Install Alpine on VMware Workstation: Difference between revisions
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{{merge|[[Installing Alpine on a virtual machine]]}} | |||
There's at least 2 ways you can setup Alpine on a VMware box. | There's at least 2 ways you can setup Alpine on a VMware box. | ||
Latest revision as of 08:20, 30 May 2023
This material is proposed for merging ... It should be merged with [[Installing Alpine on a virtual machine]]. (Discuss) |
There's at least 2 ways you can setup Alpine on a VMware box.
Option 1: sys mode, traditional hard-disk install (preferable for a dev box)
- Create a virtual machine (Linux, other 3.x kernel 64 bit)
- Add a hard drive with your desired size
- Add a CD/DVD to the VM that points to the Alpine ISO you downloaded
- Disable "UEFI secure boot" in Settings -> Advanced
- Boot the VM and log in with username "root"
- run
setup-alpine
- choose sys when asked about the disk mode (sys mode will install Alpine to the disk)
- choose the default hard disk mounted by VMware
- reboot after the installation is complete
- run
Option 2: USB mode, no data preserved between reboots
- Create a virtual machine (Linux, other 3.x kernel 64 bit)
- add a small hard drive, e.g. 100MB for saving configs (like an usb stick)
- Add a CD/DVD to the VM that points to the Alpine ISO you downloaded
- boot into the VM
- press F2 on boot to enter the BIOS
- change the boot order so that it boots from CD, then HD, then floppy (or whatever - as long as CD is first)
- boot the machine
- now run the following commands:
mkfs.vfat /dev/sda
mount /dev/sda /media/usb
(Or try:mount -t vfat /dev/sda /media/usb
)grep /dev/sda /proc/mounts >> /etc/fstab
setup-alpine
(select no disk, save configs to 'usb')lbu ci usb
If the VM hangs at the boot prompt, reboot the VM, and when the boot prompt appears again, type pax_nouderef
(i.e. append it to the kernel options) and press Enter. This should allow normal boot-up.
Now you should be able to reboot and it should retain your settings because they were saved to your "usb-disk".
VMware Tools
More info on this page: Open-vm-tools
For VMware Tools support you need to install the package open-vm-tools.