Intel(R) PRO/1000 MT - driver
I have got problem with NIC driver. When I go to Device manager, I have got yellow exclamation point there.
If I uninstall the driver and do Scan for hardware changes, it will freeze the PC and the only solution to unfreeze is hard reset.
Hardware IDs:
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD&REV_01
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_020000
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_0200
System Info:
OS Name Microsoft windows server 2008 R2 Datacenter
version 6.1.7601 service Pack 1 Build 7601
Other OS Description Not Available
OS manufacturer Microsoft corporation
System Name WIN-OSNLGVJODEC
System manufacturer VMware, Inc.
System model VMware Virtual Platform
System Type x64-based Pc
Processor Intel(R) xeon(R) CPU L5640 @ 2.27GHz, 2261 Mhz, 1 core(s)
BIOS Version/Date Phoenix Technologies LTD 6.00, 7/30/2013
SMBIOS Version 2.4
windows Directory c:windows
System Directory c:windowssystem32
Boot Device DeviceHarddiskVolume3
Locale united states
Hardware Abstraction Layer version = "6.1.7601.17514"
User Name WIN-OSNLGVJODECAdministrator
Time Zone Pacific Daylight Time
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 1.00 GB
Total Physical memory 1.00 GB
Available Physical memory 636 MB
Total virtual Memory 2.00 GB
Available virtual memory 1.60 GB
Page File space 1.00 GB
Page Pile c:pagefile.sys
networking drivers windows-server-2008-r2
add a comment |
I have got problem with NIC driver. When I go to Device manager, I have got yellow exclamation point there.
If I uninstall the driver and do Scan for hardware changes, it will freeze the PC and the only solution to unfreeze is hard reset.
Hardware IDs:
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD&REV_01
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_020000
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_0200
System Info:
OS Name Microsoft windows server 2008 R2 Datacenter
version 6.1.7601 service Pack 1 Build 7601
Other OS Description Not Available
OS manufacturer Microsoft corporation
System Name WIN-OSNLGVJODEC
System manufacturer VMware, Inc.
System model VMware Virtual Platform
System Type x64-based Pc
Processor Intel(R) xeon(R) CPU L5640 @ 2.27GHz, 2261 Mhz, 1 core(s)
BIOS Version/Date Phoenix Technologies LTD 6.00, 7/30/2013
SMBIOS Version 2.4
windows Directory c:windows
System Directory c:windowssystem32
Boot Device DeviceHarddiskVolume3
Locale united states
Hardware Abstraction Layer version = "6.1.7601.17514"
User Name WIN-OSNLGVJODECAdministrator
Time Zone Pacific Daylight Time
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 1.00 GB
Total Physical memory 1.00 GB
Available Physical memory 636 MB
Total virtual Memory 2.00 GB
Available virtual memory 1.60 GB
Page File space 1.00 GB
Page Pile c:pagefile.sys
networking drivers windows-server-2008-r2
Can you perhaps see what’s listed on the “Driver” tab? Are any of the files missing if you’re looking for them?
– Daniel B
Sep 13 '15 at 18:50
I can find the driver file without any problem. link
– user1576055
Sep 13 '15 at 19:24
add a comment |
I have got problem with NIC driver. When I go to Device manager, I have got yellow exclamation point there.
If I uninstall the driver and do Scan for hardware changes, it will freeze the PC and the only solution to unfreeze is hard reset.
Hardware IDs:
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD&REV_01
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_020000
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_0200
System Info:
OS Name Microsoft windows server 2008 R2 Datacenter
version 6.1.7601 service Pack 1 Build 7601
Other OS Description Not Available
OS manufacturer Microsoft corporation
System Name WIN-OSNLGVJODEC
System manufacturer VMware, Inc.
System model VMware Virtual Platform
System Type x64-based Pc
Processor Intel(R) xeon(R) CPU L5640 @ 2.27GHz, 2261 Mhz, 1 core(s)
BIOS Version/Date Phoenix Technologies LTD 6.00, 7/30/2013
SMBIOS Version 2.4
windows Directory c:windows
System Directory c:windowssystem32
Boot Device DeviceHarddiskVolume3
Locale united states
Hardware Abstraction Layer version = "6.1.7601.17514"
User Name WIN-OSNLGVJODECAdministrator
Time Zone Pacific Daylight Time
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 1.00 GB
Total Physical memory 1.00 GB
Available Physical memory 636 MB
Total virtual Memory 2.00 GB
Available virtual memory 1.60 GB
Page File space 1.00 GB
Page Pile c:pagefile.sys
networking drivers windows-server-2008-r2
I have got problem with NIC driver. When I go to Device manager, I have got yellow exclamation point there.
