Great that you see instant value on taking the extra configuration steps for VirtualLab/SureBackup. SureBackup is doing it´s job and notify you that you would have an issue when you would restore to production (in this case when the VM was deleted or restored to a new VMware environment).
How to do the MAC address binding change depends on the distribution, but there are many examples if you Google.Īgain. Then reboot the server and check IP settings. You can ignore the vcenter error with the double MAC address, as your run them in different virtual switches.Ģ) Edit production VM Linux to the point that it binds the network config like Windows to the PCI/PCIe slot instead of the MAC. It had all the bleeding edge features of the time, it came with a very significant performance. Quite possibly Intels best product launch ever. Buy a Razer Blade if you want high performance in a (relatively) light package. Backup the VM and SureBackup would show as well the correct IP. Worse than the Macbook for not even offering the small plus sides of having macOS. The main vendors are VMware and Microsoft. It is the technology used on top of physical hosts running inside datacenters, and is a de-facto standard in datacenters. Virtualization market is increasing at a 5 yearly pace.
This is really only recommended for more technically inclined Mac OS X users. And I guess this is exactly what SureBackup shows you.ġ) Make the MAC address static in the VM config, reboot the production server and check IP address settings again. Enterprise Datacenters market is increasing steadily at a nearly 6 CAGR pace. If you want to run Mac OS X 10.7 Lion Developer Preview but you don’t want to bother setting up another partition or upgrading your existing Mac OS X 10.6 installation, you can go with a third option: running Lion in a virtual machine with VMWare. => New MAC, new network card, you would run into trouble at restore.
Many Linux detributions on the other hand bind the IP addresses and other configurations to the MAC addresses. By default VMs get when you register them again (restore or surebackup) a new MAC address as the MAC address stand on "Automatic" mode within the VM configuration. I guess SureBackup is exactly doing it´s job and show that you would have an issue with this VM when you restore.