Collection of Powershell scripts to create Windows, Ubuntu and Debian VMs in Hyper-V.
For Windows Server 2016+, Windows 8.1+ only.
For Hyper-V Generation 2 (UEFI) VMs only.
To migrate an existing Windows VM from Hyper-V to Proxmox (QEMU) see Windows: Prepare a VHDX for QEMU migration.
To download all scripts into your $env:temp
folder:
iex (iwr 'bit.ly/h-v-a' -UseBasicParsing)
- For Windows VMs
- For Ubuntu VMs
- For Debian VMs
- Other commands
(*) Requires administrative privileges.
New-WindowsUnattendFile.ps1 [-AdministratorPassword] <string> [-Version] <string> [[-ComputerName] <string>] [[-FilePath] <string>] [[-Locale] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Creates an unattend.xml
file to initialize a Windows VM. Used by New-VMFromWindowsImage
.
Returns the full path of created file.
New-VMFromWindowsImage.ps1 [-SourcePath] <string> [-Edition] <string> [-VMName] <string> [-VHDXSizeBytes] <uint64> [-AdministratorPassword] <string> [-Version] <string> [-MemoryStartupBytes] <long> [[-VMProcessorCount] <long>] [[-VMSwitchName] <string>] [[-VMMacAddress] <string>] [[-Locale] <string>] [-EnableDynamicMemory] [<CommonParameters>]
Creates a Windows VM from an ISO image.
For the -Edition
parameter use Get-WindowsImage -ImagePath <path-to-install.wim>
to see all available images. Or just use "1" for the first one.
The -Version
parameter is required to set the product key (required for a full unattended install).
Returns the VirtualMachine
created.
(*) Requires administrative privileges.
New-VHDXFromWindowsImage.ps1 [-SourcePath] <string> [-Edition] <string> [-ComputerName] <string> [[-VHDXPath] <string>] [-VHDXSizeBytes] <uint64> [-AdministratorPassword] <string> [-Version] <string> [[-Locale] <string>] [[-AddVirtioDrivers] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Creates a Windows VHDX from an ISO image. Similar to New-VMFromWindowsImage
but without creating a VM.
You can add VirtIO drivers with -AddVirtioDrivers
. In this case you must inform the path of VirtIO ISO (see Get-VirtioImage
). This is useful if you wish to import the created VHDX in a KVM environment.
Returns the path for the VHDX file created.
(*) Requires administrative privileges.
New-VMSession.ps1 [-VMName] <string> [-AdministratorPassword] <string> [[-DomainName] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Creates a new PSSession
into a VM. In case of error, keeps retrying until connected. Useful for wait until a VM is ready to accept commands.
Returns the PSSession
created.
Enable-RemoteManagementViaSession.ps1 [-Session] <PSSession[]> [<CommonParameters>]
Enables Powershell Remoting, CredSSP server authentication and sets WinRM firewall rule to Any
remote address (default: LocalSubnet
).
Set-NetIPAddressViaSession.ps1 [-Session] <PSSession[]> [[-AdapterName] <string>] [-IPAddress] <string> [-PrefixLength] <byte> [-DefaultGateway] <string> [[-DnsAddresses] <string[]>] [[-NetworkCategory] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Sets TCP/IP configuration for a VM.
Get-VirtioImage.ps1 [[-OutputPath] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Downloads latest stable ISO image of Windows VirtIO Drivers.
Use -OutputPath
parameter to set download location. If not informed, the current folder will be used.
Returns the path for downloaded file.
Add-VirtioDrivers.ps1 [-VirtioIsoPath] <string> [-ImagePath] <string> [[-ImageIndex] <int>] [<CommonParameters>]
Adds Windows VirtIO Drivers into a WIM or VHDX file.
You must inform the path of VirtIO ISO with -VirtioIsoPath
. You can download the latest image from here. Or just use Get-VirtioImage.ps1
.
You must use -ImagePath
to inform the path of file. For WIM files you must also use -ImageIndex
to inform the image index inside of WIM. For VHDX files the image index must be always 1
(the default).
Convert-VhdxToQcow2.ps1 [-SourceVhdx] <string> [[-TargetQcow2] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Convert a vhdx
file to qcow2
format (used by QEMU).
You must inform the path of source vhdx
file with -SourceVhdx
.
The target file name will be the same as the source with .qcow2
extension. You may use -TargetQcow2
to override this.
Returns the path of created file.
$isoFile = '.\en_windows_server_2019_x64_dvd_4cb967d8.iso'
$vmName = 'TstWindows'
$pass = 'u531@rg3pa55w0rd$!'