If I uninstall the driver and do Scan for hardware changes, it will freeze the PC and the only solution to unfreeze is hard reset.
Hardware IDs:
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD&REV_01
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&SUBSYS_075015AD
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_020000
PCIVEN_8086&DEV_100F&CC_0200
System Info:
OS Name Microsoft windows server 2008 R2 Datacenter
version 6.1.7601 service Pack 1 Build 7601
Other OS Description Not Available
OS manufacturer Microsoft corporation
System Name WIN-OSNLGVJODEC
System manufacturer VMware, Inc.
System model VMware Virtual Platform
System Type x64-based Pc
Processor Intel(R) xeon(R) CPU L5640 @ 2.27GHz, 2261 Mhz, 1 core(s)
BIOS Version/Date Phoenix Technologies LTD 6.00, 7/30/2013
SMBIOS Version 2.4
windows Directory c:windows
System Directory c:windowssystem32
Boot Device DeviceHarddiskVolume3
Locale united states
Hardware Abstraction Layer version = "6.1.7601.17514"
User Name WIN-OSNLGVJODECAdministrator
Time Zone Pacific Daylight Time
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 1.00 GB
Total Physical memory 1.00 GB
Available Physical memory 636 MB
Total virtual Memory 2.00 GB
Available virtual memory 1.60 GB
Page File space 1.00 GB
Page Pile c:pagefile.sys
networking drivers windows-server-2008-r2
networking drivers windows-server-2008-r2
edited Sep 13 '15 at 18:45
FastEthernet
2,48021324
2,48021324
asked Sep 13 '15 at 18:26
user1576055user1576055
1614
1614
Can you perhaps see what’s listed on the “Driver” tab? Are any of the files missing if you’re looking for them?
– Daniel B
Sep 13 '15 at 18:50
I can find the driver file without any problem. link
– user1576055
Sep 13 '15 at 19:24
add a comment |
Can you perhaps see what’s listed on the “Driver” tab? Are any of the files missing if you’re looking for them?
– Daniel B
Sep 13 '15 at 18:50
I can find the driver file without any problem. link
– user1576055
Sep 13 '15 at 19:24
Can you perhaps see what’s listed on the “Driver” tab? Are any of the files missing if you’re looking for them?
– Daniel B
Sep 13 '15 at 18:50
Can you perhaps see what’s listed on the “Driver” tab? Are any of the files missing if you’re looking for them?
– Daniel B
Sep 13 '15 at 18:50
I can find the driver file without any problem. link
– user1576055
Sep 13 '15 at 19:24
I can find the driver file without any problem. link
– user1576055
Sep 13 '15 at 19:24
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Your System Info says you are using VMware. Vmware's recommended Network card (NIC) in many/most cases is vmxnet3 (see link below). To do this:
1) After installing the OS, immediately install VMware tools.
2) Delete the non-vmxnet3 Network adapter in VMware, add new adapter and make it vmxnet3. That's the recommended NIC. (How-to varies on what version/type of VMware you are using)
Recommended NICs for Windows Server 2008R2
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/detail.php?deviceCategory=Software&productid=11137&vcl=true&supRel=13,24,31,34,71,72,74,76,77,78,79,80,81,85,86,90,148,155,158,162,163,164,165,168,171,172,179,182,187,196,199,201,202,217,218,243,258,259,260,270,271,273,295,301,326,327&testConfig=16
VMXNET 3: Supported (Recommended) Third generation VMware virtual NIC
An example how-to of installing VMware tools, from http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1018377
video - https://youtu.be/tVEw9VprYeQ
- Ensure that your Windows virtual machine is powered on.
- Log in to the virtual machine as a user with Administrative privileges.
- When the desktop is loaded, click VM in the virtual machine menu, then click Guest > Install/Upgrade VMware Tools and click OK.
- The installation wizard appears inside of the virtual machine's console.
Note: If the VMware Tools installation does not start automatically, you may have CDROM Autorun disabled in your Windows environment. To manually run the installation double-click Computer and double-click on the CDROM to run it.
- Follow the prompts in the wizard to complete the VMware Tools installation. Choose the Typical installation option.
- When the VMware Tools installation has finished, restart the virtual machine for the changes to take effect.
An Example how-to of changing the VMware NIC from anything-else to vmxnet3
http://www.vmwarebits.com/content/how-to-change-network-adapter-to-vmxnet3-for-windows-guest
Remove the current NIC from Windows first
The best approach is to first remove the NIC that is currently in the virtual machine. If you don't then the adapter's configuration will still be in the Windows-configuration and might conflict with your future networking configuration.
