I have loaded VMware Horizon View 3.0 for 64 bit Windows 7. I entered the correct server to connect to, but get a time out error? Any help?
Have tried on separate computer, different location and the error is unable to find server, any help?
Thanks
I have loaded VMware Horizon View 3.0 for 64 bit Windows 7. I entered the correct server to connect to, but get a time out error? Any help?
Have tried on separate computer, different location and the error is unable to find server, any help?
Thanks
I have a client that would like to Install Red Hat Clustering Solution on VMware Environment. Does anyone know if Red hat Clustering is Supported on VMware? Thanks for your input.
Hi ,
I am facing an issue where we have an application running on Guest VM ( RHEL 6.1 ). We needed upgrade the OS from RHEL6.1 to RHEL 6.4.
So, we did the upgrade of the VM by attaching RHEL6.4 ISO as CD-ROM device and running the standard OS upgrade. After the OS upgrade is done.
When VM boots up Guest console freezes just before the login screen as show in the below screenshot:
Here, I can login to guest via ssh/telnet but, from console I can't login or do any operation. I tried pressing CTR+ALT+DEL VM get's rebooted but again the console just freeze at this step.
I also tried the suspend and then resume option (found workaround on some forums)
Here, We are using VSphere client 5.1.0
I wanted to know first if it's known issue what's defect id for it. Also , If there is any workaround (patch).
Thanks,
AmitW
We ran into the following error when trying to install VMWare Server 2.0 - on Windows Server 2003.
"Error 1718. File was rejected by digital signature policy"
There is a hotfix available to resolve the issue from Microsoft. More information about the hotfix and the download can be found at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/925336.
The hotfix resolved the issue for us.
Dave
Ontrack Data Recovery
I've recently joined a company and therefore inherited a number of Virtual machines but one in particular is causing me some concern as it randomly blue screens. The kernel memory dump exceeds 400Mb (the maximum that I can make the paging file with the partition space I have available) so I have had to set minidumps instead to get a non truncated report. I have included one mini dump below, and I have also attached the previous minidump, but all of my others are practically identical to these two.
The probable cause in each dump is "memory_corruption". In a physical World I would replace the physical memory and expect that to resolve matters but in a virtual World, where the other virtual servers running on this box are stable, I'm not so sure that memory is the answer.
I was wondering if someone more technically competent than I at diagnosing these dumps, could possible advise me of what the likely cause is and give me something to go on.
This apparently was a physical box before being virtualised if that helps. The BSOD can occur at any time of day or night. Sometimes it goes down twice in a week, sometimes twice in a month. I haven't as yet come up with any pattern or trend that would stimulate the box into a crash.
Further Info:
Windows 2000 Advanced Server with SP4
Physical Memory 4Gb
Virtual memory 6.4Gb ( split as follows : C drive 400Mb, D drive 2Gb, E Drive 4Gb)
Boot.ini
timeout=30
default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINNT
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINNT="Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server" /fastdetect /pae /3gb
Last memory dump (consistent with all others I've collected so far)
Microsoft (R) Windows Debugger Version 6.9.0003.113 X86
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Mini Kernel Dump File: Only registers and stack trace are available
Symbol search path is: SRVc:\symbolshttp://msdl.microsoft.com/download/symbols
Executable search path is: C:\WINDOWS;C:\WINDOWS\system32;C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers
Windows 2000 Kernel Version 2195 (Service Pack 4) MP (2 procs) Free x86 compatible
Kernel base = 0xdd400000 PsLoadedModuleList = 0xdd487c00
Debug session time: Tue Sep 2 06:18:46.948 2008 (GMT+1)
System Uptime: not available
Loading Kernel Symbols
...........................................................................................................
Loading User Symbols
Loading unloaded module list
....
*******************************************************************************
*
Bugcheck Analysis *
*
*******************************************************************************
Use !analyze -v to get detailed debugging information.
BugCheck A, {97, 2, 0, dd538d8d}
Probably caused by : memory_corruption ( nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+103 )
Followup: MachineOwner
-
1: kd> !analyze -v;r;kv;lmtn;.logclose;q
*******************************************************************************
*
Bugcheck Analysis *
*
*******************************************************************************
IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL (a)
An attempt was made to access a pageable (or completely invalid) address at an
interrupt request level (IRQL) that is too high. This is usually
caused by drivers using improper addresses.
If a kernel debugger is available get the stack backtrace.
Arguments:
Arg1: 00000097, memory referenced
Arg2: 00000002, IRQL
Arg3: 00000000, bitfield :
bit 0 : value 0 = read operation, 1 = write operation
bit 3 : value 0 = not an execute operation, 1 = execute operation (only on chips which support this level of status)
Arg4: dd538d8d, address which referenced memory
Debugging Details:
-
READ_ADDRESS: unable to read from dd487c58
unable to read from dd487588
unable to read from dd48743c
unable to read from dd4790b8
unable to read from dd487450
unable to read from dd487584
unable to read from dd4790bc
unable to read from dd487644
unable to read from dd487bf8
00000097
CURRENT_IRQL: 2
FAULTING_IP:
nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+103
dd538d8d 8b8b98000000 mov ecx,dword ptr
CUSTOMER_CRASH_COUNT: 1
DEFAULT_BUCKET_ID: DRIVER_FAULT
BUGCHECK_STR: 0xA
PROCESS_NAME: System
TRAP_FRAME: f0e93cbc -- (.trap 0xfffffffff0e93cbc)
.trap 0xfffffffff0e93cbc
ErrCode = 00000000
eax=00000000 ebx=ffffffff ecx=dd487e84 edx=00000000 esi=dd0654f0 edi=dd487e84
eip=dd538d8d esp=f0e93d30 ebp=f0e93d44 iopl=0 nv up ei pl zr na pe nc
cs=0008 ss=0010 ds=0023 es=0023 fs=0030 gs=0000 efl=00010246
nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+0x103:
dd538d8d 8b8b98000000 mov ecx,dword ptr ds:0023:00000097=????????
