- #Driver easy for free#
- #Driver easy drivers#
- #Driver easy driver#
- #Driver easy windows 10#
- #Driver easy pro#
GPUResourceAllocationPercentage = 50 - Percentage of the GPU you want to share with the VM
#Driver easy windows 10#
On Windows 11 you may also use the exact name of the GPU you want to share with the VM in multi GPU situations (GPU selection is not available in Windows 10 and must be set to AUTO) GPUName = "AUTO" - AUTO selects the first available GPU. UnattendPath = "$PSScriptRoot"+"\autounattend.xml" -Leave this value alone VHDPath = "C:\Users\Public\Documents\Hyper-V\Virtual Hard Disks\" - Path to the folder you want the VM Disk to be stored in, it must already exist NetworkSwitch = "Default Switch" - Leave this alone unless you're not using the default Hyper-V Switch MemoryAmount = 8GB - Memory size, in this case 8GBĬPUCores = 4 - CPU Cores you want to give VM, in this case 4 SizeBytes = 40gb - Disk size, in this case 40GB, the minimum is 20GB VhdFormat = "VHDX" - Leave this value aloneĭiskLayout = "UEFI" - Leave this value alone
#Driver easy pro#
SourcePath = "C:\Users\james\Downloads\Win11_English_圆4.iso" - path to Windows 10/ 11 ISO on your hostĮdition = 6 - Leave as 6, this means Windows 10/11 Pro VMName = "GPUP" - Name of VM in Hyper-V and the computername / hostname Run Update-VMGPUPartitonDriver.ps1 -VMName "Name of your VM" -GPUName "Name of your GPU" (Windows 10 GPU name must be "AUTO").Open Powershell as administrator and change directory (CD) to the path that CopyFilestoVM.ps1 and Update-VMGPUPartitonDriver.ps1 are located.Reboot the host after updating GPU Drivers.
#Driver easy drivers#
It's important to update the VM GPU Drivers after you have updated the Host GPUs drivers. Upgrading GPU Drivers when you update the host GPU Drivers You can use Parsec to connect to the VM up to 4K60FPS. Run CopyFilesToVM.ps1 with your changes to the params section - this may take 5-10 minutes.Additionally, you need to provide the path to the Windows 10/11 ISO file you downloaded. On Windows 10 the GPUName must be left as "AUTO", In Windows 11 it can be either "AUTO" or the specific name of the GPU you want to partition exactly how it appears in PreChecks.ps1. Open CopyFilesToVM.ps1 Powershell ISE and edit the params section at the top of the file, you need to be careful about how much ram, storage and hard drive you give it as you system needs to have that available.Open and Run PreChecks.ps1 in Powershell ISE using the green play button and copy the GPU Listed (or the warnings that you need to fix).Run the files from within the extracted folder. In the extracted folder you downloaded, open PreChecks.ps1 in Powershell ISE.Search your system for Powershell ISE and run as Administrator.Make sure your system meets the prerequisits.Allow Powershell scripts to run on your system - typically by running "Set-ExecutionPolicy unrestricted" in Powershell running as Administrator.Virtualisation enabled in the motherboard and Hyper-V fully enabled on the Windows 10/ 11 OS (requires reboot).Do not use Media Creation Tool, if no direct ISO link is available, follow this guide. Latest Windows 10 ISO downloaded from here / Windows 11 ISO downloaded from here.
#Driver easy driver#
Latest GPU driver from or, don't rely on Device manager or Windows update.GPU must support hardware video encoding (NVIDIA NVENC, Intel Quicksync or AMD AMF). Desktop Computer with dedicated NVIDIA/AMD GPU or Integrated Intel GPU - Laptops with NVIDIA GPUs are not supported at this time, but Intel integrated GPUs work on laptops.Windows 11 on host and VM is preferred due to better compatibility. Windows 10 20H1+ Pro, Enterprise or Education OR Windows 11 Pro, Enterprise or Education.To use Parsec commercially, sign up to a Parsec For Teams account
#Driver easy for free#
You can use Parsec for free non commercially.
Automatically Installs Windows 11 to the VM.It's the same technology that is used in WSL2, and Windows Sandbox.Įasy-GPU-PV aims to make this easier by automating the steps required to get a GPU-PV VM up and running. GPU-PV allows you to partition your systems dedicated or integrated GPU and assign it to several Hyper-V VMs. A work-in-progress project dedicated to making GPU Paravirtualization on Windows Hyper-V easier!