Vmware Workstation v10 Technology Preview
Vmware Workstation v10 Technology Preview
Size: 505 MB
The VMware Workstation team is excited to announce the VMware Workstation Technology Preview - May 2013 release! As usual, this Technology Preview includes many changes to VMware Workstation that we would like your feedback on. With this preview, VMware would like your help ensuring that VMware Workstation stays ahead of the industry and continues to set the standard for all desktop virtualization products.
In rare circumstances, it might be necessary to recreate a virtual machine created in this Technology Preview in a subsequent version of the product. This Technology Preview includes changes to the underlying virtualization platform, which is under active development. There are no guarantees that changes in this preview will be forward compatible with other VMware software, nor that these changes will be present in future supported releases of VMware Workstation.
Installation
To run this Technology Preview, you must uninstall previous versions of Workstation before installing this software. Please note that the drivers included in this preview have NOT been signed and will prompt you accordingly during installation.
The system requirements for this Technology Preview are the same as those for Workstation 8 and Workstation 9.
Processor - The host system must have a 64-bit x86 CPU that meets the following requirements.
LAHF/SAHF support in long mode
1.3GHz or faster core speed
Multiprocessor systems are supported.
When you install Workstation, the installer performs checks to make sure the host system has a supported processor. You cannot install Workstation if the host system does not meet the processor requirements.
Processor Requirements for 64-Bit Guest Operating Systems
The operating system that runs inside a virtual machine is called the guest operating system. To run 64-bit guest operating systems, the host system must have one of the following processors.
An AMD CPU that has segment-limit support in long mode
An Intel CPU that has VT-x support
If you have an Intel CPU that has VT-x support, you must verify that VT-x support is enabled in the host system BIOS. The BIOS settings that must be enabled for VT-x support vary depending on the system vendor. See the VMware knowledge base article at
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1003944
for information about how to determine if VT-x support is enabled.
When you install a 64-bit operating system, Workstation performs checks to make sure the host system has a supported processor. You cannot install a 64-bit operating system if the host system does not meet the processor requirements.
Memory - The host system must have enough memory to run the host operating system, the guest operating systems that run inside the virtual machines on the host system, and the applications that run in the host and guest operating systems.
The minimum memory required on the host system is 1GB. 2GB and above is recommended.
Disk - it is recommended that you have several gigabytes of disk space available to install Workstation and create Virtual Machines.
Graphics - To support Windows 7 Aero graphics in a virtual machine, at least 3GB of host system memory is required. 1GB of memory is allocated to the guest operating system and 256MB is allocated to graphics memory.
To support Windows 7 Aero graphics, the host system should have either an NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT or later or an ATI Radeon HD 2600 or later graphics processor.
Operating System - VMware Workstation will run on many different operating systems. For this Technology Preview, we would like you to try as many of them as you can but preferably using the following operating system versions or later.
Windows XP SP3, Windows 7, Windows 8 (and Windows 8.1)
Windows Server 2003, 2008, 2012
Ubuntu 10.04 and later
OpenSUSE and SUSE Linux 11.2 and later
CentOS 5.8 and RHEL 5.8 and later
Uninstallation
To uninstall the VMware Workstation Technology Preview:
1. Uninstall VMware Tools from each virtual machine used with the Technology Preview
2. Ensure all virtual machines are downgraded to be compatible with an earlier version of VMware Workstation (VM > Manage > Change Hardware Compatibility...)
3. Exit the VMware Workstation Technology Preview
4. Remove VMware Workstation Technology Preview via standard application uninstallation procedures
Goal of the VMware Workstation Technology Preview
The VMware Workstation Technology Preview includes changes to the core virtualization engine, a new VMware hardware version and new capabilities we are exploring. The objective of this Technology Preview is to gather feedback from users on a wide range of hardware and software configurations.
We would especially appreciate feedback in the following areas:
Installing Workstation and creating and running Virtual Machines using the latest operating systems - Windows 8, Windows 8.1 (Blue), Ubuntu 13.04, Fedora 18, OpenSUSE 12.3, 13.1, RHEL 7, CentOS 6.4...
Pushing the limits of the latest virtual hardware with 16 vCPUs, 8 TB virtual disks, new virtual SATA drives, latest USB improvements and more...
Running Restricted virtual machines with an expiration date, time, various synchronization frequencies and lease periods
Testing applications designed to run on tablets (specifically the Surface Pro) in a Virtual Machine and ensuring that accelerometers, orientation sensors etc. work as expected
Converting physical machines to virtual machines
Uploading and ing VMs to and from vSphere
Graphics performance and multi-monitor support
Running Virtual Machines in the VMware-KVM user interface
Embedded 30-day Licensing feature
General stability, application compatibility and usability
Please post your feedback in the Workstation Technology Preview 2013 community forum. Our Product Management, Engineering, Quality Assurance, Documentation and Management are all interested in what you uncover!
