This MP builds from the MP from Kevin Holman:
https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/kevinholman/2014/10/16/faq-how-can-i-tell-which-servers-are-physical-or-virtual-in-scom/
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It detects Windows operatingsystems running as guests hosted on
- VMWare
- Hyper-V
- XEN
- Proxmox
- VirtualBox
and classifies them as 'Virtual Machines'
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.VMWare.Computer.Class --> Computer being hosted by VMWare
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.HyperV.Computer.Class --> Computer being hosted by Hyper-V
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.Xen.Computer.Class --> Computer being hosted by Xen
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.Proxmox.Computer.Class --> Computer being hosted by Proxmox
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.VirtualBox.Computer.Class --> Computer being hosted by VirtualBox
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.VMWare.Computers.Group --> Any Windows Computer running on a VMWare host
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.HyperV.Computers.Group --> Any Windows Computer running on a Hyper-V host
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.Xen.Computers.Group --> Any Windows Computer running on a Xen host
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.Proxmox.Computers.Group --> Any Windows Computer running on a Proxmox host
- LOST.Virtual.Windows.VirtualBox.Computers.Group --> Any Windows Computer running on a VirtualBox host
Download the file 'LOST.Virtual.Machine.mp' and import it as usually.
Don't install both Kevin's MP and this MP as the discoveries are somewhat the same.