You have an Azure subscription.
You have an on-premises virtual machine named VM1. The settings for VM1 are shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit tab.)
You need to ensure that you can use the disks attached to VM1 as a template for Azure virtual machines.
What should you modify on VM1?
You have an on-premises virtual machine named VM1. The settings for VM1 are shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit tab.)
You need to ensure that you can use the disks attached to VM1 as a template for Azure virtual machines.
What should you modify on VM1?
- A. the memory
- B. the network adapters
- C. the hard drive
- D. the processor
- E. Integration Services
Correct Answer: C
From the exhibit we see that the disk is in the VHDX format.
Before you upload a Windows virtual machine (VM) from on-premises to Microsoft Azure, you must prepare the virtual hard disk (VHD or VHDX). Azure supports only generation 1 VMs that are in the VHD file format and have a fixed sized disk. The maximum size allowed for the VHD is 1,023 GB. You can convert a generation 1 VM from the VHDX file system to VHD and from a dynamically expanding disk to fixed-sized.
Reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/windows/prepare-for-upload-vhd-image