| ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Microsoft Vista (RTM) on Debian using VMware-workstation 5.0.0-13124 | |||||||
| > > |
Microsoft Vista (RTM) on Debian using VMware workstation 5.0.0-13124 | |||||||
| With the beta releases of Microsoft Vista, the Microsoft installer worked OK with VMware-workstation-5.0.0-13124 (with Debian as the host). | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
But now with the RTM "release" version Microsoft Vista English Disc 3707 January 2007
| |||||||
| > > |
But now with the RTM "release" version Microsoft Vista English Disc 3707 January 2007 | |||||||
|
you may be surprised to get the following message:
| ||||||||
Microsoft Vista (RTM) on Debian using VMware-workstation 5.0.0-13124 | ||||||||
| Line: 64 to 64 | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
When you hit the error about Microsoft Vista not having a driver for your CD drive, press the Ctrl and Alt keys together,
to get out of the virtual machine, and go to the tab for your virtual machine and right-click to bring up a menu,
and select "Settings" from that menu.
| ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
In the Settings, edit CD-ROM 1 to point at your Microsoft Vista iso image, instead of having it as a physical drive. | |||||||
| > > |
In the Settings, edit CD-ROM 1 to point at your Microsoft Vista ISO image, instead of having it as a physical drive. | |||||||
You don't need to change CD-ROM 2, you can leave it pointing to the ISO image.
| ||||||||
Microsoft Vista (RTM) on Debian using VMware-workstation 5.0.0-13124 | ||||||||
| Line: 13 to 13 | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Note: If the Windows installation media is in the CD/DVD drive, you can safely remove it for this step. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
If you persist (after dilligently checking that the "Windows installation media" is indeed in the CD/DVD drive), the following discouraging message is all you'll get for your trouble: | |||||||
| > > |
If you persist (thinking that the CD device driver must already be loaded, as the Microsoft installer had just booted from the CD device, and after dilligently checking that the "Windows installation media" is indeed still in the CD drive), the following discouraging message is all you'll get for your trouble: | |||||||
No device drivers were found. Make sure the installation media contains the correct drivers, | ||||||||
| Line: 33 to 34 | ||||||||
| cheerful google search engine, we immediately find a helpful eWeek article. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
So if we pre-allocate the virtual drive as an IDE drive (not SCSI, this is important!) of size 16GB contiguous (not as 2GB separate files, this is important!), and set the virtual memory size to use in the virtual machine to 512MB (which is the minimum Microsoft will allow for Vista!), then we can intrepidly proceed with the install using the following instructions based on the eWeek article. | |||||||
| > > |
Preparing the Virtual MachineFor Microsoft Vista, we need to:
| |||||||
The Two-CD Tango Method of Installing Vista RTM on VMware | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Steps to get Microsoft Vista installed on VMware Workstation 5.0.0-13124 using an ISO image: | |||||||
| > > |
Steps to get Microsoft Vista installed as a VMware Workstation 5.0.0-13124 guest on Debian, using an ISO image: | |||||||
| ||||||||
| Line: 60 to 64 | ||||||||
When you hit the error about Microsoft Vista not having a driver for your CD drive, press the Ctrl and Alt keys together,
to get out of the virtual machine, and go to the tab for your virtual machine and right-click to bring up a menu,
and select "Settings" from that menu.
| ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
In the Settings, edit CDROM 1 to point at your Microsoft Vista iso image, instead of having it as a physical drive. You don't need to change CDROM 2, you can leave it pointing to the ISO image. | |||||||
| > > |
In the Settings, edit CD-ROM 1 to point at your Microsoft Vista iso image, instead of having it as a physical drive. You don't need to change CD-ROM 2, you can leave it pointing to the ISO image. | |||||||
| ||||||||
| Line: 77 to 81 | ||||||||
| Try this driver from AMD. After you install it, you'll connect to the internet, and Microsoft will detect it and will cheerfully inform you that it is not supported. But it works OK. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Once you get the AMD networking driver installed, you may need to hunt down the proxy settings for your work environment: you can find them under network settings, LAN settings, configure proxy. | |||||||
| > > |
Once you get the AMD networking driver installed, you may need to hunt down the proxy settings for your work environment: you can find them under "Control Panel", "Network and Internet", "Internet Options". In the "Internet Properties" dialog box, click on the "Connections" tab then click on the "LAN settings" button. In the "Local Area Network (LAN) Settings" dialog box (in the "Proxy Server" section) check the box "Use a proxy server for your LAN" and enter the Address and Port of your proxy server. Whew! | |||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
The
| |||||||
| > > |
| |||||||
| Due to the CD troubles, you may find you have trouble installing the VMware tools. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Normally the "windows.iso" file that VMware uses to provide the VMware tools install is installed in the following location, | |||||||
| > > |
Normally the windows.iso file that VMware uses to provide the VMware tools install is installed in the following location,
| |||||||
|
in the Linux host operating system:
| ||||||||
| Line: 95 to 99 | ||||||||
| -r--r--r-- 0/0 13467648 2005-03-23 03:54 vmware-distrib/lib/isoimages/windows.iso | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
It may be more convenient to burn the windows.iso to CD-RW and installing it from there into the Microsoft Vista guest,
once the Vista guest had first been rebooted with no CD devices attached, and has all the CD drivers
removed using the Vista "device manager" tool, and has been rebooted with a single physical CD (non-legacy)
device attached at power-on to the virtual machine.
| |||||||
| > > |
It may be more convenient to burn this windows.iso image to CD-RW and install it from there into the Microsoft Vista guest.
To get the physical CD-ROM drive to function properly in the Vista guest, you can go through the following steps:
| |||||||
|
This message (apparently harmless) is displayed during the booting of the Microsoft Vista guest, when
connecting a non-legacy CD-ROM to Vista:
| ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Your virtual machine has sent an ATAPI (CD-ROM) sommand that is supported | |||||||
| > > |
Your virtual machine has sent an ATAPI (CD-ROM) command that is supported | |||||||
| only when programming the drive via DMA. You will need to configure your guest operating system to use DMA when communicating with DVD/CD-ROM devices. Note that some operating systems will report DMA is available | ||||||||
| Line: 113 to 123 | ||||||||
| reconfigure the virtual device as a SCSI device. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
To install any further software from ISO images, you'll need to perform the same Two-CD Tango as described above. | |||||||
| > > |
To install any further software from ISO images, you'll still need to perform the same Two-CD Tango as described above. | |||||||
| So if you nerves are still good after all that excitement, you may want to explore further, but for now it's time to shut down the virtual machine: be sure not to | ||||||||
Microsoft Vista (RTM) on Debian using VMware-workstation 5.0.0-13124 | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
With the beta releases of Microsoft Vista, the Microsoft installer worked OK on Debian with VMware-workstation-5.0.0-13124. | |||||||
| > > |
With the beta releases of Microsoft Vista, the Microsoft installer worked OK with VMware-workstation-5.0.0-13124 (with Debian as the host). | |||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
But now with the "release" version Microsoft Vista English Disc 3707 January 2007
| |||||||
| > > |
But now with the RTM "release" version Microsoft Vista English Disc 3707 January 2007
| |||||||
|
you may be surprised to get the following message:
| ||||||||
| Line: 12 to 12 | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| If you have a driver floppy disk, CD, DVD, or USB flash drive, please insert it now. Note: If the Windows installation media is in the CD/DVD drive, you can safely remove it for this step. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
||||||||
| > > |
<nop> | |||||||
| No device drivers were found. Make sure the installation media contains the correct drivers, then click OK. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
You might indeed ask yourself, why am I getting this kind of error message, and are they seriously talking about the very same CD drive I have just booted the Microsoft installation CD from? And you would be right to ask. | |||||||
| > > |
You might indeed be asking yourself at this point: | |||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Not being a pioneer in this case has its benefits: by entering the text of the above error message into the | |||||||
| > > |
"Why am I getting this kind of error message? And are they seriously talking about the very same CD drive I have just booted the Microsoft installation CD from?" And you would be right to ask. By entering the text of the above error message into the | |||||||
| cheerful google search engine, we immediately find a helpful eWeek article. | ||||||||
| Line: 32 to 39 | ||||||||
| (which is the minimum Microsoft will allow for Vista!), then we can intrepidly proceed with the install using the following instructions based on the eWeek article. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
The Two-CD Switch Method of Installing Vista RTM on VMware | |||||||
| > > |
The Two-CD Tango Method of Installing Vista RTM on VMware | |||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
Steps to get Vista installed on VMware Server using an ISO image: | |||||||
| > > |
Steps to get Microsoft Vista installed on VMware Workstation 5.0.0-13124 using an ISO image: | |||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
| |||||||
| > > |
| |||||||
cdrecord dev=ATA -scanbus /usr/bin/readcd -v dev=ATA:0,0,0 f=./Microsoft_Vista_English_Disc3707_January2007.iso | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
| |||||||
| > > |
| |||||||
| Configure both drives to "connect at power on," and make sure | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
the [ ] "Legacy emulation" box is not checked for your first CD drive. | |||||||
| > > |
the [ ] Legacy emulation box is not checked for your first CD drive.