.\New-VMFromWindowsImage.ps1 -SourcePath $isoFile -Edition 'Windows Server 2019 Standard' -VMName $vmName -VHDXSizeBytes 60GB -AdministratorPassword $pass -Version 'Server2019Standard' -MemoryStartupBytes 2GB -VMProcessorCount 2
$sess = .\New-VMSession.ps1 -VMName $vmName -AdministratorPassword $pass
.\Set-NetIPAddressViaSession.ps1 -Session $sess -IPAddress 10.10.1.195 -PrefixLength 16 -DefaultGateway 10.10.1.250 -DnsAddresses '8.8.8.8','8.8.4.4' -NetworkCategory 'Public'
.\Enable-RemoteManagementViaSession.ps1 -Session $sess
# You can run any commands on VM with Invoke-Command:
Invoke-Command -Session $sess {
echo "Hello, world! (from $env:COMPUTERNAME)"
# Install chocolatey
Set-ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Scope Process -Force
[System.Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol = [System.Net.ServicePointManager]::SecurityProtocol -bor 3072
iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://community.chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))
# Install 7-zip
choco install 7zip -y
}
Remove-PSSession -Session $sess
$vmName = 'TstWindows'
# Shutdown VM
Stop-VM $vmName
# Get VirtIO ISO
$virtioIso = .\Get-VirtioImage.ps1 -OutputPath $env:TEMP
# Install VirtIO drivers to Windows VM (offline)
$vhdxFile = "C:\Hyper-V\Virtual Hard Disks\$vmName.vhdx"
.\Add-VirtioDrivers.ps1 -VirtioIsoPath $virtioIso -ImagePath $vhdxFile
# Convert vhdx to QCOW2 format
$qcow2File = .\Convert-VhdxToQcow2.ps1 -SourceVhdx $vhdxFile
# Copy QCOW2 file to QEMU host
scp $qcow2File "root@pve-host:/tmp/"
After copy, you may use import-vm-windows (on Proxmox) to create the Windows VM.
Get-UbuntuImage.ps1 [[-OutputPath] <string>] [-Previous] [<CommonParameters>]
Downloads latest Ubuntu 22.04 LTS cloud image and verify its integrity.
Use -OutputPath
parameter to set download location. If not informed, the current folder will be used.
Use -Previous
parameter to download Ubuntu 20.04 LTS image instead of 22.04 LTS.
Returns the path for downloaded file.
New-VMFromUbuntuImage.ps1 -SourcePath <string> -VMName <string> -RootPassword <string> [-FQDN <string>] [-VHDXSizeBytes <uint64>] [-MemoryStartupBytes <long>] [-EnableDynamicMemory] [-ProcessorCount <long>] [-SwitchName <string>] [-MacAddress <string>] [-IPAddress <string>] [-Gateway <string>] [-DnsAddresses <string[]>] [-InterfaceName <string>] [-VlanId <string>] [-SecondarySwitchName <string>] [-SecondaryMacAddress <string>] [-SecondaryIPAddress <string>] [-SecondaryInterfaceName <string>] [-SecondaryVlanId <string>] [-InstallDocker] [<CommonParameters>]
New-VMFromUbuntuImage.ps1 -SourcePath <string> -VMName <string> -RootPublicKey <string> [-FQDN <string>] [-VHDXSizeBytes <uint64>] [-MemoryStartupBytes <long>] [-EnableDynamicMemory] [-ProcessorCount <long>] [-SwitchName <string>] [-MacAddress <string>] [-IPAddress <string>] [-Gateway <string>] [-DnsAddresses <string[]>] [-InterfaceName <string>] [-VlanId <string>] [-SecondarySwitchName <string>] [-SecondaryMacAddress <string>] [-SecondaryIPAddress <string>] [-SecondaryInterfaceName <string>] [-SecondaryVlanId <string>] [-InstallDocker] [<CommonParameters>]
Creates a Ubuntu VM from Ubuntu Cloud image.
You must have qemu-img installed. If you have chocolatey you can install it with:
choco install qemu-img -y
You can download Ubuntu cloud images from here (get the amd64.img
version). Or just use Get-UbuntuImage.ps1
.
You must use -RootPassword
to set a password or -RootPublicKey
to set a public key for default ubuntu
user.
You may configure network using -VlanId
, -IPAddress
, -Gateway
and -DnsAddresses
options. -IPAddress
must be in address/prefix
format. If not specified the network will be configured via DHCP.
You may rename interfaces with -InterfaceName
and -SecondaryInterfaceName
. This will set Hyper-V network adapter name and also set the interface name in Ubuntu.
You may add a second network using -SecondarySwitchName
. You may configure it with -Secondary*
options.
