Difference between revisions of "Enhanced vMotion Compatibility (EVC)"

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VMware introduced the per-VM EVC feature in [[vSphere 6.7]] (2018), Virtual machine hardware version 14.
 
VMware introduced the per-VM EVC feature in [[vSphere 6.7]] (2018), Virtual machine hardware version 14.
  
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_CPU_microarchitectures
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* [[Intel]]® "[[Merom]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Penryn]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Nehalem]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Westmere]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Sandy Bridge]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Ivy Bridge]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Haswell]]" Generation
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* Intel® "[[Broadwell]]" Generation (2014)
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* Intel® "[[Skylake]]" Generation (2015-2019)
  
  
* Intel® "Merom" Generation
 
* Intel® "Penryn" Generation
 
* Intel® "Nehalem" Generation
 
* Intel® "Westmere" Generation
 
* Intel® "Sandy Bridge" Generation
 
* Intel® "Ivy Bridge" Generation
 
* Intel® "Haswell" Generation
 
* Intel® "Broadwell" Generation
 
* Intel® "Skylake" Generation
 
  
  

Latest revision as of 11:15, 8 April 2021

wikipedia:Enhanced vMotion Compatibility


  • EVC solves this by creating a baseline set to the least advanced processor configuration supported by all ESXi hosts in the cluster.


VMware introduced the per-VM EVC feature in vSphere 6.7 (2018), Virtual machine hardware version 14.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_CPU_microarchitectures



Related terms[edit]

See also[edit]

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