What's New
New OS Support - From our customers using Workstation who have opted in to share information with us we know that the popularity of Windows 8 is growing (at least as far as evaluating it in a virtual machine). We have been running the latest 8.1 version since the day it was released and are continuing to improve our support for it. We would appreciate your comments and suggestions for making it easier to run Windows 8 / 8.1 in a virtual machine. Of course we are running the latest Ubuntu, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE and other Linux distros as well and we would appreciate your feedback on their performance too.
VMware Hardware Version 10 - This Technology Preview introduces hardware Version 10. Hardware versions introduce new virtual hardware functionality and new features while enabling VMware to run legacy operating systems in our virtual machines.
16 vCPUs - In this Technology Preview VMware Workstation is shipping Hardware Version 10 and has enabled our users to create and run virtual machines with up to 16 virtual CPUs. Please let us know how this performs running your workloads. We have run CPU benchmarks, encryption/decryption and encoding/decoding programs to characterize the performance, but we are interested in what results you get running other applications.
Note: Running Virtual Machines with 16 vCPUs requires that both your host and guest operating system support 16 logical processors. Your physical machine must have at least 8 cores with hyper-threading enabled to create and power on a VM with this configuration.
8 Terabyte disks - Virtual Disks can now add virtual disks greater than 2 Terabytes. There are some considerations, you cannot use the Buslogic controller for anything greater than 2TB and these large disks are tricky to setup as boot disks since your guest operating system would need to boot using EFI in order to read a GPT formatted disk which is required to access all of the sectors on a disk of this size.
Virtual SATA Disks - Disks can now be configured as SATA in addition to IDE and SCSI. This enables use of in box drivers for certain operation systems. We have not yet characterized the performance of SATA vs SCSI virtual disks and are interested in your feedback on which one you prefer and why.
USB Improvements - In Workstation 9, VMware added support for USB 3 devices. Most devices worked, but not all of the specification was fully implemented and we have found some issues with certain chipsets. We have been working on enabling streams which allows very large files to be transferred between USB 3 storage devices (that support streams) and the virtual machine at a very high rate of speed. Please give this a try and let us know if your devices work. We have also encountered issues when plugging in USB 2 devices into USB 3 ports and having them available in the VM (specifically iPods). Please try connecting your USB 2 devices to your virtual machines via the USB 3 port.

Vmware Workstation v10 Technology Preview
Size: 505 MB
The VMware Workstation team is excited to announce the VMware Workstation Technology Preview - May 2013 release! As usual, this Technology Preview includes many changes to VMware Workstation that we would like your feedback on. With this preview, VMware would like your help ensuring that VMware Workstation stays ahead of the industry and continues to set the standard for all desktop virtualization products.
In rare circumstances, it might be necessary to recreate a virtual machine created in this Technology Preview in a subsequent version of the product. This Technology Preview includes changes to the underlying virtualization platform, which is under active development. There are no guarantees that changes in this preview will be forward compatible with other VMware software, nor that these changes will be present in future supported releases of VMware Workstation.
Installation
To run this Technology Preview, you must uninstall previous versions of Workstation before installing this software. Please note that the drivers included in this preview have NOT been signed and will prompt you accordingly during installation.
The system requirements for this Technology Preview are the same as those for Workstation 8 and Workstation 9.
Processor - The host system must have a 64-bit x86 CPU that meets the following requirements.
LAHF/SAHF support in long mode
1.3GHz or faster core speed
Multiprocessor systems are supported.
When you install Workstation, the installer performs checks to make sure the host system has a supported processor. You cannot install Workstation if the host system does not meet the processor requirements.
Processor Requirements for 64-Bit Guest Operating Systems
The operating system that runs inside a virtual machine is called the guest operating system. To run 64-bit guest operating systems, the host system must have one of the following processors.
An AMD CPU that has segment-limit support in long mode
An Intel CPU that has VT-x support
If you have an Intel CPU that has VT-x support, you must verify that VT-x support is enabled in the host system BIOS. The BIOS settings that must be enabled for VT-x support vary depending on the system vendor. See the VMware knowledge base article at
http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1003944
for information about how to determine if VT-x support is enabled.
When you install a 64-bit operating system, Workstation performs checks to make sure the host system has a supported processor. You cannot install a 64-bit operating system if the host system does not meet the processor requirements.
Memory - The host system must have enough memory to run the host operating system, the guest operating systems that run inside the virtual machines on the host system, and the applications that run in the host and guest operating systems.
The minimum memory required on the host system is 1GB. 2GB and above is recommended.
Disk - it is recommended that you have several gigabytes of disk space available to install Workstation and create Virtual Machines.
