I spent a good hour on this one! I was just about ready to break out the sysinternals tools (which I suspect would have pointed out the issue) when I found this. Digi makes a product that many people are using with VMware since it's marketed as being compatible with VMware but you will spend lots of money for that sentence - and that's really all it is because this type of a device really has NO interaction with VMware at all since its a physical device communicating directly with your virtual machine on the network.Īnd I would assume would work for an external hard drive? 21/4/09 11:44 AM Anonymous said. * There are a few vendors that make an identical product but, from my research, I found that the Belkin is about 1/3 of the cost of most of them and also has some additional features.
If you tell your key to only connect manually your software may start before you mount the USB device and a pissed off program would likely ensue :) * Auto-connecting Hardlock keys is essential if you are running some type of server. There are lots of options to play with as far as sharing devices to other specific machines but I did not play with any of that. This literally makes the box just like real USB ports on the virtual machine. * I found it's extremely handy to dedicate the USB hub to a single machine and to tell it to auto connect new devices. * My Belkin Network USB Hub is running firmware version 1.2.0
* If you are using an Aladdin Hardlock USB key, you can most likely find new drivers on Aladdin's Hardlock Page. Everything should function as intended and you have a little box that holds physical USB ports for your virtual machine. Copy this file to C:\windows\system32\drivers\Ħ- Once the machine reboots, complete installation of your software, hardlock drivers, or any other USB device that you connect. Often times you can find this on the same machine but, if needed, look on another Windows machine or in the i386 folder on your Windows installation CD.
In this case, it's only a single file, USBD.SYS, that is missing.Ģ- Install the Belkin client software as the instructions explainģ- Ignore any new hardware wizards that occur.Ĥ- Locate a USBD.SYS file. The issue that occurs inside of a VMware server is when you install Windows there is no USB root devices found so Windows does not install the proper USB support files.
Everything immediately worked by plugging this in. Thankfully, a handful of companies have created Networked USB Hubs such as the Belkin F5L009. The problem with ESXi is that you are not able to pass a USB device through to a virtual machine. In short, this hardware requires the use of a USB dongle or "Hardware key" in order to run (this is an anti-piracy feature). Recently I've been working on a project for one of my customers which involves installing software for their Trumpf metal working equipment and ran into a small issue that I was able to overcome. VMware is quickly becoming the best way to run servers of all kinds and now that ESXi is free we're going to continue to see more and more functions moved onto a virtualized platform.