![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() For this reason, Windows must identify your USB drive as a “Mass Storage Device” in order for it to connect in passthrough mode. As I said in the opening paragraph, only one component can communicate with a USB device, so the Windows disk subsystem brokers I/O for all USB storage devices. Hyper-V can set up most USB disk drives in passthrough mode, but it does so via Windows’ storage subsystem. How to Add Hyper-V Passthrough Support for USB Drives As a result, we face special difficulties with USB in virtualized environments. USB devices expect to communicate with only one subsystem or application at a time. Other hardware components present a greater challenge for virtualization because they are not shared, even among separate applications. Even on non-virtualized systems, these resources are shared. It focuses on CPU, disk, and memory because all operating systems and applications require them. One of the chief features of virtualization is the abstraction of the hardware. ![]()
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