Hi,
I have a fresh debian VM under VMware W0rkstation.
I was wondering how can I pass data between the host (Windows :/ and the VM) with the VM being fully offline is it possible ?
Tested and not working:
- host sharing a network drive (SMB) not possible as debian will require the install of
cifs-utils
- create a virtualized NTFS drive. not possible need
ntfs-3g
for debian
Any ideas ?
note:
open-vm-tools
is impossible either as I want to install it without being connected ton the www.[1]
Thanks.
World Wide Web (aka internet) ↩︎
deleted by creator
This is the method I use in your scenario, OP. You can use Folder2iso to get the files in that you need. If the OS has official VMware tools, you can also mount the VMware Tools ISO straight from workstation into the VM and this will give you the clipboard service so you can copy and paste files between the host and VM, if this scenario is permitted within your isolation needs.
Otherwise, go the ISO route. You just can’t bring stuff out of the VM back to the host is all.
Thank you all for your input’s !! 🤗
I’ve put the files on a USB flash drive formatted as a classic FAT. Then I mounted it in the VM (I confirm no need the
VMware-tools
for that :)SSH/SCP. Install Winscp or Filezilla on the host.
Or alternatively, Windows version of tar -> netcat -> network -> netcat -> Linux version of tar.
Create a virtualized FAT drive
I don’t use VMware, so these are just ideas. Without using a network, I have to possible solutions in mind: a) can you drag and drop between the machines? or b) use a usb-stick to write and read from, at least until you find a better solution.
Remove the closed source VMWare and Install the open source Virtualbox ?
The two aren’t even in the same league. I’m a big open source advocate don’t get me wrong, but VirtualBox is horrible to use and its not what OP asked.
If you’re not trying to create complex virtual networks, or have hardware accelerated graphics, VirtualBox can be a bit unintuitive, but has all of the features that VMWare makes you pay for, available for free.
Or just use virtmanager + libvirt