| |||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
| |||||||
| > > |
| |||||||
| ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
When you hit the error about Vista not having a driver for your CD drive, press the Ctrl and Alt keys together,
| |||||||
| > > |
When you hit the error about Microsoft Vista not having a driver for your CD drive, press the Ctrl and Alt keys together,
| |||||||
| to get out of the virtual machine, and go to the tab for your virtual machine and right-click to bring up a menu, and select "Settings" from that menu. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
In the Settings, edit CDROM 1 to point at your Vista iso image, instead of having it as a physical drive. | |||||||
| > > |
In the Settings, edit CDROM 1 to point at your Microsoft Vista iso image, instead of having it as a physical drive. | |||||||
You don't need to change CDROM 2, you can leave it pointing to the ISO image.
| ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
| |||||||
| > > |
Once Microsoft Vista has been installed in this way, the system won't recognize your CD drive. Switch your first drive back to point at a physical CD drive with legacy emulation switched off, and reboot Microsoft Vista. | |||||||
| Wait for the OS to recognize and install a driver for the drive. Once the system has installed a driver for | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
the first CD drive, you should be able to burn a CD containing the VMware tools and get them installed. After that, the VGA driver and sound driver should be working, and perhaps the networking driver. | |||||||
| > > |
the first CD drive, you should be able to either burn a CD containing the VMware tools to get them installed,
or repeat this two-CD Tango using the windows.iso (where to locate this ISO image is described below).
After installing VMware tools, the VGA driver and sound driver should be working, and perhaps the networking driver.
| |||||||
Networking in Vista RTM | ||||||||
| Line: 71 to 79 | ||||||||
| Once you get the AMD networking driver installed, you may need to hunt down the proxy settings for your work environment: you can find them under network settings, LAN settings, configure proxy. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
The windows.iso is where the VMware tools live | |||||||
| > > |
The
| |||||||
| Due to the CD troubles, you may find you have trouble installing the VMware tools. Normally the "windows.iso" file that VMware uses to provide the VMware tools install is installed in the following location, in the Linux host operating system: | ||||||||
| Line: 87 to 95 | ||||||||
| -r--r--r-- 0/0 13467648 2005-03-23 03:54 vmware-distrib/lib/isoimages/windows.iso | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
I end up deciding to burn it to CD-RW and installed it from there into the Microsoft Vista guest, once the VIsta guest had first been rebooted with no CD devices attached, had all the CD drivers removed using the Vista "device manager" tool, and rebooted with a single physical CD (non-legacy) | |||||||
| > > |
It may be more convenient to burn the windows.iso to CD-RW and installing it from there into the Microsoft Vista guest,
once the Vista guest had first been rebooted with no CD devices attached, and has all the CD drivers
removed using the Vista "device manager" tool, and has been rebooted with a single physical CD (non-legacy)
| |||||||
| device attached at power-on to the virtual machine. | ||||||||
| Changed: | ||||||||
| < < |
This message displayed during the booting of the Microsoft Vista guest, when connecting a non-legacy CD-ROM to Vista, and it turns out to be harmless: | |||||||
| > > |
This message (apparently harmless) is displayed during the booting of the Microsoft Vista guest, when connecting a non-legacy CD-ROM to Vista: | |||||||
Your virtual machine has sent an ATAPI (CD-ROM) sommand that is supported | ||||||||
| Line: 105 to 113 | ||||||||
| reconfigure the virtual device as a SCSI device. | ||||||||
| Added: | ||||||||
| > > |
To install any further software from ISO images, you'll need to perform the same Two-CD Tango as described above. | |||||||
