-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 9
Fork of VMWare's http://open-vm-tools.sourceforge.net with fixes for Fedora 18 guest OS
License
drothlis/open-vm-tools
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
Project information: open-vm-tools <http://open-vm-tools.sourceforge.net/> These are the release notes for the open-vm-tools. Read them carefully, as they explain how to build this project for different platforms and various different Linux distributions. ================================================================================ General information: (*)What are the open-vm-tools? The open-vm-tools are a subset of the VMware Tools, currently composed of kernel modules for Linux and user-space programs for all VMware supported Unix like guest operating systems. (*)Where do I find documentation for the open-vm-tools beyond this README? Please refer to the main project web site for all the latest documentation at: <http://open-vm-tools.sourceforge.net/> (*)How do I build the open-vm-tools? The open-vm-tools uses the GNU Automake tool for generating Makefiles to build all sources. More information about Automake can be found here: <http://sources.redhat.com/automake/> For more information on building this project see the "Project build information" section of this document. ================================================================================ Project build information: (*)Getting configure options & help: If you are looking for help or additional settings for the building of this project the following configure command will display a list of help options: "./configure --help" (*)Using configure: When using configure in the steps below it is only necessary to call "./configure" once unless there was a problem after the first invocation. (*)Building Unix user-space programs: 1) "./configure" 2) Run "make" to build Unix userland programs 3) Run "make modules" to build kernel modules (*)Packaging: If you are interested in creating a Tools package, please see <https://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/open-vm-tools/index.php?title=Packaging> for more information. ================================================================================ Build suggestions: Each Linux distribution puts binaries, libraries and development headers in different locations. This leads to having to setup different paths for the compiler and linker for the Automake system. Below is a list of known configurations to build for platforms that do not "just work" out of the box or the tar-ball as the case may be. General Build note: Please make note that the "--disable-multimon" flag should only be used when there are no libXinerama libraries installed, or you do not want to enable multi monitor support. Your operating system version will influence which kernel modules can be built. Here are the minimum OS versions for each module: |------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | vmsync | vmblock | vmxnet | vmmemctl | vmhgfs | |---------------|----------------|--------------|----------------|-------------| | Linux 2.6.6 | Linux 2.4.0 | Linux 2.2.0 | Linux 2.2.0 | Linux 2.4.0 | | FreeBSD N/A | FreeBSD 6.0 | FreeBSD 4.9 | FreeBSD 3.2 | FreeBSD 6.0 | |------------------------------------------------------------------------------| (*)Suse Enterprise 10.1 (i386 & x86_64): i386: ./configure LDFLAGS="-L/opt/gnome/lib" x86_64: ./configure LDFLAGS="-L/opt/gnome/lib64" (*)OpenSolaris "Nevada" (i386 & x86_64): Before building open-vm-tools on Solaris, you will need to make sure that libdnet (http://libdnet.sourceforge.net/) is installed and that the 'dnet-config' script is on your shell's PATH. Make sure that the GNU tools are in your shell's PATH. The default GNU tools location on OpenSolaris is: "/usr/sfw/bin". Once the PATH is set in your build shell then the following configure command should work: ./configure --disable-multimon (*)FreeBSD 6.2 (i386 & x86_64): ./configure LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib" ================================================================================ Other resources: There are also open-source video & mouse drivers for Xorg/XFree86 that provide better performance and additional features to Linux, Solaris, and BSD derivatives guests running X11. The drivers 'xf86-input-vmmouse' and 'xf86-video-vmware' are included with recent Xorg releases, and it shouldn't be necessary to do anything extra to obtain them. If you want to obtain them separately, they can be downloaded at: <http://xorg.freedesktop.org/releases/individual/driver/> ================================================================================ Guest operating systems used to test on this release: (*)Fedora Core 8 (i386 & x86_64) (*)Redhat 9.0 (i386) (*)Redhat Enterprise 4 U5 (i386 & x86_64) (*)Redhat Enterprise 5 (i386 & x86_64) (*)FreeBSD 5.4 (i386 & x86_64) (*)FreeBSD 6.2 (i386 & x86_64) (*)OpenSolaris 10 "Nevada" (i386 & x86_64) (*)Open SuSE 10.3 (i386 & x86_64) (*)Ubuntu 6.04 (i386 & x86_64) (*)Ubuntu 7.10 (i386 & x86_64) =============================================================================== Known issues: (*) When using HGFS on FreeBSD, the 'cp' command will fail if the source file is on the HGFS share. This is because mmap() does not yet work with the FreeBSD port of HGFS. One workaround is to use 'cat /mnt/hgfs/foo/bar > /tmp/baz' instead of 'cp /mnt/hgfs/foo/bar /tmp/baz'. (*) When using HGFS on FreeBSD, if your current working directory is the top-level HGFS mount (e.g. '/mnt/hgfs') and you run 'ls', you will receive an "Invalid argument" error. The workaround is to change to another directory and then run 'ls /mnt/hgfs'. Running 'ls' in subdirectories of /mnt/hgfs works as expected. ===============================================================================
About
Fork of VMWare's http://open-vm-tools.sourceforge.net with fixes for Fedora 18 guest OS
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published