Installing Windows 8 on SCSI Virtual Drive

Discussion in 'Installation and Configuration of Parallels Desktop' started by Heisenberg, Aug 1, 2013.

  1. Heisenberg

    Heisenberg Bit poster

    Messages:
    2
    I am a developer using Windows 8 to develop with Visual Studio 2012 and I am trying to optimise performance to speed up building/compiling and perhaps lower the resource requirement on my Mac.

    From what I've read, the SCSI virtual drive emulator performs better than the SATA and the IDE emulator. I have created a new VM and have tried to make the boot drive a SCSI drive to improve overall performance but Windows 8 does not seem to see that SCSI device. I can't find drivers to load because I don't know what driver I should use for Parallels 8 desktop SCSI drive driver.

    - Firstly, can anyone please confirm that my information is correct and that SCSI does perform better than SATA and IDE
    - If this is the case, can someone please help me configure the SATA drive to be seen by the Windows installation so that I can install Windows on it

    Thanks in advance

    OSX 10.8.4 & Windows 8 Enterprise
    iMac 27"
    3.1GHz i5
    16GB Memory
    Parallels Desktop 8
     
    Last edited: Aug 2, 2013
  2. JoacimB

    JoacimB Junior Member

    Messages:
    17
    Did you ever figure this out?

    On earlier versions of Parallels the general recommendation, as I understod it, was to use SCSI instead. I did so buy just switching the interface, but as you've found out this no longer works.

    Anyone know how to solve this?
     
  3. Heisenberg

    Heisenberg Bit poster

    Messages:
    2
    Hi JoacimB,

    Unfortunately I never worked this out.
    I converted my drive to a static side drive and I used SATA - it seems okay.
    As a developer though, one could always use the extra performance.

    I couldn't even find evidence that installing Windows 8 on a SCSI would even be faster with the more recent versions of Parallels.

    Please let me know if you find anything.

    H
     

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