Unable to connect internet in bridge mode in vmware
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I am trying to install CentOS 7 minimal in VMWare, but when I tried to connect Internet during the installation in bridged mode, it refused to connected and, after few seconds, it automatically disconnected. Here is the screenshot which I am talking about:
I have tried all possible combination, like entering a static IP and a few more things after I finished installing, but no luck.
Any idea what is wrong, as Internet is working fine in window 10.
Comment if you want more information.
networking windows-10 vmware centos-7
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up vote
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down vote
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I am trying to install CentOS 7 minimal in VMWare, but when I tried to connect Internet during the installation in bridged mode, it refused to connected and, after few seconds, it automatically disconnected. Here is the screenshot which I am talking about:
I have tried all possible combination, like entering a static IP and a few more things after I finished installing, but no luck.
Any idea what is wrong, as Internet is working fine in window 10.
Comment if you want more information.
networking windows-10 vmware centos-7
New contributor
I assume you mean Workstation. Use a NATed network, that will work.
– Zina
Nov 15 at 18:08
No, I want host and vmware should be on same network so that I can access application from other PC,I want to be on bridged Adapter. @Zina
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 18:38
ok, what is your ipconfig output on your host and what network IP/subnet/GW did you set on the VM?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 20:04
@Zina I use IP from free pool, IP: 10.235.77.88 subnet: 255.255.0.0 gateway:10.235.10.2 I have also tried automatic ip assignment and my DHCP is running.
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 22:09
a /16 network, are you in a corporate environment? where is your DHCP? do you see the IP assignment on your DHCP? what are your PC network settings?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 22:15
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I am trying to install CentOS 7 minimal in VMWare, but when I tried to connect Internet during the installation in bridged mode, it refused to connected and, after few seconds, it automatically disconnected. Here is the screenshot which I am talking about:
I have tried all possible combination, like entering a static IP and a few more things after I finished installing, but no luck.
Any idea what is wrong, as Internet is working fine in window 10.
Comment if you want more information.
networking windows-10 vmware centos-7
New contributor
I am trying to install CentOS 7 minimal in VMWare, but when I tried to connect Internet during the installation in bridged mode, it refused to connected and, after few seconds, it automatically disconnected. Here is the screenshot which I am talking about:
I have tried all possible combination, like entering a static IP and a few more things after I finished installing, but no luck.
Any idea what is wrong, as Internet is working fine in window 10.
Comment if you want more information.
networking windows-10 vmware centos-7
networking windows-10 vmware centos-7
New contributor
New contributor
edited Nov 15 at 18:03
Worthwelle
2,1832724
2,1832724
New contributor
asked Nov 15 at 18:00
Vinay
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
I assume you mean Workstation. Use a NATed network, that will work.
– Zina
Nov 15 at 18:08
No, I want host and vmware should be on same network so that I can access application from other PC,I want to be on bridged Adapter. @Zina
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 18:38
ok, what is your ipconfig output on your host and what network IP/subnet/GW did you set on the VM?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 20:04
@Zina I use IP from free pool, IP: 10.235.77.88 subnet: 255.255.0.0 gateway:10.235.10.2 I have also tried automatic ip assignment and my DHCP is running.
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 22:09
a /16 network, are you in a corporate environment? where is your DHCP? do you see the IP assignment on your DHCP? what are your PC network settings?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 22:15
|
show 2 more comments
I assume you mean Workstation. Use a NATed network, that will work.
– Zina
Nov 15 at 18:08
No, I want host and vmware should be on same network so that I can access application from other PC,I want to be on bridged Adapter. @Zina
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 18:38
ok, what is your ipconfig output on your host and what network IP/subnet/GW did you set on the VM?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 20:04
@Zina I use IP from free pool, IP: 10.235.77.88 subnet: 255.255.0.0 gateway:10.235.10.2 I have also tried automatic ip assignment and my DHCP is running.
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 22:09
a /16 network, are you in a corporate environment? where is your DHCP? do you see the IP assignment on your DHCP? what are your PC network settings?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 22:15
I assume you mean Workstation. Use a NATed network, that will work.