.trap
Resetting default scope
LAST_CONTROL_TRANSFER: from dd538d8d to dd46ca94
STACK_TEXT:
f0e93cbc dd538d8d 00000000 f0e93d3c 00000021 nt!KiTrap0E+0x284
f0e93d44 dd442773 fcf05a00 dd486c40 fcf05a40 nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+0x103
f0e93d7c dd467a65 fcf05a40 00000000 00000000 nt!MmInSwapProcess+0x3e5
f0e93d90 dd4679bc 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KiInSwapProcesses+0x33
f0e93da8 dd458b38 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KeSwapProcessOrStack+0x6e
f0e93ddc dd46e256 dd46794e 00000000 00000000 nt!PspSystemThreadStartup+0x54
00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KiThreadStartup+0x16
STACK_COMMAND: kb
FOLLOWUP_IP:
nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+103
dd538d8d 8b8b98000000 mov ecx,dword ptr
SYMBOL_STACK_INDEX: 1
SYMBOL_NAME: nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+103
FOLLOWUP_NAME: MachineOwner
MODULE_NAME: nt
DEBUG_FLR_IMAGE_TIMESTAMP: 403d35f9
IMAGE_NAME: memory_corruption
FAILURE_BUCKET_ID: 0xA_nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+103
BUCKET_ID: 0xA_nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+103
Followup: MachineOwner
-
eax=fd98513c ebx=0000000a ecx=00000000 edx=00000000 esi=dd538d8d edi=00000097
eip=dd46ca94 esp=f0e93ca8 ebp=f0e93cbc iopl=0 nv up ei ng nz na pe nc
cs=0008 ss=0010 ds=0023 es=0023 fs=0030 gs=0000 efl=00000286
nt!KiTrap0E+0x284:
dd46ca94 f7457000000200 test dword ptr ,20000h ss:0010:f0e93d2c=00010246
ChildEBP RetAddr Args to Child
f0e93cbc dd538d8d 00000000 f0e93d3c 00000021 nt!KiTrap0E+0x284 (FPO: TrapFrame @ f0e93cbc)
f0e93d44 dd442773 fcf05a00 dd486c40 fcf05a40 nt!MiSessionInSwapProcess+0x103 (FPO: )
f0e93d7c dd467a65 fcf05a40 00000000 00000000 nt!MmInSwapProcess+0x3e5 (FPO: )
f0e93d90 dd4679bc 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KiInSwapProcesses+0x33 (FPO: )
f0e93da8 dd458b38 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KeSwapProcessOrStack+0x6e (FPO: )
f0e93ddc dd46e256 dd46794e 00000000 00000000 nt!PspSystemThreadStartup+0x54 (FPO: )
00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 nt!KiThreadStartup+0x16
start end module name
dd062000 dd076460 hal hal.dll Fri Mar 21 02:04:42 2003 (3E7A733A)
dd400000 dd5a3f00 nt ntkrpamp.exe Wed Feb 25 23:55:37 2004 (403D35F9)
de000000 de1a4000 win32k win32k.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
de1a4000 de1b9000 vmx_fb vmx_fb.dll unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
de1b9000 de1c6000 RDPDD RDPDD.dll unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0a00000 f0a0f000 pci pci.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0a10000 f0a1c000 isapnp isapnp.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0a20000 f0a30000 cpq32fs2 cpq32fs2.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B60C9)
f0a30000 f0a38700 CLASSPNP CLASSPNP.SYS Wed Jan 15 19:42:51 2003 (3E25B9BB)
f0a50000 f0a5c4c0 VIDEOPRT VIDEOPRT.SYS Wed Jan 15 19:47:20 2003 (3E25BAC8)
f0a60000 f0a6b680 i8042prt i8042prt.sys Wed Apr 16 05:00:59 2003 (3E9CD57B)
f0a70000 f0a7f400 serial serial.sys Wed Apr 16 05:19:39 2003 (3E9CD9DB)
f0a80000 f0a8db00 vmx_svga vmx_svga.sys Wed Apr 11 18:53:38 2007 (461D20A2)
f0a90000 f0a9ca80 rasl2tp rasl2tp.sys Wed Apr 30 00:05:06 2003 (3EAF0522)
f0aa0000 f0aabc40 raspptp raspptp.sys Thu May 15 00:47:00 2003 (3EC2D574)
f0ab0000 f0abea20 parallel parallel.sys Wed Jan 15 19:47:14 2003 (3E25BAC2)
f0ad0000 f0ad9ce0 NDProxy NDProxy.SYS Fri Oct 01 00:25:35 1999 (37F3F16F)
f0af0000 f0af8fa0 Npfs Npfs.SYS Sun Oct 10 00:58:07 1999 (37FFD68F)
f0b00000 f0b08680 msgpc msgpc.sys Wed Jan 15 19:54:25 2003 (3E25BC71)
f0b10000 f0b181a0 netbios netbios.sys Tue Oct 12 20:34:19 1999 (38038D3B)
f0b20000 f0b28580 savonaccessfilter savonaccessfilter.sys Mon Sep 10 12:07:39 2007 (46E5257B)
f0bf0000 f0bf9000 Fips Fips.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0c80000 f0c86000 PCIIDEX PCIIDEX.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0c88000 f0c90000 MountMgr MountMgr.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0c90000 f0c97000 symc8xx symc8xx.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B60C9)
f0c98000 f0c9e000 sym_hi sym_hi.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B60C9)
f0ca0000 f0ca7720 disk disk.sys Wed Jan 15 19:43:05 2003 (3E25B9C9)
f0ca8000 f0cad880 nsifiltr nsifiltr.sys Wed Oct 03 18:05:49 2007 (4703CBED)
f0cb0000 f0cb5100 agp440 agp440.sys Wed Jan 15 19:47:07 2003 (3E25BABB)
f0cd0000 f0cd5ec0 kbdclass kbdclass.sys Thu Feb 20 16:37:30 2003 (3E55044A)
f0ce0000 f0ce5400 mouclass mouclass.sys Thu Feb 20 16:37:45 2003 (3E550459)
f0ce8000 f0ced000 TDTCP TDTCP.SYS ***** Invalid (FCFD2F69)
f0cf0000 f0cf6100 parport parport.sys Wed Jan 15 19:47:13 2003 (3E25BAC1)
f0d08000 f0d0f000 fdc fdc.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0d18000 f0d1ec40 cdrom cdrom.sys Wed Jan 15 19:43:04 2003 (3E25B9C8)
f0d30000 f0d37280 vmxnet vmxnet.sys Sun Sep 30 13:22:32 2007 (46FF9508)
f0d58000 f0d5c400 ptilink ptilink.sys Wed Jan 15 19:47:15 2003 (3E25BAC3)
f0d68000 f0d6c0e0 raspti raspti.sys Fri Oct 08 21:45:10 1999 (37FE57D6)
f0d80000 f0d84a60 flpydisk flpydisk.sys Wed Jan 15 19:42:52 2003 (3E25B9BC)
f0d90000 f0d96a20 EFS EFS.SYS Wed Jan 15 19:46:55 2003 (3E25BAAF)
f0db0000 f0db5240 Msfs Msfs.SYS Wed Oct 27 00:21:32 1999 (3816377C)
f0dd0000 f0dd7d00 wanarp wanarp.sys Fri Aug 16 13:25:01 2002 (3D5CEF1D)
