On 2024-03-01 22:04, Alexander Boettcher wrote:
<snip>
VMWare products are not used by any of the core developers, so the
support will be limited.

No worries at all.  They're popular in some circles, maybe due to
vm snapshot support, and decent DirectX support for Windows VMs.

Broadcom recently bought VMware Inc, so the desktop products now
have an unknown future. :(

That being said, I can try with KVM based VMs as well.  Might give
that a go later to see what happens.


<snip>
For a short test I tried the VMWare player on Ubuntu 22.04. I couldn't
find a way to import the raw disk image directly

File -> Open -> "Select the .vmdk file" didn't work?


so I converted it

qemu-img convert -O vmdk sculpt-23-10.img sculpt-23-10.vmdk

Thanks.  Totally forgot that qemu-img existed.  I'll muck around with
that a bit, and see if I can create an ova that VMware Workstation is
happy to use.


With the vmdk, I was able to create a configuration with "Other 64bit"
OS as type. It booted, but showed no graphical output. At a second
look, somehow solely 256M RAM was configured, so I increased it to 2
GB and I got a Sculpt screen.

So, in principle the image can be booted with the VMware player when
in vmdk format.

Cool. :)

Something else worth mentioning is the network adapter support.  In
VMware Workstation it defaults to emulating an "e1000", which *sounds*
like it should work.  Sculpt doesn't seem to like it though, which
leaves the system without a working connection.

Changing the network adapter model to "e1000e" though works, with Sculpt
happily using that without further drama.  The network adapter model
can only be changed by manually editing the VM definition file (.vmx)
in the VM directory though, as the setting isn't made visible in the
VMware Workstation GUI:

  ethernet0.virtualDev = "e1000e"

Note that this change must be done when the GUI isn't running.


<snip>
I can reproduce the Problem 1-3, but there seems no rock solid way to
use Virtualbox generated ova files with VMWare. Several workarounds
are posted all over the net, e.g. [0], but all seem kind of quirky. I
tried also to export the ova from Virtualbox in various formats and
also the type of used disks, but none of the variants are accepted by
the VMWare player.

The only long term solution would be to be to export a working VM as
ova from a VMWare-Workstation installation, which we don't have nor
intend to have.

Thanks heaps for taking the time to try stuff out. :)

I'll see if I can generate a matching ova that works ok, then throw it
online somewhere in case other people want to try it out. :)

Regards and best wishes,

Justin Clift
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