I've been using VMware Workstation to run my virtual machines on my Vista laptop.
Are you able to identify precisely which processes are sucking up resources and slowing down your servers? Can you do this equally well over VM guests that VMotion?
OpManager also allows admins to remotely shut down problem-causing processes. With over 500 built-in monitors & 70 deep VMware metrics reported on, OpManager is one of the most comprehensive fault & performance management solutions available today for entire server infrastructure - both physical and virtual.
MSDN has an explanation for this behavior - see Keywords Not Displayed in the User Interface It turns out that Windows Vista automatically identifies and monitors the networks to which a computer connects. However, if the NDIS_DEVICE_TYPE_ENDPOINT flag is set on the network adapter, this means that the device is an endpoint device and is not a connection to a true external network. Because of that, Windows ignores the endpoint device when Windows identifies networks. The Network Awareness APIs indicate that the device does not connect the computer to a network. For end users in this situation, the Network and Sharing Center and the network icon in the notification area do not show the NDIS endpoint device as connected. However, the connection is shown in the Network Connections Folder. Also, if NDIS_DEVICE_TYPE_ENDPOINT is set, the Windows Firewall ignores the connection when Windows Firewall enforces public, private, or domain policies. MVP Oisin Grehan has created a nice PowerShell script that scans the computer's network adapters for VMware’s virtual network interface cards and makes the necessary registry changes. The script will also disable/enable cycle the adapters so that the changes take effect without having to reboot the computer. After the script runs you will see VMware’s virtual network interface cards in the Network Connections page without a network category - and the connections will no longer appear in the Network and Sharing Center nor will they affect your Windows Firewall policy no matter how many times you reboot the computer. Cool! Here's the script source: Nivot Ink - VMWare VMNET Adapters Triggering Public Profile for Windows Firewall
# see <a href="http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb201634.aspx">http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb201634.aspx</a> # # *NdisDeviceType # # The type of the device. The default value is zero, which indicates a standard # networking device that connects to a network. # # Set *NdisDeviceType to NDIS_DEVICE_TYPE_ENDPOINT (1) if this device is an # endpoint device and is not a true network interface that connects to a network. # For example, you must specify NDIS_DEVICE_TYPE_ENDPOINT for devices such as # smart phones that use a networking infrastructure to communicate to the local # computer system but do not provide connectivity to an external network. # # Usage: run in an elevated shell (vista/longhorn) or as adminstrator (xp/2003). # # PS> .\fix-vmnet-adapters.ps1 # boilerplate elevation check $identity = [Security.Principal.WindowsIdentity]::GetCurrent() $principal = new-object Security.Principal.WindowsPrincipal $identity $elevated = $principal.IsInRole([Security.Principal.WindowsBuiltInRole]::Administrator) if (-not $elevated) { $error = "Sorry, you need to run this script" if ([System.Environment]::OSVersion.Version.Major -gt 5) { $error += " in an elevated shell." } else { $error += " as Administrator." } throw $error } function confirm { $host.ui.PromptForChoice("Continue", "Process adapter?", [Management.Automation.Host.ChoiceDescription[]]@("&No", "&Yes"), 0) -eq $true } <!-- Adkit freestyle placement -->[adkit: zone="freestyle" limit="1" list="0"] <br><br><br> [netshelter]# adapters key pushd 'hklm:\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Class\{4D36E972-E325-11CE-BFC1-08002BE10318}' # ignore and continue on error dir -ea 0 | % { $node = $_.pspath $desc = gp $node -name driverdesc if ($desc -like "*vmware*") { write-host ("Found adapter: {0} " -f $desc.driverdesc) if (confirm) { new-itemproperty $node -name '*NdisDeviceType' -propertytype dword -value 1 } } } popd # disable/enable network adapters gwmi win32_networkadapter | ? {$_.name -like "*vmware*" } | % { # disable write-host -nonew "Disabling $($_.name) ... " $result = $_.Disable() if ($result.ReturnValue -eq -0) { write-host " success." } else { write-host " failed." } # enable write-host -nonew "Enabling $($_.name) ... " $result = $_.Enable() if ($result.ReturnValue -eq -0) { write-host " success." } else { write-host " failed." } } |
Copy the above text, paste into a text file and save it with the PS1 extension. Next, open a PowerShell prompt. Note that you need to run it with elevated credentials (i.e. "Run as Administrator"). Navigate to the folder where you've placed the script, and execute it. You can type the first letter of the script's name and press TAB to auto complete the script's name. Note: If PowerShell gives you this error:
File D:\Tools\Admin\Scripts\VMware - VMNET Adapters Triggering Public Profile for Windows Firewall\script.ps1 cannot be loaded because the execution of scripts is disabled on this system. Please see "get-help about_signing" for more details.
You will need to change the Signing and Execution Policies by typing the following command:
Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted
After running the command, you will be prompted to press "Y" for each VMware adapter.
When finished, the script will make the necessary changes.
I hope you have found this article useful!
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