15Managing virtual mediaVirtual media allows the managed server to access media devices on the management station or ISO CD/DVD images on a networkshare as if they were devices on the managed server.Using the Virtual Media feature, you can:• Remotely access media connected to a remote system over the network• Install applications• Update drivers• Install an operating system on the managed systemThis is a licensed feature for rack and tower servers. It is available by default for blade servers.The key features are:• Virtual Media supports virtual optical drives (CD/DVD), floppy drives (including USB-based drives), and USB flash drives.• You can attach only one floppy, USB flash drive, image, or key and one optical drive on the management station to a managedsystem. Supported floppy drives include a floppy image or one available floppy drive. Supported optical drives include a maximumof one available optical drive or one ISO image file.The following figure shows a typical Virtual Media setup.• Virtual floppy media of iDRAC is not accessible from virtual machines.• Any connected Virtual Media emulates a physical device on the managed system.• On Windows-based managed systems, the Virtual Media drives are auto-mounted if they are attached and configured with adrive letter.• On Linux-based managed systems with some configurations, the Virtual Media drives are not auto-mounted. To manually mountthe drives, use the mount command.• All the virtual drive access requests from the managed system are directed to the management station across the network.• Virtual devices appear as two drives on the managed system without the media being installed in the drives.• You can share the management station CD/DVD drive (read only), but not a USB media, between two managed systems.• Virtual media requires a minimum available network bandwidth of 128 Kbps.• If LOM or NIC failover occurs, then the Virtual Media session may be disconnected.Figure 4. Virtual media setupSupported drives and devicesThe following table lists the drives supported through virtual media.233