This is a discussion on Windows 2003 Server in a Solaris-hosted VM? within the Sun Solaris Administration forums, part of the Solaris Operating System category; --> Gary R. Schmidt wrote: > AZ Nomad wrote: >> On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 23:25:51 +0000 (UTC), Cydrome Leader ...
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| Gary R. Schmidt wrote: > AZ Nomad wrote: >> On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 23:25:51 +0000 (UTC), Cydrome Leader <presence@MUNGEpanix.com> wrote: >>> In comp.unix.solaris Rich Teer <rich@rite-group.com> wrote: >>>> Hi all, >>>> >>>> I (or rather, my client) have a need to run a Solaris machine and >>>> a machine running Windoze server 2003 (don't ask...). Obviously >>>> this could be achieved by using two separate servers, but I was >>>> wondering if there was a way to achieve this by running some sort >>>> of VM inside a non-global zone. >>> you cannot run windows inside solaris. >> Bullshit. VMWare runs on Solaris, and can host windows server 2K3. >> > Half wrong - VMWare does *not* run on Solaris, however VirtualBox > <http://www.virtualbox.org/> does, and will run WS2K3. > > Cheers, > Gary B-) I have tried VirtualBox Beta 1 on a Dual Opteron 2018 (dual core) with 8GB RAM, Windows 98SE runs fine but the Screen is limited to 640x480 and 16 colours. I then created another Virtual Machine and attempted to create a Windows 2K VM but it seemed to hang on install during booting Windows 2000 or was just very slow. |
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| Barry OGrady wrote: > On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 23:25:51 +0000 (UTC), Cydrome Leader <presence@MUNGEpanix.com> wrote: > >> In comp.unix.solaris Rich Teer <rich@rite-group.com> wrote: >>> Hi all, >>> >>> I (or rather, my client) have a need to run a Solaris machine and >>> a machine running Windoze server 2003 (don't ask...). Obviously >>> this could be achieved by using two separate servers, but I was >>> wondering if there was a way to achieve this by running some sort >>> of VM inside a non-global zone. >> you cannot run windows inside solaris. > > Is it possible to run Solaris inside Windows via a VM? > Virtual Server 2005 is free from Microsoft. I run Solaris 10u4 and various flavours of Nevada under Windows using VMware Server 1.0.4 (which is also free). Al |
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| On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Barry OGrady wrote: > What about running Solaris in a VM under Windows 2003? Why would anyone want to do that? Windoze has enough instability issues of its own, without dragging down other OSes running in a VM. -- Rich Teer, SCSA, SCNA, SCSECA, OGB member CEO, My Online Home Inventory URLs: http://www.rite-group.com/rich http://www.linkedin.com/in/richteer http://www.myonlinehomeinventory.com |
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| On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, solx wrote: > I have tried VirtualBox Beta 1 on a Dual Opteron 2018 (dual core) with 8GB > RAM, Windows 98SE runs fine but the Screen is limited to 640x480 and 16 > colours. I then created another Virtual Machine and attempted to create a > Windows 2K VM but it seemed to hang on install during booting Windows 2000 or > was just very slow. IIRC, the Virtual Box docs mention that Win2000 is problematic/very slow. -- Rich Teer, SCSA, SCNA, SCSECA, OGB member CEO, My Online Home Inventory URLs: http://www.rite-group.com/rich http://www.linkedin.com/in/richteer http://www.myonlinehomeinventory.com |
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| In comp.unix.solaris Barry OGrady <god_free_jones@yahoo.com> wrote: > On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 23:25:51 +0000 (UTC), Cydrome Leader <presence@MUNGEpanix.com> wrote: > >>In comp.unix.solaris Rich Teer <rich@rite-group.com> wrote: >>> Hi all, >>> >>> I (or rather, my client) have a need to run a Solaris machine and >>> a machine running Windoze server 2003 (don't ask...). Obviously >>> this could be achieved by using two separate servers, but I was >>> wondering if there was a way to achieve this by running some sort >>> of VM inside a non-global zone. >> >>you cannot run windows inside solaris. > > Is it possible to run Solaris inside Windows via a VM? > Virtual Server 2005 is free from Microsoft. It can be done, although it's pretty silly. |
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| Rich Teer wrote: > On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, solx wrote: > >> I have tried VirtualBox Beta 1 on a Dual Opteron 2018 (dual core) with 8GB >> RAM, Windows 98SE runs fine but the Screen is limited to 640x480 and 16 >> colours. I then created another Virtual Machine and attempted to create a >> Windows 2K VM but it seemed to hang on install during booting Windows 2000 or >> was just very slow. > > IIRC, the Virtual Box docs mention that Win2000 is problematic/very slow. > Odd, it's worked fine for me. -- Ian Collins. |
