Kaspersky Antivirus NDIS 6 filter
. This made the NIC show up in the editor, but didn't fix the problem. I noticed I was running the editor as Administrator when it was showing up, so I tried running VMWare Workstation as Administrator too. It worked! I tried reticking the Kaspersky filter, and reopening VMWare Workstation as Administrator, and it still works :) Best of both works, I'll just Run as Administartor now..2
IP in the subnet. So in your case, your /etc/network/interfaces
should read:172.241.0.2
), and also communicate with your host (172.241.0.100
). So try it out and let me know if it works.iface eth0 inet dhcp
like you had it before), and then do route -n
. This should show you the default gateway it's using. Use that IP in your static configuration.hosts
file in Windows, which is located in C:WindowsSystem32driversetchosts
. Edit that file to include the following line in the end:ping Workshop
successfully from your Windows host.172.241.0.0/16
, because I think VMware randomly assigns a subnet to its virtual networks (VMnet1, 2, and so on), so VMnet8 might not be using the same subnet on another Windows host. If they're not, you'll need to manually give VMnet8 a subnet using the Virtual Network Editor in VMware.192.168.186.1
.192.168.186.3 - 192.168.186.127
. Let's use 192.168.186.3
. Also, configure the default gateway and dns server to be 192.168.186.2
So your /etc/network/interfaces
should be:192.168.186.1
and 192.168.186.2
from the guest machine. You should also be able to ping from the host to the guest.google.com
, or browsing the internet.192.168.186.3 Workshop
to your hosts
file in the Windows host machine.ping Workshop
from the Windows host machine.192.168.186.0/24
, you'll need to go to Edit > Virtual Network Editor
in VMware, find VMnet8, and change its DHCP settings at the very bottom to whatever network you want, and change the static IPs accordingly (the default gateway will always be the second usable IP, x.x.x.2
).