From: Robert Comer on 3 Dec 2009 13:49 Yep, or whichever NIC you're using right now. -- Bob Comer On Thu, 03 Dec 2009 10:11:58 -0800, Karl E. Peterson <karl(a)exmvps.org> wrote: >Robert Comer formulated the question : >> It's in the settings for the VM. (on the host, Virtual PC folder) > >Ahhh. Okay, now, mind you, this is that "frankenclone" system I've >been at odds with for a few days, so I didn't intentionally do this and >cannot begin to tell you what's up with it. <g> It's set to: > >Adapter 1: Intel(R) WiFi Link 5100 AGN >Adapter 2: Intel(R) 82567LM Gigabit Network Connection > >Looking at the settings for the XP Mode machine, I see it set to use >NAT. I take it that's how I should configure this other VM?
From: Karl E. Peterson on 3 Dec 2009 15:13 Robert Comer formulated on Thursday : > Yep, or whichever NIC you're using right now. Well, when I set Adapter 1 to the NIC in the box, I'm back to where I started. (Probably because I disabled the other within the VM.) Host can ping guest and guest can ping host, but guest can't get beyond host. If I set it to use NAT, neither can ping the other. Timeouts when guest pings host (or anything else), and destination unreachable when host pings guest. -- [.NET: It's About Trust!]
From: Robert Comer on 3 Dec 2009 15:25 >Well, when I set Adapter 1 to the NIC in the box, I'm back to where I >started. (Probably because I disabled the other within the VM.) Host >can ping guest and guest can ping host, but guest can't get beyond >host. DHCP or a fixed address? Check your gateway address on both the host and the guest to see if they are the same. Is this at home or work? Make sure the VM is in the same subnet as the other PC's too. You might try and just delete the connection and reboot to let it recreate it -- it might be corrupt. -- Bob Comer On Thu, 03 Dec 2009 12:13:11 -0800, Karl E. Peterson <karl(a)exmvps.org> wrote: >Robert Comer formulated on Thursday : >> Yep, or whichever NIC you're using right now. > >Well, when I set Adapter 1 to the NIC in the box, I'm back to where I >started. (Probably because I disabled the other within the VM.) Host >can ping guest and guest can ping host, but guest can't get beyond >host. > >If I set it to use NAT, neither can ping the other. Timeouts when >guest pings host (or anything else), and destination unreachable when >host pings guest.
From: Karl E. Peterson on 3 Dec 2009 15:59 Robert Comer explained : >> Well, when I set Adapter 1 to the NIC in the box, I'm back to where I >> started. (Probably because I disabled the other within the VM.) Host >> can ping guest and guest can ping host, but guest can't get beyond >> host. > > DHCP or a fixed address? Fixed. > Check your gateway address on both the host > and the guest to see if they are the same. Check. > Is this at home or work? Work. Though I'd like the VM to be portable. It is on a laptop. I'm on a wired connection at the moment. > Make sure the VM is in the same subnet as the other PC's too. Yep. > You might try and just delete the connection and reboot to let it > recreate it -- it might be corrupt. Okay, wth, not the first time that would've helped. There is also an Unknown Device I haven't figured out yet. Probably not related to the networking, but I think it may be VPC related as it's device ID is "ACPI\VPCBUS\4&4B01EB&0" -- [.NET: It's About Trust!]
From: Karl E. Peterson on 3 Dec 2009 16:08 Karl E. Peterson explained on 12/3/2009 : > Robert Comer explained : >> You might try and just delete the connection and reboot to let it >> recreate it -- it might be corrupt. > > Okay, wth, not the first time that would've helped. Huh. Sucker won't let me delete it. -- [.NET: It's About Trust!]
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