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Table Of Contents
Enabling VBS is a process that involves first enabling VBS in the virtual machine then enabling VBS in
the guest OS.
Note New virtual machines configured for Windows 10 and Windows Server 2016 on hardware versions
less than version 14 are created using Legacy BIOS by default. If you change the virtual machine's
firmware type from Legacy BIOS to UEFI, you must reinstall the guest operating system.
Prerequisites
Intel hosts are recommended. See Virtualization-based Security Best Practices for acceptable CPUs.
The virtual machine must have been created using hardware version 14 or later, UEFI firmware, and one
of the following supported guest operating systems:
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Windows 10 (64 bit)
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Windows Server 2016 (64 bit)
Procedure
1 In the vSphere Client, browse to the virtual machine.
2 Right-click the virtual machine and select Edit Settings.
3 Click the VM Options tab.
4 Check the Enable check box for Virtualization Based Security.
5 Click OK.
Confirm that the virtual machine's Summary tab displays "VBS true" in the Guest OS description.
What to do next
See Enable Virtualization-based Security on the Guest Operating System.
Enable Virtualization-based Security on the Guest
Operating System
You can enable Microsoft virtualization-based security (VBS) for supported Windows guest operating
systems.
You enable VBS from within the Windows Guest OS. Windows configures and enforces VBS through a
Group Policy Object (GPO). The GPO gives you the ability to turn off and on the various services, such as
Secure Boot, Device Guard, and Credential Guard, that VBS offers. Certain Windows versions also
require you to perform the additional step of enabling the Hyper-V platform.
See Microsoft's documentation about deploying Device Guard to enable virtualization-based security for
details.
Prerequisites
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Ensure that virtualization-based security has been enabled on the virtual machine.
vSphere Security
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