Is there a way to know if the Windows machine I'm working on is virtual or physical? (I'm connecting with RDP to the machine. If it's a virtual machine it is working and handled by VMWare).
16 Answers
If it's Windows, just have a look at the hardware screens. It'll have a billion and five VMWare-branded virtual devices.
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Agreed. Since the OP mentioned RDP, it's most likely Windows, so there you go.– mfinniFeb 3, 2010 at 14:01
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3Looking at drivers is also works for linux. lsmod would probably return the information that you need. Feb 3, 2010 at 17:01
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In the CMD window type:
SYSTEMINFO
You will find a line with the following text (or similar):
System Manufacturer: VMware, Inc.
System Model: VMware Virtual Platform
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5If Hyper V is used you get: System Manufacturer: Microsoft Corporation System Model: Virtual Machine Mar 24, 2017 at 10:24
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There is a list of values for different VM implementations here: unix.stackexchange.com/a/89718 Apr 25, 2023 at 10:30
If it's handled by VMware, it isn't too difficult at the present moment. This could change in the future.
# dmidecode -s system-manufacturer
VMware, Inc.
In Linux you can also use "virt-what". "virt-what - detect if we are running in a virtual machine".
On Windows, from CMD:
Systeminfo | findstr /i model
returns something like:
System Model: VMware Virtual Platform
[01]: Intel64 Family 6 Model 26 Stepping 5 GenuineInt
On Linux, run this:
$ dmesg |grep -i hypervisor
Hypervisor detected: KVM
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5for linux you type
dmesg |grep DMI
Virtual Machines: [root@myhost ~]# dmesg |grep DMI<br> DMI 2.3 present. DMI: Microsoft Corporation Virtual Machine/Virtual Machine, BIOS 090006 05/23/2012 [root@myhost ~]# dmesg |grep -i virtual DMI: Microsoft Corporation Virtual Machine/Virtual Machine, BIOS 090006 05/23/2012 Booting paravirtualized kernel on bare hardware input: Macintosh mouse button emulation as /devices/virtual/input/input1 scsi 0:0:0:0: Direct-Access Msft Virtual Disk 1.0 PQ: 0 ANSI: 4 input: Microsoft Vmbus HID-compliant Mouse as /devices/virtual/input/input4 Physical: [root@backdev1– gabo34Apr 10, 2014 at 17:00 -
If you are in Windows, as castrocra says, you can run the systeminfo
command from inside a cmd shell, then look for the "BIOS Version".
These are probably real machines:
BIOS Version: Dell Inc. A03, 06/12/2010
BIOS Version: Phoenix Technologies, LTD MS7254 1.08, 08/03/2007
This, on the other hand, is almost certainly a virtual machine:
BIOS Version: VMware, Inc. VMW71.00V.0.B64.1201040214, 04/01/2012
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2Modern hypervisors can supply arbitrary strings here, making this a not very reliable check. Jul 4, 2014 at 18:03
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3Unfortunately this isn't reliable. I'm running a virtual machine but my BIOS is showing as: "Phoenix Technologies LTD 6.00, 16/08/2013" Oct 30, 2014 at 9:27
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It has been answered, but FWIW you can do this in powershell:
gwmi -q "select * from win32_computersystem"
The "Manufacturer" will be "Microsoft Corporation" and the "Model" will be "Virtual Machine" if it's a virtual machine, or it should display regular manufacturer details if not, e.g. "Dell Inc." and "PowerEdge R210 II" respectively.
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Funny. My Windows VM says the Manufacturer and Model are both "Bochs". Aug 22, 2014 at 2:07
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1Or in cmd:
wmic computersystem get manufacturer | find "VMware" && echo In VMWare || echo Not in VMWare
. It's faster thansysteminfo
-based solutions.– atzzMar 3, 2015 at 13:13 -
@MichaelHampton Are you using VMs? Which platform - HyperV, VMWare or something else? Seems like the VM is probably being run in a Bochs emulator or something like that. Oct 31, 2015 at 4:42
On Linux if you prefer to look under /proc
try
cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep flags | grep hypervisor
Even simpler - wmic /node: bios get serialnumber
Anything that returns a Dell-style serial number is physical.
It will also return "VMware-42 22 26 a8 dd 6e e3 b3-2e 03 fc 2c 92 ae 2e 89", if it's a virtual machine.
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Sadly, this is not working all the time. Our ESXi servers are running a DELL VMware Image, and all VMs claim to be a Dell hardware server via WMI. The serial number is the DELL service tag.– TobiasDec 11, 2019 at 7:43
There is another option here which describes the official way to do so:
For Windows:
Click Start > Run. Type msinfo32 and press Enter. In the right pane, look for System Manufacturer for 'VMware, Inc.'
You could try the "Host Detection" program.
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1This link is broken as of 2019. I found this page on the site that links to the program page, but that link is also broken. Dec 26, 2019 at 17:25
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Seems like the last working cached page of this was back in 2007: web.archive.org/web/20070401065556/http://www.codegurus.be/…– DavidJan 29, 2021 at 1:47
One (relatively) simple way to detect key virtualization information is via WMI / WBEM. You can use the root\CIM2 namespace and access the Baseboard class (full of interesting BIOS information) to get a description of the "physical" system. This class often includes information about the motherboard and chassis - manufacture, model, serial number, other.
Run the following command from a command prompt or PowerShell session:
wmic baseboard get manufacturer, product, Serialnumber, version
I had the same question and found that there are a lot of processes running with "VM" in the name, for example VMWareTray.exe
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nbtstat -a The outcome will tell you as VMs have a speecific prefix which is 00-50-56-XX-XX-XX. There is also another prefix it uses but I can not remember at the top of my head but I recall Vcenter uses 00-50-56-XX-XX-XX so this ios the one I check only.
I think this is the best way, personally.
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3...except for when someone manually sets the MAC address to something else– RexApr 10, 2014 at 18:17
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