![]() ![]() Is there a different way I should be mounting it? Or is there a trick to getting Solaris to use this virtual drive? I'm also open to other alternatives people are aware of for transferring files in/out of my VM, but since Solaris 2.7 is a rather old operating system, things like networking (for example) aren't trivial to set up (and even basic things like ssh are missing). I even tried giving it an entry in /etc/vfstab to see if I could get it to automount, but that didn't work either. ![]() I tried mounting the unformatted drive in Solaris but it wasn't able to do that either. I can't seem to format it because I don't know the "disk" geometry (apparently Solaris was very particular about this). Some QEMU features, such as image file formats, require exclusive write access to the disk image and this is unaffected by the share-rwon. Note that share-rwon only declares the guest’s ability to share the disk. We describe here the usage for QEMU version > 0.8.3. Solaris sees this as a disk, but I'm unsure where to go from here. In addition to disk image files, QEMU can directly access host devices. I've managed to "plug in" a folder as a virtual drive into the VM, using -drive file=fat:rw:,bus=0,unit=1,if=scsi,format=raw,media=disk I need a way to get files in and out of the VM. I didn’t succeed to make smbd auto-start with qemu process till the end, so I use regular /etc/samba/smb.conf to start a standalone samba server which managed by systemd to make this work.I was wondering if anyone could give me wisdom on how to create a shared folder between my host machine (running Windows 10) and the virtual machine I created in qemu which is running Solaris 2.7. Smbd not start (Fixed in QEMU 2.x): Debian Bug tracker - samba4 does not work with qemu Ps -ef | grep qemu should show the -net user,smb=. Install samba (QEMU bring it up automatically actually according to ArchWiki) This post introduced how to share linux folder to Windows guest VM How ![]()
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