Reputation: 46613
Win7 PC running Rails in an Ubuntu VM via VMWare Player. I'm working on a site and would like to show it to a friend who's outside my network.
I found this blog post, which got me very close: http://blog.fardad.com/2012/06/vmware-player-and-custom-nat-port-map.html
OK, so I have the VM that is using NAT. As I understand it, that means that the VM will appear to have the same IP address as the parent machine to outside traffic.
I went into NAT settings and added port forwarding:
Host Port: 8200 Type: UDP Virtual IP Address: 192.168.198.184:3000
OK so my understanding is that I should now be able to go to 192.168.1.1xx:8200 (the IP of my 'real' PC) and access the webserver running in the VM. But when I go to that address, I don't get anything. I can ping 192.168.198.184 (the VM) from the PC.
What I want to be able to do is go into my router and set up a port that will eventually forward into the VM.
It seems like I'm missing something very small but I don't know what that is. Help, please.
If anyone is curious how to get the Virtual Network Editor:
go to the vmware-directory and run in elevated cmd.exe-box
rundll32.exe vmnetui.dll VMNetUI_ShowStandalone
Upvotes: 12
Views: 21306
Reputation: 959
Find the vmnetnat.conf
file, usually located in
C:\ProgramData\VMware\vmnetnat.conf
or
C:\Users\Application Data\VMware\vmnetnat.conf
Edit vmnetnat
, add similar line in the [incomingtcp]
section
8200=192.168.198.184:3000
Restart VMware NAT Service
.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 83
You can use an http proxy to do that, by doing that you don't need to expose your entire private network, check out this blog post for more information how to access docker containers from external devices
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 61
Try using Bridged network option in vmware player instead of NAT. It replicates your physical network.
Upvotes: 6