On Monday 18 December 2006 19:47, Garrett Cooper wrote: > This is assuming that you have APM setup though on the client OS? I > agree though, vmware is a good product in Windows / Linux. Too bad they > don't directly support FreeBSD though. > -Garrett
well, the freebsd guests install just as normally as any real machine. it even recognized the ACPI without any trouble. the vmware-tools install a daemon that listens to commands from the host, and will reboot (kinda like ctrl-alt-del on the console) or poweroff the guest via buttons on the remote console, or by rebooting/shutting down the host. i will note, that the freebsd tools need a quick patch (whipped up by someone who appears to be a vmware employee, from the vmware forums) to completly acpi-poweroff the guests. this patch: --- vmware-tools.sh.bak Mon Sep 11 11:36:27 2006 +++ vmware-tools.sh Wed Nov 1 13:09:47 2006 @@ -609,6 +609,7 @@ # Start the guest OS daemon vmware_start_guestd() { cd "$vmdb_answer_SBINDIR" && "$vmdb_answer_SBINDIR"/vmware-guestd \ + --halt-command "/sbin/shutdown -p now" \ --background "$GUESTD_PID_FILE" } does the trick. (changes the command that the daemon issues from 'shutdown now' to shutdown -p now'). my email, web, and 2 dns servers, are all virtual machines running on a single linux host. they run fantastic, and i couldnt be more pleased with their performance. cheers, jonathan _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"