Network setup - Hyper-V
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 @CCWTech what versions of SMB are enabled on the server and the clients? 
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 I'm aware. 
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 @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @CCWTech what versions of SMB are enabled on the server and the clients? I haven't tried SMB 1 yet. Is that something that needs to be done on physical, hyper-v, and clients? 
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 @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @CCWTech what versions of SMB are enabled on the server and the clients? I haven't tried SMB 1 yet. Is that something that needs to be done on physical, hyper-v, and clients? I'm curious as to what's currently enabled? 
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 So the app is fast when using local storage and slow when using network storage? Seems like a not unexpected behaviour. 
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 @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @CCWTech what versions of SMB are enabled on the server and the clients? I haven't tried SMB 1 yet. Is that something that needs to be done on physical, hyper-v, and clients? I'm curious as to what's currently enabled? Just defaults. Does SMB1 need to be enabled on ALL servers (Physical, Hyper-V Applications) and then all clients? If so, can that be done when they are in production? 
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 Temporary exclude the software directory and/or processes of that software from Windows Defender AV on server to see if that helps. 
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 @reid-cooper said in Network setup - Hyper-V: So the app is fast when using local storage and slow when using network storage? Seems like a not unexpected behaviour. Except that it is. Of course running it locally with be always faster, but I'm talking about very significant slowdowns. I said above that I have done several of these servers for clients that use the software and have not had this issue. 
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 @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @reid-cooper said in Network setup - Hyper-V: So the app is fast when using local storage and slow when using network storage? Seems like a not unexpected behaviour. Except that it is. Of course running it locally with be always faster, but I'm talking about very significant slowdowns. I said above that I have done several of these servers for clients that use the software and have not had this issue. Have you looked for things like a broken switch, unnecessary route hops, high latency between nodes, packet loss, or things of that nature? 
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 @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @CCWTech what versions of SMB are enabled on the server and the clients? I haven't tried SMB 1 yet. Is that something that needs to be done on physical, hyper-v, and clients? I'm curious as to what's currently enabled? Just defaults. Does SMB1 need to be enabled on ALL servers (Physical, Hyper-V Applications) and then all clients? If so, can that be done when they are in production? need? I would hope not, but I don't know.. Have you confirmed what is actually enabled? What's the output of Get-SmbClientConfigurationandGet-SmbConnectionon both the hosting VM and the client computers?
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 @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @reid-cooper said in Network setup - Hyper-V: So the app is fast when using local storage and slow when using network storage? Seems like a not unexpected behaviour. Except that it is. Of course running it locally with be always faster, but I'm talking about very significant slowdowns. I said above that I have done several of these servers for clients that use the software and have not had this issue. Right, but difference now is - Windows server version and Hyper-V version? what about hardware differences? 
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 @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @reid-cooper said in Network setup - Hyper-V: So the app is fast when using local storage and slow when using network storage? Seems like a not unexpected behaviour. Except that it is. Of course running it locally with be always faster, but I'm talking about very significant slowdowns. I said above that I have done several of these servers for clients that use the software and have not had this issue. Right, but difference now is - Windows server version and Hyper-V version? what about hardware differences? Server 2016 is new. They all have been 2012 R2 and earlier. However the vendor says they have tested 2016 and had no problems. I don't know how much testing they have done with hyper-v (although they so support it). Hardware is essentially the same setup. 
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 When possible, you should have a copy of the data so you can just restore it to a test location for something like the following. Windows 10 PC (Desktop/laptop hardware) put the data there and access it using the same client machine via the same switch as the server uses, see if there is a difference. Then test the same setup with Server 2016 on that hardware. 
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 I believe you said that you put the data directly on the Hyper-V host and shared it? if so, what was the outcome? I also recall that you shared it from the VM, and accessed it on the Hyper-V host via that share, and it was slow - is that still the case? 
