Hello!
I have VMware 6.5.3 for Windows. I installed Ubuntu 9.10 32 bit and I don't know how to install tools inside Linux guest. In Windows guest that is a snap, but here look like more complicated. Can someone help me with step by step tutorial how to install this on Ubuntu 9.10? I'm newbie here.
When I click button to install tools I just get open File Browser with file .txt, rpm and gz file. Any file I click I cannot run installer. Please for help!
It's a bit more complicated because every OS has a kernel (everything revolves around that), and in Linux you can have varying kernel versions. So, the shell script (files that end in .sh) will compile all the binaries against what you have. I believe that version of Ubuntu has the kernel headers with it, so what you would do is:
1. Go to places, downloads (the top menu bar on the desktop)
2. Find your gz file, right click and select extract here (I normally do this from the command line using tar -zxvf, but this should work too)
3. Open that directory, right click on the vmware-install.sh file, and select "execute as program" (this way you can kick it off)
4. Open a terminal (command prompt), and cd to that directory (should be cd Downloads/vmware-tools-distrib)
5. Type sudo ./vmware-install.sh
6. Enter your password when prompted, then go with the defaults and you should be set. Make sure to run the config script (it will ask you if you want to, and you do, but if you mess that part up you can run it later so no biggie) and then log off and log back in. You shouldn't need to reboot, and everything should work immediately.
During boot you might see any ERROR. That's likely from the HGFS mount that isn't working due to no shared directories. Don't worry about it for now. If it bugs you, you can comment it out in /etc/fstab (but DON'T mess with that until you're a little bit better). Snapshots are your friend, so use that as your fallback as you repeatedly trash your Linux VM, because it will happen.
Dell SXPS 1340, P9600, 8GB RAM
MCSE/MCSA 2003, MCTS, RHCT
Hi, I'm not completely shure about ubuntu, but the standart way would be to open the .gz or .tgz file, then extract all the content to a subdirectory of your choice. Further on you have to run the installer inside that directory (command: sh ./nameofyourinstallfile) <<< this should be done as superuser.
If you get compileerros its commonly a not install c++-dev package.
Hope this helps..
German:
Ich bin mir nicht ganz sicher, aber der Standartweg wäre die .gz oder .tgz in ein Verzeichnis deiner wahl zu entpacken. Danach wechselst du in dieses Verzeichnis und startes den Install mit Hilfe des Befehls sh ./namederinstallationsdatei. (Befehl als root eingeben)
Bei compilierprobleme ist die häufigste Ursache ein fehlendes Entwicklungpacket. z.b. c++ entwicklung oder Kernelentwicklung/Kernel-Quellen
Hope this helps..
It's a bit more complicated because every OS has a kernel (everything revolves around that), and in Linux you can have varying kernel versions. So, the shell script (files that end in .sh) will compile all the binaries against what you have. I believe that version of Ubuntu has the kernel headers with it, so what you would do is:
1. Go to places, downloads (the top menu bar on the desktop)
2. Find your gz file, right click and select extract here (I normally do this from the command line using tar -zxvf, but this should work too)
3. Open that directory, right click on the vmware-install.sh file, and select "execute as program" (this way you can kick it off)
4. Open a terminal (command prompt), and cd to that directory (should be cd Downloads/vmware-tools-distrib)
5. Type sudo ./vmware-install.sh
6. Enter your password when prompted, then go with the defaults and you should be set. Make sure to run the config script (it will ask you if you want to, and you do, but if you mess that part up you can run it later so no biggie) and then log off and log back in. You shouldn't need to reboot, and everything should work immediately.
During boot you might see any ERROR. That's likely from the HGFS mount that isn't working due to no shared directories. Don't worry about it for now. If it bugs you, you can comment it out in /etc/fstab (but DON'T mess with that until you're a little bit better). Snapshots are your friend, so use that as your fallback as you repeatedly trash your Linux VM, because it will happen.
Dell SXPS 1340, P9600, 8GB RAM
MCSE/MCSA 2003, MCTS, RHCT
Read this:
http://pubs.vmware.com/ws65_ace25/ws_user/ws_newguest_tools_linux.html
http://pubs.vmware.com/ws65_ace25/ws_user/ws_newguest_tools_linux_2.html
AWo
VCP / VMware vEXPERT 2009
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Thank you for your help guys. With StudentDriver procedure I installed tools. Now I see VM | Reinstall VMware Tools, but my sound card still doesn't work what I hope that will after installing the tools. I will also try some other Linux distribution.