I updated to Big Sur, Then I had to update to VMware Fusion 12. I have been having issues ever since. I saw this issue is happening to windows users but I can't find a fix for OSX.
I'm experiencing exactly the same issue as described in this question: Kali Linux: apt-get update returns “Hash Sum mismatch” error. Before you mark this as a duplicate however, I have tried the solutions posted there, as well as on numerous other sites, including:
sudo apt-get clean sudo rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/* sudo apt-get update
Editing /etc/apt/sources.list with alternate official mirrors, such as deb http://mirrors.ocf.berkeley.edu/kali kali-rolling main non-free contrib or deb https://http.kali.org/kali kali-rolling main non-free contrib
Everything worked after I first imported the VM. I ran sudo apt update and it found some ~650 packages to upgrade. I ran sudo apt upgrade and it encountered an error partway through. That error was solved using sudo apt --fix-broken install, but that is when this hash sum error began. Unfortunately due to hours of troubleshooting I no longer have the details of the earlier error, but I believe it was an error extracting a package due to corrupt data.
I've tried multiple official mirrors, but I get the same error. Additionally, when I downloaded the Packages.gz file here on my Windows machine (VM host) and computed the SHA256 hash, I got the exact hash that apt printed as the expected value. This led me to believe that the error was not with the mirror but with my VM.
The next thing I tried was wget https://mirrors.ocf.berkeley.edu/kali/dists/kali-rolling/main/binary-amd64/Packages.gz followed by sha256sum Packages.gz, which provided yet another different hash output.
To be clear, I have seen 3 different hashes for the same file:
I should also note that I have only been referencing the SHA256 hash in each step. The other hash functions are also mismatched when I run sudo apt update, but the file size is the same. I had considered that downloads might be failing due to limited disk space (it is a VM after all) but I don't think that's the case.
What am I missing?
Not really a forum poster but saw your post while checking for a different issue.
I had this issue (on Catalina) with Kaspersky (KIS) installed. I believed it was intercepting the traffic and causing this issue, every time I disabled it, it came good. I imagine any other AV that intercepts traffic may cause a similar issue.
I have the same issue after updating to Big Sur and Vmware Fusion 12.
When in Bridge mode the problem with Hash Sum mismatch comes up, but when i change the networking to Shared mode the problem is solved.
So it can be a Vmware fusion or Big Sur problem.
I was facing the same issue with Ubuntu 20.04 on Big Sur 11.1 with VMware Fusion 12.1.0 (17195230). Other suggested solutions involving /etc/gcrypt/hwf.deny did not help. Changing settings from bridged (Wi-Fi) to Internet Sharing (Share with my Mac) solved the issue, however it is not a long term acceptable solution. So I agree that there is either a VMware Fusion or a Big Sur issue here.
Hi,
I tried this, but when I change the network configuration of the VM from "Bridged" to "Shared (Internet Sharing)" practically I do not have internet in the VM.
Is there anything else that has to be configured in the VM so that it can have internet when network configuration set ti "Shared"?
Regards,
Rashid
That's rare - if your VM is set to use DHCP for DNS and IP, it should connect once you reboot.
Try switching from Share with my Mac to one of the bridged options, and then switch back. Hopefully, you'll see a popup from VmWare Fusion saying "The network connection type change is saving and taking effect..." Then your Ubuntu should hopefully see the connection bounce, which is its clue to restart dhcp discovery. Make sure you make your network adapter settings changes while the VM is running.
I have also had problems if I change the network adapter settings while the VM is not actually running. So there may be a hole there...
Mac OS 11.2 doesnt solve the problem 😞
@balsup wrote:I was facing the same issue with Ubuntu 20.04 on Big Sur 11.1 with VMware Fusion 12.1.0 (17195230). ...Changing settings from bridged (Wi-Fi) to Internet Sharing (Share with my Mac) solved the issue,
THANK YOU! Solved my issue updating the OS and installs - I'll switch back to WiFi MAC for my reserved IP when I run stuff, but I couldn't get past updating and installing.
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!
Lots of reports like this, I have the same issue.
Is VMware looking at it?
Try switching the virtual NIC to a vmxnet3 one.
--
Wil
“Is VMware looking at it?”
VMTN is a user community forum, with occasional appearances from VMware employees who have some product responsibility.
Can you clarify? How does one switch the virtual NIC? Is this a guest OS specific configuration? I do not see any choices within VmWare Fusion 12 settings to set the NIC type. Under Network Adaptor, I can choose the host networking adaptor (vmxnet3 is not a choice). I can also choose a new MAC address, and I can restrict bandwidth. Choosing "Add Device..." to add a new Network Adapter doesn't give me any choices for vmxnet3 either. There is one more option under "Custom" which is "Private to my Mac". Unfortunately this window can't be resized to show it...
Hi,
You can't do that there. In fact there is no user interface in Fusion for changing the virtual network adapter.
You'll have to edit a config file by hand.
The steps are as follows:
Shut down your VM
Take a backup of the VM if you're not comfortable editing configuration files.. (for this particular scenario a snapshot is sufficient as well as it keeps a copy of the file we change)
In VMware Fusion, go to Virtual Machine Library
Right Click the VM, hold down the option key, select "Open Config File in Editor"
TextEdit will appear with the VM's .vmx file
Locate the line:
ethernet0.virtualDev = "e1000"
change it into:
ethernet0.virtualDev = "vmxnet3"
Choose "Save" .. "Close" from the menu in Text Edit.
Start your VM again.
The network should still work and hopefully no longer have any issues.
Note that the line you change might also be a "e1000e" network adapter or even something, but it looks like that the e1000 adapter is the default for Linux guests.
If it works.. commit the snapshot if you made one (don't keep those lingering around for any longer than you need them)
--
Wil
Scott -- you're a VMware employee, so have you reported it to where it needs to go?
I'm totally unable to do anything with Linux guests with Fusion 12 on Big Sur. Even trying to download over https with curl or wget gets me openssl errors. This is renders the product totally useless for me and leaves me not being able to get any work done...
None of these workarounds, or those found elsewhere, seem to help at all. Changing to vmxnet3 has no effect on things.
Using the shared with my mac network adapter seems to work fine with updating and I am not getting the issues I was before, that being said, for some of my tasks I need that VM to have its own IP (WiFi Bridge). Is there any workaround solution to fixing this so that the VM will work in bridged mode?
This is a pretty substantial issue so I'm surprised that VMWare has failed to catch it yet.
I am having exactly the same issue, changing adapter type to vmxnet3 did not resolve it. Only way I was able to resolve this issue is by choosing to NAT from my Mac's, but I really want to use a bridged adapter for a number of reasons.
Same issue, vmxnet3 edit did not fix, only shared network works.