Hi Chris,
Never connect your iSCSI LUN to the Hyper-V host and use virtual VM disks as backup storage. If you lose the host along with the VMs, you’d first have to deploy a new Hyper-V server and rebuild a new VM before you could access your backup disks again. So this should only be option 2 if you have no other choice than Synology iSCSI LUNs as backup storage.
Consider using a Linux VM (or, starting with v13.1, our Infrastructure Appliance) as a Hardened Repository to add another protection layer (immutable backups). Also make sure the Synology admin UI is properly protected (strong passwords, MFA), and the same applies to the Hyper-V management console—an attacker with admin access to the Hyper-V server can easily take over the virtual machines.
Another option for environments where budget is a problem, you could connect iSCSI to the Hyper-V host and use the Hyper-V host as a backup repository. I don't like this design, but sometimes small customers are doing it. Keep in mind, backups are not immutable and protected. An Attacker on the Hyper-V host will be able to delete them.
Best regards,
Fabian
Never connect your iSCSI LUN to the Hyper-V host and use virtual VM disks as backup storage. If you lose the host along with the VMs, you’d first have to deploy a new Hyper-V server and rebuild a new VM before you could access your backup disks again. So this should only be option 2 if you have no other choice than Synology iSCSI LUNs as backup storage.
Consider using a Linux VM (or, starting with v13.1, our Infrastructure Appliance) as a Hardened Repository to add another protection layer (immutable backups). Also make sure the Synology admin UI is properly protected (strong passwords, MFA), and the same applies to the Hyper-V management console—an attacker with admin access to the Hyper-V server can easily take over the virtual machines.
Another option for environments where budget is a problem, you could connect iSCSI to the Hyper-V host and use the Hyper-V host as a backup repository. I don't like this design, but sometimes small customers are doing it. Keep in mind, backups are not immutable and protected. An Attacker on the Hyper-V host will be able to delete them.
Best regards,
Fabian
Statistics: Posted by Mildur — May 05, 2026 7:49 am







