Host WiFi connection not working when VM is on - virtual-machine

I have a Kali VM on VMWare and when I have it on the VM's internet connection works, but my host machine's doesn't
The VM is using a bridged network adapter and my host machine is a Mid-2012 MacBook Pro running Windows.

Ok so what I did was simple all I did was change the adapter to NAT.

Related

How to acquire Windows 10 Host IP from an ubuntu HyperV Virtual Machine

I have a server running on my windows machine and a hyper-v ubuntu VM
I am trying to test the frontend from my VM but I want to make requests to windows 10
host, how can I get the host's IP?
Go to Wired Connected -> Wired Settings and just copy the DNS IP

Connect Hyper-V VM from WSL (Ubuntu)

I have created a VM on Hyper-V with 2 Network Adapters.
NAT switch for static ip
External Switch (for access internet)
From my command line I was able to connect to the VM with the Nat Switch IP
but from WSL Bash I was not able to connect with IP NatSwitch, but able to connect with ExternalSwitch IP.
Why?
Unfortunately this is the expected behavior. (As of 29/01/2021)
WSL2 uses Hyper-V Virtual Switch, vEthernet (WSL) virtual network adapter, that is providing internal type Hyper-V network that is only accessible from the VM and the Host. The Hyper-V machine has a different virtual network adapter e.g. vEthernet (Default Switch). If that is set to internal that is a different NAT-ed network (subnet) not connected to the WSL one. It is like the Host having 3 NICs and one cable (Cable 1) going to WSL on a subnet that only exists on that adapter/cable and another cable (Cable2) going to Hyper-V guest with a very different subnet on that NIC.
On the other scenario the Hyper-V guest shares the subnet with the Host machine ("Same subnet as the 3rd cable/NIC.") so it is routed back to the VM. See red labels.
There is a workaround in this GitHub issue using port forwarding to Guest VM from WSL.

Not able to connect ESXi host remotely via a Secure Shell client

I have installed a CentOS in VMware server and if I open the VMware console then I am able to connect to the server but if I use putty in my desktop then I am not able to connect to the host.
1) Started SSH service in the VMware host configuration.
2) Added IP and hostname in the /etc/hosts file
Thanks #Kyle Ruddy. I fixed this issue by allowing certain IP in the Firewall settings. Its working now.

I cannot access the default Apache webserver page, which is hosted in a VirtualBox VM, from my machine

My machine is a regular laptop with Windows 7. I have a Virtualbox VM running Ubuntu Server 14.04.1 and I have apache2 installed. When I try to access the default webserver page (10.0.2.15) from my machine, it cannot find the page. I have disabled my machine's firewall so that isn't causing the issue. The network for my VM is NAT, but I also tried the bridged adapter setting to no avail. Any suggestions would help.
Can you ping the server? If so, try the netstat command in server terminal to determine if it listens to port 80. If you cannot ping it, check the network address, f.x with ifconfig
If you can ping apache from the server, you probably have a problem with the network.
Try to add an host only interface. Then, in your VM, sudo ifconfig. Use the eth1's ip.

How do I connect to a localhost service from a hyper-v VM?

I have a WCF service running on "http://localhost:12345/ServiceName". I also have a VM running under hyper-v in Windows 8 public beta. Is there any way that I can connect to this service from the VM? I cant seem to set up a bridged network connection in the hyper-v manager. An alternative would be for the WCF service to bind to the Win8 machine name or IP, but I don't know how I would find out what that endpoint is from the VM side. The WCF service can be changed in any way needed...
Any help would be much appreciated!
Many thanks,
Jon
Not sure this will work with a Windows VM, but I managed to open host's URL from inside an Ubuntu VM:
On Host disable the Firewall or add a rule to allow connections to the respective port (12345 in your case).
On VM edit /etc/hosts, replace 127.0.0.1 localhost with IP_OF_HOST localhost.
Now http://localhost:12345/ServiceName should open from inside the VM.
you can create Virtual Switch in Hyper-V(Virtual Switch Manager) Then you can connect it to your VM(right click on VM ->setting -> create Legaci network adapter -> connect abouve virtual switch to it). after that you should install intigration to Hyper-V for your OS in VM. then you can connect to your virtual switch in your VM. after that you can access internet as well. you your host machine has it. type your host machine's IP address in web browser and you can access any service in host machine
You also need to run as admin on the host machine command shell netsh http add urlacl url=http://*:12345/ user=Everyone where 12345 is the port number of your service.