How to add all Physical server to Veeam one monitor for report generation?
Best answer by Geoff Burke
View originalHow to add all Physical server to Veeam one monitor for report generation?
Best answer by Geoff Burke
View originalWhat do you mean by Physical Server? Do you mean hypervisor hosts? Or Window/Linux/… Hosts?
What do you mean by Physical Server? Do you mean hypervisor hosts? Or Window/Linux/… Hosts?
We have 7 Physical server where as 5 are windows and 2 are Linux server. no virtual environment
If I did not miss some fundamental information, I would say, currently it is not possible to monitor non-vSphere/Hyper-V physicals hosts.
Community, please correct me, if I am wrong here.
What do you mean by Physical Server? Do you mean hypervisor hosts? Or Window/Linux/… Hosts?
We have 7 Physical server where as 5 are windows and 2 are Linux server. no virtual environment
I have to say, up to now, I did not see an environment backed up by Veeam without any hypervisor .. . except some stand-alone hosts and notebooks (like mine).
One wild and weird way to monitor windows at least, is to enable the hyper-v role but not use it as a hypervisor :). Seems a little much though but I did this once, I can’t remember the reason why.
One wild and weird way to monitor windows at least, is to enable the hyper-v role but not use it as a hypervisor :). Seems a little much though but I did this once, I can’t remember the reason why.
That is one really great thought
One wild and weird way to monitor windows at least, is to enable the hyper-v role but not use it as a hypervisor :). Seems a little much though but I did this once, I can’t remember the reason why.
That is one really great thought
I did get some flack from the security guy saying that I had needlessly increased the “windows attack surface” i.e. nothing comes without a cost :)
One wild and weird way to monitor windows at least, is to enable the hyper-v role but not use it as a hypervisor :). Seems a little much though but I did this once, I can’t remember the reason why.
Nice idea! But from a security perspective, I would not recommend this!
One wild and weird way to monitor windows at least, is to enable the hyper-v role but not use it as a hypervisor :). Seems a little much though but I did this once, I can’t remember the reason why.
Nice idea! But from a security perspective, I would not recommend this!
Unless they are RedHat then just install KVM :) going forward :)
One wild and weird way to monitor windows at least, is to enable the hyper-v role but not use it as a hypervisor :). Seems a little much though but I did this once, I can’t remember the reason why.
Nice idea! But from a security perspective, I would not recommend this!
Unless they are RedHat then just install KVM :) going forward :)
Those 2Linux machine are centOS v7.9
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