| So if you nerves are still good after all that excitement, you may want to explore further, but for now it's time to shut down the virtual machine: be sure not to accidentally "suspend" it, and choose shutdown. The default is now to suspend, | ||||||||
| Line: 1 to 1 | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Added: | ||||||||
| > > |
Microsoft Vista (RTM) on Debian using VMware-workstation 5.0.0-13124With the beta releases of Microsoft Vista, the Microsoft installer worked OK on Debian with VMware-workstation-5.0.0-13124. But now with the "release" versionMicrosoft Vista English Disc 3707 January 2007
you may be surprised to get the following message:
A required CD/DVD drive device driver is missing. If you have a driver floppy disk, CD, DVD, or USB flash drive, please insert it now. Note: If the Windows installation media is in the CD/DVD drive, you can safely remove it for this step. No device drivers were found. Make sure the installation media contains the correct drivers, then click OK.You might indeed ask yourself, why am I getting this kind of error message, and are they seriously talking about the very same CD drive I have just booted the Microsoft installation CD from? And you would be right to ask. Not being a pioneer in this case has its benefits: by entering the text of the above error message into the cheerful google search engine, we immediately find a helpful eWeek article. So if we pre-allocate the virtual drive as an IDE drive (not SCSI, this is important!) of size 16GB contiguous (not as 2GB separate files, this is important!), and set the virtual memory size to use in the virtual machine to 512MB (which is the minimum Microsoft will allow for Vista!), then we can intrepidly proceed with the install using the following instructions based on the eWeek article. The Two-CD Switch Method of Installing Vista RTM on VMwareSteps to get Vista installed on VMware Server using an ISO image:
cdrecord dev=ATA -scanbus /usr/bin/readcd -v dev=ATA:0,0,0 f=./Microsoft_Vista_English_Disc3707_January2007.iso
Networking in Vista RTMTry this driver from AMD. After you install it, you'll connect to the internet, and Microsoft will detect it and will cheerfully inform you that it is not supported. But it works OK. Once you get the AMD networking driver installed, you may need to hunt down the proxy settings for your work environment: you can find them under network settings, LAN settings, configure proxy.The windows.iso is where the VMware tools liveDue to the CD troubles, you may find you have trouble installing the VMware tools. Normally the "windows.iso" file that VMware uses to provide the VMware tools install is installed in the following location, in the Linux host operating system:/usr/lib/vmware/isoimages/windows.isoDuring installation, it's extracted from VMware-workstation-5.0.0-13124.tar.gz and has the following size:
tar ztvf VMware-workstation-5.0.0-13124.tar.gz|grep windows.iso -r--r--r-- 0/0 13467648 2005-03-23 03:54 vmware-distrib/lib/isoimages/windows.isoI end up deciding to burn it to CD-RW and installed it from there into the Microsoft Vista guest, once the VIsta guest had first been rebooted with no CD devices attached, had all the CD drivers removed using the Vista "device manager" tool, and rebooted with a single physical CD (non-legacy) device attached at power-on to the virtual machine. This message displayed during the booting of the Microsoft Vista guest, when connecting a non-legacy CD-ROM to Vista, and it turns out to be harmless: Your virtual machine has sent an ATAPI (CD-ROM) sommand that is supported only when programming the drive via DMA. You will need to configure your guest operating system to use DMA when communicating with DVD/CD-ROM devices. Note that some operating systems will report DMA is available without actually using it. In those cases, normal CD-ROM operations will still be available, but special features will only be available if you reconfigure the virtual device as a SCSI device.So if you nerves are still good after all that excitement, you may want to explore further, but for now it's time to shut down the virtual machine: be sure not to accidentally "suspend" it, and choose shutdown. The default is now to suspend, which can be confusing. -- PeterKnaggs - 02 Mar 2007 | |||||||