Marko Vojinovic wrote:
On Sunday 06 December 2009 16:11:11 Greg Woods wrote:
I'm guessing I could set up a VM that has a real IP address rather than
using NAT, but the GUIs don't generally support this and I haven't yet
learned how to create a VM or a virtual network from the command line.
If I did that I could possibly sync to a VM via wireless instead of USB,
but this is now wandering far from the original question.
In VirtualBox you set this up as follows:
* open VirtualBox
* open the settings window for your VM
* go to "network", open the appropriate "adapter" tab (typically the first
one)
* set the "attached to" setting to "bridged adapter"
* click "OK"
This sets up bridged networking for your VM --- it will behave on equal
footing as the host OS itself, ie. it will request an IP from your router's
dhcp (or whatever your host OS uses to set itself up). Depending on your ISP
and local network setup, it should have a real IP as much as your host does,
and will be visible from any other machine on your LAN.
I don't remember how to do it under KVM/QEMU and VMWare, but it should also
amount of choosing "bridged" networking somewhere in some settings.
You can do it from cli using kvm. I'm writing this on a VM with most definitely
it's own IP, etc. Started from cli, I was doing KVM before libvirt and friends
and haven't converted.
--
Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
"We have more to fear from the bungling of the incompetent than from
the machinations of the wicked." - from Slashdot
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