f0de0000 f0de7000 vmmemctl vmmemctl.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0e10000 f0e13000 BOOTVID BOOTVID.dll unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0e14000 f0e17000 compbatt compbatt.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B66C9)
f0e18000 f0e1b000 PartMgr PartMgr.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0e1c000 f0e20000 cpqarray cpqarray.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B60C9)
f0e20000 f0e24000 symc810 symc810.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B60C9)
f0e24000 f0e27c80 cpqcissm cpqcissm.sys Mon May 19 17:19:35 2003 (3EC90417)
f0e28000 f0e2b460 cpqarry2 cpqarry2.sys Mon Nov 05 21:47:33 2001 (3BE708F5)
f0e2c000 f0e2f480 nsirecog nsirecog.sys Wed Oct 03 18:05:49 2007 (4703CBED)
f0f00000 f0f02000 BATTC BATTC.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0f02000 f0f04000 intelide intelide.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B65C9)
f0f04000 f0f06000 Diskperf Diskperf.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B68E9)
f0f06000 f0f08000 dmload dmload.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0f0a000 f0f0b300 kbstuff5 kbstuff5.sys Wed Nov 23 19:44:23 2005 (4384C697)
f0f0c000 f0f0d280 vmmouse vmmouse.sys Wed Apr 11 18:54:49 2007 (461D20E9)
f0f12000 f0f13ca0 Fs_Rec Fs_Rec.SYS Wed Jan 15 19:53:30 2003 (3E25BC3A)
f0f1a000 f0f1be40 rasacd rasacd.sys Sat Sep 25 19:41:23 1999 (37ED1753)
f0fb6000 f0fb8000 ParVdm ParVdm.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0fc8000 f0fc9000 WMILIB WMILIB.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f0fc9000 f0fca000 pciide pciide.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B65C9)
f105e000 f105e840 idisw2km idisw2km.sys Wed Nov 23 19:45:10 2005 (4384C6C6)
f1088000 f1088a40 audstub audstub.sys Sat Sep 25 19:35:33 1999 (37ED15F5)
f10a1000 f10a1d80 swenum swenum.sys Sat Sep 25 19:36:31 1999 (37ED162F)
f10bf000 f10bf9e0 Null Null.SYS Sat Sep 25 19:34:58 1999 (37ED15D2)
f10c3000 f10c3ee0 Beep Beep.SYS Wed Oct 20 23:18:59 1999 (380E3FD3)
f10c8000 f10c8f80 mnmdd mnmdd.SYS Sat Sep 25 19:37:40 1999 (37ED1674)
f3faf000 f3fb3000 prepdrv prepdrv.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f409b000 f40b1000 RDPWD RDPWD.SYS ***** Invalid (FCFD2F69)
f4101000 f4111000 ipsec ipsec.sys ***** Invalid (E2AF6008)
f41e1000 f41e4000 spud spud.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f4c69000 f4c8c000 Fastfat Fastfat.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f4e94000 f4e9d000 termdd termdd.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B68E9)
f509c000 f50d7000 srv srv.sys ***** Invalid (E13824C8)
f533f000 f534e000 Cdfs Cdfs.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f5537000 f5555000 afd afd.sys ***** Invalid (FD710149)
f56bd000 f56ce000 dump_symmpi dump_symmpi.sys ***** Invalid (FD71D609)
f56f6000 f575aca0 mrxsmb mrxsmb.sys Thu Jan 20 07:25:21 2005 (41EF5CE1)
f576d000 f5796900 rdbss rdbss.sys Fri Dec 03 03:37:11 2004 (41AFDF67)
f5797000 f57aff00 savonaccesscontrol savonaccesscontrol.sys Mon Sep 10 12:08:16 2007 (46E525A0)
f57b0000 f57d91a0 netbt netbt.sys Thu May 22 02:51:10 2003 (3ECC2D0E)
f57da000 f58281a0 tcpip tcpip.sys Thu May 12 11:24:58 2005 (42832EFA)
f5cb1000 f5cdb3a0 update update.sys Wed Apr 16 05:22:01 2003 (3E9CDA69)
f5cdc000 f5cf7b40 ks ks.sys Wed Apr 16 05:02:11 2003 (3E9CD5C3)
f5d0a000 f5d2d060 rdpdr rdpdr.sys Fri Mar 21 21:43:14 2003 (3E7B8772)
f5d56000 f5d6cba0 ndiswan ndiswan.sys Wed Apr 30 00:05:01 2003 (3EAF051D)
f5d7d000 f5d80580 vga vga.sys Sat Sep 25 19:37:40 1999 (37ED1674)
f5db9000 f5dbd000 dump_scsiport dump_scsiport.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f5f4e000 f5f51e60 TDI TDI.SYS Wed Jan 15 19:56:26 2003 (3E25BCEA)
f5f5e000 f5f602e0 ndistapi ndistapi.sys Wed Jan 15 19:54:15 2003 (3E25BC67)
f5f6a000 f5f6d640 serenum serenum.sys Wed Jan 15 19:47:01 2003 (3E25BAB5)
f5f7e000 f5f805a0 CmBatt CmBatt.sys Wed Jan 15 19:44:29 2003 (3E25BA1D)
f5fbe000 f5fd1b20 CPQPHP CPQPHP.SYS Mon Jan 06 23:44:27 2003 (3E1A14DB)
f5fd2000 f5fe7640 Mup Mup.sys Wed Jan 15 19:54:01 2003 (3E25BC59)
f5fe8000 f6011aa0 NDIS NDIS.sys Wed Apr 30 00:05:01 2003 (3EAF051D)
f6012000 f60945a0 Ntfs Ntfs.sys Fri May 09 20:46:45 2003 (3EBC05A5)
f6095000 f60a67c0 KSecDD KSecDD.sys Sun Sep 21 01:32:19 2003 (3F6CF193)
f60a7000 f60b91c0 Dfs Dfs.sys Wed Feb 12 02:19:06 2003 (3E49AF1A)
f60ba000 f60d4c00 dblhook dblhook.sys Wed Oct 03 18:05:50 2007 (4703CBEE)
f60d5000 f60e6180 drvmcdb drvmcdb.sys Thu Feb 08 22:01:47 2001 (3A83174B)
f60e7000 f60f8000 symmpi symmpi.sys Mon Jun 14 16:28:44 2004 (40CDC42C)
f60f8000 f610e000 adpu160m adpu160m.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B60C9)
f610e000 f6124000 atapi atapi.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B68E9)
f6124000 f6137000 SCSIPORT SCSIPORT.SYS unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f6137000 f6159000 dmio dmio.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f6159000 f6176000 ftdisk ftdisk.sys unavailable (FFFFFFFE)
f6176000 f619e000 ACPI ACPI.sys ***** Invalid (FD9B68E9)
Unloaded modules:
f5225000 f5267000 cpqasm.sys
Timestamp: unavailable (00000000)
Checksum: 00000000
f0b30000 f0b39000 redbook.sys
Timestamp: unavailable (00000000)
Checksum: 00000000
f0da0000 f0da5000 Cdaudio.SYS
Timestamp: unavailable (00000000)
Checksum: 00000000
f5d85000 f5d88000 Sfloppy.SYS
Timestamp: unavailable (00000000)
Checksum: 00000000
Closing open log file c:\debuglog.txt
Any assistance that anybody could give me in diagnosing the fault or possible remedies, would be much appreciated.
