On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 08:47 -0600, Christopher A. Williams wrote: > On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 07:30 -0600, Wendell Nichols wrote: > > Robert G. (Doc) Savage wrote: > > > I'm unable to connect to VMware Server 2 via https://127.0.0.1:8333. The > > > connection times out. I've been reading fragments of reports elsewhere > > > on the web that others are running into major problems with VMware > > > Server 2 on 64-bit F10. They all say they can't shut down VMware > > > services or re-run vmware-config.pl without hard resetting via the power > > > switch. Some have suggested shutting down SELinux (add selinux=0 to > > > grub.conf), but this doesn't fix the problem. Others have suggested > > > shutting down the firewall. Again, no joy. > > > > > > Can anyone point me to a working solution? > > > > > > --Doc Savage > > > Fairview Heights, IL > > > > > > > > Did you finish the install by running "vmware-config.pl" ? Its a must. > > and you must have your kernel dev packages installed to do it. > > Second: do "service vmware status" to see if the services are up ... if > > not start them. > > Also try your non https port at 8222 (which is the default, you can > > change it in the config script). > > wcn > > I run 2 servers with VMware Server on F10 at my church and have seen > this before. I think it's a bug somewhere, but am not really sure. I > think it's that something gets crossed up with kernel versions in the > VMware Server configuration. > > What I usually do to fix the problem - believe it or not - is to > shutdown and reboot the server. Twice. > > What this seems to do is to force VMware to figure out that it isn't > properly configured and then allows you to run vmware-config.pl > successfully. > > As to the questions about selinux and the firewall: > > - Yes, selinux must be disabled. Nobody has yet figured out exactly why. > It's an ongoing issue. Permissive mode doesn't cut it. But you can > disable it from the selinux menu (System --> Administration --> SELinux > Administration). > > - No you do NOT have to disable the firewall. But you DO have to allow > communication on ports 901, 902, 8222, and 8333. I usually open them up > for both TCP and UDP, even though UDP is probably not needed. > > Hope that helps! > > Cheers, > > Chris Chris, Very interesting. I'll try your recommendations and let you know how they worked. Thanks a bunch. --Doc -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines