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Howto: Install Open VMware Tools in Linux Kernel 2.6.24
May 1st, 2008 under Open Source, DIY Plans, Ubuntu, x86 Virtualization, Intel, VMWare, Enterprise Computing, Virtualization, News. [ Comments: 1 ]

Open VMware Tools, Installation Instructions Step by Step

What are VMware Tools?

They are a collection of software and drivers which enhance and improve the virtualization experience for the guest operating system. They include shared folders, heartbeat drivers, enhanced network drivers, and mouse and video drivers to allow seemless migration between guest and console operating systems.

Where can I get VMware tools?

Currently there are 2 sources, the first source is with VMware workstation or VMware Server Products (including VMware Server and VMware ESX). If you are running VMware player the expectation is that you are only going to be using prebuilt Virtual Machines which have the tools previously loaded.

What are Open VMware Tools (open-vm-tools)?

The Open Virtual Machine Tools (open-vm-tools) are the open source implementation of VMware Tools. They are a set of guest operating system virtualization components that enhance performance and user experience of virtual machines. As virtualization technology rapidly becomes mainstream, each virtualization solution provider implements their own set of tools and utilities to supplement the guest virtual machine. However, most of the implementations are proprietary and are tied to a specific virtualization platform. (About Open-VM-Tools)

Where can I get Open-VM-Tools?

The open tools are available currently in the source format only currently. For a limited time they where available as part of the Ubuntu repository, but due to their alpha stages they have been removed. More info about the removal can be found here at launchpad bug # 217254 To dowload a copy of the source files or learn more about the project visit the open-vm-tools sourceforge page.

Keep reading to see step by step installation instructions
Read more »


Virtualization Comic Roundup
April 20th, 2008 under Open Source, Ubuntu, Event, x86 Virtualization, VMWare, Virtualization, News. [ Comments: none ]

Virtualization is starting to make it into the main stream media, slowly. We are seeing it on gaming systems, in the newspaper and now in comic strips.

All comics have been reduced in size, click on them to see them in their original format

These are a few of the comics including Virtualization I have came across recently.

Linuxolution

This comic (above) has been released under:

Creative Commons License

More comics after the break, including xkcd, comic and Virtualman
Read more »


Free VMware eLearning Videos, Powered by Youtube
April 18th, 2008 under x86 Virtualization, Event, Intel, Virtualization, VMWare, Enterprise Computing, News. [ Comments: 1 ]

VMware has released a series, currently 19 videos, in an effort to help educate the masses to the methods and practices of using VMware server virtualization.

These videos can be viewed on directly on http://x86Virtualization.com at the following page: VMware Education Services Videos

Here is a sample video, to give you an idea of the style, pace, and level of content provided:



You can also request to download the high resolution version of these video directly by contacting VMware, more information regarding these are available on their youtube page: YouTube - VMwareELearning’s Channel

With a soft launch VMware just opened a couple of online TV channes (one on YouTube and another on Blip.tv) to host a bunch of training videos. No longer than 10 minutes, each video explains how to complete (very) easy tasks with VMware products (just Server 1.0 at the moment).

Source: virtualization.info: VMware opens two Internet TV channels for free e-learning


New Job Title: Virtual Network Administrator
April 14th, 2008 under Certification, AMD, Xen, x86 Virtualization, Virtualization, VMWare, Enterprise Computing, News. [ Comments: 1 ]

Potential future job posting:

Virtual Network Administrator

Responsibilities: A virtual network administrator oversees virtual computer networks to ensure that they function smoothly. A virtual network consists of a grouping of virtual machines that communicate with each other on a physical computer known as a virtual machine host server, on which computer files, programs, and other information are stored. A network may be as small as two or three virtual machines or as large as hundreds when paravirtualization is used.

Education: A virtual network administrator should have a strong background in math, sciences, and computer science, as well as experience working with virtual machines. Although a college degree in computer science, systems science, math, or engineering is not required to become a virtual network administrator, advancement is difficult without one. Administrators should be familiar with a variety of enterprise virtualization software packages, including Microsoft, VMware, and Sun. Because computer technology changes rapidly, administrators must constantly upgrade their knowledge base.

