other than DirectX) is Windows Media Center (yes - Server 2012R2 DOES include the Windows App Store - it is installed alongside Desktop Experience, as is, rather amusingly, touch-screen display support). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
binaryzero Posted August 18, 2014 Share Posted August 18, 2014 ^ Ok? I suggest using 2 VMs - each with 8GB RAM. 1 VM = Domain Services + DHCP 1 VM = SMB + iSCSI. MorganX 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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