I never saw I need to do this. You can try a checksum use the same command on each box server and virtual:
This will give you two numbers as output: Example
The first number is checksum, which makes sure all of the filenames are spelled the same. They should match.
The second number is the number of bytes in the filenames, which will be how you can tell if files are missing. For example if you have 57792 on one server and 56991 on the new server. You are missing some bytes which should have come from file names- but are not there.
[/code]
Hello All,
Can anybody please tell me what is the maximum limit of Physical IBM Power Machine which can be handled by single HMC at a single point of time?
Thanks,
Jenish (1 Reply)
Hi there
Firstly, I'm no expert with Unixware but have an appreciation of Unix systems generally. I've been asked to help with a P2V of an aging server and me and the guy that asked for help have hit some snags.
He's created an image (.spf) and used the VMWare Converter to upload it to... (3 Replies)
Trying to set or modify the randomly set hostID of a Solaris 10 virtual/guest machine that I installed on a Windows-XP host machine (using Virtual Box 4.1.12).
I was able to set/modify the hostname of the Solaris 10 virtual/guest machine during installation as well as via the Virtual Box... (4 Replies)
My RHEL virtual Machine Does not have Virtual Machine Manager Desktop Tool
Hi,
I don't seem to have the Virtual Machine Manager Desktop tool set up on my RHEL6 Machine. The Linux machine runs off VMWare player and I'm not sure whether it is a VMWare software issue or a problem with the RHEL6... (2 Replies)
hi,
I am using command psrinfo -p to check the number of physical processors present on any soalris machine.I want to check the number of virtual processors assigned for particular solaris machine.
which command/set of command need to be used which can grep or show the total virtual processors... (8 Replies)
Hi There,
I have zero information and zero knowledge for IBM virtual machine except Amazon cloud and VMware ESXi (Only Linux OS available).
Anyone could provide me the following answer -
Can IBM VM been deploy on X86 and X64 (Intel Chip)?
If answer is yes any chance to deploy AIX OS... (13 Replies)
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 All,
Is there any way I can prioritize my VMs when there is resource crunch in host machine so that some VMs will be allocated more vcpu, more memory than other VMs in kvm/qemu hypervisor based virtual machines?
Lets say in my cloud environment my Ubuntu 16 compute hosts are running some... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
.
I am trying to find whether Solaris 11 installed on physical server or on VMware/KVM.
I tried uname -a but it's giving only whether i installed on X86 or sparc machine.
I tried prtdiag command but it's giving below information.
command : prtdiag -v |grep "System... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sravani25
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
vmware-user-suid-wrapper
VMWARE-USER-SUID-WRAPPER(8) Open VM Tools VMWARE-USER-SUID-WRAPPER(8)NAME
vmware-user-suid-wrapper - wrapper programm for vmware-user(1)SYNOPSIS
vmware-user-suid-wrapper
DESCRIPTION
Operations on the vmblock(9) filesystem are considered privileged, and as such may only be issued on a file descriptor acquired by root.
This is accomplished by vmware-user-suid-wrapper, a small setuid wrapper whose only purpose is to acquire a filesystem file descriptor,
drop superuser privileges, and then execute vmware-user(1). In particular, prepare the system for vmware-user means that it unmounts the
vmblock file system, unloads the vmblock module, then reloads the module, mounts the file system, and opens a file descriptor that vmware-
user can use to add and remove blocks.
OPTIONS
vmware-user-suid-wrapper has no options.
SEE ALSO vmware-checkvm(1)vmware-hgfsclient(1)vmware-toolbox(1)vmware-toolbox-cmd(1)vmware-user(1)vmware-xferlogs(1)libguestlib(3)libvmtools(3)vmware-guestd(8)vmware-hgfsmounter(8)vmblock(9)vmci(9)vmhgfs(9)vmmemctl(9)vmsock(9)vmsync(9)vmxnet(9)vmxnet3(9)HOMEPAGE
More information about vmware-user-suid-wrapper and the Open VM Tools can be found at <http://open-vm-tools.sourceforge.net/>.
AUTHOR
Open VM Tools were written by VMware, Inc. <http://www.vmware.com/>.
This manual page was put together from homepage materials by Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-technologies.net>, for the Debian
project (but may be used by others).
2010.03.20-243334 2010-04-08 VMWARE-USER-SUID-WRAPPER(8)