Workstation doesn't have a wireless NIC type, so direct wireless hardware access is out. If you just want to access through the extant host wireless connection, bridging is your answer.
Workstation doesn't have a wireless NIC type, so direct wireless hardware access is out. If you just want to access through the extant host wireless connection, bridging is your answer. I think the only way to get a wireless NIC dedicated to the VM would be using a USB wireless NIC as a USB-passthrough device on the VM.
When you have Workstation running and a USB device plugged in, it should give you an option to change whether that device is connected to the host or to the VM.
I think you are right, I couldn't find anything in VMWare for doing that. So I just installed my OS out of VMWare beside windows. – Ehsan Khodarahmi Jan 8 at 12:47.
Change your network adapter to a bridged connection, this will directly connect to your computers physical network.
I did it before but it had no effect!(I need to connect my wireless adapter to my virtual machine because I want to scan a wireless network with airodump-ng) – Ehsan Khodarahmi Jan 5 at 10:55 See if you can find a solution on this thread: communities.vmware. Com/thread/70896 – Jon Jan 5 at 21:53.
I think the only way to get a wireless NIC dedicated to the VM would be using a USB wireless NIC as a USB-passthrough device on the VM. When you have Workstation running and a USB device plugged in, it should give you an option to change whether that device is connected to the host or to the VM.
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