problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - Printable Version +- Maui Forums (https://forums.mauilinux.org) +-- Forum: Maui Support (https://forums.mauilinux.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=74) +--- Forum: Software & Applications (https://forums.mauilinux.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=77) +--- Thread: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? (/showthread.php?tid=24331) |
RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - kdemeoz - 21st March 2017 (20th March 2017, 15:36)rocky7x Wrote: Using the original cd (dvd) is absolutely ok - the same approach works with it as well, just instead of mounting the iso, you insert the disc into the drive Ah, ok, thanks. I've still not had time to actually give this a go yet, although i still think about it as i do "other stuff". I realised that there's a [possibly weird, possibly ok] peripheral question i also should ask about this whole concept of running Office in Wine. Presumably / obviously, my Office 2010 suite simply cannot receive any of the historic nor prospective MS security patches this way, so i'd be running an unpatched 7+ yr old software, which doesn't sound very safe. Conversely, it'd be running in the Linux not Windows infrastructure, so presumably no putative MS-focused malware [eg, if i somehow picked up an infected docx or xlsx file etc] could actually do any damage, so i need not worry? Would you lean towards the 2nd not 1st risk interpretation? RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - rocky7x - 21st March 2017 Since running anything in wine is pretty much like running it in an isolated virtual machine, you don't have to worry about it. It cannot delete your disk, nor cause any damage. If it breaks your "Office 2010" prefix, you just delete the prefix directory and reinstall it again as if nothing happened. That is the beauty of running stuff under wine - I ran tons of suspicious stuff and not once had it caused any problems. You don't have to run an antivirus in a wine prefix Just don't save your files in the wine prefix Documents folder (the one that Windows would use), but use the Linux Documents folder. Also regarding word or excel macros, they are harmless under wine. Use the whole wine prefix as 1 application containing only Office and nothing else, no documents. RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - kdemeoz - 21st March 2017 Golly, this sounds quite marvellous, now i rather can't wait for a chance to try it. Oh, i just had another left-field query strike me. What's the situation with needing to activate Office, else it stops working after x days, when it's in Wine... doable, or a PITA? RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - rocky7x - 21st March 2017 No idea if it's doable, I use an enterprise version of it. But it should be doable since it's just a registration via internet... RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - AJSlye - 22nd March 2017 The easiest "idiot prof" way to install Office 2010 would be by using playonlinux: https://www.playonlinux.com/en/ There is also the commercial CrossOver for Linux: https://www.codeweavers.com/products/crossover-linux PS, you can always download the patches (updates) manually and install them in the same container if needed. RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - kdemeoz - 23rd March 2017 Rocky Earlier, you said: Quote:Installing Office 2010 in wine 1.8 is very easy I've just realised that the installed Wine in Maui 17.03 is v1.6.2 not 1.8. Can i correctly intuit then that you're actually advocating i not use this installed version, but would need to find & install v1.8 before embarking on your MS Office procedure? Now, a tinfoil-hat question. Would you pls comment on this rather strident anti-Wine opinion? ... https://sites.google.com/site/easylinuxtipsproject/wine If indeed my personal files might be vulnerable via using Wine, i wonder if confining Wine for MS Office within the FireJail sandbox might be viable? I already like & use FireJail for a great many of my pgms anyway. So maybe this might work, once i'd performed your initial setup? ... Code: firejail wine program.exe RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - kdemeoz - 23rd March 2017 (22nd March 2017, 14:06)AJSlye Wrote: The easiest "idiot prof" way to install Office 2010 would be by using playonlinux: Thanks AJ. In 2015 when i was still a Windows user beginning to educate myself about Linux, i was dual-booting Win7 & Mint 17.x KDE4. I extensively tested PoL for MS Office 2010, primarily for Outlook, but also for Word & Excel. All 3 pgms would run, BUT with huge qualifiers attached. Whilst i was able to get Outlook running [sp1 only; sp2 would never work in PoL], it was hideously unreliable -- it was very common that each morning when i wanted to launch Outlook from within PoL, i had to retry it half a dozen times before it would actually fully launch rather than crash during the launch phase. Even after Outlook was running, it was also common that it would randomly crash during ordinary use, often causing me to lose data i'd not yet saved. Ultimately i abandoned PoL when it culminated in a fatal crash that corrupted my actual Outlook PST file... i lost important data & was very upset. My experience of Word & Excel 2010 in PoL was slightly less bad, but similar misbehaviour still occurred for these, ie, multiple launch attempts needed, random crashes [with consequent data loss], & also several functions would not work. Furthermore when i tried contacting the PoL Dev i was met with outright hostility & insult. I don't now feel any strong desire to give PoL another chance... (22nd March 2017, 14:06)AJSlye Wrote: There is also the commercial CrossOver for Linux: In 2016 i seriously considered trying CO, but wary of my poor PoL experiences, i first contacted CO, with this reply: Quote:From: Andrew Balfour [mailto:linux-support@crossover.codeweavers.com] RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - rocky7x - 23rd March 2017 Hi, You should already be able to install wine 1.8 through Synaptic for example, since Maui provides the Ubuntu wine ppa, which contains wine 1.8. Just check the available version - it should be there. As for that article, it's quite paranoid from my perspective and not entirely true But if you want to isolate wine from the rest of your linux files, it's quite easy, but removes some flexibility. Via winecfg you can remove the "drives" that point to your linux directories and remove the desktop integration completely, so the wine "Windows environment" will not "see" the linux stuff. Of course, if you are VERY paranoid, then indeed you can sandbox it, but from my perspective, it's an overkill. RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - kdemeoz - 23rd March 2017 Hi again. Yes, that article certainly has a strong view, & to someone like me it's hard to know whether i should believe it or not. I also read these, which kinda offer views one way & the other: https://askubuntu.com/questions/175336/is-installing-wine-in-ubuntu-safe https://askubuntu.com/questions/49255/risks-disadvantages-associated-with-wine I'm quite happy to be considered paranoid, so i'm thinking this might give me the best of possibilities: 1. Go the Wine route per your method. 2. Don't bother isolating Wine from my Linux personal files, as that would be quite inconvenient for my opening existing docs & saving new docs (i know how to work around this, but it's a PITA]. 3. Do run my Excel, Word & Ppt in Wine in FJ, using the "--protocol=unix" option to stop internet access. Given i would have no need for these pgms to access the net, & given they would be working exclusively with my own local docs, of my own creation, which i already know are safe, this seems a good method to me coz then Office 2010 will have convenient access to my docs but with zero chance of any nasty malware infections. Looking fwd now to giving it a go soon. Many thanks again. RE: problems with vmware: which virtual machine is best? - kdemeoz - 23rd March 2017 Wine version contradiction: Code: GA-Z97-HD3:~$ wine --version ...versus... Confusing... |