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From: /root on 24 Mar 2005 23:46 I received this error when I reboot the machine and run VMWare each time (only after reboot)....must be losing it setting. VMWare Workstation is installed, but it has not been (correctly) configured for your running kernel. To (re-) configure it, your system administrator must find and run "vmware-config.pl". Anyhow, the temporary fix is to run the vmware-config.pl and it runs some scripts on its own then it executes fine after that,,,except after the machine is rebooted. I think it has something to do with update. Anyhow, this is my machine info - Linux kubuntu01 2.6.10-5-686 #1 Thu Mar 24 14:58:42 GMT 2005 i686 GNU/Linux Any ideas on what I need to do to correct it?
From: /root on 25 Mar 2005 00:00 /root wrote: > I received this error when I reboot the machine and run VMWare each time > (only after reboot)....must be losing it setting. > > VMWare Workstation is installed, but it has not been (correctly) > configured for your running kernel. To (re-) configure it, your system > administrator must find and run "vmware-config.pl". > > Anyhow, the temporary fix is to run the vmware-config.pl and it runs some > scripts on its own then it executes fine after that,,,except after the > machine is rebooted. I think it has something to do with update. Anyhow, > this is my machine info - Linux kubuntu01 2.6.10-5-686 #1 Thu Mar 24 > 14:58:42 GMT 2005 i686 GNU/Linux > > Any ideas on what I need to do to correct it? Here was the solution ... can anyone please tell me what's goin on here as far as the fix...what did it do? 1. rm /etc/vmware/not_configured if it exists. * This clears VMware's Not Configured flag so that the next time you try to start VMware after you apply this patch you won't have to reconfigure first. 2. Find this text in /etc/init.d/vmware (around line 814): * # See how we were called. case "$1" in start) 3. Put this text right under those two lines: * for a in `seq 0 9`; do mknod /dev/vmnet$a c 119 $a > /dev/null 2>&1 done mknod /dev/vmmon c 10 165 > /dev/null 2>&1 4. Now run /etc/init.d/vmware start and the program should work again.
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