Working Conditions: Virtual network administrators, like other computer professionals, work in an office environment. Most put in forty hours or more of work per week. Much of the job is performed as part of an enterprise team, along with physical network administrators, and virtual machine managers. Configuring a virtual network can require long hours of work over a short period of time. Maintaining the virtual network can alternate between routine tasks and the more interesting but hectic work of troubleshooting and fixing virtual network problems. If a virtual network crashes, the administrator must work as quickly as possible, regardless of the hour, to solve the problem and restore the network to operation.

Similar Job description: Network Administrator Job Description


Antivirus Software and Virtualization FAQ
April 12th, 2008 under x86 Virtualization, Intel, Dell, Open Source, Ubuntu, Virtualization, Enterprise Computing, Apple, Microsoft, VMWare, Parallels, News. [ Comments: none ]

First, lets start off by breaking this FAQ down into 2 branches, desktop and enterprise. This is because what do you in a Virtual Machine which may run for 20 minutes a week is very different then a 24/7 system.

Software Evaluation / Desktop Virtualization:

Should you run Antivirus software?
Short answer Always. Long answer is this: evaluate the risk, the potential loss, and loss of performance to decide if it is worthwhile. If you are using a virtual machine to test software or websites where the VM is only powered on for a few minutes a day then it is probably ok to avoid the uneeded overhead. If you are running the VM as the development environment, where you are connected to the physical network and visiting websites then you may want to consider running antivirus software.

Which anti virus software should I run?
There are many out there, but any of the big three: mcafee, nortons, avast would be acceptable. For windows XP or Vista systems you can’t go wrong with grisofts free offering.

What if I’m not running Windows, ie running Linux or Solaris?
Ask yourself this, what are you really trying to protect? There are very few viruses out there for linux and solaris at this point. If you have been good about only using highly trusted repositories for your software then you should be safe. Generally it seems safe to say the biggest problem a linux system will encouter is the actual user deleting the wrong file, not a virus.

Here is a list of solaris antivirus options
Here is a list of Linux antivirus software packages
Here is a directions for installing antivirus on ubuntu
Here is an article “Note to new Linux users: No antivirus needed” from linux.com

Enterprise level virus scanning

What anti virus should I run on my corporate server?
There are a few well known quality enterprise grade antivirus options. But they are almost all for windows server in a windows environment. If you are running a linux backend, then what you really need is just enough protect to prevent the spread of viruses onto the windows portion of the network, as it is unlikely that any linux product will be as effective as a secure linux system with a properly configured firewall and security levels.

Check out this breakdown for a good starting direction Antivirus Tools Underperform When Tested in LinuxWorld ‘Fight Club’

Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition
They do support linux clients, here is the info from their website:
Linux Client

Symantec AntiVirus supports installation on the following Linux distributions:

* Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3.x, 4.x, 5.x
* SUSE Linux Enterprise (server/desktop) 9.x, 10.x
* Novell Open Enterprise Server
* VMware EX 2.5.x, 3.x

Note: Symantec AntiVirus Linux clients are unmanaged clients. You cannot use the Symantec management components, such as Symantec System Center, to centrally manage Symantec AntiVirus Linux clients.

What premade Virtual Machines are available for Antivirus tasks?
Check out this page from Trend Micro USA - Virtualization. They offer a variety of solutions for the enterprise customer, ranging from spam protection to full virus scanning. Their virtual machines are available for VMware workstation 5.x, 6.x, VMware Server 1.x, VMware ESX 3.x.
Also search the VMware Appliance Marketplace for antivirus, there are a few helpful premade machines there.

A few general articles about Virtual Machine performance related to antivirus:
virtualization.info: How to improve disk I/O performances with VMware Workstation
virtualization.info: Security by virtualization
The Core Dump of Thought: Anti-virus, virtualization and security paradigm
rentzsch.com: Virtualization as an Antivirus
anti-virus rants: what virtualization can and cannot do in an anti-malware context


Unbelievable Inflation of Operating Systems Prices
April 6th, 2008 under Dell, Intel, Desktop Computing, Microsoft, News. [ Comments: none ]

What are you willing to pay for an operating system, including all these great programs:

Calculator, Calendar, Cardfile, Clipboard viewer, Clock, Control Panel, Notepad, Paint, Reversi, Terminal, and Write.

