From: "Lamar Owen" <lowen@xxxxxxxx>
Reply-To: CentOS mailing list <centos@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: CentOS mailing list <centos@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: VMware ver 1.03
Date: Sat, 12 May 2007 10:21:00 -0400
On Saturday 12 May 2007, Barton Callender wrote:
> I'm for not giving accurate information, I am able to create new virtual
> machines as a non-root user. I have windowsXP and Ubuntu installed on
my
> hard drive as well. So I am trying to create a new virtual machine with
> custom settings, and using my hard drive, so I can boot windowsXP or
Ubuntu
> while Im in CentOS 5. But when I reach to the end of the settings it
tells
> me I do not have permission to access that file.
Please read the VMware documentation about 'dual boot' installs
(specifically,
the Virtual Machine Guide, section "Using Disks in a Virtual
Machine"; "Configuring Hard Disk Storage in a Virtual Machine"; "Disk
Types:
Virtual and Physical"; "Physical (Raw) Disk" and the paragraph immediately
below the caution (not counting the caution, this is the third paragraph of
the section).
Note that Windows XP will want to reactivate every time you boot in the VM
after having booted the hard drive, and vice versa (XP is seeing a
different
PC each time; the bare host hardware when native booted, and a PC
called 'VMware' when booted inside VMware Server). Also note that the
hardware VMware server presents to the VM's is radically different from the
hardware the bare OS sees, especially the video card, network card, audio
driver, and motherboard chipset. VMware recommends that you do not do
this,
in other words, and you can cause serious issues on the dual booted OS's if
you do it.
Now, if you want to always boot these others under VMware server, you can
just
do that; but dual-booting and VMware running of the VM's is going to cause
the guest OS's (especially XP) loads of problems.
--
Lamar Owen
Chief Information Officer
Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute
1 PARI Drive
Rosman, NC 28772
(828)862-5554
www.pari.edu
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Thanks for your reponse, I guess they changed some things in the vmware
server, I dont remember what version I had on my centos 4.4 version. I was
able to install it and create a new virtual machine using my hard drive (raw
disk) with no problem. WindowsXP started up fine and I did not have any
problems. The only thing that I had to do was install vmware tools
manually.
Later
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