vmware virtualization blues

As a Linux developer I’m loathe to use Windows, but as a musician I’ve
finally decided to give in. I have various devices that have special non
file type USB drivers for Windows as well as music production software
now. I tried VirtualBox which was easy to set up but the USB
functionality is not 100%. So I thought I’d try vmware server. I read
opensuse howtos and ‘Install VMware server 2 in Suse / openSUSE 11 & USB
support’ (http://www.swerdna.net.au/linhowtovmwareserversuse.html). I’ve
done everything carefully. I downloaded the latest RPM from vmware and
followed the install which completes only failing to build vsock which
it says is not critical. Starting with /etc/init.d/vmware start gives me
this.

Code:

Starting VMware services:
Virtual machine monitor failed
Virtual machine communication interface done
Virtual ethernet failed
Bridged networking on /dev/vmnet0 done


That is disturbing by maybe those failures are due to not being set up.
Using Firefox as advised and myself as the user it continually rejects
me. Isn’t there a way to circumvent this from localhost? BTW it fails to
show for localhost but only 127.0.0.1. Possibly there is some issue with
needing the virtual internet working to configure. Shutting down gives
me this.

Code:

Stopping VMware autostart virtual machines:
Virtual machines failed
Stopping VMware management services:
VMware Virtual Infrastructure Web Access
VMware Server Host Agent failed
Stopping VMware services:
VMware Authentication Daemon done
Virtual machine communication interface done
Virtual machine monitor done
Bridged networking on /dev/vmnet0 done
Host network detection done
Virtual ethernet failed


Seemingly some of these might be expected as it’s not configured but
vmnet-bridge and vmware-hostd have to be manually killed if I want to
try configuring again. I’ve combed all the posts I could search and
confirmed I’ve done everything relevant for opensuse 11.1.

I’m running an AMD Phenom Quad 2500 64 bit with 8GB RAM. I even made
out with the devil and bought Vista 64 bit to try as well as my copy of
XP. I’m now going to install Vista to dual boot on another drive and
rely on opensuse to boot manage it. I’ve read it may be possible to use
either a VirtualBox image or a phisical install with vmware server. It
seemed pointless to install XP 32 bit on this machine. I am running
databases for my business and doing Linux software development so I’d
like to not have to dual boot to run my studio. TIA


kittyhooch

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Don’t feel to bad about yourself. Though I think you will be sadly
disappointed by Vista. Though you have the advantage of RAM overkill,
well for most of us it is, but Vista will love it.

Windows has it’s place and credit when due, XP has been and still is a
great bit of work. Pretty much All I see in the business workplace is
XP, often a downgrade from Vista.

Not for me of course. But if you need it.

There are, incidentally spins I think in Ubuntu that focus on your line
of work. But I dare say its focus is on apps like for like with windows,
rather than usb drivers.
‘Home | Ubuntu Studio’ (http://ubuntustudio.org/)


Box: Linux 2.6.27.7-9 i686 | OS 11.1 | (KDE3.5.10) “33.2” | M2N4-SLI |
AMD 64 X2 5200+ | nVidia 8500GT | 2GB RAM
Lap: OS 11.1 | Celeron 550 | (KDE4.1.87)“3.1” | Intel 965 GM | Lenovo
R61e | 3GB RAM

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Tried vmware for music but gave up as i was unable to get my firewire
sound card an hardware dongles. Had to use xp tried vista but hated it.
Only have 4 gb ram but it works fine with Cubase 4 which i use
You could try getting the 64 bit version of XP have it on my developmen
machine on work. Pretty similar specs to yours intel quad core 8 gb. Use
vmware for different environments to test the software

/Geoff


Core 2 Duo 3.16GHz 4GB DDR2 2.5 TB GeForce 7600 GS OS 11.1 x86_64
KDE4.2 beta2 ‘Smolt specs’ (http://tinyurl.com/9hgxhl)

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The problem is the first part of the howto: the kernel part is not
working (not for me)… I made a little manual, it’s in dutch, but i’m
sure you can read the commands :wink:

The second part of this howto is very interesting, i’ll have a look
further into it


inktvis75

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kittyhooch;1925538 Wrote:
> … Starting with /etc/init.d/vmware start gives me this.
> >
Code:

> > Starting VMware services:
> Virtual machine monitor failed
> Virtual machine communication interface done
> Virtual ethernet failed
> Bridged networking on /dev/vmnet0 done
>

> >
> …
That message usually occurs after a failed run of vmware-config.pl or
if a kernel-update has come in. You need to run it again.

