Parallel Tools Installed? Quick Visual Indicator

Discussion in 'Feature Suggestions' started by TaoMacGuy, Apr 15, 2006.

  1. TaoMacGuy

    TaoMacGuy Junior Member

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    Is this feature already there and I'm just missing it?

    I'd love to see a quick visual indicator telling me whether or not the Parallels Tools have been installed in a VM. As far as I can tell now, I have to be logged into Windows and drill down to see if the Tools folder and tools are there.

    A nice "toolsy" icon in the console window would be great!

    Thanks guys (I'm seriously looking forward to future beta releases and the GM when it comes out -- I've already pre-ordered the Mac OS X version!)
     
  2. constant

    constant Forum Maven

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    The tools are a "once off" install.

    Make a habit of doing it at the begining, then you just have to remember that you have.
    .
     
  3. TaoMacGuy

    TaoMacGuy Junior Member

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    12
    Here's the potential problem:

    Client "A" calls me into their site. Just-fired incompetent administrator has set up a bunch of VMs. I want to easily and quickly see of Parallels Tools have been installed.

    My preferrred method of doing this VM-creating thing is to make a first VM for each guest OS, get it right (i.e. install Tools, patches, etc.). Turn it off and "park it" on the shelf as a sort of template. Deploy others from there, making changes as required.
     
  4. constant

    constant Forum Maven

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    I hadn't thought about the incompetent admin. Lucky he had enough smarts to install Parallels. On the bright side, you would be looking at a bit more chargeable time.

    I like your install idea. On the surface. What troubles me is the awful consistency of Windwoes to get all confused after major hardware changes. Usually requiring a repair or reinstall.
    .
     
  5. TaoMacGuy

    TaoMacGuy Junior Member

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    Ahhh, I've made a decent living in the past due to the gross incompetence of my clients. ;)

    Agreed. The good news is that virtualization done right (and Parallels is well on the way down this road already) minimzes (if not elmimnates) this problem.

    In a VM, RAM, CPU, disk, the network are all virtual. If you change the underlying hard drives on the host system, for example, the VM shouldn't know or care. Its "disk" is still in a file on the host system and the drivers for said "disk" are still the same virtual drivers as before.

    This particular problem can be seriously mitigated by good virtualization -- one of the great benefits of VMs IMHO. But I digress and wander off topic for this forum. :eek:
     
  6. constant

    constant Forum Maven

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    Could virtualization be the holy grale of Linux conversion. The killer app.
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  7. MG_work

    MG_work Member

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    No, really, how to know? (for Ubunto 7.10, too)

    OK, all this consideration of how much you can charge aside, I do need to know how to tell if Parallels Tools are installed. I may be that incompetent admin (I'm certainly not an experienced Linux admin yet), but I'm not hiring the original poster. :)

    The reason I don't know is that every time I install Parallels Tools for Linux, the display (only the display?) crashes. Once, but only once, I got a success message before that happened.

    In Windows XP, a successful Parallels Tools (always?) results in a "Parallels Tools" item in the All Programs menu. How about in Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon)? I don't see any parallels tools items, but I don't think Linux gets all that many tools, and probably nothing that gets settings, so maybe there just aren't any control panels.

    Anyway, how to tell? I can move the mouse from Ubuntu to Mac without having to escape the vm window; I have a choice of screen resolutions including 1280x1024... are those the key features provided?

    thanks,
    MG
     

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