It depends on the VMWare application used. If it's a "hypervisor" then the "native linux" is really running under a hypervisor. Sort of like how Hyper-V works:
[attachment=0]Hyper-V.png[/attachment]
What VMWare product is running on the machine?
Dear support team,
we're using TurboActivate in a C++ environment. Activation on Virtual Machines is disabled. On a native linux, the activation and usual license checking gets blocked, when there is a VMware service runnning in the background. Is this an intended behaviour? How could we solve this?
It depends on the VMWare application used. If it's a "hypervisor" then the "native linux" is really running under a hypervisor. Sort of like how Hyper-V works:
[attachment=0]Hyper-V.png[/attachment]
What VMWare product is running on the machine?
Hey - and thanks for the quick reply!
Well no - it's no hypervisor and the VMware product is VMware player. If the background process is stopped, everything works as expected. Any thoughts on that?
This is odd. Is their primary ethernet device (eth0) the emulated VMWare network device or their real network device?