Now if you guessed $99.00, and the year was 1986 you would be correct.

Just incase you where wondering: what cost $99 in 1986 would cost $188.40 in 2007 (source).

Now lets compare that to the market today.

According to NewEgg: Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic is only $189.99, so in 21 years the prices of Windows has only gone up $1.59.

Keep reading to see the video of Steve Ballmer selling Windows 1.0 from youtube.
Read more »


Howto: Run VMware Server Console 1.0.5 in Ubuntu Hardy 8.04
March 27th, 2008 under DIY Plans, Ubuntu, x86 Virtualization, Virtualization, VMWare, Desktop Computing, News. [ Comments: 3 ]

If you are running on the cutting edge, with Ubuntu Hardy 8.04, and recently decided to install VMware Server Console on that machine you may have gotten a very strange error message, something along the lines of this:

/usr/lib/vmware-server-console/bin/vmware-server-console: /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libpng12.so.0/libpng12.so.0: no version information available (required by /usr/lib32/libcairo.so.2)
/usr/lib/vmware-server-console/bin/vmware-server-console: /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libgcc_s.so.1/libgcc_s.so.1: version `GCC_4.2.0' not found (required by /usr/lib32/libstdc++.so.6)
/usr/lib/vmware-server-console/bin/vmware-server-console: /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libpng12.so.0/libpng12.so.0: no version information available (required by /usr/lib32/libcairo.so.2)
/usr/lib/vmware-server-console/bin/vmware-server-console: /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libgcc_s.so.1/libgcc_s.so.1: version `GCC_4.2.0' not found (required by /usr/lib32/libstdc++.so.6)
/usr/lib/vmware-server-console/bin/vmware-server-console: /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libpng12.so.0/libpng12.so.0: no version information available (required by /usr/lib32/libcairo.so.2)
/usr/lib/vmware-server-console/bin/vmware-server-console: /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libgcc_s.so.1/libgcc_s.so.1: version `GCC_4.2.0' not found (required by /usr/lib32/libstdc++.so.6)

This is caused by VMware Server Console being compiled with an older version of those libraries then included in Hardy. To resolve this problem I found a variety of solutions on multiple sites, but the simplest and one which worked for me is the following:

$ sudo cp /lib/libgcc_s.so.1 /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libgcc_s.so.1/
$ sudo cp /usr/lib/libpng12.so.0 /usr/lib/vmware-server-console/lib/libpng12.so.0/

The explaniation, in French is:

Il s’agit du bug #189250 is not in libcairo (Ubuntu) recensé sur le launchpad Ubuntu, lié au fait que VMWare Server a été compilée avec une version plus ancienne de GCC que celle intégrée nativement dans Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy Heron. Pour fixer ce bug, il faut copier quelques librairies spécifique (on va d’abord sauvegarder les anciennes…) (source)

UPDATE: 64 bit users, there is a second step required to get Server Console Running on Ubuntu 8.04

sudo ln -s /usr/lib32 /usr/l32
sudo sed -i -e 's/usr\/lib/usr\/l32/g' /usr/lib32/gtk-2.0/2.10.0/loader-files.d/libgtk2.0-0.loaders
sudo sed -i -e 's/usr\/lib/usr\/l32/g' /usr/lib32/libgdk_pixbuf-2.0.so.0.1200.9

Take from: vmware-server in hardy - Ubuntu Forums and vmware-server-console on Hardy 64-bit - Ubuntu Forums

For information on fixing VMware server on 8.04 or more information on this issue visit these sites:
VMware Server 1.0.5 sur Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy Heron - Taltan.blog.bkp
VMware Server, Ubuntu “Hardy Heron” 8.04 and Linux 2.6.24 « Federkiel
vmware-server in hardy - Page 4 - Ubuntu Forums
Bug #177869 in ia32-libs (Ubuntu): “vmware-server-console broken after 2.2ubuntu2”
Bug #193692 in ia32-libs (Ubuntu): “[hardy] ia32-libs_2.2ubuntu6 failure when running VMWare”

Here is a screenshot of VMware Server Console 1.0.5 running on Hardy:
VMware Server Console 1.0.5 running on Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy


Squeezing the Juice out of Ubuntu
March 7th, 2008 under x86 Virtualization, Open Source, Ubuntu, Intel, Virtualization, VMWare, Desktop Computing, Enterprise Computing, News. [ Comments: 1 ]

Ubuntu comes in 3 main sizes, Large, Small, and tiny to meet different needs.

