![]() Also VM-computer BIOS has one more option with the case of Win10. This may have to do with "memory management", which is mentioned elsewhere for Win10. With Win10 VM, it seems to work, but at some point hangs the entire computer, not just VM. ![]() No surprise there, it doesn't work since Mint is based on Ubuntu Other tests, on the same computer, mentioned above: This, I'm not sure if it even works.ĮDIT: In case you are wondering, I did rename username and diskname in the vmware.log.Īs mentioned before, in Ubuntu 16.04.1 VMware Player works as it always has worked. I was even able to run a 3D CAD-application with SQL Server on VM on a 1 GB Asus/Linux minicomputer in VMware - it is the only one that was equally slow, but it did work. I have used VMware Workstation Pro (or Player) for 15+ years on Windows and Ubuntu, and used easily over 100-200 DIFFERENT VMware computers and never had something like this. If this is a memory allocation problem, I need advice. VM is NOT allocated to take too much or too little memory (perhaps under 10 GB currently). Perhaps there is some memory allocation problem in VMware, but I don't know how to solve that. RAM is 16 GB and should be enough for everything. Message to add more swap to Linux, I have ignored. It took minutes to get into the "background page of Windows start" and then, after another several minutes, there was still no login page for Windows 7.Īs stated before, all the other VMs, Win10 and Win7, fresh or old, give a similar issue on Ubuntu 20.04.1 Host. Mind you that this is a failed attempt to start Windows 7 VM. If I find nothing, I will give you a fresh vmware.log for analysis. I will test with Windows 7 VM, which I now use with Windows 10 Host on a (theoretically) identical workstation without any issues. It's a bit cumbersome, because VM must be killed - no ordinary shutdown is possible because of the slowness - and thus VM can be broken at some point. As a description of events, it is so slow that when selecting a username in Windows login, it doesn't seem to proceed at all.īased on your answer, I will test with different BIOS setup combinations for virtualization. I said it is "very very slow and unusable". Information that this combination IS supported would have helped. ![]() According to some Google threads, it was unclear and I did specifically ask about this support in my question, b) holiday season is the reason for no answers. You actually gave out relevant information for my tests: a) this IS supposed to be supported (Ubuntu 20.04.1). ![]() Thanks! This was the first answer in 2 Ubuntu Forums and VMware Forum after a week or so. ![]()
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