TipFirst make a note of the current IP-configuration so you can use that same configuration for the new adapter. If it is configured with DHCP then it doesn't matter. But be aware that the new vmxnet3-adapter will have a new MAC address so it will not get the same address from your DHCP-server.
To remove the adapter open Device Manager and expand the Network adapters category. Next right-click the Intel adapter and from the menu select Uninstall.
Remove the current NIC from the VM and add the VMXNET3-adapter
The next step is to remove the current virtual NIC from the virtual machine and add a new NIC of the type VMXNET3.
In the vSphere Web Client browse to your VM and edit the settings. At the bottom of the Edit Settings-screen you see the possibility to add a device. Choose a Network adapter and click Add. Don't forget to open the new adapter's configuration settings to set the type to VMXNET3.
If you click Ok the new VMXNET3-adapter will be added to your system and be available instantly. At the same time the old adapter will be removed. You can do this while the virtual machine is powered on.
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
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oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Your System Info says you are using VMware. Vmware's recommended Network card (NIC) in many/most cases is vmxnet3 (see link below). To do this:
1) After installing the OS, immediately install VMware tools.
2) Delete the non-vmxnet3 Network adapter in VMware, add new adapter and make it vmxnet3. That's the recommended NIC. (How-to varies on what version/type of VMware you are using)
Recommended NICs for Windows Server 2008R2
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/detail.php?deviceCategory=Software&productid=11137&vcl=true&supRel=13,24,31,34,71,72,74,76,77,78,79,80,81,85,86,90,148,155,158,162,163,164,165,168,171,172,179,182,187,196,199,201,202,217,218,243,258,259,260,270,271,273,295,301,326,327&testConfig=16
VMXNET 3: Supported (Recommended) Third generation VMware virtual NIC
An example how-to of installing VMware tools, from http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1018377
video - https://youtu.be/tVEw9VprYeQ
- Ensure that your Windows virtual machine is powered on.
- Log in to the virtual machine as a user with Administrative privileges.
- When the desktop is loaded, click VM in the virtual machine menu, then click Guest > Install/Upgrade VMware Tools and click OK.
- The installation wizard appears inside of the virtual machine's console.
Note: If the VMware Tools installation does not start automatically, you may have CDROM Autorun disabled in your Windows environment. To manually run the installation double-click Computer and double-click on the CDROM to run it.
- Follow the prompts in the wizard to complete the VMware Tools installation. Choose the Typical installation option.
- When the VMware Tools installation has finished, restart the virtual machine for the changes to take effect.
An Example how-to of changing the VMware NIC from anything-else to vmxnet3
http://www.vmwarebits.com/content/how-to-change-network-adapter-to-vmxnet3-for-windows-guest
Remove the current NIC from Windows first
The best approach is to first remove the NIC that is currently in the virtual machine. If you don't then the adapter's configuration will still be in the Windows-configuration and might conflict with your future networking configuration.
TipFirst make a note of the current IP-configuration so you can use that same configuration for the new adapter. If it is configured with DHCP then it doesn't matter. But be aware that the new vmxnet3-adapter will have a new MAC address so it will not get the same address from your DHCP-server.
To remove the adapter open Device Manager and expand the Network adapters category. Next right-click the Intel adapter and from the menu select Uninstall.
Remove the current NIC from the VM and add the VMXNET3-adapter
The next step is to remove the current virtual NIC from the virtual machine and add a new NIC of the type VMXNET3.
In the vSphere Web Client browse to your VM and edit the settings. At the bottom of the Edit Settings-screen you see the possibility to add a device. Choose a Network adapter and click Add. Don't forget to open the new adapter's configuration settings to set the type to VMXNET3.
If you click Ok the new VMXNET3-adapter will be added to your system and be available instantly. At the same time the old adapter will be removed. You can do this while the virtual machine is powered on.
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
add a comment |
Your System Info says you are using VMware. Vmware's recommended Network card (NIC) in many/most cases is vmxnet3 (see link below). To do this:
1) After installing the OS, immediately install VMware tools.
2) Delete the non-vmxnet3 Network adapter in VMware, add new adapter and make it vmxnet3. That's the recommended NIC. (How-to varies on what version/type of VMware you are using)
Recommended NICs for Windows Server 2008R2
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/detail.php?deviceCategory=Software&productid=11137&vcl=true&supRel=13,24,31,34,71,72,74,76,77,78,79,80,81,85,86,90,148,155,158,162,163,164,165,168,171,172,179,182,187,196,199,201,202,217,218,243,258,259,260,270,271,273,295,301,326,327&testConfig=16
VMXNET 3: Supported (Recommended) Third generation VMware virtual NIC
An example how-to of installing VMware tools, from http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1018377
video - https://youtu.be/tVEw9VprYeQ
- Ensure that your Windows virtual machine is powered on.
