Before connecting click Options to make the changes full screen, window or other. Also it is possible to scale or zoom a window. You'll have to restate what you're after.
From the description I took it that you wanted a method to view an instance of XP vm on second monitor in a full screen mode. I'm not using the Hyper-V console. I'm using cmd. It's a batch file used to run an old DOS program.
What on earth are you talking about?? Why does that matter? On your windows 10 desktop or whatever you have start a remote desktop session to XP in seamless mode. The cmd. Ok this has nothing to do with hyper-v session but with cmd.
Within the Layout tab, you can adjust the width and height. It sounds like you are right-clicking on the virtual machine in the Hyper - V Manager and selecting Connect. This is the hyper-v console. I would try using remote desktop protocol instead. It doesn't work that way for me and I've now verified this unacceptable behavior on a different Windows 10 computer with XP running on Hyper-V In XP cmd. I have tried changing the Font size and it makes no change to the command console - see the image.
It's like those settings are being ignored. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Client. For more information, please visit the following Microsoft article: Changes to remote administration in Windows Server Please note that this document is a translation from English, and may have been machine-translated.
It is possible that updates have been made to the original version after this document was translated and published. Veritas does not guarantee the accuracy regarding the completeness of the translation. You may also refer to the English Version of this knowledge base article for up-to-date information. Support Knowledge base How to use Remote Desktop to connect to the console during Storage Foundation installations How to use Remote Desktop to connect to the console during Storage Foundation installations.
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This article describes how to use Microsoft Windows Server Terminal Services to connect to and shadow a console session. In Windows Server , when you use Terminal Services, you can connect to the console session session 0 , and at the same time, open a shadow session to it as long as you connect from a session other than the console. With this added functionality, you can log on to a Windows Server based server that is running Terminal Services remotely and interact with session 0 as if you were sitting at the physical console of the computer.
This session can also be shadowed so that the remote user and the local user at the physical console can see and interact with the same session. When you connect to the console session of a Windows Server based server, no other user has to be already logged on to the console session.
Even if no one is logged on to the console, you are logged on just as if you were sitting at the physical console.
To connect from the remote Windows Server based computer, open a command prompt, and then type the following command:. When you use this command, you open the Remote Desktop session, and when the logon is authenticated, you are connected to the console session that is running on the Windows Server based server.
If a user is currently working on the console session at the computer, you receive the following error message:. The user has been idled for number minutes. The desktop is unlocked. If you continue, this user's session will end and any unsaved data will be lost.
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