Discrete device assignment
Host requirements are similar to the existing requirements for the SR-IOV feature in Hyper-V.
The processor must have either Intel's Extended Page Table (EPT) or AMD's Nested Page Table (NPT).
The chipset must have:
Interrupt remapping - Intel's VT-d with the
Interrupt Remapping capability (VT-d2) or any version of AMD I/O Memory Management Unit (I/O MMU).
DMA remapping - Intel's VT-d with Queued Invalidations or any AMD I/O MMU.
Access control services (ACS) on PCI Express root ports.
The firmware tables must expose the I/O MMU to the Windows hypervisor. Note that this feature might be turned off in the UEFI or BIOS. For instructions, see the hardware documentation or contact your hardware manufacturer.
Devices need GPU or non-volatile memory express (NVMe). For GPU, only certain devices support discrete device assignment. To verify, see the hardware documentation or contact your hardware manufacturer. For details about this feature, including how to use it and considerations, see the post "Discrete Device Assignment -- Description and background" in the Virtualization blog.
Ich habe leider noch nicht herausgefunden ob es auch mit älteren Chipsätzen als Skylake funktioniert: Bei meinem ML310e Gen8 geht es jedenfalls auch nicht