Ubuntu Versions, desktop, workstation, server, jeos

Complete description of each version after the break.
Read more »


Sun Microsystems Continues Their Shopping Spree
February 21st, 2008 under x86 Virtualization, Open Source, Virtualization, Sun, Desktop Computing, News. [ Comments: none ]

Sun Microsystems, NASDAQ: JAVA is on a shopping Spree

Just recently it was announced that Sun would be investing over a Billion dollars in mysql, as reported in x86Virtualization post: “Brighter Days for MySQL, The Sun Rises Over MySQL“, now less a few weeks later Sun has struck again, and is purchasing Innotek the makers of the very popular Virtualization product: “Virtualbox“.

x86Virtualization reported on Virtualbox back on April 20, 2007 with the post “VirtualBox, Everything You Need To Know“, I’m happy to announce, under recent testing the mouse issue has been resolved in Windows 3.11 (yeah not a big deal for most people, but I like 3.11 for testing virtualization products.)

If you are curious about what else Sun has purchased in the past check out their complete (but not up to date) history: Sun Facts - Acquisitions History

Related How To’s:
VirtualBox, Everything You Need To Know
klikit wiki / How to install Windows in VirtualBox


Howto: Install VMware Server on Ubuntu 7.10 (Part 2)
February 3rd, 2008 under x86 Virtualization, Dell, Ubuntu, Intel, Virtualization, VMWare, Enterprise Computing, News. [ Comments: 3 ]

Install Ubuntu Server 7.10
If you haven’t read part 1, read part 1 how to install Ubuntu Server 7.10 in 34 Steps, note it isn’t actually 34 steps just a bunch of screenshots it only takes 15 minutes.

Install ssh server:
sudo apt-get install ssh openssh-server

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SSHHowto

[Optional Steps]
Remove CD from repository list:
sudo vi /etc/apt/sources.list

Once inside of VI, hit i to be in insert mode, scroll down to deb cdrom:[Ubuntu-Server 7.10 _Gutsy Gibbon_ …. and add # to the beginning of the line. hit esc, then :x to save and exit

sudo aptitude update

sudo aptitude upgrade

Add build tools to Ubuntu
sudo aptitude install linux-headers-`uname -r` build-essential

Ok, problem… ssl on Ubuntu http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=337040
sudo mkdir -p /etc/vmware/ssl/
sudo touch /etc/vmware/ssl/rui.key
sudo touch /etc/vmware/ssl/rui.crt

And if you are on a 64 bit host:
sudo apt-get install ia32-libs

use wget to get the files from VMware:
wget [URL of the file that shall be downloaded]

Visit http://vmware.com/download/server/ to find download links.
(You must agree to the license agreement to access download urls)

extract the files:
tar -xzf ./VMware-server-1.0.4-56528.tar.gz

goto the new directory containing the VMware files:
cd vmware-server-distrib

run the installer:
sudo ./vmware-install.pl

hit enter to all choices for basic installation. When you get to the license agreement hit space to page through it, then type y and hit enter.

When it gets to the steps about your networking, you need to have an understanding of the difference between the host only networking, NAT, and standard networking. To read more about VMware networking read this: VMWare networking It explains all three, and the differences between them.

Networking issues with Ubuntu and VMware Server:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=478611
http://communities.vmware.com/thread/84170

Re: VMWare VMnet compile error
1. get this - http://npw.net/~phbaer/vmnet.tar
2. copy it into your /usr/lib/vmware/modules/source
3. run vmware-config.pl again

This Worked for me. I found it at http://www.vmware.com/community/thread.jspa?threadID=84170&start=0&tstart=0

Congrats, you are done installing VMware server. You can now connect to the vmware console with the Windows based client tools or the web interface.I will have more on both of those methods in the next post. Installing VMware Server Part 3.

Sources:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=337040
http://www.howtoforge.com/ubuntu_vmware_server


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