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Ivan I have a Linux RHEL guest running on a VirtualBox VM, the host OS is Windows 7. I'm trying to link the two over a host-only network, but I can't access one machine from the other, I guess it's because the host-specific host adapter isn't properly linked w
Dfaure I have a Windows 7 host that handles VirtualBox debian guests with nat. This guest is running some web services accessible from outside via port redirection. I need to provide external access to these services via url, but I can't rely on proper dns res
Dfaure I have a Windows 7 host that handles VirtualBox debian guests with nat. This guest is running some web services accessible from outside via port redirection. I need to provide external access to these services via url, but I can't rely on proper dns res
Harnex I'm running Windows Server 2008 on VirtualBox with "Bridge Adapter" in the "Network" tab, and my network card is selected. I open CMD in virtualbox and run ipconfig and get the following Ethernet Adapter Local Area Connection: Connection-specific DNS su
Harnex I'm running Windows Server 2008 on VirtualBox with "Bridge Adapter" in the "Network" tab, and my network card is selected. I open CMD in virtualbox and run ipconfig and get the following Ethernet Adapter Local Area Connection: Connection-specific DNS su
Heimger I'm troubleshooting an issue in my DHCP configuration and I need the Windows machine to request a "new" IP address, so I can see what the DHCP server is offering by default. When I do ipconfig /releasesecond ipconfig /renew, Windows "suggests" the old
Heimger I'm troubleshooting an issue in my DHCP configuration, and I need the Windows machine to request a "new" IP address, so I can see what the DHCP server is offering by default. When I do ipconfig /releasesecond ipconfig /renew, Windows "suggests" the old
Eric Smalling On OS X 10.10, if I start a Vagrant-based VirtualBox VM configured with a host-only network adapter, then destroy the VM, and try to recreate it via VMware Provider, the vboxnet# adapter I used before remains in my Vagrantfile The static IP decla
Eric Smalling On OS X 10.10, if I start a Vagrant-based VirtualBox VM configured with a host-only network adapter, then destroy the VM, and try to recreate it via VMware Provider, the vboxnet# adapter I used before remains in my Vagrantfile The static IP decla
TimD1 I've been trying to learn more about security by following http://www.pentesterlab.com/bootcamp/week2/ , but I'm struggling to access the VM's internal IP localhost from the host . I can access the host's internal IP from the VM (using 10.0.2.2) and the
TimD1 I've been trying to learn more about security by following http://www.pentesterlab.com/bootcamp/week2/ , but I'm struggling to access the VM's internal IP localhost from the host . I can access the host's internal IP from the VM (using 10.0.2.2) and the
Marg Really hope this is the right place to ask this question since my host is a Windows 7 machine. I setup 3 Ubuntu Server 12.04 VMs via VirtualBox 4.1.18 and envisioned the following usage: LAMP - for Drupal, Moodle and other arbitrary PHP testing applicatio
Marg Really hope this is the right place to ask this question since my host is a Windows 7 machine. I setup 3 Ubuntu Server 12.04 VMs via VirtualBox 4.1.18 and envisioned the following usage: LAMP - for Drupal, Moodle and other arbitrary PHP testing applicatio
Marg Really hope this is the right place to ask this question since my host is a Windows 7 machine. I setup 3 Ubuntu Server 12.04 VMs via VirtualBox 4.1.18 and envisioned the following usage: LAMP - for Drupal, Moodle and other arbitrary PHP testing applicatio
benaia I've virtualized an old XP computer on dying physical hardware and I'm running a VM inside a Windows 8 64-bit host on the same network. The virtual machine must be on the same network as the host because it is the only device configured to communicate w
benaia I've virtualized an old XP computer on dying physical hardware and I'm running a VM inside a Windows 8 64-bit host on the same network. The virtual machine must be on the same network as the host because it is the only device configured to communicate w
benaia I've virtualized an old XP computer on dying physical hardware and I'm running a VM inside a Windows 8 64-bit host on the same network. The virtual machine must be on the same network as the host because it is the only device configured to communicate w
Brian I'm using Vagrant to deploy a large virtual network environment to test some applications and network activity. I'm using host-only networking, so all IP addresses can be defined in the Vagrantfile, but one of the applications I need for testing is an ex
Brian I'm using Vagrant to deploy a large virtual network environment to test some applications and network activity. I'm using host-only networking, so all IP addresses can be defined in the Vagrantfile, but one of the applications I need for testing is an ex
CL。 When I installed Oracle VirtualBox it created a network adapter on my host system called "VirtualBox Host Only Network". Allegedly ipconfig /all, this virtual network adapter has a MAC address 0A-00-27-00-00-10. How can I change that MAC address? I hope th
CL。 When I installed Oracle VirtualBox it created a network adapter on my host system called "VirtualBox Host Only Network". Allegedly ipconfig /all, this virtual network adapter has a MAC address 0A-00-27-00-00-10. How can I change that MAC address? I hope th
Timur Fayzrakhmanov Sorry, I made a mistake. I'm trying to ssh from a guest machine (Ubuntu Server 13.10) with a bridged adapter to my host (Ubuntu 13.10) via ssh. Vice versa, everything works fine - I can connect to the guest just by typing ssh user@dhcp-ip,
Timur Fayzrakhmanov Sorry, I made a mistake. I'm trying to ssh from a guest machine (Ubuntu Server 13.10) with a bridged adapter to my host (Ubuntu 13.10) via ssh. Vice versa, everything works fine - I can connect to the guest just by typing ssh user@dhcp-ip,
Timur Fayzrakhmanov Sorry, I made a mistake. I'm trying to ssh from a guest machine (Ubuntu Server 13.10) with a bridged adapter to my host (Ubuntu 13.10) via ssh. Vice versa, everything works fine - I can connect to the guest just by typing ssh user@dhcp-ip,
Victor Pudeyev If I have a VMware box with host-only networking, what is the host's IP, or how do I connect to the host? I'm testing some DHCP stuff and I want a new VMware machine to communicate only with the DHCP server (misconfigured) of the host I'm workin
Victor Pudeyev If I have a VMware box with host-only networking, what is the host's IP, or how do I connect to the host? I'm testing some DHCP stuff and I want a new VMware machine to communicate only with the DHCP server (misconfigured) of the host I'm workin
Victor Pudeyev If I have a VMware box with host-only networking, what is the host's IP, or how do I connect to the host? I'm testing some DHCP stuff and I want a new VMware machine to communicate only with the DHCP server (misconfigured) of the host I'm workin
Anthony Kong There are many answers, only the applicable version 1 of the Vagrant file configuration. E.g config.vm.network :hostonly, :adapter => 2
The new public networkfeature does not support this feature. For example this line config.vm.network "public_n
Anthony Kong There are many answers, only the applicable version 1 of the Vagrant file configuration. E.g config.vm.network :hostonly, :adapter => 2
The new public networkfeature does not support this feature. For example this line config.vm.network "public_n