Published by: Cisco Press 800 East 96th Street Indianapolis, IN 46240 USA All rights reserved. To return to the previous page viewed, click the Back button on your device or app.Ĭonnecting Networks v6 Companion Guide Cisco Networking AcademyĬisco Press 800 East 96th Street Indianapolis, Indiana 46240 USAĬonnecting Networks v6 Companion Guide Cisco Networking Academy Copyright © 2018 Cisco Systems, Inc.
Click the link to view the print-fidelity code image. In addition to presenting code and configurations in the reflowable text format, we have included images of the code that mimic the presentation found in the print book therefore, where the reflowable format may compromise the presentation of the code listing, you will see a “Click here to view code image” link. To optimize the presentation of these elements, view the e-book in single-column, landscape mode and adjust the font size to the smallest setting. Many titles include programming code or configuration examples. For additional information about the settings and features on your reading device or app, visit the device manufacturer’s Web site. Settings that you can customize often include font, font size, single or double column, landscape or portrait mode, and figures that you can click or tap to enlarge. Use your device or app settings to customize the presentation to your liking. However, support for EPUB and its many features varies across reading devices and applications. T07:09:50.About This E-Book EPUB is an open, industry-standard format for e-books. T07:09:50.545+08:00| mks| I125: MKS-RenderMain: Collecting RenderOps caps from DX11Renderer T07:03:38.386+08:00| mks| I125: MKS-RenderMain: Collecting RenderOps caps from DX11Renderer This is the from the two different vmware log of VM startup. So if the workaround is successful, your VM log should not show an Intel HD 4600. You will likely see something similar in your VM vmware.log that it just sees the Intel graphics first and simply just creates a DX11 device.
When I switched Nvidia control panel to use Intel graphics as the preferred, it came first and Workstation simply created DX11 device context and sure enough the VM wasn't using the Nvidia GPU.
It looks like it just creates a DX11 device context on whatever the first render device Windows gives it. Under the hood, Workstation 12.5 for Windows is using DirectX 11 unless it is disabled in the vmx configuration. Hopefully the result is your VM instance is using Nvidia and you get to keep your dual display configuration.