VMware – what is it and how use it?
VMware provides cloud computing and virtualization software and services, their most important products are:
-
VMware Workstation Player, is a virtualization software package and can run existing virtual appliances and create its own virtual machines (which require an operating system to be installed to be functional). VMware Player is available for personal non-commercial use.
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VMware Workstation Pro, it enables users to set up virtual machines (VMs) on a single physical machine, and use them simultaneously along with the actual machine. Each virtual machine can execute its own operating system, including versions of Microsoft Windows, Linux, BSD, and MS-DOS.
You should have a valid license to work with VMware Workstation Pro. |
How to Resolve Issues for WORKSTATION and PLAYER (ANY KERNEL + ANY VERSION)
Installation
Resolving Conflict with Kernel
The problem here is always the same vmnet
and vmmon
doesn’t start well or doesn’t start at all, You should find a PATCH deal with changes in vmmon.c and vmnet.c because something breaks or add some parameters to these files, you can found the following:
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know what is your kernel version?:
uname -r
. -
know your Vmware version or install the latest.
/usr/bin/vmware -v
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Try to find the PATCH for a specific KERNEL version and Vmware.
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You have to deal with sources ( vmnet and vmmon ) and apply fixed in both of them.
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Try to find the fix for the specific product Vmware and Kernel version.
This guide try to help with all this boring stuff. |
Installation
This repository tracks patches needed to build VMware (Player and Workstation) host modules against recent kernels.
For Example, I would like to Patch Workstation:
wget https://github.com/mkubecek/vmware-host-modules/archive/workstation-x.y.z.tar.gz tar -xzf workstation-x.y.z.tar.gz cd vmware-host-modules-workstation-x.y.z make sudo make install
Based on your VMware product, replace “x.y.z” with your installed version and/or “workstation” with “player”. |
Deal with Kernel Updates
You can create a script to take of this after a kernel update. Save it as /etc/kernel/install.d/99-vmmodules.install
:
#!/usr/bin/bash export LANG=C COMMAND="$1" KERNEL_VERSION="$2" BOOT_DIR_ABS="$3" KERNEL_IMAGE="$4" ret=0 case "$COMMAND" in add) VMWARE_VERSION=$(cat /etc/vmware/config | grep player.product.version | sed '/.*\"\(.*\)\".*/ s//\1/g') [ -z VMWARE_VERSION ] && exit 0 mkdir -p /tmp/git; cd /tmp/git git clone -b workstation-${VMWARE_VERSION} https://github.com/mkubecek/vmware-host-modules.git cd vmware-host-modules make VM_UNAME=${KERNEL_VERSION} make install VM_UNAME=${KERNEL_VERSION} ((ret+=$?)) ;; remove) exit 0 ;; *) usage ret=1;; esac exit $ret
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