Ensure that during the re-run that you choose yourself as the admin
manager for the VMachines.

Check you changed the line in /etc/sysconfig/boot to RUN_PARALLEL=“yes”

In Yast → System → System Services (Runlevel) → Expert: set
service vmware to 2, 3 and 5. Set all the other vmware-related services
to off and no runlevels.

If you prefer to start it occasionally rather than at boot. Set the
runlevels for vmware to no runlevels and the service to off. Then you
can start it with /etc/init.d/vmware start in a root console.

The main thing here is I think that a kernel-type update has occurred
or the install failed. So you need I think to run vmware-config.pl
again.

Check rpms installed for: kernel-source, make, gcc, gcc-c++ (most
likely are)


‘Drop in and visit some time’
(http://www.swerdna.net.au/linux.html).

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I have run vmware-config.pl more times than I have tried variations on
VirtualBox. I have been getting indications of success with no failures
on at the end. However I have been getting an error when it tries to
build vsock. I mentioned this already. It says it’s optional. The funny
thing is it says it may have to do with the kernel not matching due to
an update. I found another post on the web suggesting to get kernel
sources, clone the running configuration and build the sources so this
would match. I wish I could remember the link as it was days of hell
ago. Anyway that appeared to have worked, but possibly it didn’t.

This brings up two pivotal points to explore. First what path does this
need for kernel headers. It seems it gets them from an object directory,
not the original source path and it builds. Can someone give me a
verifiable reference directory? The other point is the question of how
to insure my kernel and headers match. My running kernel seems fine and
I have built a lot of kernels with Gentoo and other distributions. I’ve
also hosed it a few times. Any reference for the least invasive and most
probable successful course here? Rebuild and install? I guess I could
look at the docs.

Thanks, and for the reference as to whether I will like Vista, Get a
life! I have been a project lead on some of the more popular open source
projects (Quanta & Kommander) for the last 8 years precisely because I
believe in free as in GPL and I detest the Microsoft culture. I have
grown to hate Windows the more I use it, but the best sequencer on Linux
is Rosegarden which crashes on opensuse and I’ve never got fully working
on anything including Gentoo. Even so it’s no Cakewalk Sonar and I don’t
think I’m likely to see a GPL’d competitor to Melodyne. It’s not easy
for me dual booting to Vista… Well it is since I fixed grub, but I
didn’t want to do this and I didn’t want to spendover a thousand dollars
on software for a platform I hate. That said I have to give Microsoft
it’s due. In spite of needing to reboot, a little bit of inconsistent
behavior with drivers and only one desktop I would say over all there
are things I really like about Vista and it’s by far the best I’ve seen
from them. It also exposes why even if opensuse isn’t as aesthetically
decorated it still does a lot of stuff better out of the box. It’s all
academic though. If I want to run this software it’s either cough up for
a mac or use my current system. $100 to the evil empire or $2000 to
their little brother.


kittyhooch

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There’s a patch for the vsock thing here:
‘Getting VMware to run on openSUSE 11.1 - Page 2 - openSUSE Forums’
(http://tinyurl.com/9ywdlk)

There’s a mix of VM workstation and Server 2 discussions starting
here:
‘Getting VMware to run on openSUSE 11.1 - openSUSE Forums’
(http://tinyurl.com/7u364e)
and running about 4 pages, including I think, compilations.


‘Drop in and visit some time’
(http://www.swerdna.net.au/linux.html).

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try this:

Open a terminal and as a superuser type

mv /usr/lib/vmware/modules/binary /usr/lib/vmware/modules/binary.old

Now start vmware, it will rebuild all the modules. Note you have to
have kernel development installed, and it works best if you actually
build the kernel, don’t have to install it just build it.

make menuconfig (exit saving config, don’t have to change anything)
make
make modules

Now when you remove the modules/binary directory it should have all the
proper objects and symbols to properly compile the modules vmware needs.


silenuz

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I’m just curious, but is there any reason why you are using VMware
Server rather than VMware Workstation? With Workstation I am able to run
Windows XP (for SolidWorks and MS Office) just fine, and with the new
version you no longer need to mess with the vmware-config nonsense, it
just ran like it should. Originally I was having trouble with the
vmware-config stuff as well, so I switched back to VirtualBox, but it
still can’t handle the graphics in SolidWorks, so I switched back to
VMware Workstation 6.5.1 and it ran just fine right away, no more
vmware-config. It seems to me that if you are just running music
programs that wouldn’t require a server, but I don’t have any experience
with that.


tsteiner2

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