Is there a program which will allow me to convert a VMware guest host VM into a physical image?
I know how to go P2V, but I need to go V2P.
Is there a program which will allow me to convert a VMware guest host VM into a physical image?
I know how to go P2V, but I need to go V2P.
I'd like to setup my Windows Server 2003 VPN system as follows:
User A connects to public IP 1.2.3.4 / Firewall redirects 1.2.3.4 to internal IP 10.10.1.1 which is an IP setup on the Windows Server 2003 box running VPN / The 10.10.1.1 VPN server assigns an IP of 10.10.2.2
User B connect to public IP 4.3.2.1 / Firewall redirects 4.3.2.1 to internal IP 10.10.1.2 which is a 2nd IP setup on the same Server 2003 box running VPN / The 10.10.1.2 VPN server assigns an IP of 10.10.3.3
Is this possible or do I need two seperate VPN servers to setup such a configuration?
I know how to add the extra IPs for the additional VLANs on the single NIC, but I'm not sure how to go about directing the traffic to the separate VLANs.
On the Windows level is there anything I need to do besides enable tagging on the NIC?
On the switch side I'm guessing I just need to add multiple VLANs to the port the NIC is connected to and the tagging will determine which VLAN the traffic goes to.
Is there anything else I need to setup?
I don't mean the build version, I mean whether I have Essentials, Essentials Plus, Standard, Advanced, Enterprise, or Enterprise Plus? Is there somewhere I can look to see this without having to determine it by what features I do have and which I do not?
The sys admin before me purchased this setup and there is no documentation for it.
Thanks in advance.
I'd like to setup multiple IPs (I know how to do this) and multiple VLAN interfaces to a NIC team I have setup.
I'm using the HP Network Configuration Utility to setup my NIC team so I'll need to setup the VLAN using that within Windows.
Can anybody tell me how to use multiple VLANs on a single NIC team so as not to bring down traffic on the current VLAN that I have setup?
Thanks in advance.
I setup a new VLAN with ID 153 in vSphere for my ESX4 server. The VLAN is setup for virtual machines and then I added a new NIC to the VM I want to be able to access the VM. The NIC is added to VLAN 153, but yet I am unable to ping the VLAN .1 IP that is setup on our Cisco 3750.
The IP is properly setup on the Cisco 3750 because I'm able to ping the interface IP from other machines on the network. I'm guessing there must be an issue with the cabling.
Any ideas?
I have setup VPN on a Windows Server 2003 box. I also added rules to the firewall to pass traffic through for port 1723 and IP protocol 47 (GRE).
I'm able to connect to the VPN, but then I'm not able to navigate the network. I'm able to ping the box which the VPN is setup on, but nothing else on the network.
The machine I'm connecting to the VPN on has a 192.168.x.x address and the VPN IP is on a 10.x.x.x IP range, so that isn't the problem.
There must be an issue with the way the VPN server is doing the routing but I'm not sure how to resolve this issue. Can anybody lend a helping hand?
Thanks in advance.
Edit: The VPN is setup using a single NIC for clarification purposes.
We used this at my last company and I thought it was a great product, so much so that I bought it at my current company.
However, there is one thing I can't figure out. At my last job, the program was always open. There was no way to close the program even if you wanted to (you might have been able to kill it via Task Manager, never tried that).
Is anybody familiar with this program that can help me out? I realize might be a bit obscure, but since sys admins use it, I figured it was worth checking.
Thanks in advance.
One of my end users says that they didn't receive an important email yesterday.
I have the copy of the email that he was supposed to receive yesterday that says it was sent but he said he didn't get it.
How can I check to see if an email was actually not delivered vs. being caught in a spam filter? We don't have an external spam filter (such as Barracuda) so it isn't sitting in anything like that waiting to be delivered.
Any advice?
Thanks in advance.
I would like to add a second NIC to a Windows Server 2003 VM so that it will have two NICs which each have a different public IP.
How do I go about assigning the NICs to different public IPs?
I'm able to call people from the phone and they can hear whatever I say, but I hear nothing whatsoever.
When I first pickup the phone I'm able to hear the dial tone and I can hear the numbers as they are being pressed so it isn't a problem with the handset.
I've checked to make sure there isn't anything setup for a headset or anything like that, but I can't figure out what the problem is.
Anybody have any ideas?
Edit: Found somebody else with a similar problem and it ended up being that the firewall was letting traffic out but not back in, which is why the other person could hear them, but they couldn't hear the others. Will update this once I take a look.
To the guy who asked why I would ask the forum...the answer is because it was likely related to an IT issue (i.e. a firewall issue).
I'm getting the following error when trying to mount an NFS share to one of my blades on ESX:
"Error during the configuration of the host: NFS Error: Unable to Mount filesystem: Unable to connect to NFS server"
There are 3 other blades setup exactly the same which are not having this issue. I have unmounted the NFS share from the other blades to be sure that this isn't an issue having to do with exceeding the maximum number of connections on that NFS share.
This is an HP Blade Server and the NFS share is setup on an HP server running Storage Server 2003 R2.
Does anybody have any idea as to what might be going on? The logs I've looked at haven't said much besides the fact that it is unable to connect to the NFS share. I'm able to ping the server hosting the NFS share without issue and the root Unix user is mapped to the backup user and everything is setup properly as far as that goes (as can be witnessed by the fact that the other 3 blades are able to mount the NFS share without a problem).
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Edit: vmkping did not work when trying to ping the server hosting the NFS share from the blade...I'm going to try and blow out the vmkernel and set it back up to see if this resolves the issue. Any recommendations would be awesome.
I'm pretty sure the answer to this is yes, but I just would like some clarification.
Basically I'm wondering because the company I work at uses a 3rd-party product which runs as a process.
I would like to join this server to the domain for security reasons and to have users login via their domain credentials whenever they need to work on an issue. However, I'm fairly certain this won't be doable given the fact that the application runs as a process, so if I were to log out of the Administrator account the program would cease to run.
Can somebody provide some clarification?
Thanks!
I've googled all over the place but none of the pages I have come across include a step-by-step guide showing how to set this up. I'm not a Linux master (although I'm working hard to increase my knowledge of it), and I need to be walked through how to set this up.
I'm aware of things like openldap and what not, but I still need to see each step I need to complete during the entire process which I haven't been able to find.
If anybody can help out I'd greatly appreciate it.
Thanks!
Edit: Sorry, it is OpenBSD 4.3