Subject: RE: NetBSD on VMWare
To: 'Julian C. Dunn - Lists' <lists@aquezada.com>
From: Ambarish Malpani <ambarish@caymas.com>
List: netbsd-help
Date: 06/23/2003 13:37:52
Hi Julian,
Responses inline.
Regards,
Ambarish
> -----Original Message-----
> From: netbsd-help-owner@netbsd.org
> [mailto:netbsd-help-owner@netbsd.org] On Behalf Of Julian C.
> Dunn - Lists
> Sent: Friday, June 20, 2003 9:34 PM
> To: netbsd-help@netbsd.org
> Subject: Re: NetBSD on VMWare
>
>
> On Fri, 2003-06-20 at 19:16, Ambarish Malpani wrote:
> > I have been running NetBSD on VMWare (on Win2K) for
> about 4 months
> > now and am very, very happy with it.
>
> Just curious, what version of VMWare and NetBSD are you
> using? I had problems booting NetBSD 1.6.1 as a guest under
> VMWare Workstation 4. (The VMWare virtual IDE disk is not
> recognized by NetBSD, and if you use a virtual SCSI disk,
> NetBSD performs SCSI function calls which cause the virtual
> Buslogic driver to blow up, thereby crashing VMWare.)
I was using Workstation 3 and upgraded to Workstation 4. Both
worked just fine. I am on NetBSD 1.6.1. Used the virtual IDE
disk.
>
> > 1. Can't get vmware tools for NetBSD. I don't care much for the
> > graphics acceleration, but I do care about the fact that
> the time on
> > my virtual NetBSD box get completely screwed up. Running
> ntpd doesn't
> > help at all.
>
> Did you try turning on Linux emulation in the NetBSD guest
> and trying the Linux VMWare tools. I believe this is what
> FreeBSD does when it's a guest. Examine the relevant ports
> (vmware-guestd, linux-vmware-toolbox or whatever) under FreeBSD.
Haven't done that at yet. Will try it next.
>
> > 2. (I think), VMWare acts like I have a 10Mbps networking
> card, even
> > though I have a 100Mbps card. This slows down my file
> transfer speed
> > more than it needs to....
>
> Have you verified this analytically, or are you just
> hypothesizing due to the fact that VMWare emulates an AMD PCNet card?
Got this from their messages, but on measuring the speed of transfer,
I do see rates faster than 2MBps (16Mbps), so maybe they do use
the interface at the best speed they can get out of it.
>
> - Julian
>
> --
> [ Julian C. Dunn <jdunn@aquezada.com> * <julian@dreaming.org> ]
> [ WWW: http://www.aquezada.com/staff/julian/ * PGP: 0xFDC205B9 ]
> [ "sometimes you win, sometimes you lose / and most times ]
> [ you choose between the two" - carole king, "sweet seasons" ]
Thanks for your help,
Regards,
Ambarish
>