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I'm using VMware Server 2.0.1-156745.i386 for Linux on Ubuntu 8.10.

When I run "vmware", it brings up what is supposed to be the login page in a browser, but it just loads a blank page.

This is the address:

https://127.0.0.1:8333/ui/

Sometimes the login page comes back if you reload it a bunch of times, but this time it won't. Doing this also doesn't help:

/etc/init.d/vmware restart

Does anyone know why this happens, and how to fix it?

10 Answers 10

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I've experienced this several times.

Different fixes fix it from time to time, and I'm still not certain of the root cause or (i suspect) causes.

sometimes fixes it:

/etc/init.d/vmware-mgmt restart

sometimes fixes it, if you're using a self-signed certificate:

  1. in Firefox, Preferences -> Advanced -> Encryption
  2. select View Certificates and find the cert for your vmware server
  3. delete the cert, then navigate to https://hostname:8333/ again
  4. do the standard "accept this forever" dance, and cross your fingers

I've dug into the error with Firebug once or twice, but nothing conclusive.

Sorry to be so hand-wavy, but good luck!

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  • Didn't work at all for me...
    – Neil
    Sep 3, 2009 at 19:09
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    yes, clearing the browser cache usually fixes it for me, but i've had to resort to the other steps on more than one occasion also. amusingly, on preview i scanned to make sure i led with that solution, and mis-read baumgart's answer as the start of my own. ;-)
    – jeff
    Sep 3, 2009 at 23:28
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I've seen that issue several times. I've dealt with this by clearing my browser cache, and then re-loading the page.

I have fewer issues with this on my Mac using Safari, but Windows users with IE or Firefox have the problem more regularly. I believe one coworker reported that Google Chrome worked more reliably.

It seems to me to be an issue with the browser, not the VMware service on the system. Clearing caches and using different browsers seems to work around the problem, but I haven't found a proper reason or solution for this yet.

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  • This worked for me!
    – Neil
    Sep 3, 2009 at 16:01
  • I'm glad it worked - I just wish there was a better answer. I've never had the time to dig in and find out what's really happening.
    – baumgart
    Sep 3, 2009 at 16:18
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My solution was to adjust the ammount of memory in the init.d script.

/etc/init.d/vmware-mgmt

I replace -Xmx64m for -Xmx512m

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You can try to ctrl+shift+R (refresh page, override cache) a couple of times in Firefox, before and after restarting the VMWare management (/etc/init.d/vmware-mgmt restart)

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I was suffering exactly the same problem for a long time and neither these hints (CTRL-R or vmware-mgmt restart) worked for me. But some time ago i found a thread on the official vmware forum there people tracked down the problem to some SSL-protocol-wiredness between vmware-webui and current webbrowsers.

To cut things short, you must activate SSLv2 Mode on your webbrowser and maybe reload the webui via CTRL-R. You can get detailed instructions about this workaround on my Blog.

http://www.rootz.de/2010/05/vmware-2-x-kein-zugriff-auf-die-weboberflache-moglich-loading/

(its written in german but maybe the screenshots are helpful)

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  • That would explain why it worked fine for me until FF3.6 - 3.6 is the first version that disabled SSL2 by default. Jul 13, 2010 at 20:00
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How much memory do you have? VMware server 2 is seriously slow when it's short on memory, when I first installed it I assumed it just wasnt working at all.

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  • I don't think it has anything to do with memory.
    – Neil
    Sep 4, 2009 at 17:39
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Also, disable popup blocking in your browser for the VMWare management site.

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Unfortunately, nothing is working. and I see in FireFox Error Console :

Error: vmtn is not defined Source File: https://theremotevmware:8333/ui/# Line: 122

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Disabling the firefox plugin "VMware Remote Console" did the trick for me.

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For anyone else landing here... another great resource post on the VMWare community: http://communities.vmware.com/message/1546975#1546975

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