- Log in to the virtual machine as a user with Administrative privileges.
- When the desktop is loaded, click VM in the virtual machine menu, then click Guest > Install/Upgrade VMware Tools and click OK.
- The installation wizard appears inside of the virtual machine's console.
Note: If the VMware Tools installation does not start automatically, you may have CDROM Autorun disabled in your Windows environment. To manually run the installation double-click Computer and double-click on the CDROM to run it.
- Follow the prompts in the wizard to complete the VMware Tools installation. Choose the Typical installation option.
- When the VMware Tools installation has finished, restart the virtual machine for the changes to take effect.
An Example how-to of changing the VMware NIC from anything-else to vmxnet3
http://www.vmwarebits.com/content/how-to-change-network-adapter-to-vmxnet3-for-windows-guest
Remove the current NIC from Windows first
The best approach is to first remove the NIC that is currently in the virtual machine. If you don't then the adapter's configuration will still be in the Windows-configuration and might conflict with your future networking configuration.
TipFirst make a note of the current IP-configuration so you can use that same configuration for the new adapter. If it is configured with DHCP then it doesn't matter. But be aware that the new vmxnet3-adapter will have a new MAC address so it will not get the same address from your DHCP-server.
To remove the adapter open Device Manager and expand the Network adapters category. Next right-click the Intel adapter and from the menu select Uninstall.
Remove the current NIC from the VM and add the VMXNET3-adapter
The next step is to remove the current virtual NIC from the virtual machine and add a new NIC of the type VMXNET3.
In the vSphere Web Client browse to your VM and edit the settings. At the bottom of the Edit Settings-screen you see the possibility to add a device. Choose a Network adapter and click Add. Don't forget to open the new adapter's configuration settings to set the type to VMXNET3.
If you click Ok the new VMXNET3-adapter will be added to your system and be available instantly. At the same time the old adapter will be removed. You can do this while the virtual machine is powered on.
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
add a comment |
Your System Info says you are using VMware. Vmware's recommended Network card (NIC) in many/most cases is vmxnet3 (see link below). To do this:
1) After installing the OS, immediately install VMware tools.
2) Delete the non-vmxnet3 Network adapter in VMware, add new adapter and make it vmxnet3. That's the recommended NIC. (How-to varies on what version/type of VMware you are using)
Recommended NICs for Windows Server 2008R2
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/detail.php?deviceCategory=Software&productid=11137&vcl=true&supRel=13,24,31,34,71,72,74,76,77,78,79,80,81,85,86,90,148,155,158,162,163,164,165,168,171,172,179,182,187,196,199,201,202,217,218,243,258,259,260,270,271,273,295,301,326,327&testConfig=16
VMXNET 3: Supported (Recommended) Third generation VMware virtual NIC
An example how-to of installing VMware tools, from http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1018377
video - https://youtu.be/tVEw9VprYeQ
- Ensure that your Windows virtual machine is powered on.
- Log in to the virtual machine as a user with Administrative privileges.
- When the desktop is loaded, click VM in the virtual machine menu, then click Guest > Install/Upgrade VMware Tools and click OK.
- The installation wizard appears inside of the virtual machine's console.
Note: If the VMware Tools installation does not start automatically, you may have CDROM Autorun disabled in your Windows environment. To manually run the installation double-click Computer and double-click on the CDROM to run it.
- Follow the prompts in the wizard to complete the VMware Tools installation. Choose the Typical installation option.
- When the VMware Tools installation has finished, restart the virtual machine for the changes to take effect.
An Example how-to of changing the VMware NIC from anything-else to vmxnet3
http://www.vmwarebits.com/content/how-to-change-network-adapter-to-vmxnet3-for-windows-guest
Remove the current NIC from Windows first
The best approach is to first remove the NIC that is currently in the virtual machine. If you don't then the adapter's configuration will still be in the Windows-configuration and might conflict with your future networking configuration.
TipFirst make a note of the current IP-configuration so you can use that same configuration for the new adapter. If it is configured with DHCP then it doesn't matter. But be aware that the new vmxnet3-adapter will have a new MAC address so it will not get the same address from your DHCP-server.
To remove the adapter open Device Manager and expand the Network adapters category. Next right-click the Intel adapter and from the menu select Uninstall.
Remove the current NIC from the VM and add the VMXNET3-adapter
The next step is to remove the current virtual NIC from the virtual machine and add a new NIC of the type VMXNET3.
