Vmware ESXI detects as FreeBSD 32bit.

Set network interface to vmxnet3.

Also you can use pvscsi driver ( I had some issues with filesystem
corruption,
there is a weird bug, but there is a workaround.)

In general buslogic is more resilient.

Regards,


Em qua, 22 de mai de 2019 às 14:26, mxb <m...@alumni.chalmers.se> escreveu:

> I think FreeBSD or any Linux template will work just fine and add vmxnet3.
> However, last I checked (1year ago) vmxnet3 been less stable than e1000
> under pressure.
>
> Sent from my iDevice
>
> > 22 мая 2019 г., в 13:47, Reyk Floeter <r...@openbsd.org> написал(а):
> >
> >> On Wed, May 22, 2019 at 01:43:35PM +0200, Janne Johansson wrote:
> >> Den ons 22 maj 2019 kl 12:52 skrev Roderick <hru...@gmail.com>:
> >>
> >>> Hallo!
> >>> As far as I read in WWW, OpenBSD do run on VMware ESXi out of the box.
> >>> What does run better on amd64 virtual machine? i386 or amd64?
> >>> Are there reasons to preffer one to the other?
> >>>
> >>
> >> The ESX template for 64-bit comes with more recent "hardware" in the
> >> environment IIRC, so it will be less tweaking the supplied virtualized
> >> hardware if you select 64bit guest instead of 32bit.
> >> Apart from that, 64bit is better on both virtual and real hw.
> >>
> >
> > But unfortunately, there is no openbsd template.  So use "Other 64bit"
> > and enable vmxnet3 manually, as mentioned in vmx(4):
> >
> >     The following entry must be added to the VMware configuration file to
> >     provide the vmx device:
> >
> >           ethernet0.virtualDev = "vmxnet3"
> >
> > This is much better than the e1000 emulation.
> >
> > Reyk
> >
>
>

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