You may install Docker using -InstallDocker
switch.
Returns the VirtualMachine
created.
(*) Requires administrative privileges.
# Create a VM with static IP configuration and ssh public key access
$imgFile = .\Get-UbuntuImage.ps1 -Verbose
$vmName = 'TstUbuntu'
$fqdn = 'test.example.com'
$rootPublicKey = Get-Content "$env:USERPROFILE\.ssh\id_rsa.pub"
.\New-VMFromUbuntuImage.ps1 -SourcePath $imgFile -VMName $vmName -FQDN $fqdn -RootPublicKey $rootPublicKey -VHDXSizeBytes 60GB -MemoryStartupBytes 2GB -ProcessorCount 2 -IPAddress 10.10.1.196/16 -Gateway 10.10.1.250 -DnsAddresses '8.8.8.8','8.8.4.4' -Verbose
# Your public key is installed. This should not ask you for a password.
ssh ubuntu@10.10.1.196
Get-DebianImage.ps1 [[-OutputPath] <string>] [<CommonParameters>]
Downloads latest Debian 11 cloud image.
Use -OutputPath
parameter to set download location. If not informed, the current folder will be used.
Returns the path for downloaded file.
New-VMFromDebianImage.ps1 -SourcePath <string> -VMName <string> -RootPassword <string> [-FQDN <string>] [-VHDXSizeBytes <uint64>] [-MemoryStartupBytes <long>] [-EnableDynamicMemory] [-ProcessorCount <long>] [-SwitchName <string>] [-MacAddress <string>] [-IPAddress <string>] [-Gateway <string>] [-DnsAddresses <string[]>] [-InterfaceName <string>] [-VlanId <string>] [-SecondarySwitchName <string>] [-SecondaryMacAddress <string>] [-SecondaryIPAddress <string>] [-SecondaryInterfaceName <string>] [-SecondaryVlanId <string>] [-InstallDocker] [<CommonParameters>]
New-VMFromDebianImage.ps1 -SourcePath <string> -VMName <string> -RootPublicKey <string> [-FQDN <string>] [-VHDXSizeBytes <uint64>] [-MemoryStartupBytes <long>] [-EnableDynamicMemory] [-ProcessorCount <long>] [-SwitchName <string>] [-MacAddress <string>] [-IPAddress <string>] [-Gateway <string>] [-DnsAddresses <string[]>] [-InterfaceName <string>] [-VlanId <string>] [-SecondarySwitchName <string>] [-SecondaryMacAddress <string>] [-SecondaryIPAddress <string>] [-SecondaryInterfaceName <string>] [-SecondaryVlanId <string>] [-InstallDocker] [<CommonParameters>]
Creates a Debian VM from Debian Cloud image. For Debian 11 only.
You must have qemu-img installed. If you have chocolatey you can install it with:
choco install qemu-img -y
You can download Debian cloud images from here (get the genericcloud-amd64 version
). Or just use Get-DebianImage.ps1
.
You must use -RootPassword
to set a password or -RootPublicKey
to set a public key for default debian
user.
You may configure network using -VlanId
, -IPAddress
, -Gateway
and -DnsAddresses
options. -IPAddress
must be in address/prefix
format. If not specified the network will be configured via DHCP.
You may rename interfaces with -InterfaceName
and -SecondaryInterfaceName
. This will set Hyper-V network adapter name and also set the interface name in Debian.
You may add a second network using -SecondarySwitchName
. You may configure it with -Secondary*
options.
You may install Docker using -InstallDocker
switch.
Returns the VirtualMachine
created.
(*) Requires administrative privileges.
# Create a VM with static IP configuration and ssh public key access
$imgFile = .\Get-DebianImage.ps1 -Verbose
$vmName = 'TstDebian'
$fqdn = 'test.example.com'
$rootPublicKey = Get-Content "$env:USERPROFILE\.ssh\id_rsa.pub"
.\New-VMFromDebianImage.ps1 -SourcePath $imgFile -VMName $vmName -FQDN $fqdn -RootPublicKey $rootPublicKey -VHDXSizeBytes 60GB -MemoryStartupBytes 2GB -ProcessorCount 2 -IPAddress 10.10.1.197/16 -Gateway 10.10.1.250 -DnsAddresses '8.8.8.8','8.8.4.4' -Verbose
# Your public key is installed. This should not ask you for a password.
ssh debian@10.10.1.197
Move-VMOffline.ps1 [-VMName] <string> [-DestinationHost] <string> [-CertificateThumbprint] <string> [<CommonParameters>]
Uses Hyper-V replica to move a VM between hosts not joined in a domain.