I'd like to display Virtual Machines (VMWare Workstation on Windows 7 host) as their own windows instead of as tabs in the VMWare Workstation menu, similar to how VMs are handled with VMWare Fustion on the Mac.
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Just drag the tab out of the VMWare window and take it to the other monitor. If that's what you mean. It will create a new solitary window with the other running OS in it. Have done that on Ubuntu, and it should work the same for Windows 7.
Create a new shortcut to your vmware.exe and modify the target line under shortcut properties.
Append -n which tells vmware to open a new window instead of a new tab. At last add the path to the VM you wish to open.
Dragging tabs does not work for me in WS 10, neither over the desktop, nor into a new window. Opening a new window already starts a second copy of vmware.exe, so there is no difference to doing that manually.
Using VMware 10 I was able to have this happen by going to File->New Window, which should be the second option in the file drop-down menu, which should be in the upper-left hand corner. Then, you simply activate the system through the new window that opens up. But beware! If your original instance of VMware still has ownership, then your second instance won't be able to take permission. Hope this helps! Wish I could tell you authoritatively how to change ownership. What worked for me was removing (right click the VM in the side-bar) from the original VM instance, then simply resuming it in the new one. I'm worried about how that might come to bite me in the future, but we'll see.
If you run vmware workstation under linux you can just grab the VM tab and drag it to a new window. Comes in real handy when working with multiple monitors or when you just want to alt tab. Now for some unknown reason this is NOT possible under windows. Yeah you read that right, a simple feature like this seems to be OS dependent. There are some threads out there with people asking exactly this question:
The virtual network interfaces you select depend on how or if you want to connect to the rest of your network. In my opinion the cleanest way is to connect to VMnet8 which connects to your physical network by NAT.
When I expanded the files and opened the .vmx file in VMware workstation it had four network adapters, two on VMnet2, which is a private network seen only by VMs with interfaces on it, and two on VMnet0, which is bridged to the physical network. If you select the bridged network you will need to get the configuration from your network administrator.
You are running the Cluster mode simulator. It sounds like what you really want is the 7-mode simulator. Download and install the 7-mode simulator, then it will look like the existing ONTAP 7 or ONTAP 8 filers.
If you have a NetApp NOW account you can download from here: This page has links for 7-mode and C-mode for versions 8.0, 8.0.1, 8.0.3 and 8.1, as well documentation and license files for the simulator.
I have installed Prime and ISE as well in the same network of WLC. Ping to all 3 applications works fine, however when it comes to GUI access it works only for Prime and ISE and fails continuously for WLC :(
That is for host only access to the vWLC, I'm looking for this to be accessible from my network so that test APs can connect. To be clear, that works and APs can connect and broadcast SSIDs which work in FlexConnect, it's just I cannot manage the VM on the Management interface, I need to use the Service Port IP instead.
Hi Muhammed, i ve recently install a lab with vmware workstation mounting a vWLC also. I verified the same issue. But i was able to found a workaround. I just set up a new virtual network adapter with a new ip range on vmware workstation. Then attached service-port to thart vmnet. For ap management and control i just used the default management interface inband (the ap-manager interface by default as well) attached to my wifi network card (my network lan for example). Then i could use both interfaces for management ( service-port ) and Capwap control (management inband).
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