– Zina
Nov 15 at 18:08
I assume you mean Workstation. Use a NATed network, that will work.
– Zina
Nov 15 at 18:08
No, I want host and vmware should be on same network so that I can access application from other PC,I want to be on bridged Adapter. @Zina
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 18:38
No, I want host and vmware should be on same network so that I can access application from other PC,I want to be on bridged Adapter. @Zina
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 18:38
ok, what is your ipconfig output on your host and what network IP/subnet/GW did you set on the VM?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 20:04
ok, what is your ipconfig output on your host and what network IP/subnet/GW did you set on the VM?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 20:04
@Zina I use IP from free pool, IP: 10.235.77.88 subnet: 255.255.0.0 gateway:10.235.10.2 I have also tried automatic ip assignment and my DHCP is running.
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 22:09
@Zina I use IP from free pool, IP: 10.235.77.88 subnet: 255.255.0.0 gateway:10.235.10.2 I have also tried automatic ip assignment and my DHCP is running.
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 22:09
a /16 network, are you in a corporate environment? where is your DHCP? do you see the IP assignment on your DHCP? what are your PC network settings?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 22:15
a /16 network, are you in a corporate environment? where is your DHCP? do you see the IP assignment on your DHCP? what are your PC network settings?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 22:15
|
show 2 more comments
1 Answer
1
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up vote
0
down vote
Configure Networks in Workstation
I would suggest you configure additional networks in VMware's Workstation the following way:
- Open "Edit" -> "Virtual Network Editor"
- Click on "Change Settings"
- Click "Yes" on UAC
- Click "Add Network"
- Select free VMnet network to be created
- When new network is added select it
- Select "Bridged (connect VMs directly to the external network)"
- Select under "Bridged to" your netowrk adapter which you have connected your host to your network
- Repeat steps 4 to 8 until you have created Bridged networks for all of your hosts NICs
Configure your VM NICs setting
Go to "Settings" of your VM and change the Network adapter setting "Network Connection" to "Custom: Specific virtual network" and try with each of the newly created networks if the VM will pick up an IP.
I have found out that the setting to "Bridged: Connected directly to the physical network" in the VM settings, does not always work, as this setting should automatically detect which hosts NIC to use.
With the above creation you can work around that limitation.
Only thing to remember is to change the VM's NIC settings if you move you host's connection. Eg, moving from Wired to WiFi or from Home to Work.
NOTE!
If none of the networks at work will provide you an IP then your company's network is using some authentication protocol on the network which can prohibit IP assignment.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
Configure Networks in Workstation
I would suggest you configure additional networks in VMware's Workstation the following way:
- Open "Edit" -> "Virtual Network Editor"
- Click on "Change Settings"
- Click "Yes" on UAC
- Click "Add Network"
- Select free VMnet network to be created
- When new network is added select it
- Select "Bridged (connect VMs directly to the external network)"
- Select under "Bridged to" your netowrk adapter which you have connected your host to your network
- Repeat steps 4 to 8 until you have created Bridged networks for all of your hosts NICs
Configure your VM NICs setting
Go to "Settings" of your VM and change the Network adapter setting "Network Connection" to "Custom: Specific virtual network" and try with each of the newly created networks if the VM will pick up an IP.
I have found out that the setting to "Bridged: Connected directly to the physical network" in the VM settings, does not always work, as this setting should automatically detect which hosts NIC to use.
With the above creation you can work around that limitation.
Only thing to remember is to change the VM's NIC settings if you move you host's connection. Eg, moving from Wired to WiFi or from Home to Work.
NOTE!
