2- Declare Windows 7 virtual machine. First, you need to open the VirtualBox, select New to create a new virtual machine. Choose the number of RAMs to be provided to the virtual machine. Next, create a virtual hard disk for your virtual machine. Select the position where your virtual disk file will be created and designate the size of your. This evaluation virtual machine includes: Windows 10 Enterprise Evaluation 21H1 (10.0.20348.0) Windows 10 SDK, version 2104 (10.0.20348.0) Visual Studio 2019 (latest as of 7/08/21) with the UWP,.NET desktop, and Azure workflows enabled and also includes the Windows Template Studio extension. Visual Studio Code (latest as of 7/08/21). How to Activate GodMode in Windows. Make a new folder, anywhere you like. To do this, right-click or tap-and-hold on any empty space in any folder in Windows, and choose New Folder. You need to make a new folder right now, not just use an existing folder that already has files and folders in it. If you proceed to Step 2 using a folder that. Self-Installing Windows OVA & ISO. Because I can't distribute Windows. This is an Virtual Machine in OVA format that will install Windows on top of itself. I wrote this as an alternative to packer. This OVA basically downloads the evaluation version of the Windows version you select to one drive as installation media and then.
-->Important
This content applies to Azure Virtual Desktop with Azure Resource Manager Azure Virtual Desktop objects. If you're using Azure Virtual Desktop (classic) without Azure Resource Manager objects, see this article.
The process to deploy a Windows 7 virtual machine (VM) on Azure Virtual Desktop is slightly different than for VMs running later versions of Windows. This guide will tell you how to deploy Windows 7.
Prerequisites
Before you start, follow the instructions in Create a host pool with PowerShell to create a host pool. If you're using the portal, follow the instructions in steps 1 through 9 of Create a host pool using the Azure portal. After that, select Review + Create to create an empty host pool.
Configure a Windows 7 virtual machine
Once you've done the prerequisites, you're ready to configure your Windows 7 VM for deployment on Azure Virtual Desktop.
To set up a Windows 7 VM on Azure Virtual Desktop:
Sign in to the Azure portal and either search for the Windows 7 Enterprise image or upload your own customized Windows 7 Enterprise (x64) image.
Deploy one or multiple virtual machines with Windows 7 Enterprise as its host operating system. Make sure the virtual machines allow Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) (the TCP/3389 port).
Connect to the Windows 7 Enterprise host using the RDP and authenticate with the credentials you defined while configuring your deployment.
Add the account you used while connecting to the host with RDP to the 'Remote Desktop User' group. If you don't add the account, you might not be able to connect to the VM after you join it to your Active Directory domain.
Go to Windows Update on your VM.
Install all Windows Updates in the Important category.
Install all Windows Updates in the Optional category (excluding language packs). This process installs the Remote Desktop Protocol 8.0 update (KB2592687) that you need to complete these instructions.
Open the Local Group Policy Editor and navigate to Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Remote Desktop Services > Remote Desktop Session Host > Remote Session Environment.
Enable the Remote Desktop Protocol 8.0 policy.
Join this VM to your Active Directory domain.
Restart the virtual machine by running the following command:
Follow the instructions here to get a registration token.
- If you'd rather use the Azure portal, you can also go to the Overview page of the host pool you want to add the VM to and create a token there.
Download the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent for Windows 7.
Download the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent Manager for Windows 7.
Open the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent installer and follow the instructions. When prompted, give the registration key you created in step 12.
Open the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent Manager and follow the instructions.
Optionally, block the TCP/3389 port to remove direct Remote Desktop Protocol access to the VM.
Optionally, confirm that your .NET framework is at least version 4.7.2. Updating your framework is especially important if you're creating a custom image.
Next steps
Your Azure Virtual Desktop deployment is now ready to use. Download the latest version of the Azure Virtual Desktop client to get started.
For a list of known issues and troubleshooting instructions for Windows 7 on Azure Virtual Desktop, see our troubleshooting article at Troubleshoot Windows 7 virtual machines in Azure Virtual Desktop.
Windows 7 Ova
-->Important
Windows 7 Ova File
This content applies to Azure Virtual Desktop with Azure Resource Manager Azure Virtual Desktop objects. If you're using Azure Virtual Desktop (classic) without Azure Resource Manager objects, see this article.
The process to deploy a Windows 7 virtual machine (VM) on Azure Virtual Desktop is slightly different than for VMs running later versions of Windows. This guide will tell you how to deploy Windows 7.
Prerequisites
Before you start, follow the instructions in Create a host pool with PowerShell to create a host pool. If you're using the portal, follow the instructions in steps 1 through 9 of Create a host pool using the Azure portal. After that, select Review + Create to create an empty host pool.
Configure a Windows 7 virtual machine
Once you've done the prerequisites, you're ready to configure your Windows 7 VM for deployment on Azure Virtual Desktop.
To set up a Windows 7 VM on Azure Virtual Desktop:
Sign in to the Azure portal and either search for the Windows 7 Enterprise image or upload your own customized Windows 7 Enterprise (x64) image.
Deploy one or multiple virtual machines with Windows 7 Enterprise as its host operating system. Make sure the virtual machines allow Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) (the TCP/3389 port).
Connect to the Windows 7 Enterprise host using the RDP and authenticate with the credentials you defined while configuring your deployment.
Add the account you used while connecting to the host with RDP to the 'Remote Desktop User' group. If you don't add the account, you might not be able to connect to the VM after you join it to your Active Directory domain.
Go to Windows Update on your VM.
Install all Windows Updates in the Important category.
Install all Windows Updates in the Optional category (excluding language packs). This process installs the Remote Desktop Protocol 8.0 update (KB2592687) that you need to complete these instructions.
Open the Local Group Policy Editor and navigate to Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Remote Desktop Services > Remote Desktop Session Host > Remote Session Environment.
Enable the Remote Desktop Protocol 8.0 policy.
Join this VM to your Active Directory domain.
Restart the virtual machine by running the following command:
Follow the instructions here to get a registration token.
- If you'd rather use the Azure portal, you can also go to the Overview page of the host pool you want to add the VM to and create a token there.
Download the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent for Windows 7.
Download the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent Manager for Windows 7.
Open the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent installer and follow the instructions. When prompted, give the registration key you created in step 12.
Open the Azure Virtual Desktop Agent Manager and follow the instructions.
Optionally, block the TCP/3389 port to remove direct Remote Desktop Protocol access to the VM.
Optionally, confirm that your .NET framework is at least version 4.7.2. Updating your framework is especially important if you're creating a custom image.
Next steps
Your Azure Virtual Desktop deployment is now ready to use. Download the latest version of the Azure Virtual Desktop client to get started.
For a list of known issues and troubleshooting instructions for Windows 7 on Azure Virtual Desktop, see our troubleshooting article at Troubleshoot Windows 7 virtual machines in Azure Virtual Desktop.