{"id":593,"date":"2014-03-25T22:42:43","date_gmt":"2014-03-25T17:12:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blog.binarybits.net\/?p=593"},"modified":"2021-05-03T16:20:10","modified_gmt":"2021-05-03T10:50:10","slug":"windows-8-boot-to-vhd-sharepoint","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.binarybits.net\/windows-8-boot-to-vhd-sharepoint\/","title":{"rendered":"Windows 8 Pro’s Boot-to-VHD is a good news for an indie SharePoint developer !"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"SharePoint

SharePoint & Windows<\/p><\/div>\n

A\u00a0post\u00a0<\/span>describing SharePoint’s high resource usage and how Windows 8’s Boot to VHD will help to run SharePoint host with more dedicated resource.<\/span><\/p>\n

Trailer….<\/strong><\/em><\/h1>\n

For people like me who has to depend on resource hungry SharePoint servers, life is difficult as a developer and IT designer.<\/p>\n

Most of the time we have to run the server inside a virtual environment and most of the time it would be a standalone server.<\/p>\n

The problem….<\/strong><\/p>\n

Initially with SharePoint 2010 you could get away with at-least 6GB RAM allocated to a guest OS. But with SharePoint 2013 you require at least 12GB for a better experience and most of the machines come with 8GB or 16 GB RAM.<\/p>\n

The problem is, your host OS will take at least 2GB RAM which for SharePoint can make life and death kind of experience even though Windows is perfectly capable of keeping SharePoint alive with paging (Virtual RAM) and have the storage drive on a never ending marathon run !<\/p>\n

For virtual environment, the following are the options we generally have.<\/p>\n