Sep 07, 2016

Aug 31, 2003 networking - Override localhost on Windows XP - Stack Overflow It is useful to access a host on localhost from within a VM, so the configuration does not need modification. The trick with hosts file worked in Windows 7, but failed on both XP and Windows 8. If you have specific ports you want to forward you can do that with netsh. Run a cmd prompt as Administrator, then: For Windows XP first install ipv6: Windows XP Tutorial: Editing the Hosts File - YouTube May 04, 2008

HOSTS file lock and hidden - Windows XP Home and Professional

Need to figure out how to edit the Hosts file in Windows Server? For the most part, it’s pretty much the same as Windows XP and Vista, but with a few extra hiccups! Just if case you don’t know, the Hosts file is where you can manually enter a hostname and an IP address pair, thereby bypassing the DNS server. Block XP, Vista or Windows 7 from going to a website In Windows XP, the hosts file is found here: C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts. Once you have found the hosts file, right click it and select Properties. Uncheck the “Read-Only” attribute (if checked). Click OK. Double click the ‘Hosts’ file and select “Notepad” from the list of programs to open it with. Missing hosts file in C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc folder

First published on TECHNET on Jul 23, 2010 Hello all, Anshuman Ghosh here. A while back, I came across and issue where a customer had a VDI deployment of Windows XP machines running on Windows Server 2008 R2 Hyper-V servers. The problem was that while performance of the virtualized desktops was fine on one of the Hyper-V machines, it was not so good on the other.

Jun 01, 2017