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issueman
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kubuntu vm: no network after resume

vmware fusion 11.5.2, macOS 10.15.3, vm: kubuntu 19.10

 

Network is working fine in vm after booting. Problem is, whenever pausing and resuming I end up with a non working network. Can get back to working state by restarting the vm, but that's somewhat annoying. Any ideas how to fix this?

 

Screenshots show network working state and non-working state.

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issueman
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No longer a problem with Kubuntu 20.10 and vmware Fusion 12.1.0.

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Alex_Romeo
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Hi,

the Kubuntu operating system installs but does not appear in the vmware compatibility (guest) matrix (also part of the Ubuntu project).

VMware Compatibility Guide - Guest/Host Search

VMware Guest Operating System Installation Guide

https://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/pdf/VMware_GOS_Compatibility_Guide.pdf

However, on a test level, the advice I can give you is if you have installed the VMware tools?

https://patrick-nagel.net/blog/archives/42

Kubuntu is an official derivative of the Ubuntu operating system which uses the KDE Plasma Desktop instead of the Unity graphical environment. Kubuntu is an operating system built by a worldwide team of expert developers:

Kubuntu images for VirtualBox and VMware

ARomeo

Blog: https://www.aleadmin.it/
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issueman
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Does that translate to "Kubuntu is not supported so odd behavior is expected"? vmware tools are installed. Not sure what to make of that blog article.

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wila
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Hi,

Ubuntu 19.10 (or kubuntu for that matter, same thing) is probably not yet supported by VMware.

Not sure if that's your problem though. Perhaps, perhaps not.

Personally I don't like that kind of answer unless it has a known issue and can't be worked around.

For starters it doesn't explain what is going on and why it works that way.

As such you still don't have a solution.

When your suspend/resume a VM and vmware tools is installed, vmware tools will run some scripts.

This is done to take care of a number of things.

For example to prevent that you don't have an IP address after resume.

A scenario that it takes into account is that if you haven't run a VM for a while, the IP address it used might have been assigned to another VM or physical machine.

I don't have a ubuntu 19.10 VM down here atm, nor do I have the time to reproduce your issue.

However, you can find the scripts under:

/etc/vmware-tools

there's a script here that takes care of the network:

/etc/vmware-tools/scripts/vmware/network

You can probably work around it by commenting out the suspend and resume part.

Better would be to install your own script as documented in /etc/vmware-tools/suspend-vm-default and /etc/vmware-tools/resume-vm-default

--

Wil

| Author of Vimalin. The virtual machine Backup app for VMware Fusion, VMware Workstation and Player |
| More info at vimalin.com | Twitter @wilva
issueman
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Working with scripts is above my skill level. What is the timeline for vmware fusion to add official support for ubuntu 19.10?

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wila
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Hi,


That's up to VMware to decide (I don't work for them).

Unfortunately they have a policty to not communicate about features and upcoming release time lines.

My guess would be that official support would arrive "in a few months", but I don't know for sure.

--

Wil

| Author of Vimalin. The virtual machine Backup app for VMware Fusion, VMware Workstation and Player |
| More info at vimalin.com | Twitter @wilva
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issueman
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For what it's worth this problem with VMware Fusion is persisting with Kubuntu 20.04. It would be great if VMware would address this problem.

issueman
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No longer a problem with Kubuntu 20.10 and vmware Fusion 12.1.0.

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maartenwrs
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Occasionally I also have to restart VMware Fusion networking and Ubuntu networking again after a resume.  To do that, I issue these commands as root in a terminal on the Mac:

/Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/vmnet-cli --configure

/Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/vmnet-cli --stop

/Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/vmnet-cli --start

And then from Ubuntu, I click the networking icon in the top-right corner of the desktop and go to "Wired connected" and turn it off, and then back on.  After that, networking out from Ubuntu via the Mac works, for me.  I hope this helps someone.

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