In the vSphere Web Client browse to your VM and edit the settings. At the bottom of the Edit Settings-screen you see the possibility to add a device. Choose a Network adapter and click Add. Don't forget to open the new adapter's configuration settings to set the type to VMXNET3.
If you click Ok the new VMXNET3-adapter will be added to your system and be available instantly. At the same time the old adapter will be removed. You can do this while the virtual machine is powered on.
Your System Info says you are using VMware. Vmware's recommended Network card (NIC) in many/most cases is vmxnet3 (see link below). To do this:
1) After installing the OS, immediately install VMware tools.
2) Delete the non-vmxnet3 Network adapter in VMware, add new adapter and make it vmxnet3. That's the recommended NIC. (How-to varies on what version/type of VMware you are using)
Recommended NICs for Windows Server 2008R2
http://www.vmware.com/resources/compatibility/detail.php?deviceCategory=Software&productid=11137&vcl=true&supRel=13,24,31,34,71,72,74,76,77,78,79,80,81,85,86,90,148,155,158,162,163,164,165,168,171,172,179,182,187,196,199,201,202,217,218,243,258,259,260,270,271,273,295,301,326,327&testConfig=16
VMXNET 3: Supported (Recommended) Third generation VMware virtual NIC
An example how-to of installing VMware tools, from http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1018377
video - https://youtu.be/tVEw9VprYeQ
- Ensure that your Windows virtual machine is powered on.
- Log in to the virtual machine as a user with Administrative privileges.
- When the desktop is loaded, click VM in the virtual machine menu, then click Guest > Install/Upgrade VMware Tools and click OK.
- The installation wizard appears inside of the virtual machine's console.
Note: If the VMware Tools installation does not start automatically, you may have CDROM Autorun disabled in your Windows environment. To manually run the installation double-click Computer and double-click on the CDROM to run it.
- Follow the prompts in the wizard to complete the VMware Tools installation. Choose the Typical installation option.
- When the VMware Tools installation has finished, restart the virtual machine for the changes to take effect.
An Example how-to of changing the VMware NIC from anything-else to vmxnet3
http://www.vmwarebits.com/content/how-to-change-network-adapter-to-vmxnet3-for-windows-guest
Remove the current NIC from Windows first
The best approach is to first remove the NIC that is currently in the virtual machine. If you don't then the adapter's configuration will still be in the Windows-configuration and might conflict with your future networking configuration.
TipFirst make a note of the current IP-configuration so you can use that same configuration for the new adapter. If it is configured with DHCP then it doesn't matter. But be aware that the new vmxnet3-adapter will have a new MAC address so it will not get the same address from your DHCP-server.
To remove the adapter open Device Manager and expand the Network adapters category. Next right-click the Intel adapter and from the menu select Uninstall.
Remove the current NIC from the VM and add the VMXNET3-adapter
The next step is to remove the current virtual NIC from the virtual machine and add a new NIC of the type VMXNET3.
In the vSphere Web Client browse to your VM and edit the settings. At the bottom of the Edit Settings-screen you see the possibility to add a device. Choose a Network adapter and click Add. Don't forget to open the new adapter's configuration settings to set the type to VMXNET3.
If you click Ok the new VMXNET3-adapter will be added to your system and be available instantly. At the same time the old adapter will be removed. You can do this while the virtual machine is powered on.
answered Sep 13 '15 at 19:30
RobElRobEl
1266
1266
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
add a comment |
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Thanks for your answer. It may be a good solution. But unfortunately, i cannot change any settings on vmware including network card. I only have got access to VNC, so i need to make the PRO 1000 MT working. Anyway, thanks for help.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 13:11
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
Have you tried downloading the Intel Pro 1000 MT drivers to your local system, and then using VNC to transfer them? That would be my next attempt - load new network drivers straight from Intel's installer. Can you describe why you only have VNC access? I've only worked in environments where I, or someone I could contact, had access to the VMware administraion tools, so I'm curious. Thanks!
– RobEl
Sep 15 '15 at 15:49
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
I have tried to install Intel Pro 1000 MT from Intel drivers. But it wasn't successful. It says "No Intel(R) Adapters are present in this computer." It's very cheap VPS with VMware Server virtualization. The base variant only have VNC access. Better variants have got access using V-Sphere Client, but it costs about 10 times more.
– user1576055
Sep 15 '15 at 16:16
add a comment |
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Can you perhaps see what’s listed on the “Driver” tab? Are any of the files missing if you’re looking for them?
– Daniel B
Sep 13 '15 at 18:50
I can find the driver file without any problem. link
– user1576055
Sep 13 '15 at 19:24