Thanks.
--
Scott Barker
320MB is enough for the guests, but the documentation clearly states that
there's additional overhead, ranging from "a few megabytes to over 10
megabytes" per guest. At 5 X 64MB, you've hit the 320MB barrier already, so
your results are consistent with the documentation. Can you set reserved
memory any higher?
On a 512MB system, I can set it to 409MB for guests. As my host doesn't
require much, I do wish I could set it a bit higher, but it works well
within those parameters.
- Bob
I think if you pull up the Advanced pane and tell it to turn off both of
those checks, it'll let you try to do anything you want, including
configuring a VM with more memory than the host (a bad idea).
Yours,
Jeremy.
--
I do work for VMware, but I read and contribute to the vmware.* newsgroups
on a voluntary basis in my spare time. Thus, unless I explicitly otherwise
indicate, I am speaking solely for and as myself. Since I do contribute in
my spare time, please understand if I do not reply to personal e-mail.
It won't let me set it higher than 327Mb, which still doesn't let me run 6
virtual machines. I guess I'll just have to live with it.
--
Scott Barker sco...@m-tech.ab.ca
Technology Manager sco...@psynch.com
Consistent with the documentation, and 57MB for the host _is_ a reasonable
amount. I'd hate to starve it out!
Of course, with the price of RAM these days, throwing 512MB at the beast
isn't as bad as it used to be. For as much as I use VMware, that was a hell
of a lot less than the equivalent number of physical PCs.
The equally important question is how much the guests need. I've found that
I can run many (7-8) guests concurrently by figuring out exactly what each
needs and installing the minimal configuration required. Debian Linux is
particuarly frugal, both in memory and disk space requirements. I just have
to avoid loading X and other gadgetry when I really want to run a simple
mail server.
- Bob