On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 4:34 AM, Tamas Karpati <[email protected]> wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> 1. Failed installing VMWare Workstation 10.* (WS) along with any
> gentoo-sources (swept all stable and latest ~amd64 versions recent days),
>
> 2. seeing many solutions of remarkably few types re-appearing
> on the net after several version bumps but still
>
> 3. having 0 (zero) stable versions of WS in the portage tree
>
> I would like to ask you about the appropriate steps to make in order
> to have a stable working WS on my Gentoo box without having
> to mix things up with overlays (I never used them and unsure
> about spending the effort for just a workaround).
>
> Another question would be whether WS will ever go stable in the
> portage tree (temporary state of the corresponding packages) or
> this is the intended conduction of developement?
> You know, a field Gentoo user never knows why is a pkg unstable...
>
> Thanks for your time,
>   toma
>

Hi Toma,
   I cannot offer any recent experiences with VMWare on Gentoo. Maybe
5-6 years ago I was using the workstation product but I had numerous
issues that sound similar to yours and eventually gave up on it.

   Since that time I've been using the ~amd64 version of Virtualbox
nearly daily. (Since 2008-2009 I think...) I run two VMs each running
Win 7 in which I run 2 different trading platforms along with other
Windows apps. As a workstation I've had remarkably few real issues
with it other than graphics performance where it really lags behind
VMWare's virtual graphics device. That said graphics performance isn't
critical to my needs so I'm quite happy. In fact recently NetFlix
started supporting watching streaming videos in a Linux browser (I use
Chrome for most everything) without having to use a Windows VM so I've
retired the 3rd VB VM that I used to use for that.

   If graphics performance, or for some reason using specifically a
VMWare product is important to you, then you might be better off on a
Linux platform they support directly like Ubuntu or Redhat, etc. I
personally wouldn't go there but it's probably a more dependable and
less maintenance if you did.

HTH,
Mark

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