The real issue here seems to be the lack of Autofit configuration on a
per-VM basis. I've added back some of the modes and added some
additional ones which users will likely have [1]. As for the resolutions
that exceed the monitor resolution the only thing that limits the size
of a virtual display is the max GPU texture size which is usually 16K x
16K or larger. We can always add scroll bars to the window when the
resolution exceeds the monitor size even though its probably not very
useful. Alternatively if you have multiple (4 or 9) monitors arranged in
a cube you can create a window with a resolution that will fit on the
extended displays but exceeds the resolution of any single monitor.
https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/621992/
** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2081803
Title:
kernel >= 6.8.0-44.44 vmwgfx regression in Ubuntu 24.04.1 Desktop VM
guest (VMWare Workstation Pro 17.5.2/17.6)
Status in linux package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Bug description:
Acknowledgements
================
This bug was originally posed as a question:
https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+question/818765. Contributions
from actionparsnip, Phil B and Amir Cicak have been incorporated into
this report.
Expected behavior
=================
When running an Ubuntu 24.04.1 Desktop VM guest with linux-generic
6.8.0-44.44 in VMWare Workstation Pro 17.5.2/17.6 in full screen mode
with VMWare "Stretch guest" display preference set and using a 4k
(3840x2160) monitor, the detected screen resolutions selectable in the
Gnome Screen Display settings should be as follows:
3840x2160 (16:9)
2880x1800 (16:10)
2560x1600 (16:10)
2560x1440 (16:9)
1920x1440 (4:3)
etc.
Please also see the attached ubuntu24.04.1-vm-hw-version-21-open-vm-
tools-2:12.4.5-1-gnome-resolutions-expected.png.
Actual behavior
===============
The actual resolutions available in the Gnome Screen Display settings
do not include 4k (3840x2160) but strangely include a 4096x2160
resolution that exceeds the physical monitor resolution. The selected
resolution also defaults to 1280x800 (16:10).
4096x2160 (9:5)
2560x1600 (16:10)
2048x1152 (16:9)
1920x1440 (4:3)
etc.
Please also see the attached ubuntu24.04.1-vm-hw-version-21-open-vm-
tools-2:12.4.5-1-gnome-resolutions-actual.png.
xrandr also omits the 4k resolution so I do not believe this is a
Gnome specific issue:
$ xrandr|grep 3840
Although xrandr does not include the 4096 resolution, either:
$ xrandr |grep 4096
Tested versions:
- Ubuntu 24.04.1 Desktop VM guest
- linux-generic >= 6.8.0-44.44
- VMWare Workstation Pro 17.5.2/17.6 full screen display preferences set to "Stretch guest"
- Please note: I have only tested under VMWare Workstation Pro 17.5.2 due to unrelated issues upgrading to 17.6. However, Phil B confirmed the issue also affects 17.6 in their response to the original question: https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+question/818765.
- GNOME Shell 46.0 (as displayed by gnome-shell --version)
Workarounds, which show that the guest does technically support the 4k resolution
=================================================================================
Workaround option 1
-------------------
The following workaround has to be performed upon each boot, albeit it
can be automated - please see the attached vmware-missing-4k-res-
workaround.sh as an example.
1. In the Ubuntu 24.04.1 guest OS, explicitly set the guest screen
topology:
sudo vmwgfxctrl --set-topology 3840x2160+0+0
2. Toggle VMWare Workstation Pro out of and back into full screen
mode.
3. Observe the Gnome Screen Display settings now has 3840x2160 (16:9)
as the selected resolution.
4. Fractional scaling can also be manually set and will persist across
reboots.
Workaround option 2
-------------------
Ensure the VMWare Workstation Pro 17.5.2 settings:
- Display Preference:
- Autofit
- Autofit Window: disabled
- Autofit guest: disabled
- Full screen: Autofit guest (change guest resolution)
However, auto fitting the guest can break some scenarios for some
other guest VMs and VMWare Workstation Pro does not allow configuring
per-VM display preferences. So this workaround can be significantly
less convenient than the automated version of option 1.
