Your best source of information and news about winvista, winvista and drivers on the internet

Vista ARTICLES TOP 50 Spyware Virus Vista SOFT Vista HELP

The Virtualization Nation Podcast – Episode 3: Want to boot a physical computer from a VHD?


Of course you do.  And in this episode of the Virtualization Nation Podcast, I’ll show you how. 

But first, a little background.

Earlier today, I posted a description of the new Native VHD integration in Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2, and Microsoft Hyper-V Server 2008 R2 on the Windows Virtualization Team blog, along with a link to a nifty little Powershell script called Install-WindowsImage.ps1 which I’ll talk about some other time.  The main point of that post was to start getting the word out about Native VHD Boot.

So, what’s so special about this?

Well, put yourself in the shoes of a corporate network administrator (though, when I was a network admin, I didn’t wear shoes all that often).  It’s really very common for a company to have a “base” Operating System image that they can apply to a server or workstation.  This image is usually tweaked with some software and/or patches installed, or is specially configured in some other way.

If that’s the case, it’s possible that you would need to maintain two (or more) images: one for virtual machines (probably a VHD), and one for physical machines (maybe a WIM or a Ghost file).

With Native VHD Boot, you can finally have one, single base image that works everywhere.  Your VHD can be booted in virtual machines, just like it always did, and it can also be used to boot your physical servers. 

Ok, let’s get right to the heart of this thing.

To boot from a VHD, you need the following things:

Now, you’ve got those things ready, right?  You’re all set?  You’ve read the VHD FAQ? Cool. 

Ok.  You can find instructions on how to configure your computer on various web pages and videos, but they all seem pretty lengthy.

Want something simple?  Something easy to remember?

Of course you do.

You can watch me run through the steps in the video below, or download it here.

For those of you who don’t want to download a video for a “simple” command, here are the Cliff’s Notes:

  1. Get to an elevated or WinPE command prompt.
  2. Use your favorite VHD-creation method to install Windows in a VHD.
  3. Use DiskPart or DiskMgmt.msc to attach your VHD as a drive on your computer, and give it a drive letter (V:\ for example).
  4. Run BCDBOOT.EXE  V:\Windows
  5. Sit back, relax, and reboot your computer to start booting into your new OS.

Important Notes:

  1. If you’re booting to a Dynamically Expanding VHD, make sure that you have enough room on your physical disk to hold the VHD as if it were fully expanded to its maximum size.  If you don’t have enough space, you’ll get a bugcheck during boot.
  2. Hibernation is disabled when booted to a VHD.
  3. You can’t boot to a VHD that lives on a network share or a removable storage device.
Popularity: 1%


Written by mikekol. Read more great feeds at is source WEBSITE
no comments.
Read more articles on Hyper-V in 2008 R2 and Virtualization Nation Podcast and WIM2VHD and otherSoftware and windows 7 and Miscellaneous V.

Related articles

No comments

There are still no comments on this article.

Leave your comment...

If you want to leave your comment on this article, simply fill out the next form:




You can use these XHTML tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong> .