- You should get a reply in the Command Prompt, which looks like this: Pinging 151.101.194.114 with 64 bytes of data: Reply from 151.101.194.1.241: Destination host unreachable.
- Ssh: connect to host XX.XX.XX.XX port 22: Network is unreachable Daemon SSHD is running in my laptop. What is interesting, this connection worked correctly a few months ago, but I reinstalled the SSHD and now is the problem. /sbin/route shows.
- Open Mac System Preferences, and look for the “Parallels NAT” network port. This is an interesting one, because it allows the Mac itself to be connected to the virtual NAT network, using an IP on the NAT subnet. Write down that IP: this will be the IP you’ll use to access the Mac virtual hosts from within the virtual machines.
I was trying to connect to a mongo instance in the cloud using Robo 3T, and I was getting the 'Network is unreachable' message. Oddly, I could connect from using Robo 3T inside a Parallels VM on the same machine. This led me to try the full Studio 3T on my mac, which could also connect just fine.
for a long time now i used Windows XP. this is the first time i work with suse/linux or something equal.
i installed openSUSE from the dvd (v 10.3). everything works fine..nearly everything. i'm not able to connect to my local network. (DSL Router: FRITZ!Box Fon WLAN 7050, +3 other Computers running WinXP)
I tried everything, but no matter what i did, everytime i tried to ping my router or a computer in the network i got this:
all settings are exactly as i used them with winXP.
(i set them in YaST2)
My System:
Mainboard: Gigabyte P35-DS4(onboard: Giga-byte RTL8111/8168B PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet controller)
CPU: Intel Core²Duo (don't know which number)
RAM: 4GB DDR2 800(G-Skill)
Graphics: ASUS EAX1950Pro
250GB-HDD + DVD-Writer
i hope u can help me.
Sebastian
(i'm sorry for my bad english, i hope u have no problems to understand)
I finally moved to an Intel machine. Despite the dramatic speed improvement in everything Java-related, namely Eclipse, there’s another big advantage: being able to run IE on Windows using a virtual machine. Unfortunately, that’s something every web developer must do to ensure his or her application will work on the most used (and crappy) browser on earth.
I installed Parallels and created two virtual machines, one for IE 6 and another one for IE 7. This way I’m sure there are no weird problems between those two versions (having more than an IE version on Windows can only be accomplished by hacks, and hacks are bad). Also I can install Visual Web Developer Express Edition on each of the VMs, and use either IE 6 or 7 to debug.
Connect Network Is Unreachable
My apps run inside virtual hosts on Mac OS X apache, under a fake DNS name. On Mac OS X it’s easy to add the DNS entry to the /etc/hosts file, under the 127.0.0.1 entry. This way, your DNS name will always point to your mac, and you’ll be able to reach your virtual host.
Network Is Unreachable Ssh
I wanted to do the same from inside Windows running on Parallels. An easy way would be to edit the Windows hosts file, adding the Mac OS X public IP to the file. But that will only work if the OS X IP doesn’t change. My Intel mac is an MBP, and I change the network I use often, so I needed a little more flexibility. So, this is the way I found to do this:
- Configure your VM to use Shared Networking. This wall, Parallels extensions installed on your Mac will create a NAT network where your virtual machine will be hooked into.
- Open Mac System Preferences, and look for the “Parallels NAT” network port. This is an interesting one, because it allows the Mac itself to be connected to the virtual NAT network, using an IP on the NAT subnet. Write down that IP: this will be the IP you’ll use to access the Mac virtual hosts from within the virtual machines.
- Finally, edit Windows hosts file. This file is located on WINDOWSsystem32driversetchosts. Add a line with the IP (in my case, 10.211.55.2) and the name of the virtual host, just like you do on the Mac.
That’s it. Now you can access your Mac virtual hosts from Windows, whatever the Mac IP is.