Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Will Cooke
on 17 September 2018

Optimised Ubuntu Desktop images available in Microsoft Hyper-V gallery


Today we’re very pleased to announce that an optimised Ubuntu Desktop image is available from the Hyper-V gallery.  This will give an optimum experience when running Ubuntu Desktop as a guest on a Windows 10 Pro desktop host. From the Ubuntu Report data we know that a lot of people are using Ubuntu as a virtual machine, and so we want to make that experience as seamless as possible.

Our friends over at Microsoft have worked with XRDP upstream to add support for their Enhanced Session Mode, which provides tight integration between a Windows host and the Ubuntu virtual machine running in Hyper-V. The next obvious step was to create a bootable Hyper-V image of Ubuntu Desktop 18.04 LTS which includes XRDP pre-configured to take advantage of Enhanced Session Mode.

What are the benefits of Enhanced Session Mode?

  • Improved clipboard integration
  • Dynamic desktop resizing
  • Shared folders for easy host/guest file transfer
  • Improved mouse experience, seamlessly moving between the host and guest desktops

Thanks to the work Microsoft contributed to the open source XRDP project (an open source implementation of Microsoft’s own Remote Desktop Protocol) Hyper-V users benefit by using hv_sock, a byte-stream based communication mechanism between the host and the guest giving a high bandwidth interconnection between them.

The Ubuntu Desktop 18.04.1 LTS Hyper-V image is available in the Hyper-V Gallery on Windows 10 Pro.  Open the Hyper-V Gallery and choose Ubuntu from the list of operating systems:

Once booted you’ll be guided through setting up Ubuntu, including adding your user account, locale and time zone. When the first setup is complete Enhanced Session Mode will automatically be enabled and prompt you to select your display resolution. Once selected, you get an XRDP prompt to login, make sure that “Xorg” is selected from the drop down, enter the username and password that you created during setup and you’ll be logged into a full Ubuntu Desktop session.

For more information on Hyper-V check out the links from this Microsoft blog post.

 

Related posts


Michelle Anne Tabirao
20 December 2024

Building RAG with enterprise open source AI infrastructure

Data Platform Article

How to create a robust enterprise AI infrastructure for RAG systems using open source tooling?A highlight on how open source can help ...


Amir Abdel Baki
19 December 2024

Life at Canonical: Victoria Antipova’s perspective as a new joiner in Product Marketing

Ubuntu Article

Life at Canonical: Victoria Antipova’s perspective as a new joiner in Product Marketing ...


Matthew de Klerk
18 December 2024

What is patching automation?

Security Article

In software, patches are updates that are designed to overcome problems, flaws or vulnerabilities in the programming. Patch management is the process of gathering and applying these patches to the target software, devices or systems. ...