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 Output from Physical Server: ConnectionCountPerRssNetworkInterface : 4 
 DirectoryCacheEntriesMax : 16
 DirectoryCacheEntrySizeMax : 65536
 DirectoryCacheLifetime : 10
 DormantFileLimit : 1023
 EnableBandwidthThrottling : True
 EnableByteRangeLockingOnReadOnlyFiles : True
 EnableInsecureGuestLogons : True
 EnableLargeMtu : True
 EnableLoadBalanceScaleOut : True
 EnableMultiChannel : True
 EnableSecuritySignature : True
 ExtendedSessionTimeout : 1000
 FileInfoCacheEntriesMax : 64
 FileInfoCacheLifetime : 10
 FileNotFoundCacheEntriesMax : 128
 FileNotFoundCacheLifetime : 5
 KeepConn : 600
 MaxCmds : 50
 MaximumConnectionCountPerServer : 32
 OplocksDisabled : False
 RequireSecuritySignature : False
 SessionTimeout : 60
 UseOpportunisticLocking : True
 WindowSizeThreshold : 1Output from Applications server: ConnectionCountPerRssNetworkInterface : 4 
 DirectoryCacheEntriesMax : 16
 DirectoryCacheEntrySizeMax : 65536
 DirectoryCacheLifetime : 10
 DormantFileLimit : 1023
 EnableBandwidthThrottling : True
 EnableByteRangeLockingOnReadOnlyFiles : True
 EnableInsecureGuestLogons : True
 EnableLargeMtu : True
 EnableLoadBalanceScaleOut : True
 EnableMultiChannel : True
 EnableSecuritySignature : True
 ExtendedSessionTimeout : 1000
 FileInfoCacheEntriesMax : 64
 FileInfoCacheLifetime : 10
 FileNotFoundCacheEntriesMax : 128
 FileNotFoundCacheLifetime : 5
 KeepConn : 600
 MaxCmds : 50
 MaximumConnectionCountPerServer : 32
 OplocksDisabled : False
 RequireSecuritySignature : False
 SessionTimeout : 60
 UseOpportunisticLocking : True
 WindowSizeThreshold : 1ServerName ShareName UserName Credential Dialect NumOpens 
 HOMETOWN-APPS Data HTVET\hvh2 HTVET\HVH2 3.1.1 1 
 HOMETOWN-APPS Data HTVET\HVH3 HTVET\HVH3 3.1.1 1
 HOMETOWN-APPS Data HTVET\HVH8 HTVET\HVH8 3.1.1 1Output from one of the workstations: 
 ConnectionCountPerRssNetworkInterface : 4
 DirectoryCacheEntriesMax : 16
 DirectoryCacheEntrySizeMax : 65536
 DirectoryCacheLifetime : 10
 DormantFileLimit : 1023
 EnableBandwidthThrottling : True
 EnableByteRangeLockingOnReadOnlyFiles : True
 EnableInsecureGuestLogons : True
 EnableLargeMtu : True
 EnableLoadBalanceScaleOut : True
 EnableMultiChannel : True
 EnableSecuritySignature : True
 ExtendedSessionTimeout : 1000
 FileInfoCacheEntriesMax : 64
 FileInfoCacheLifetime : 10
 FileNotFoundCacheEntriesMax : 128
 FileNotFoundCacheLifetime : 5
 KeepConn : 600
 MaxCmds : 50
 MaximumConnectionCountPerServer : 32
 OplocksDisabled : False
 RequireSecuritySignature : False
 SessionTimeout : 60
 UseOpportunisticLocking : True
 WindowSizeThreshold : 8ServerName ShareName UserName Credential Dialect NumOpens 
 HOMETOWN-APPS Data HTVET\hvh HTVET.LOCAL\hvh 3.1.1 1 
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 It is still slow when running the app on the physical server from the hyper-v (apps) server. I have put the application on a directory on the physical server and shared that out for testing. More to come... 
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 I gave the wrong command. Get-SmbServerConfiguration
 This one will tell you what SMB versions you have enabled for serving up shares. Only needed on the server side.
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 @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: I gave the wrong command. Get-SmbServerConfiguration
 This one will tell you what SMB versions you have enabled for serving up shares. Only needed on the server side.Physical or virtual or both? 
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 @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: Get-SmbServerConfiguration This is from the hyperv/apps server: AnnounceComment : 
 AnnounceServer : False
 AsynchronousCredits : 512
 AuditSmb1Access : False
 AutoDisconnectTimeout : 15
 AutoShareServer : True
 AutoShareWorkstation : True
 CachedOpenLimit : 0
 DurableHandleV2TimeoutInSeconds : 180
 EnableAuthenticateUserSharing : False
 EnableDownlevelTimewarp : False
 EnableForcedLogoff : True
 EnableLeasing : True
 EnableMultiChannel : True
 EnableOplocks : False
 EnableSecuritySignature : False
 EnableSMB1Protocol : True
 EnableSMB2Protocol : True
 EnableStrictNameChecking : True
 EncryptData : False
 IrpStackSize : 15
 KeepAliveTime : 2
 MaxChannelPerSession : 32
 MaxMpxCount : 50
 MaxSessionPerConnection : 16384
 MaxThreadsPerQueue : 20
 MaxWorkItems : 1
 NullSessionPipes : HydraLsPipe,TermServLicensing
 NullSessionShares :
 OplockBreakWait : 35
 PendingClientTimeoutInSeconds : 120
 RejectUnencryptedAccess : True
 RequireSecuritySignature : False
 ServerHidden : True
 Smb2CreditsMax : 8192
 Smb2CreditsMin : 512
 SmbServerNameHardeningLevel : 0
 TreatHostAsStableStorage : False
 ValidateAliasNotCircular : True
 ValidateShareScope : True
 ValidateShareScopeNotAliased : True
 ValidateTargetName : True
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 @ccwtech said in Network setup - Hyper-V: @dashrender said in Network setup - Hyper-V: I gave the wrong command. Get-SmbServerConfiguration
 This one will tell you what SMB versions you have enabled for serving up shares. Only needed on the server side.Physical or virtual or both? both, since you're now testing both. Also, you can wrap each block of text with 3 tick marks ` before and after to see it like this



