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Solaris 10 on Vmware 7 in Windows 7 x64: can't ping my default router !

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Fr3nc3sco

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Jan 7, 2011, 4:29:26 PM1/7/11
to
Hi all,

I've created a virtual machine using Vmware 7 on Windows 7 x64 installing
Solaris 10 (image downloaded today from oracle site): everything is fine
except the networking, I can't ping my default router and of course can't
connect to web.

I've set in vmware the network mode as "bridged", set everything on Solaris:
/etc/defaultrouter with 192.168.0.1, /etc/hostname.e1000g0, /etc/hosts ,
/etc/resolv.conf with 192.168.0.1, /etc/nsswitch.conf with "dns" before
"files" for hosts and ipnode.

Before I had a Windows XP SP3 system with Vmware 6, a 2008 release of
Solaris 10 and everything worked like a charm !

Thanks all for any help and best regards,
Ale


Bill Waddington

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Jan 7, 2011, 7:25:35 PM1/7/11
to

This probably isn't much help: I'm running Win 7 64 as a host, S10 U7
(vanilla DVD ISO downloaded from Sun/Oracle) with VM network mode
"NAT" and S10 networking set to DHCP (during the install). It's
working fine.

Bill
--
William D Waddington
william.w...@beezmo.com
"Even bugs...are unexpected signposts on
the long road of creativity..." - Ken Burtch

Bill Waddington

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Jan 7, 2011, 7:28:00 PM1/7/11
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On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 16:25:35 -0800, Bill Waddington
<william.w...@beezmo.com> wrote:

>On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 21:29:26 GMT, "Fr3nc3sco" <fra...@tin.it> wrote:
>
>>Hi all,
>>
>>I've created a virtual machine using Vmware 7 on Windows 7 x64 installing
>>Solaris 10 (image downloaded today from oracle site): everything is fine
>>except the networking, I can't ping my default router and of course can't
>>connect to web.
>>
>>I've set in vmware the network mode as "bridged", set everything on Solaris:
>>/etc/defaultrouter with 192.168.0.1, /etc/hostname.e1000g0, /etc/hosts ,
>>/etc/resolv.conf with 192.168.0.1, /etc/nsswitch.conf with "dns" before
>>"files" for hosts and ipnode.
>>
>>Before I had a Windows XP SP3 system with Vmware 6, a 2008 release of
>>Solaris 10 and everything worked like a charm !
>>
>>Thanks all for any help and best regards,
>>Ale
>>
>
>This probably isn't much help: I'm running Win 7 64 as a host, S10 U7
>(vanilla DVD ISO downloaded from Sun/Oracle) with VM network mode
>"NAT" and S10 networking set to DHCP (during the install). It's
>working fine.

Sorry, forgot to say VMWare Player 3.

Alessandro

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Jan 7, 2011, 7:50:20 PM1/7/11
to

>>
>> This probably isn't much help: I'm running Win 7 64 as a host, S10 U7
>> (vanilla DVD ISO downloaded from Sun/Oracle) with VM network mode
>> "NAT" and S10 networking set to DHCP (during the install). It's
>> working fine.
>
> Sorry, forgot to say VMWare Player 3.
>
> Bill

Interesting ... have you set anything in Win 7 about the two vmware
adapters ("vmnet 1" and "vmnet 8") ?
I'm using "bridge" mode and not NAT, but I've discovered that both
adapters doesn't have checked in Properties "vmware bridge protocol" ...

And about vmware tools ? aren't they mandatory for networking, right ?

Thanks
Ale

Chris Ridd

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Jan 8, 2011, 5:09:44 AM1/8/11
to

No, consider them more of an optimisation.

What network device does the VM see? It is "better" if you can get the
VM using a virtual e1000g ("Intel Pro/1000") NIC, which VMware does
support.

The <http://www.easyvmx.com/easyvmx.shtml> site lets you create a VMX
file using an e1000g interface, if that helps.

--
Chris

Alessandro

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Jan 8, 2011, 5:14:34 AM1/8/11
to

> What network device does the VM see? It is "better" if you can get the
> VM using a virtual e1000g ("Intel Pro/1000") NIC, which VMware does
> support.

The VM sees "e1000g0" NIC ... anyway I'm trying to enable DHCP and set
"NAT" instead of "bridged"

Alessandro

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Jan 8, 2011, 10:47:46 AM1/8/11
to
Il 08/01/2011 01:50, Alessandro ha scritto:
>
>>>
>>> This probably isn't much help: I'm running Win 7 64 as a host, S10 U7
>>> (vanilla DVD ISO downloaded from Sun/Oracle) with VM network mode
>>> "NAT" and S10 networking set to DHCP (during the install). It's
>>> working fine.
>>
>> Sorry, forgot to say VMWare Player 3.
>>
>> Bill


Guys,
at the end I've succeeded: using NAT mode it works fine !

Now just to understand, it's not so clear to me how it works (even if I
know NAT principles), maybe you could help me.
We have:

- physical NIC (host-win7), 192.168.0.3 which reaches my router and internet
- adpter VMnet8 (host-win7), 192.168.182.1. Which purposes ??
- virtual NIC (guest-sol10), 192.168.182.150
- vmnet8 gateway, 192.168.182.2 used as gateway and DNS server in my
virtual machine

I can't understand the network role of "adapter VMnet8", I would have
used it as gateway and DNS server but instead I need to use
192.168.182.2 as defined in Virtual Netowrk Editor.

Thanks all,
Ale

Andrew Owen

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Jan 10, 2011, 12:56:07 PM1/10/11
to
Interesting. I never managed to get Solaris to work properly on VMware Fusion on MacOS X. I ended up using Virtual Box. Makes sense that Oracle's OS would work best on Oracle's VM. Nope, still can't get used to saying Oracle instead of Sun.

Chris Ridd

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Jan 10, 2011, 2:47:46 PM1/10/11
to

Really? Vbox's guest additions for Solaris were pretty unusable when I
last tried, often completely screwing up guest OS updates.

OTOH VMware Fusion hosts Solaris, OpenSolaris, OpenIndiana, Solaris 11
Express guests like a champ. (Not all at the same time :-)
--
Chris

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