Cheers
I moved an RH i386 image from VM version 1.06 server to a new server running VM version 2.0.
When I try to open the folder where the vmx file is I get a GUI pop up error: " ServiceNotAvailableException: Web service not available." and in the background the GUI says "The Datastore Browser could not successfully retrieve data from the server."
I have to reboot the server to get my GUI back again.
What I am missing to let me move a VMware image from 1.06 server to 2.0?
Thanks
VMware Server 1.0.6 build-91891
VMware-server 2.0.0 build 122956
Hi friends ;
Host : windows 7
Guest : Linux 5.5
I am using virtual machine version 9 (brigged n/w)
I want to connect my vmware machine from putty without LAN connection.
I strongly believe it is possible. I dont know how can i do that ?
Always i am facing 'network unreachable'
Please help me ..
I have the follwing configuration:
host Ubuntu server 7
guest Ubuntu server 8
vmnet0 = bridged (eth1)
ifconfig on host:
eth1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:E0:81:48:F9:EF
inet addr:91.185.193.179 Bcast:91.185.193.255 Mask:255.255.240.0
eth1:0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:E0:81:48:F9:EF
inet addr:91.185.201.112 Bcast:91.185.207.255 Mask:255.255.240.0
eth1:7 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:E0:81:48:F9:EF
inet addr:91.185.201.119 Bcast:91.185.193.255 Mask:255.255.240.0
lo Link encap:Local Loopback
inet addr:127.0.0.1 Mask:255.0.0.0
ifconfig on guest
eth1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:E0:81:48:F9:EF
inet addr:91.185.201.118 Bcast:91.185.193.255 Mask:255.255.240.0
lo Link encap:Local Loopback
inet addr:127.0.0.1 Mask:255.0.0.0
from guest:
ping 91.185.201.119 WORKS!
ssh 91.185.201.119 WORKS!
ping google.com DOES NOT work
ping gateway-address DOES NOT work
route output is OK!
from host:
ping 91.185.201.118 WORKS!
ssh 91.185.201.118 WORKS!
ping google.com WORKS!
grep eth UbuntuServer.vmx
ethernet0.present = "TRUE"
ethernet0.allowGuestConnectionControl = "FALSE"
ethernet0.virtualDev = "vlance"
ethernet0.features = "1"
ethernet0.wakeOnPcktRcv = "FALSE"
ethernet0.networkName = "Bridged"
ethernet0.addressType = "generated"
ethernet0.generatedAddress = "00:0c:29:2e:79:7a"
ethernet0.pciSlotNumber = "33"
ethernet0.generatedAddressOffset = "0"
When I create a VM for Vista x64 on Workstation 6.5 and then 'move' it to Server 2.0, the following ASSERT() occurs (debugger attached, of course).
Assertion failed: Missing StreamContext Support: post IRP_MJ_CREATE, not a paging file: (volume->FileSystemType == FLT_FSTYPE_MS_NETWARE) || FlagOn(irpSp->Flags,SL_OPEN_PAGING_FILE)
Source File: d:\rtm\base\fs\filtermgr\filter\fltmgr.c, line 703
Break repeatedly, break Once, Ignore, terminate Process, or terminate Thread (boipt)? o
Collecting the details (shown below) it would appear that VMHGFS.SYS is causing a problem. AFAIK, VMHGFS.SYS should be 'inert' with server since there is no "Shared Folders" support.
Any ideas on how to make this issue go away?
TIA,
-Dave
Debugging Details:
-
ERROR: Module load completed but symbols could not be loaded for vmhgfs.sys
PROCESS_NAME: System
FAULTING_IP:
nt!DbgBreakPoint+0
fffff800`01a0dc70 cc int 3
EXCEPTION_RECORD: ffffffffffffffff -- (.exr 0xffffffffffffffff)
ExceptionAddress: fffff80001a0dc70 (nt!DbgBreakPoint)
ExceptionCode: 80000003 (Break instruction exception)
ExceptionFlags: 00000000
NumberParameters: 1
Parameter[0]: 0000000000000000
ERROR_CODE: (NTSTATUS) 0x80000003 - Breakpoint A breakpoint has been reached.
EXCEPTION_CODE: (HRESULT) 0x80000003 (2147483651) - One or more arguments are invalid
EXCEPTION_PARAMETER1: 0000000000000000
DEFAULT_BUCKET_ID: VISTA_DRIVER_FAULT
BUGCHECK_STR: 0x0
CURRENT_IRQL: 0
ASSERT_DATA: (volume->FileSystemType == FLT_FSTYPE_MS_NETWARE) || FlagOn(irpSp->Flags,SL_OPEN_PAGING_FILE)
ASSERT_FILE_LOCATION: d:\rtm\base\fs\filtermgr\filter\fltmgr.c at Line 703
LAST_CONTROL_TRANSFER: from fffff800019cb6b9 to fffff80001a0dc70
STACK_TEXT:
fffffa60`0cd196e8 fffff800`019cb6b9 : fffff800`00000065 fffffa60`00000000 fffff800`01a1a230 fffffa60`0cd19740 : nt!DbgBreakPoint
fffffa60`0cd196f0 fffffa60`0116c200 : fffffa60`01181f80 fffffa60`01181dc0 fffffa60`000002bf fffffa60`01181f30 : nt!RtlAssert+0x11d
fffffa60`0cd19c40 fffffa60`0116d388 : fffffa80`05955c60 fffffa80`03cb6aa0 fffffa80`03cb69f0 fffffa60`017bc2e7 : fltmgr!VALIDATE_CONTEXT_STATE+0x380
fffffa60`0cd19c80 fffffa60`0116d76c : fffffa80`03cb69f0 fffffa80`03cb69f0 fffffa80`03cb6a08 fffffa80`05d26680 : fltmgr!FltpProcessIoCompletion+0x70
fffffa60`0cd19cc0 fffffa60`0116d08f : fffffa80`03457be0 fffffa80`05955c60 fffffa80`03cb69f0 fffffa80`05955e08 : fltmgr!FltpPassThroughCompletion+0x284
fffffa60`0cd19d10 fffffa60`011a2eaf : fffffa60`0cd19de0 fffffa60`00000000 fffffa80`05955c00 00000000`00000000 : fltmgr!FltpLegacyProcessingAfterPreCallbacksCompleted+0x72b
fffffa60`0cd19d90 fffff800`0209809f : fffffa80`03457be0 fffffa80`05955c60 fffffa80`028ca624 00000000`00000000 : fltmgr!FltpCreate+0x54f
fffffa60`0cd19e50 fffff800`0224f651 : fffffa80`028ca670 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`03bb2010 fffffa80`028ca600 : nt!IopParseDevice+0x1b3f
