Hi Andy (and anyone else following along here).  I've been doing a lot of 
poking around, and, long story short,  I can now (for the first time ever) 
successfully book and log into the Windows image (yay!) but, annoyingly, only 
with a single one of the vm guest computers I've configured.

While stumbling around in the dark, I decided to try setting up a Linux base 
image as well as the Windows one.  The process went much quicker, but, 
unfortunately, it seems to be getting hung up in a similar place to the Windows 
image, but that's not the interesting thing.  When I created the Linux image, I 
created a new vm guest to run it on ("vmguest-2").  When I got tired of playing 
with the Linux image, I switched back to the Windows image, and, to my 
amazement, it worked!  And then I realized that it was loading on vmguest-2.  
Still didn't work on vmguest-1.  I created yet another vm - vmguest-3 - but it 
also won't work on it.  Only vmguest-2.  I can't quite figure out what's 
special about it.  I even swapped the private ip addresses, so vmguest-1 had 
vmguest-2's address, same result.  (And, with the wiki down at the moment, I 
can't get to the Linux base image documentation to see if there was something 
special about how I made the vm in the first place.)

As well, the errors I get are different on vmguest-1 and 3.  On 1, it can't ssh 
into the machine, as before.  On 3, it starts giving me these:
____________

Failed to resolve given hostname/IP: vmguest-3.  Note that you can't use 
'/mask' AND '1-4,7,100-' style IP ranges
WARNING: No targets were specified, so 0 hosts scanned.
____________

To my newbie eyes, all three vm computers are all as identically configured in 
the vcl computers tables as possible under the circumstances.

Another thing (though probably not related):  The machines all come up with 
512MB memory, but I've set them to have 1024MB.  Clearly, I'm missing some 
config info somewhere.  

At this point it seems I have a useful situation for continued debugging:  a 
working setup, but only for the Windows image, and only for a single VM.  
There's *gotta* be a way to figure out what's the difference making the 
difference.  I'm not worrying about the Linux image right now.  I figure, once 
I get Windows images running properly, I'll have a much easier time getting 
Linux working.

On a (related) side note, I see the list is getting much busier with newbies 
like me asking newbie questions.  A mixed blessing?  Obvious interest in the 
product, but a whole lot of support work for you, huh?  Once I actually have a 
clue, I fully intend to start contributing back, to help with this situation.

Terry

On 7 Apr 2010, at 1418h, Andy Kurth wrote:

> Is SSH working and is everything being processed by vcld to the point where 
> you see the Connect button on the web page?  If you are just manually running 
> the scripts then RDP won't be available because the firewall port isn't open. 
>  vcld opens it later on in the process.
> 
> I have not seen the error before in the output from IP config called from 
> configure_networking.vbs:
> "An internal error occurred: The file name is too long."
> 
> I'm wondering if a problem occurred obtaining the IP address.  Can you run 
> "ipconfig /all" manually and does this error show up?  If SSH is working 
> correctly on the private interface, then I'm guessing there is a routing 
> table problem.  There are no 129.x entries.  This seems odd.  Do any entries 
> appear for 129.x in the routing table it you run "ipconfig /renew", then 
> "route print"?
> 
> If vcld is completely loading the computer, then the problems that occur in 
> configure_networking.vbs may not be the problem.  The output from the log 
> file where "set_public_default_route" is called will be helpful.  The .vbs 
> script attempts to set default routes but the vcld code does this again later 
> on.


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