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With Hyper-V on a host machine, what are the upper limitations of the virtualization? 1 VM per proc? What about memory and networking utilization? Do the upper bounds change when choosing Full vs. Server Core as the host machine? If anyone can point me to the official documentation on physical and practical limitations I would be very grateful, I couldn't find any with my searching but I'm guessing it's got to be out there.

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Well, there's a FAQ with some details, including: "Hyper-V Server supports systems with up to 4 processors with 1, 2 or 4 cores." "Hyper-V Server supports up to 32 GB of physical memory." etc

There's also an interesting point here regarding licensing differences when choosing between Standard & Enterprise.

I don't believe you lose any functionality with Full vs. Core - but definitely with Standard vs. Enterprise vs. Datacenter. For example, Enterprise is the minimum version you'll need to support live migration (VM move between HyperV servers without downtime) - with R2.

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    Enterprise and Datacenter versions support up to 2TB of ram. The R2 version also ups the 32GB limit on standard from what I've heard but I've yet to confirm it.
    – Ryaner
    Aug 21, 2009 at 19:57
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About 4 CPU core limit:

In VM's config file section:

[processors]
[count type=”integer”]8[/count]

Now you have 8 core CPU.

What others say:

To verify my results I ran NuclearMC on a VM with 1 core, 4 cores, and 8 cores dedicated to the virtual machine.

1 core 4 cores 8 cores

Fibonachi 5875 23392 46075

Factorial 4177 19714 37091

Ferma 4132 16791 34300

Sort 2582 12277 25434

Hyperbolic 3533 12081 16405

Digit e 3896 10147 14348

Picture Morph 3305 8653 12508

Prime 3583 13896 28276

And my screenshot

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  • That is false info no matter how many times you post it. It doesn't work that way.
    – Mark
    Aug 19, 2011 at 12:43
  • Here it works with my AMD 1090T?
    – Nime Cloud
    Aug 19, 2011 at 14:33
  • Well, then! I take back my -1! That's crazy that they don't prevent that. The word from MS people is that the HyperV scheduler got crazy unstable with 6 or 8 core VMs so they stopped testing it or trying to optimize for it. I still wouldn't trust it under load if you have more than 1 VM configured that way. But... coool. ;-)
    – Mark
    Aug 19, 2011 at 20:32
  • that is straight up bananas
    – slf
    Aug 20, 2011 at 2:56
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The only hard limit I've seen is that you can't allocate more RAM to VMs than you have physical RAM available. With CPU (if you don't allot minimum CPU usage for a VM) and network, it's a question of what performance is acceptable.

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