Date: Tue, 27 Mar 2007 17:32:15 +0800 From: "Adrian Chadd" <adrian@freebsd.org> To: "Sergey Matveychuk" <sem@freebsd.org> Cc: Frank Behrens <frank@pinky.sax.de>, Michael Proto <mike@jellydonut.org>, Mark Dotson <mark@dmglobal.net>, freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: time goes slow in VmWare Message-ID: <d763ac660703270232o703c9288q54e16cc5b9ff27d5@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <45FFECB0.60604@FreeBSD.org> References: <200703191609.l2JG9ql8060947@pinky.frank-behrens.de> <200703191845.l2JIjuWN064035@pinky.frank-behrens.de> <45FEE2BE.8090607@jellydonut.org> <d763ac660703191935v6a4a6360y5b7ee3acb425ff9a@mail.gmail.com> <45FFECB0.60604@FreeBSD.org>
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On 20/03/07, Sergey Matveychuk <sem@freebsd.org> wrote: > Adrian Chadd wrote: > > The solution is to install the VMware or VirtualPC supplied drivers > > for your environment. They'll include, amongst other things, fixes for > > the RTC and timer drivers which will fix your clock skew issues (and > > if you've noticed, things like "sleep" acting oddly.) > > What do you mean as 'VMware supplied drivers'? > vmware-guestd is running. No other special driver I know. > > BTW. Setting HZ=100 does help. Thanks! vmware will load some kernel drivers as well as run the guest daemon. Just make sure the guest daemon is doing time sync. Adrian -- Adrian Chadd - adrian@freebsd.org
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