fffffa60`0cd19fd0 fffff800`0224b05e : 00000000`00000000 fffffa60`0cd1a168 fffff880`00000200 00000000`00000000 : nt!ObpLookupObjectName+0x9f9
fffffa60`0cd1a0f0 fffff800`02082990 : fffffa60`0cd1a560 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`03ac2500 00000000`00000000 : nt!ObOpenObjectByName+0x1fe
fffffa60`0cd1a1d0 fffff800`0208e18a : fffffa60`0cd1a540 fffffa60`00000020 fffffa60`0cd1a560 fffffa60`0cd1a550 : nt!IopCreateFile+0x9b0
fffffa60`0cd1a270 fffff800`01a12273 : fffffa60`0cd1a540 fffffa60`00000020 fffffa60`0cd1a560 fffffa60`0cd1a550 : nt!NtOpenFile+0xa6
fffffa60`0cd1a300 fffff800`01a12780 : fffff800`02083c6d fffffa60`0cd1a540 00000000`00000020 fffffa60`0cd1a560 : nt!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd+0x13
fffffa60`0cd1a508 fffff800`02083c6d : fffffa60`0cd1a540 00000000`00000020 fffffa60`0cd1a560 fffffa60`0cd1a550 : nt!KiServiceLinkage
fffffa60`0cd1a510 fffffa60`017c28d2 : fffff880`0074ee58 fffff880`00000020 fffffa60`0cd1a5d0 fffffa60`0cd1a5d8 : nt!IoGetDeviceObjectPointer+0x8d
fffffa60`0cd1a5b0 fffffa60`017c1b78 : fffff880`0074ee40 fffffa80`00000000 fffffa80`02ced470 00000000`00000000 : mup!MupiProcessProviderRegistration+0x132
fffffa60`0cd1a600 fffffa60`017c0ad6 : fffffa80`03ac2500 fffffa80`03ac2500 fffffa60`01181d00 fffffa60`0cd1a740 : mup!MupRegisterUncProvider+0x140
fffffa60`0cd1a660 fffffa60`0116cf18 : fffffa80`028ca670 fffffa80`03ac2500 fffffa80`03ac2523 fffffa60`01181d00 : mup!MupFsControl+0x1b6
fffffa60`0cd1a6a0 fffffa60`011a337e : fffffa60`0cd1a740 fffffa80`00000000 00000000`00001600 fffffa80`03ac2500 : fltmgr!FltpLegacyProcessingAfterPreCallbacksCompleted+0x5b4
fffffa60`0cd1a720 fffff800`0207d170 : fffffa80`03457be0 fffffa80`03ac2500 fffffa80`03ac2500 00000000`00000000 : fltmgr!FltpFsControl+0x2f6
fffffa60`0cd1a790 fffff800`0207eadf : fffffa80`03457be0 fffffa80`03ac2500 fffffa80`05d1f230 00000000`00000001 : nt!IopSynchronousServiceTail+0x420
fffffa60`0cd1a820 fffff800`0208c668 : ffffffff`80000ed0 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 : nt!IopXxxControlFile+0xa97
fffffa60`0cd1a930 fffff800`0206c399 : ffffffff`80000ed0 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 : nt!NtFsControlFile+0xa0
fffffa60`0cd1a9a0 fffff800`0206c62e : ffffffff`80000ed0 fffffa80`02ced7c0 fffffa80`02ced470 fffff800`00000000 : nt!FsRtlpRegisterProviderWithMUP+0xd9
fffffa60`0cd1aa20 fffff800`0206c524 : fffffa80`02ced800 fffffa80`02ced7c0 fffffa80`02ced470 00000000`00000000 : nt!FsRtlpRegisterUncProvider+0xca
fffffa60`0cd1aa80 fffffa60`0ca734cb : fffffa80`02ced800 fffffa80`02ced7c0 fffffa80`02ced470 00000000`00000000 : nt!FsRtlRegisterUncProviderEx+0x60
fffffa60`0cd1aab0 fffffa60`0ca73c95 : fffffa80`02ced5c0 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 : vmhgfs+0x44cb
fffffa60`0cd1aae0 fffffa60`0ca94def : 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`034c2000 00000000`00000001 fffff800`01e6bca0 : vmhgfs+0x4c95
fffffa60`0cd1ab10 fffffa60`0ca77285 : fffffa80`0336a628 fffffa80`05986090 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`034c2000 : vmhgfs+0x25def
fffffa60`0cd1ab60 fffffa60`0ca94b36 : fffffa60`03091400 fffffa60`01c1e18e 0000000a`00000000 fffffa60`01c04f6b : vmhgfs+0x8285
fffffa60`0cd1ab90 fffffa60`0ca94a34 : fffffa80`05986090 fffffa80`05986090 fffffa60`0cd1ace8 fffffa80`0336a530 : vmhgfs+0x25b36
fffffa60`0cd1abc0 fffffa60`0ca70306 : 00002709`46dfe2ce fffff800`01e6bca0 fffffa80`00000001 00000000`000001ee : vmhgfs+0x25a34
fffffa60`0cd1ac00 fffffa60`0ca704ca : fffffa80`034c2000 fffff800`01e6bca0 fffffa80`0336a530 fffff800`019ee96d : vmhgfs+0x1306
fffffa60`0cd1ac30 fffff800`0208891e : fffffa80`02d23be0 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`0336a530 fffff800`01e6bca0 : vmhgfs+0x14ca
fffffa60`0cd1ac80 fffff800`019f046c : fffffa80`034d3110 fffffa60`01cb5e01 fffffa60`01c75100 fffffa60`0cd1ace8 : nt!IopProcessWorkItem+0x4a
fffffa60`0cd1acb0 fffff800`022a5085 : 00000000`80000000 fffffa80`0336a530 00000000`00000080 fffff800`01a0bffe : nt!ExpWorkerThread+0x170
fffffa60`0cd1ad20 fffff800`01a0d6c6 : fffff800`019f02fc 00000000`80000000 fffffa60`005ec180 fffffa80`0336a530 : nt!PspSystemThreadStartup+0x1ad
fffffa60`0cd1ad80 00000000`00000000 : 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 : nt!KiStartSystemThread+0x16
STACK_COMMAND: kb
FOLLOWUP_IP:
fltmgr!VALIDATE_CONTEXT_STATE+380
fffffa60`0116c200 488b5c2450 mov rbx,qword ptr
SYMBOL_STACK_INDEX: 2
SYMBOL_NAME: fltmgr!VALIDATE_CONTEXT_STATE+380
FOLLOWUP_NAME: MachineOwner
MODULE_NAME: fltmgr
IMAGE_NAME: fltmgr.sys
DEBUG_FLR_IMAGE_TIMESTAMP: 47918e20
FAILURE_BUCKET_ID: X64_0x0_fltmgr!VALIDATE_CONTEXT_STATE+380
BUCKET_ID: X64_0x0_fltmgr!VALIDATE_CONTEXT_STATE+380
Followup: MachineOwner
-
0: kd> .exr 0xffffffffffffffff
ExceptionAddress: fffff80001a0dc70 (nt!DbgBreakPoint)
ExceptionCode: 80000003 (Break instruction exception)
ExceptionFlags: 00000000
NumberParameters: 1
Parameter[0]: 0000000000000000
Ubuntu linux installation is painless as explained in this document. Ubuntu is a valuable and completely free distribution of Linux. It is open-source and software libre meaning that it's free of any limitations that GPL or LGPL may pose. Like other Linux distributions, Ubuntu will enable you to text your applications in Linux.
