At 7/27/2003 17:05 -0400, you wrote:
i think the original poster is making the common mistake of thinking
he has to create an entire filesystem of some type for the vmware
install.
in this case, you just need to create one ***big*** single file that
vmware will take over from there. you know -- a
No, you don't modify your partitions or anything. You just run vmware, start
a new VM, and then you basically have a 'new machine' in which to install
what you want. I believe you have to allocate a certain amount of space for
the 'virtual drive', just like you allocate RAM and which hardware to gi
nac
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- Original Message -
From: "Robert P. J. Day" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, July 27, 2003 5:05 PM
Subject: Re: Using VM Ware to create a Window
On Sun, 27 Jul 2003, Rus Foster wrote:
> > Can it be ext3?
> > Sincerely,
> >
>
> The underlying filesystem can be anything as long as the kernel can read
> it. So ext3/xfs/reiser etc..
i think the original poster is making the common mistake of thinking
he has to create an entire filesystem of
> Can it be ext3?
> Sincerely,
>
The underlying filesystem can be anything as long as the kernel can read
it. So ext3/xfs/reiser etc..
Rgds
Rus
--
www: http://jvds.com | Virtual Servers from just $15/mo
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gt;
Sent: Sunday, July 27, 2003 4:53 PM
Subject: Re: Using VM Ware to create a Windows VM on a Linux server.
> On Sun, 27 Jul 2003, dlangschied wrote:
>
> > I am curious, do I have to create my partition as fat for a Windows VM?
> > Sincerely,
>
> Hi,
> No you don
On Sun, 27 Jul 2003, dlangschied wrote:
> I am curious, do I have to create my partition as fat for a Windows VM?
> Sincerely,
Hi,
No you don't VMWARE can just use a normal file such as
/usr/vmware/2000/winnt2000.dsk
Rgds
Rus Foster
--
www: http://jvds.com | Virtual Servers from just $15/mo