> Chris Davies writes:
>> The host hardware's largely irrelevant. What is important is the virtual
>> hardware offered within the VM. I successfully run a 686 based kernel,
>> here.
Harry Putnam wrote:
> What ISO did you use?
The most recent from which I've installed is debian-505-i386-netinst.
On 11/03/2010 11:03 AM, Harry Putnam wrote:
Klistvud writes:
Dne, 01. 11. 2010 16:28:53 je Harry Putnam napisal(a):
I think what you got yourself are images for the Intel Itanium
processors. What you need are either the i386 or the x64 (AMD) images.
Oh boy another 4.4 GB download...
Anothe
Chris Davies writes:
> Harry Putnam wrote:
>> I hope someone might be able to help me with installing debian as
>> guest by way of vmware.
>
>> I downloaded the iso DVD (4.4 GB what a hefty download)
>
> If you've got network access you're probably far better off with one of
> the netinst images
Klistvud writes:
> Dne, 01. 11. 2010 16:28:53 je Harry Putnam napisal(a):
>
> I think what you got yourself are images for the Intel Itanium
> processors. What you need are either the i386 or the x64 (AMD) images.
Oh boy another 4.4 GB download...
Another poster has said it doesn't matter too
Harry Putnam wrote:
> I hope someone might be able to help me with installing debian as
> guest by way of vmware.
> I downloaded the iso DVD (4.4 GB what a hefty download)
If you've got network access you're probably far better off with one of
the netinst images, and using the network to bring i
Dne, 01. 11. 2010 16:28:53 je Harry Putnam napisal(a):
I think what you got yourself are images for the Intel Itanium
processors. What you need are either the i386 or the x64 (AMD) images.
--
Cheerio,
Klistvud
http://bufferoverflow.tiddlyspot.com
Certifiable Loo
I'm in the process of trying to reconfigure VMWare Workstation 5.0 after
upgrading to Etch. I also saw the error you mention. In my case, it was
caused by not having the folder asm present in /usr/src/linux/include. I
created the symlink asm-->asm-i386 which resolved this particular issue.
U
On Fri, Feb 23, 2001 at 01:48:10AM +, SamBozo Debian User wrote:
> So where are the C header files it wants?
They're part of your the kernel source tree. If you're running one of
the Debian-supplied kernels (or using kernel-package to generate your
own kernel debs) you can probably just insta
> * Jack Morgan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > I tried using /usr/include but got the above error. My kernel is 2.2.17
> > binary. Do I need to recompile a new kernel. Any suggestions?
>
> If you're kernel is the kernel shipped with the install disk,
> you can install the kernel-headers-2.2.17 pac
* Jack Morgan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> I tried using /usr/include but got the above error. My kernel is 2.2.17
> binary. Do I need to recompile a new kernel. Any suggestions?
If you're kernel is the kernel shipped with the install disk,
you can install the kernel-headers-2.2.17
On Fri, Dec 22, 2000 at 07:50:50PM +0900 or thereabouts, Jack Morgan wrote:
> I'm trying to install VMware on Potato, and I'm getting the following
> error:
>
> ---Error
>
> None of VMware's pre-built vmmon modules is suitable for your running
> kernel. Do
> you want this script to try to bui
Why not use /usr/src/linux/include as the script recommends? That worked
for me.
-jeff
On Fri, Dec 22, 2000 at 07:50:50PM +0900, Jack Morgan wrote:
> I'm trying to install VMware on Potato, and I'm getting the following
> error:
>
> ---Error
>
> None of VMware's pre-built vmmon modules is
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