The common challenge for many users is that fact that one must either configure dual-boot into windows or Ubuntu Linux, or set-aside a PC for use with this operating system. Often, especially for smaller companies and consultancies that may not have the resources, it is not possible to set-aside a PC system just for testing or learning Linux if that is not the popular platform within the organisation. Also, it may sometimes be necessary to switch between several operating system during development or testing, and this may not be possible in dual-boot environments, or if you are away from the office (in a situation where it's not possible to have your multiple systems).
To enable to simultaneously use of multiple operating systems on on computer, there are a number of low-level applications in the market; especially for Apple Computers to run Windows (More of these will be added especially now that Apple is using Intel Chips and shipping Microsoft Windows bundled with their new systems). Besides the fact that it costs money to enable Windows to run on a Mac, this feature did not exist on Windows Systems to enable them to run other OS for free until VMware started distributing it's Server.
Download and install the VMWare Server (You will be required to create an account in order to receive a registration key - necessary to run the software)
Install the server software (this will take a long time and also ask you to close common applications such as Mozilla, Outlook, OpenOffice)
Enter the product registration key when requested
You are not equipped with the VMWare server and you are ready to install operating systems
Installing Ubuntu Linux in the VMWare server
Start the VMWare Server and from the home menu, select 'New Virtual Machine' and follow the instructions that follow to install a CD of Ubuntu Linux (If the CD auto-launches within Windows, cancel it and DO NOT install it in Windows lest you erase your physical disk)
Make sure that you allocate enough disk space for the Ubuntu Linux installation partitions without compromising the other windows applications on your system (make the decision based on how much idle disk-space you have).
Whenever Ubuntu 'talks' of formating the drive and erasing all information, do not be scared, it's only taking about the space allocated to it within the VMWare virtual machine environment
The Ubuntu Linux installation will take some time to complete, and it's not any different or complex compared to installing Windows XP
Make choices for screen-resolution, networking and RAM usage based on the resources that your system has, how often you will be using Ubuntu Linux Compared to your Windows applications, and your network setup
When done, Ubuntu will restart the machine (all within the VMWare virtual machine without restarting your physical PC) and you should have a nice working installation of Ubuntu Linux within your Windows O
The VMWare Server allows you to break free from the Ubuntu Linux or any other Virtual machine you may be using (to use your physical Windows machine) by pressing CONTROL + ALT
Original Link - http://cmsproducer.com/Ubuntu-Linux-Windows-VMware-Server
Comptia A+ | Comptia N+ | CCNA |NES |HP ACT | EE N3 | MCP | MCTSx1 | MCITPx1 | SCS | VCP
-
Please Reward Points----
Good morning all. I was wondering if there is a way I can connect an .iso file to my host os (win xp pro 64 in this case) so that I can save files dorectly to the .iso. Is there a way I can make the .iso be emulated as either a harddrive, or perhaps turn my 'cd rom' into a cd-rw to where i can just keep 'burning' my RW disc with new software? Thank you for your assistance!
Hi All
I hav two Vcenters in my Environment say for example VC1 and VC2
In VC1, i hav added two Hosts such as H1 and H2...
In VC2, i am trying to connect Host H2, as usual it said this Host H2 is already mapped with VC1, do u want to connect..i said yes and connected H2 to VC2
The moment i connected H2 to VC2, H2 got disconnected from VC1( Expected behaviour)
Now again latter in the day, am again connecting H2 to VC1, again same message , i said yes and connected H2 to VC1
Now in VC1--- i hav Hosts H2 in two states, connected and disconnected state --- Is that possible?
Thanks in advance
Regards
Hi,
Vmware server 2.0.1 installed on windows vista 32 bit.
Ubuntu 9.04 guest is installed with vmware tools.
vmware-toolbox is started in the background, but copy and paste doesn't work either from host to guest or vice versa.
Any ideas?
brg
Greetings,
I did a bone-headed thing... I was expirementing with permissions and in one of my "test" images I added "Users role Read-Only on This object" but I didn't realize that as an "Administrator" I am also a user and that "deny" permissions supersede allow permissions. Now I have no way to go back and delete that permission on the users group! I'd happily just delete this VM from my inventory but it won't let me do that either.
How do I remove the permission or remove the VM from my inventory? This is very frustrating!
Thanks!
Windows Server 2003 R2 64 bit. VMWare Server 2
I can not connect to the virtual console, can't stop the virtual machine
from any Web-interface, can't suspend or reset but can create a new
virtual machine, I can set up access rights, can create other virtual
machines to
run them. I work under the account from the Administrators group. Group
Administartors has role Administartor (at permissions tab in VMWare, i
see). Under the
account of the Administartors group in VMWare, you can do with virtual machines
anything to the idea. It turns out that the permissions lost ... What can I
do?
I can't find anything like this on the web, and I have posted to the Ubuntu discussion forums with little success so far, but here goes:
I am running Ubuntu 8.10 desktop (2.6.27-14 generic), with VMware server 2.0. VMware server had some issues with it's networking and hung ubuntu (I know, I was surprised to see that happen), so I had to hard power down my system.
When it came back up, a file system check found tons of lost inodes and moved half my system to lostfound (many many gigs). I backed up the lostfound directory to a portable hard drive.
I installed ubuntu 8.10 on a new partition, upgraded it to 27-14, and copied system files and user information to the broken one in order to get it stable. I was then able to login to my broken system and found some major damage. To the tune of my start-up scripts being gone, many of the progs in etc and bin/sbin being gone, vmware server barely being there at all - only my powered off Virtual Machine directories were left intact with their files still there.
