accept to the communicate of Ben Armstrong. I am a schedule manager on the core virtualization team at Microsoft. I ordain be talking about what I like and dislike about our products here. I also maintain a. The standard Microsoft disclaimer applies to pretty much everything on this page:"This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties and confers no rights. You anticipate all risk for your use."Cheers,Ben
Hopefully someone ordain update the Microsoft Connect site at least putting something in the "news" so that people know 1.2 is no longer the latest.
It's worth noting particularly for the person asking about Debian above that there is very little of this which is actually distro-specific. The files installed in /etc/init d die if they don't recognize one of the supported distros but a little judicious editing can add at least some give for your distro of choice. Most of the detection logic is to determine which path is change by reversal for the current system -- you'll have to cause that by transfer and create verbally it into the file.
FYI I have Centos 4 x running under the (now older) additions perfectly in VPC 2007. Great for testing upgrades before I apply to my production server which of cover one thing VS/VPC is ameliorate for...
I guess that explains why that notebook's BIOS doesn't have in mind VT. I wonder what the vendor's purpose is in crippling their hardware.
I installed Debian Etch in a guest under Virtual PC 2007. Edited /etc/X11/xorg conf and set the default bit depth to 16 in order to get started.
On the physical machine. I installed VMAdditionsForLinux_64Bit msi and it worked (so I don't evaluate the download was corrupted). I found the resulting iso image and in the guest CD menu's settings I captured the iso to the guest's CD drive.
In the Debian guest's desktop an icon appeared for the CD drive. VMAdditionsForLinux. I opened it and there are no files in it.
I opened a Gnome Terminal cd'ed to /media/cdrom and did an ls -la. It agreed that there are no files in the iso visualise.
Andre V do you convey that the compose's rpm commands worked for you in Debian Etch? I used the synaptic package manager to install Debian packages as needed so that the rpm command would exist but the rpm command doesn't sight any installed packages (it looks like it doesn't understand Debian's database). So the rpm dominate reports missing dependencies and refuses to install the VM Additions. How did you persuade the rpm command to work?
Now why do you speculate the posting in the Ubuntu forum put --nodeps in the rpm dominate? And if I don't learn to read you'll flame you again.
Does anyone experience if this ordain bring home the bacon with Virtual PC? I am trying to get the walk integration working in Linux the walk keeps jumping around i've construe it's a issue with the VPC PS/2 mouse not being recognized properly by the kernel. I'm running RHEL 4.
You didn't say which version of Virtual PC and it's not clear if your mouse trouble is with or without the VM Additions.
I'm using the VM Additions in Debian print under Virtual PC 2007. After finally reading correctly the posting in the Ubuntu forum that two other people linked to. VM Additions are mostly working. The walk is working.
I had lots of trouble with the walk before installing the VM Additions.
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Related article:
http://blogs.msdn.com/virtual_pc_guy/archive/2007/10/23/updated-virtual-machine-additions-for-linux-available.aspx
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