I can then run a second AD server and numerous other servers as VM's in Hyper-V. My thinking is that I set the NAS up as an AD server (+DHCP, DNS) so that my Hyper-V server has something to authenticate against when it boots up. I recently read somewhere that some models can act as Active Directory Domain Controllers, is that true? I've been planning to buy a QNAP NAS for some time as they have a lot of features I want to use - file storage of course (via iSCSI or IP-SAN for Hyper-V if I can), DLNA server so I can share my media to all devices, Surveillance Station for CCTV to name but a few. For now I've given up, and everything points to the fact that remote administration is much simpler in a domain, so I'm thinking of setting one up for my home lab. ![]() I've been trying to set up remote management for my Hyper-V server in a workgroup, and to say that it's difficult is an understatement. ![]() ![]() It's not been asked for a long time, and the 2016 thread scenario is slightly different from mine.
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