![]() ![]() ![]() I have also tested other USB-devices such as a memory-stick and it's simple and easy to use those over the network. In the image below you see the Raspberry Pi model B that I have used for this project in a case, with power and Ethernet plugged in and one USB-device, a USB-thermometer. So for under one hundred dollars you can run a USB-server in your network that also doesn't consume too much power. In the free trial-version you can connect one device and a popup will be displayed. And a license for using multiple devices with VirtualHere costs $29.00. The great thing about this solution is the low cost: the Raspberry Pi costs somewhere from $35 to $50, depending where you live and where you order it. When I was working with a Raspberry Pi recently I stumbled upon a program named VirtualHere USB Server which allows for remote connectivity to devices that are connected to a Raspberry Pi. To solve this problem several solutions have been around to access USB-devices remotely via the network. Also with vMotion your options are limited. For example with a failover the virtual machine would boot on another host and would not be able to connect to it's USB-device, which is still plugged into the failed host. By doing this you pin the virtual machine to the host. When you want to use USB devices in a virtual machine you don't want to connect them to your physical ESXi-host and then from there pass through to a virtual machine. ![]()
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