Graphics - To support Windows 7 Aero graphics in a virtual machine, at least 3GB of host system memory is required. 1GB of memory is allocated to the guest operating system and 256MB is allocated to graphics memory.
To support Windows 7 Aero graphics, the host system should have either an NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT or later or an ATI Radeon HD 2600 or later graphics processor.
Operating System - VMware Workstation will run on many different operating systems. For this Technology Preview, we would like you to try as many of them as you can but preferably using the following operating system versions or later.
Windows XP SP3, Windows 7, Windows 8 (and Windows 8.1)
Windows Server 2003, 2008, 2012
Ubuntu 10.04 and later
OpenSUSE and SUSE Linux 11.2 and later
CentOS 5.8 and RHEL 5.8 and later
Uninstallation
To uninstall the VMware Workstation Technology Preview:
1. Uninstall VMware Tools from each virtual machine used with the Technology Preview
2. Ensure all virtual machines are downgraded to be compatible with an earlier version of VMware Workstation (VM > Manage > Change Hardware Compatibility...)
3. Exit the VMware Workstation Technology Preview
4. Remove VMware Workstation Technology Preview via standard application uninstallation procedures
Goal of the VMware Workstation Technology Preview
The VMware Workstation Technology Preview includes changes to the core virtualization engine, a new VMware hardware version and new capabilities we are exploring. The objective of this Technology Preview is to gather feedback from users on a wide range of hardware and software configurations.
We would especially appreciate feedback in the following areas:
Installing Workstation and creating and running Virtual Machines using the latest operating systems - Windows 8, Windows 8.1 (Blue), Ubuntu 13.04, Fedora 18, OpenSUSE 12.3, 13.1, RHEL 7, CentOS 6.4...
Pushing the limits of the latest virtual hardware with 16 vCPUs, 8 TB virtual disks, new virtual SATA drives, latest USB improvements and more...
Running Restricted virtual machines with an expiration date, time, various synchronization frequencies and lease periods
Testing applications designed to run on tablets (specifically the Surface Pro) in a Virtual Machine and ensuring that accelerometers, orientation sensors etc. work as expected
Converting physical machines to virtual machines
Uploading and ing VMs to and from vSphere
Graphics performance and multi-monitor support
Running Virtual Machines in the VMware-KVM user interface
Embedded 30-day Licensing feature
General stability, application compatibility and usability
Please post your feedback in the Workstation Technology Preview 2013 community forum. Our Product Management, Engineering, Quality Assurance, Documentation and Management are all interested in what you uncover!
What's New
New OS Support - From our customers using Workstation who have opted in to share information with us we know that the popularity of Windows 8 is growing (at least as far as evaluating it in a virtual machine). We have been running the latest 8.1 version since the day it was released and are continuing to improve our support for it. We would appreciate your comments and suggestions for making it easier to run Windows 8 / 8.1 in a virtual machine. Of course we are running the latest Ubuntu, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE and other Linux distros as well and we would appreciate your feedback on their performance too.
VMware Hardware Version 10 - This Technology Preview introduces hardware Version 10. Hardware versions introduce new virtual hardware functionality and new features while enabling VMware to run legacy operating systems in our virtual machines.
16 vCPUs - In this Technology Preview VMware Workstation is shipping Hardware Version 10 and has enabled our users to create and run virtual machines with up to 16 virtual CPUs. Please let us know how this performs running your workloads. We have run CPU benchmarks, encryption/decryption and encoding/decoding programs to characterize the performance, but we are interested in what results you get running other applications.
Note: Running Virtual Machines with 16 vCPUs requires that both your host and guest operating system support 16 logical processors. Your physical machine must have at least 8 cores with hyper-threading enabled to create and power on a VM with this configuration.
8 Terabyte disks - Virtual Disks can now add virtual disks greater than 2 Terabytes. There are some considerations, you cannot use the Buslogic controller for anything greater than 2TB and these large disks are tricky to setup as boot disks since your guest operating system would need to boot using EFI in order to read a GPT formatted disk which is required to access all of the sectors on a disk of this size.
Virtual SATA Disks - Disks can now be configured as SATA in addition to IDE and SCSI. This enables use of in box drivers for certain operation systems. We have not yet characterized the performance of SATA vs SCSI virtual disks and are interested in your feedback on which one you prefer and why.
USB Improvements - In Workstation 9, VMware added support for USB 3 devices. Most devices worked, but not all of the specification was fully implemented and we have found some issues with certain chipsets. We have been working on enabling streams which allows very large files to be transferred between USB 3 storage devices (that support streams) and the virtual machine at a very high rate of speed. Please give this a try and let us know if your devices work. We have also encountered issues when plugging in USB 2 devices into USB 3 ports and having them available in the VM (specifically iPods). Please try connecting your USB 2 devices to your virtual machines via the USB 3 port.
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