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| Al Slater <al.slater.xxx@xxx.scluk.com> writes: > >I run Solaris 10u4 and various flavours of Nevada under Windows using >VMware Server 1.0.4 (which is also free). > Is that really "under" windows? It isn't actually Windows and Solaris are each guest OSes hosted by VMWare Server? -Greg -- Do NOT reply via e-mail. Reply in the newsgroup. |
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| gerg@panix.com (Greg Andrews) writes: >Al Slater <al.slater.xxx@xxx.scluk.com> writes: >> >>I run Solaris 10u4 and various flavours of Nevada under Windows using >>VMware Server 1.0.4 (which is also free). >> >Is that really "under" windows? It isn't actually Windows and Solaris >are each guest OSes hosted by VMWare Server? VMWare Server is an daemon/service run under Windows or under Linux that will virtualize vm's under it. At best, the other VMs will run alongside windows or Linux with some virtualization. ESX server is a hypervisor that boots on bare hardware, and doesn't require another OS to run. It'll have as its first VM, a redhat linux VM that manages the aspects of the hypervisor itself, but the hypervisor doesn't run under that linux instance unlike VMWare Server that does. The ESX server is a bit more robust, but I can't think of the last time I've had to take down my VMWare Server on a redhat system. |
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| In alt.solaris.x86 Doug McIntyre <merlyn@geeks.org> wrote: > gerg@panix.com (Greg Andrews) writes: >>Al Slater <al.slater.xxx@xxx.scluk.com> writes: >>> >>>I run Solaris 10u4 and various flavours of Nevada under Windows using >>>VMware Server 1.0.4 (which is also free). >>> > >>Is that really "under" windows? It isn't actually Windows and Solaris >>are each guest OSes hosted by VMWare Server? > > VMWare Server is an daemon/service run under Windows or under Linux that > will virtualize vm's under it. At best, the other VMs will run > alongside windows or Linux with some virtualization. > > ESX server is a hypervisor that boots on bare hardware, and doesn't > require another OS to run. It'll have as its first VM, a redhat linux > VM that manages the aspects of the hypervisor itself, but the hypervisor > doesn't run under that linux instance unlike VMWare Server that does. I was a bit confused and put off by this part at first. I don't like or trust linux. Here is how ESX seems to work. the install process is like installing redhat or centos. it's clearly linux the machine boots up, it's clearly linux, but somewhere along that process the machine boots the vmware kernel or whatever it is, and the linux you saw is now running inside vmware. It's not longer a machine that just booted linux. The vmware management consoles which run in this very modified linux are now just a guest VM like anything else you install on it. Most vmware patches can be installed while your esx server is running, which is a plus. the only downside to the virtualization world is you need to shutdown all your guest VMs if you need to reboot the esx server itself, for a major patch, which happens every now and then. Overall, it's still cheaper than having dozens of even shitty servers, most of which are doing nothing anyways. > The ESX server is a bit more robust, but I can't think of the last > time I've had to take down my VMWare Server on a redhat system. I've never vmware esx crash, but lots of problems with vmware server under windows xp on various machines. When acrobat/firefox act stupid like they always do, your vmware server may die with them in any attempts to recover. |
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| On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 15:14:28 GMT, Rich Teer <rich.teer@rite-group.com> wrote: >On Fri, 29 Feb 2008, Barry OGrady wrote: > >> What about running Solaris in a VM under Windows 2003? > >Why would anyone want to do that? Windoze has enough instability >issues of its own, without dragging down other OSes running in a >VM. Fair enough, though I'd like to try it as an exercise. I have an ML370 with P3/933 and 1.25 GB RAM on which I have installed Microsoft Virtual Server 2005. Would that work? How much RAM should I allocate to the VM? I am running Solaris 10 with Sunray server and Windows connector on a Netra with 256 Meg RAM. Does the X86 version require more RAM than the Sparc version? >-- >Rich Teer Barry ===== Home page http://members.iinet.net.au/~barry.og |