

You might want to verify that the Hyper-V specific video driver is, in fact, loaded and in use. Has anyone else been able to get to the bottom of this? If there's any other information I can provide, please let me know. More discussion here - one answer suggests Hyper-V wasn't meant to have good video?

Some guy describing the same problem and getting no real answers: This thread is about a year and a half old now, and it seems like something that was in a testing phase at the time. A few I have found could be outdated or might not apply in this case. I have searched many places online and in this forum for similar questions. The guest, the graphics adapter is reported as "Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe (LLVM 3.3, 128 bits)", which I'm guessing is just a generic or default device. When I check the system details from within
How to check video driver linux mint install#
Resolution for virtual machines." I understand these versions of CENTOS and Ubuntu have LIS built in and I should not have to install anything further to take advantage of the features LIS provides. This document both CENTOS 7 and Ubuntu 14.04 feature a "Hyper-V-specific video device" which is described as providing " high-performance graphics and superior The cursor movement is also lagging and not smooth. For example if I bring up a YouTube video it is pretty smooth in a Windows guest but extremely slowĪnd choppy in the Linux guests. In both cases, graphics performance was pretty terrible, much worse than the Windows guests I have.

The virtual machine management console and through VNC. Both installs have the desktop environments enabled, and I have connected to them through I am using Hyper-V Server 2012 R2 and I have a couple Linux guests - CENTOS 7 and Ubuntu 14.04. Hello, my question is regarding poor video performance on Linux guests.
