Configure virtual local area networks for Hyper-V
Virtual local area networks (VLANs) offer one way to isolate network traffic. VLANs are configured in switches and routers that support 802.1q. If you configure multiple VLANs and want communication to occur between them, you need to configure the network devices to allow that.
You need the following to configure VLANs:
- A physical network adapter and driver that supports 802.1q VLAN tagging.
- A physical network switch that supports 802.1q VLAN tagging.
On the host, you configure the virtual switch to allow network traffic on the physical switch port. This is for the VLAN IDs that you want to use internally with virtual machines. Next, you configure the virtual machine to specify the VLAN that the virtual machine uses for all network communications.
To allow a virtual switch to use a VLAN
In Hyper-V Manager, select Virtual Switch Manager from the Actions pane on the right.
In Virtual Switch Manager, under Virtual Switches on the left, select a virtual switch connected to a physical network adapter that supports VLANs.
Under VLAN ID in the right pane, select Enable virtual LAN identification for management operating system and then type a number for the VLAN ID.
Select OK.
All traffic that goes through the physical network adapter connected to the virtual switch is tagged with the VLAN ID you set.
To allow a virtual machine to use a VLAN
In Hyper-V Manager, under Virtual Machines, right-click the appropriate virtual machine and select Settings. Or, select the machine and then select Settings under the machine name in the right pane.
On the Settings screen, under Hardware in the left pane, select a Network Adapter that has a virtual switch that's set up with a VLAN.
Under VLAN ID in the right pane, select Enable virtual LAN identification, and then type the same VLAN ID as the one you specified for the virtual switch.
Select OK.
If the virtual machine needs to use more VLANs, do one of the following:
Connect more virtual network adapters to appropriate virtual switches and assign the VLAN IDs. Make sure to configure the IP addresses correctly, and that the traffic you want to route through the VLAN also uses the correct IP address.
Configure the virtual network adapter in trunk mode by using the Set-VMNetworkAdapterVlan cmdlet.