I'm trying to run an old SCO 5.0.4 server into VMWare workstation (and later, ESX). I've used Ghost to dump the entire image into the virtual disk, and of course it won't start since the SCSI drivers need to be replaced.
Now I've tried to boot the virtual system with a generic boot/rootdisk, and used the link=blc command to make the kernel aware BusLogic (vmware emulates those). This seems to go well, as I can see the %Sdsk device in the boot screen (see attachment). I can also see a few hd devices in /dev including hd0root, and for example, a 'head /dev/hd02' returns some binary garbage telling me that I'm looking at the raw disk contents.
Now, what I intend to do is to mount the system, try to chroot to it, and adjust the kernel and boot parameters to make the system bootable again. However, I can't seem to mount the hd devices ("cannot stat /dev/hd*). This could be due to my lack of knowledge concerning SCO installation and boot options (all SCO systems I managed were already installed and ran fine).
My questions: How do I proceed in mounting the disks? Should I have created a kernel with BusLogic drivers -prior- to making the Ghost image? Is it even possible with SCO 5.0.4 as I notice that 5.0.7 actually recognises the disk as VMware? Should I use a system specific bootdisk (created on the old physical machine)?
I know there are some good documents on installing SCO in VM on the web, but I've not yet seen a good procedure on virtualizing existing servers..
Hi folks,
First of all, sorry about my english, isn't the best and thks for advance.
Here es my problem...
I have virtualize an SCO unix with VMware ESX 3 and everything was going on beatifull until that i try to connect from anorther host, i can't do it so i check the connection with... (5 Replies)
I am haveing a problem with my VMware ESXi 4.1 server and a virtual SCO UnixWare 7.1.4 server that I need for a legacy application for my company. The problem seems simple but I can't find a solution. The UnixWare (UW) server is a clean install and patched as SCO recommends. I am able to telnet to... (1 Reply)
Sir I am trying to install UnixWare7.1.4 on vmware workstation9, virtualbox and I am getting the following error
FATAL BOOT ERROR: decompression failed
For installing SCO Unixware7.1.4 I have created virtual harddisk of size 18GB, 1024 RAM, 64bit video memory, chosen unixware7.1.4... (1 Reply)
I've moved a physical server over to VMWare ESXi 5.1 using SCO 6.0 with MP4. For whatever reason, people are occasionally getting kicked out or are closing out their telnet session and it is leaving their processes running. When this happens, the sar %idle drops from 98-95% down to 25-20%. ... (1 Reply)
Some years ago our company chose to run a critical proprietary app under SCO Unix.
My predecessor tried to move A SCO Unix virtual machine from our dedicated VMWare environment to a shared Cloud VMWare environment. My predecessor received licensing messages from these critical servers so... (2 Replies)
hi
i installed sco unix open server 5.0.7 on virtual machine vmware and runing it,
its work perfect and good.
now how i can configuare network at scoadmin that i able to access nework ?
---------- Post updated at 08:56 AM ---------- Previous update was at 01:47 AM ----------
nobody can... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: farzad226
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
vmmouse_detect
vmmouse_detect(1) General Commands Manual vmmouse_detect(1)NAME
vmmouse_detect - VMware mouse device autodetection tool
SYNOPSIS
vmmouse_detect
OPTIONS
vmmouse_detect has no options
DESCRIPTION
vmmouse_detect is a tool for detecting if running in a VMware environment where vmmouse is used. It exits with a 0 return value if the
vmmouse client is enabled, and 1 if not.
DIAGNOSTICS
vmmouse_detect's exit status is used to communicate information.
0 vmmouse_detect found a mouse and exited normally.
1 Either the vmmouse client was not enabled, or it is not being run from within a VMware virtual machine.
BUGS
Please report bugs in vmmouse_detect <https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/mdetect/vmmouse_detect>.
AUTHORS
vmmouse_detect is copyright 2007 VMware, Inc.
LICENSING
The vmmouse_detect source code is licensed under a BSD-like license. See COPYING for details.
This manual page is licensed under the GNU General Public License.
SEE ALSO mdetect(1), XFree86(1)X Version 11 xf86-input-vmmouse 12.6.9 vmmouse_detect(1)