Please post your findings when you get a chance. One thing I really like about Virtual Machines is that they don't take the entire system down when they hang.... Anyways, I installed an E3-1245 this morning and will work on the pass through. Thanks again. Good topic for discussion.
I suppose it wouldn't make a difference (haven't tested it). It is probably more of a habit than anything else. I just stop BI as it is the only service running i.e. processing, storing database on the main SSD which is being imaged.. and .. also camera feed -but that's on another drive so that shouldn't matter.Why stop BI before making a backup?
Exactly.. and you are forgetting the probable OCD factor on my part in there as well. . IMHO, if there are any critical clips to be saved, they should be exported out to another location and stored there. In the event the database gets corrupted, as it happened once when I was randomly deleting recordings etc., to test the software in the beginning, rebuilding DB failed to get everything back to 100%. Then I simply stopped BI, deleted all recordings, DB and restarted BI to start fresh. Point is that the BI didn't freak out and go nuts on me. It just picked up and started right back.Well you do have a point. There is a chance, however small, that BI's clip database may be snapshotted for backup while it is in the middle of a commit operation, and that BI might not be able to gracefully recover it from that state. Popular database formats are designed to handle such situations without issue, but I suspect BI uses its own proprietary format.
Looks like it is actually a RAID 6 (z2) striped across 3 volumes (RAID 60). Set it up a while ago (my old one was a 5).How do you have an 18 drive RAID 5? More importantly, why would you put your data at risk like that? RAID 0 is also not a good idea for data you care about.
That sucks.. it would be great if your motherboard supported it and I could've asked you more questions... OTH, you might be able to pick up a compatible board for little money given that the CPU is relatively old... just saying... Another thing to think about (which I haven't researched) is if BI uses newer instruction set (Intel Video I mean) and the older CPUs while they may work, may not be efficient. Anyway, good to see the progress you made!Ok, so I updated to the E1245-V3 and I wasn't seeing the intel graphics show up on the pass through. After so futzing around for a bit, I think I figured out why. My motherboard has a C224 chipset which does not support the integrated graphics. So the processor upgrade seems to have been all for naught. ...
Ah yes, now that makes more senseooks like it is actually a RAID 6 (z2) striped across 3 volumes (RAID 60). Set it up a while ago (my old one was a 5).
Was going to do a new build but I figured I’d try the C226 motherboard to see if it fixes these issues. I’ll follow up.That sucks.. it would be great if your motherboard supported it and I could've asked you more questions... OTH, you might be able to pick up a compatible board for little money given that the CPU is relatively old... just saying... Another thing to think about (which I haven't researched) is if BI uses newer instruction set (Intel Video I mean) and the older CPUs while they may work, may not be efficient. Anyway, good to see the progress you made!
I believe the monitor that is connected to your ESXi host will not show anything if you enabled GPU passthrough.i am using i7-8650U with h620 GPU integrated
while passthrough the GPU to a vm windows 10
then added the two Parameters
How can I connect to the vm via the VGA interface comes from the motherboard?
When I connected the display with the motherboard vga interface, the display shows nothing.
thanks for any help.