She checked the GNS3 server logs. “Error: Windows Server VM consumed all available RAM and crashed.” She’d allocated only 2 GB to the server. “Of course,” she sighed.
Outside, dawn bled across the sky. Another network crisis, solved not with real cables and racks, but with patience, a little folklore from the internet, and the beautiful chaos of GNS3. windows server gns3
The task seemed simple: configure the Windows Server as a DHCP and DNS server for the virtual network, then prove that a client PC (another VM) could join the domain. But every time the Windows Server booted in GNS3, its network adapter would vanish. Not disconnect—vanish. The guest OS showed no NIC at all. She checked the GNS3 server logs
Maya leaned back, victorious. But just as she reached for the screenshot button, the entire GNS3 topology froze. No ping. No console. No response. Outside, dawn bled across the sky
The Ghost in the Virtual Rack
She’d tried everything: swapping the Cloud node, using the NAT appliance, even manually editing the Windows Server’s .vmx file. Nothing. The server remained stubbornly silent, like a ghost in the machine.