My main problem is that I need to recover my Windows 2003 Server virtual machine, which is gone. I have been able to find the files (from lostfound, Ie. #3122949 (2.4Gb) for another VM (my Apache rpath linux web server which hosts some ESX backup files) which isn't as important. I have 3 months of data in my Win2k3 VM that I need to recover (3 months since my last backup to external media), but I can't find any files large enough in my lostfound that could be the Win2k3 VM files. My local backup directories are also gone, as are my snapshots which were in my Win2k3 Virtual Machine's directory, which is gone.
Can anyone tell me what I can do with my system to try to find the VM? Understandably, the directories that contained my running VM's became derefenced/lost when the system crashed. This is a huge heartache for me because I have some deliverables that I need to recover for a very important client.
Please advise ASAP!!
Thanks,
SypsG
hi there,
My computer's cpu is Intel(R) Core(TM)2 CPU 6400 @ 2.13GHz
I guess vmware server 2.0 don't support Solaris spark image, right?
Is there a plug-in for vmware server2.0 to resolve this problem?
Thanks in advance
Hi All,
I am new to VMWare server, so bare with me if I sound a bit nooby.
I have a server running Windows 2003 SE 32 bit. I used Windows WMware converter Standalone to create a VM from the physical machine. I selected VMware Servwer 2.x as the target environment. Then I disconnected the drives for the Windows server, put in a new one and installed RH Linux 64bit OS, and the VMware Server 64 bit for it. I got it all up and running without any issues.
However, the Windows VM won't start, throwing out the error shown on the attached PDF file. It is a startup blue screen warning of a serious error and that it is shutting down to avoid damage to the Windows system. It suggests reviewing the hard drive setup. It gets as far as throwing up the very first Windows 2003 Server logo witrh the little activity bar cycling about twice before the blue screen appears.
Is this a reasonable thing to expect to be able to do? That is, to "clone" a Windows system using the Windows version of WMWare Converter Standalone, and copy the resulting files to a Linux system running VMware server? The hardware is the same hardware that the "real" Windows server runs on. The .VMX file is alos attached.
Hardware: Dell SC1420, Dual Core Xeon, 3Mhz, 4GB RAM, 1TB single SATA drive (under the Linux config), two SATA drives (under the Windows Server Config).
Thanks in advance for any advice for what I am trying.
Bill
Hi, I've been testing using a dual Xeon motherboard with only one 5520 installed and Windows Server 2008 (Host) and Server 2 sees 8 processors (4 cores x 2 with HT). I've now installed another 5520 and Windows Server 2008 recognised it on boot and after a reboot, Windows shows 16 CPUs. VMWare Server 2 still shows 8 with only 1 Xeon. Will Server 2 support dual Xeons or do I need ot uninstall Server and reinstall?
Thanks!
Rick
VMware Server 2.0.1 and latest RHEL5 kernel (both host & guest) = RANDOM REBOOTS !
I have VMware Server 2.0.1 running on CentOS 5.3 (x64 kernel-2.6.18-128.2.1.el5).
Lately I started experiencing random reboots of host and had to investigate it a bit.
At first I suspected hardware problems and specificly RAM corruption. 24h memtest86+ and no errors.
I had my guests migrated to another VMware-server 2.0.1 running on FC11 (2.6.29.6-213.fc11.x86_64).
No more host reboots but the guests (CentOS 5.3 x86 2.6.18-128.2.1.el5) still keep random rebooting.
Had a look at the guest logs and found this:
-
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Caught signal 6 -- tid 5362
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: eip 0x369b0332f5 esp 0x7fa1e0b01d88 ebp 0x2
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: eax 0x0 ebx 0x369b132efe ecx 0xffffffffffffffff edx 0x6 esi 0x14f2 edi 0x14ed
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| r8 0x2c55020 r9 0x3 r10 0x8 r11 0x3206 r12 0xa57c9a000 r13 0x10000 r14 0x284f4d0 r15 0x7fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01D88 : 0x9b034b20 0x00000036 0x00000000 0x00000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01D98 : 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x00000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01DA8 : 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x00000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01DB8 : 0x00003000 0x00000000 0x9b369e80 0x00000036
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01DC8 : 0x00010000 0x00000000 0x9b369e80 0x00000036
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01DD8 : 0x00010010 0x00000000 0xe0b01f20 0x00007fa1
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01DE8 : 0x00000000 0x00000000 0x9b369ee8 0x00000036
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SIGNAL: stack 7FA1E0B01DF8 : 0x9b077f32 0x00000036 0x00000000 0x00000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace:
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[0] 00007fa1e0b01830 rip=000000000041521c rbx=0000000000000000 rbp=0000000000415500 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00007fa1e0b01940 r14=0000000000000025 r15=0000000000000006
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[1] 00007fa1e0b01850 rip=0000000000468cf5 rbx=0000000000000080 rbp=0000000000000006 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00007fa1e0b01940 r14=0000000000000025 r15=0000000000000006
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[2] 00007fa1e0b01940 rip=000000369bc0ee90 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[3] 00007fa1e0b01d88 rip=000000369b0332f5 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[4] 00007fa1e0b01d90 rip=000000369b034b20 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[5] 00007fa1e0b01ec0 rip=000000369b075a50 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[6] 00007fa1e0b01f00 rip=000000000047eb93 rbx=0000000000000000 rbp=0000000002c55020 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[7] 00007fa1e0b01f70 rip=000000000054cc9b rbx=000000000274ebd0 rbp=000000000274ed50 r12=0000000000000001 r13=000000000000000c r14=0000000000000000 r15=ffffffffffffffff
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[8] 00007fa1e0b01f90 rip=00000000004f165d rbx=000000000274ed80 rbp=000000000274ed50 r12=0000000000000001 r13=000000000000000c r14=0000000000000000 r15=ffffffffffffffff
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace[9] 00007fa1e0b01fe0 rip=00000000004f186c rbx=000000000274ed80 rbp=000000000274ed50 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00000000027f4244 r14=0000000000edfca0 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace10 00007fa1e0b02010 rip=000000000048542a rbx=0000000000ee0c08 rbp=0000000000000000 r12=00007fff609f6b50 r13=0000000000000000 r14=0000000000000000 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace11 00007fa1e0b02110 rip=000000369bc0686a rbx=0000000000000000 rbp=0000000000000000 r12=00007fff609f6ad0 r13=0000000000000000 r14=0000000000000000 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| Backtrace12 00007fa1e0b02220 rip=000000369b0de25d rbx=00007fa1e0b02910 rbp=0000000000000000 r12=00007fff609f6ad0 r13=0000000000000000 r14=0000000000000000 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[0] 00007fa1e0b01830 rip=000000000041521c in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[1] 00007fa1e0b01850 rip=0000000000468cf5 in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.120: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[2] 00007fa1e0b01940 rip=000000369bc0ee90 in function (null) in object /lib64/libpthread.so.0 loaded at 000000369bc00000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[3] 00007fa1e0b01d88 rip=000000369b0332f5 in function gsignal in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[4] 00007fa1e0b01d90 rip=000000369b034b20 in function abort in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[5] 00007fa1e0b01ec0 rip=000000369b075a50 in function (null) in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[6] 00007fa1e0b01f00 rip=000000000047eb93 in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[7] 00007fa1e0b01f70 rip=000000000054cc9b in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[8] 00007fa1e0b01f90 rip=00000000004f165d in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[9] 00007fa1e0b01fe0 rip=00000000004f186c in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace10 00007fa1e0b02010 rip=000000000048542a in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace11 00007fa1e0b02110 rip=000000369bc0686a in function (null) in object /lib64/libpthread.so.0 loaded at 000000369bc00000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| SymBacktrace12 00007fa1e0b02220 rip=000000369b0de25d in function clone in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| Unexpected signal: 6.
