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===Step 1: Check the virtual machine configuration versions=== | ===Step 1: Check the virtual machine configuration versions=== | ||
On the Windows desktop, click the Start button and type any part of the name Windows PowerShell. | # On the Windows desktop, click the Start button and type any part of the name Windows PowerShell. | ||
Right-click Windows PowerShell and select Run as Administrator. | # Right-click Windows PowerShell and select Run as Administrator. | ||
Use the Get-VMcmdlet. Run the following command to get the versions of your virtual machines. | # Use the Get-VMcmdlet. Run the following command to get the versions of your virtual machines. | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang="powershell" line start="1"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="powershell" line start="1"> | ||
Get-VM * | Format-Table Name, Version | Get-VM * | Format-Table Name, Version |
Revision as of 21:59, 27 March 2020
Warnings Due To VM Config Version
Step 1: Check the virtual machine configuration versions
- On the Windows desktop, click the Start button and type any part of the name Windows PowerShell.
- Right-click Windows PowerShell and select Run as Administrator.
- Use the Get-VMcmdlet. Run the following command to get the versions of your virtual machines.
Get-VM * | Format-Table Name, Version
You can also see the configuration version in Hyper-V Manager by selecting the virtual machine and looking at the Summary tab.
Step 2: Upgrade the virtual machine configuration version
Shut down the virtual machine in Hyper-V Manager. Select Action > Upgrade Configuration Version. If this option isn't available for the virtual machine, then it's already at the highest configuration version supported by the Hyper-V host. To upgrade the virtual machine configuration version by using Windows PowerShell, use the Update-VMVersion cmdlet. Run the following command where vmname is the name of the virtual machine.
Update-VMVersion <vmname>
Supported virtual machine configuration versions
Run the PowerShell cmdlet Get-VMHostSupportedVersion to see what virtual machine configuration versions your Hyper-V Host supports. When you create a virtual machine, it's created with the default configuration version. To see what the default is, run the following command.
Get-VMHostSupportedVersion -Default