If none of the networks at work will provide you an IP then your company's network is using some authentication protocol on the network which can prohibit IP assignment.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Configure Networks in Workstation
I would suggest you configure additional networks in VMware's Workstation the following way:
- Open "Edit" -> "Virtual Network Editor"
- Click on "Change Settings"
- Click "Yes" on UAC
- Click "Add Network"
- Select free VMnet network to be created
- When new network is added select it
- Select "Bridged (connect VMs directly to the external network)"
- Select under "Bridged to" your netowrk adapter which you have connected your host to your network
- Repeat steps 4 to 8 until you have created Bridged networks for all of your hosts NICs
Configure your VM NICs setting
Go to "Settings" of your VM and change the Network adapter setting "Network Connection" to "Custom: Specific virtual network" and try with each of the newly created networks if the VM will pick up an IP.
I have found out that the setting to "Bridged: Connected directly to the physical network" in the VM settings, does not always work, as this setting should automatically detect which hosts NIC to use.
With the above creation you can work around that limitation.
Only thing to remember is to change the VM's NIC settings if you move you host's connection. Eg, moving from Wired to WiFi or from Home to Work.
NOTE!
If none of the networks at work will provide you an IP then your company's network is using some authentication protocol on the network which can prohibit IP assignment.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Configure Networks in Workstation
I would suggest you configure additional networks in VMware's Workstation the following way:
- Open "Edit" -> "Virtual Network Editor"
- Click on "Change Settings"
- Click "Yes" on UAC
- Click "Add Network"
- Select free VMnet network to be created
- When new network is added select it
- Select "Bridged (connect VMs directly to the external network)"
- Select under "Bridged to" your netowrk adapter which you have connected your host to your network
- Repeat steps 4 to 8 until you have created Bridged networks for all of your hosts NICs
Configure your VM NICs setting
Go to "Settings" of your VM and change the Network adapter setting "Network Connection" to "Custom: Specific virtual network" and try with each of the newly created networks if the VM will pick up an IP.
I have found out that the setting to "Bridged: Connected directly to the physical network" in the VM settings, does not always work, as this setting should automatically detect which hosts NIC to use.
With the above creation you can work around that limitation.
Only thing to remember is to change the VM's NIC settings if you move you host's connection. Eg, moving from Wired to WiFi or from Home to Work.
NOTE!
If none of the networks at work will provide you an IP then your company's network is using some authentication protocol on the network which can prohibit IP assignment.
Configure Networks in Workstation
I would suggest you configure additional networks in VMware's Workstation the following way:
- Open "Edit" -> "Virtual Network Editor"
- Click on "Change Settings"
- Click "Yes" on UAC
- Click "Add Network"
- Select free VMnet network to be created
- When new network is added select it
- Select "Bridged (connect VMs directly to the external network)"
- Select under "Bridged to" your netowrk adapter which you have connected your host to your network
- Repeat steps 4 to 8 until you have created Bridged networks for all of your hosts NICs
Configure your VM NICs setting
Go to "Settings" of your VM and change the Network adapter setting "Network Connection" to "Custom: Specific virtual network" and try with each of the newly created networks if the VM will pick up an IP.
I have found out that the setting to "Bridged: Connected directly to the physical network" in the VM settings, does not always work, as this setting should automatically detect which hosts NIC to use.
With the above creation you can work around that limitation.
Only thing to remember is to change the VM's NIC settings if you move you host's connection. Eg, moving from Wired to WiFi or from Home to Work.
NOTE!
If none of the networks at work will provide you an IP then your company's network is using some authentication protocol on the network which can prohibit IP assignment.
answered 2 days ago
Zina
1,5172610
1,5172610
add a comment |
add a comment |
Vinay is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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I assume you mean Workstation. Use a NATed network, that will work.
– Zina
Nov 15 at 18:08
No, I want host and vmware should be on same network so that I can access application from other PC,I want to be on bridged Adapter. @Zina
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 18:38
ok, what is your ipconfig output on your host and what network IP/subnet/GW did you set on the VM?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 20:04
@Zina I use IP from free pool, IP: 10.235.77.88 subnet: 255.255.0.0 gateway:10.235.10.2 I have also tried automatic ip assignment and my DHCP is running.
– Vinay
Nov 15 at 22:09
a /16 network, are you in a corporate environment? where is your DHCP? do you see the IP assignment on your DHCP? what are your PC network settings?
– Zina
Nov 15 at 22:15