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| Panic: can't get userlevel lock.
Aug 01 11:08:40.121: Worker#1| Core dump limit is 0 KB.
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Child process 13550 failed to dump core (status 0x6).
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace:
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[0] 00007fa1e0b01350 rip=000000000041521c rbx=0000000000000000 rbp=0000000000415500 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00007fa1e0b01940 r14=0000000000000025 r15=0000000000000006
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[1] 00007fa1e0b01370 rip=00000000004db650 rbx=00007fa1e0b01880 rbp=0000000000000006 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00007fa1e0b01940 r14=0000000000000025 r15=0000000000000006
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[2] 00007fa1e0b01850 rip=0000000000468ea8 rbx=00007fa1e0b01880 rbp=0000000000000006 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00007fa1e0b01940 r14=0000000000000025 r15=0000000000000006
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[3] 00007fa1e0b01940 rip=000000369bc0ee90 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[4] 00007fa1e0b01d88 rip=000000369b0332f5 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[5] 00007fa1e0b01d90 rip=000000369b034b20 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[6] 00007fa1e0b01ec0 rip=000000369b075a50 rbx=000000369b132efe rbp=0000000000000002 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[7] 00007fa1e0b01f00 rip=000000000047eb93 rbx=0000000000000000 rbp=0000000002c55020 r12=0000000a57c9a000 r13=0000000000010000 r14=000000000284f4d0 r15=00007fa1e0b01f20
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[8] 00007fa1e0b01f70 rip=000000000054cc9b rbx=000000000274ebd0 rbp=000000000274ed50 r12=0000000000000001 r13=000000000000000c r14=0000000000000000 r15=ffffffffffffffff
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace[9] 00007fa1e0b01f90 rip=00000000004f165d rbx=000000000274ed80 rbp=000000000274ed50 r12=0000000000000001 r13=000000000000000c r14=0000000000000000 r15=ffffffffffffffff
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace10 00007fa1e0b01fe0 rip=00000000004f186c rbx=000000000274ed80 rbp=000000000274ed50 r12=0000000000000000 r13=00000000027f4244 r14=0000000000edfca0 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace11 00007fa1e0b02010 rip=000000000048542a rbx=0000000000ee0c08 rbp=0000000000000000 r12=00007fff609f6b50 r13=0000000000000000 r14=0000000000000000 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace12 00007fa1e0b02110 rip=000000369bc0686a rbx=0000000000000000 rbp=0000000000000000 r12=00007fff609f6ad0 r13=0000000000000000 r14=0000000000000000 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Backtrace13 00007fa1e0b02220 rip=000000369b0de25d rbx=00007fa1e0b02910 rbp=0000000000000000 r12=00007fff609f6ad0 r13=0000000000000000 r14=0000000000000000 r15=0000000000000003
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[0] 00007fa1e0b01350 rip=000000000041521c in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[1] 00007fa1e0b01370 rip=00000000004db650 in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[2] 00007fa1e0b01850 rip=0000000000468ea8 in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[3] 00007fa1e0b01940 rip=000000369bc0ee90 in function (null) in object /lib64/libpthread.so.0 loaded at 000000369bc00000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[4] 00007fa1e0b01d88 rip=000000369b0332f5 in function gsignal in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[5] 00007fa1e0b01d90 rip=000000369b034b20 in function abort in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[6] 00007fa1e0b01ec0 rip=000000369b075a50 in function (null) in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[7] 00007fa1e0b01f00 rip=000000000047eb93 in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[8] 00007fa1e0b01f70 rip=000000000054cc9b in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace[9] 00007fa1e0b01f90 rip=00000000004f165d in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace10 00007fa1e0b01fe0 rip=00000000004f186c in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace11 00007fa1e0b02010 rip=000000000048542a in function (null) in object /usr/lib/vmware/bin/vmware-vmx loaded at 0000000000400000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace12 00007fa1e0b02110 rip=000000369bc0686a in function (null) in object /lib64/libpthread.so.0 loaded at 000000369bc00000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| SymBacktrace13 00007fa1e0b02220 rip=000000369b0de25d in function clone in object /lib64/libc.so.6 loaded at 000000369b000000
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Msg_Post: Error
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| http://msg.log.error.unrecoverable VMware Server unrecoverable error: (Worker#1)
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| Unexpected signal: 6.
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| http://msg.panic.haveLog A log file is available in "/storage/VirtualMachines/srv01.ctg.ee/vmware.log". http://msg.panic.requestSupport.withLog Please request support and include the contents of the log file. http://msg.panic.requestSupport.vmSupport.windowsOrLinux
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| To collect data to submit to VMware support, select Help > About and click "Collect Support Data". You can also run the "vm-support" script in the Workstation folder directly.
Aug 01 11:08:40.139: Worker#1| http://msg.panic.response We will respond on the basis of your support entitlement.
Aug 01 11:08:40.221: vmx| VTHREAD watched thread 37 "Worker#1" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.222: vcpu-0| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.320: Worker#13| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.320: Worker#8| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.320: Worker#16| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.321: Worker#3| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.321: Worker#0| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.321: Worker#9| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.321: Worker#2| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.322: Worker#7| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.322: Worker#12| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.322: Worker#15| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.322: Worker#10| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.322: Worker#5| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.322: Worker#14| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.323: Worker#4| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.323: Worker#11| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.324: Worker#6| VTHREAD watched thread 4 "vcpu-0" died
Aug 01 11:08:40.554: mks| VTHREAD watched thread 0 "vmx" died
-
I've looked around and that seems to be quite a common problem here and there?