Testing steps
=============
1. Ensure your system is connected to a single native 4k (3840x2160)
monitor. DisplayPort vs HDMI connector makes no difference. My monitor
supports DisplayPort 1.4 and HDMI 2.0.
2. (optional) I don't think it matters but my host OS was:
$ grep VERSION= /etc/os-release
VERSION="24.04.1 LTS (Noble Numbat)"
$ uname -r
6.8.0-45-generic
3. VMWare Workstation Pro 17.5.2 settings:
Edit->Preferences->Display
- Autofit
- Autofit window: disabled
- Autofit guest: disabled
- Full Screen
- Stretch guest (no resolution change): enabled
4. Ensure the Ubuntu 24.04.1 guest VM is using the latest VMWare
hardware version. This can be verified from the version in the VM's
.vmx file, which is 21 for 17.5.x:
$ grep virtualHW.version "$(ls *.vmx)"
virtualHW.version = "21"
According to Phil B, the latest VMWare Workstation Pro 17.6, which
I could not test due to unrelated upgrade errors, doesn't make a
difference.
5. Ensure the Ubuntu 24.04.1 guest VM has a kernel >= 6.8.0-44
$ uname -r
6.8.0-44-generic
$ dpkg -l linux-generic
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=========================================
ii linux-generic 6.8.0-44.44 amd64 Complete Generic Linux kernel and headers
In my case, one of my guests already had this version due to
upgrading from 23.10 to 24.04.1 on Sep 16 2024. However, if you have
already upgraded to the latest stable kernel (6.8.0-45.45), you can
downgrade the kernel as follows, assuming you did not explicitly
remove the old kernel:
4.1 Reboot the system, holding down the Shift key
4.2 In the Grub "Advanced options for Ubuntu", select the option for the 6.8.0-44-generic kernel
4.3 Once booted, confirm the kernel version:
$ uname -r
6.8.0-44-generic
6. Ensure the VM is using the latest open-vm-tools and open-vm-tools-
desktop
$ sudo apt update && sudo apt install open-vm-tools open-vm-tools-desktop
$ dpkg -l open-vm-*
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-===========================-==========================-============-=============================================================
ii open-vm-tools 2:12.4.5-1~ubuntu0.24.04.1 amd64 Open VMware Tools for virtual machines hosted on VMware (CLI)
un open-vm-tools-containerinfo <none> <none> (no description available)
ii open-vm-tools-desktop 2:12.4.5-1~ubuntu0.24.04.1 amd64 Open VMware Tools for virtual machines hosted on VMware (GUI)
un open-vm-tools-dev <none> <none> (no description available)
un open-vm-tools-salt-minion <none> <none> (no description available)
un open-vm-tools-sdmp <none> <none> (no description available)
7. If open-vm-tools or open-vm-tools-desktop were newly installed or
updated, reboot the VM just in case.
8. Display the VM in windowed mode.
9. In the VM, check the available resolutions in the Gnome Screen
Display settings are wrong:
4096x2160 (9:5)
2560x1600 (16:10)
2048x1152 (16:9)
1920x1440 (4:3)
etc.
10. Display the VM in full screen mode. Confirm the available resolutions are still wrong.
11. Observe the host log during boot. Logs are located under
/tmp/vmware-$USER and the number will be runtime dependent. The log
seemed to indicate VMWare is aware of the 4k resolution screen:
$ tail -f vmware-ui-3652.log |grep -i topology
2024-09-17T09:12:48.104Z In(05) vmui HandleGuestTopologyChange: main UI rect: 3840x2160 @ 0,0
2024-09-17T09:12:48.104Z In(05) vmui HandleGuestTopologyChange: Found 1 present screens
2024-09-17T09:12:48.104Z In(05) vmui HandleGuestTopologyChange: Windows for extra guest monitors will be shown
12. In the guest VM, /var/log/vmware* seemed to indicate
resolutionCheckForKMS is running, which according to
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-
Tools/12.4.0/com.vmware.vsphere.vmwaretools.doc/GUID-0BD592B1-A300-4C09-808A-BB447FAE2C2A.html,
"Handles communicating guest user interface topology to the vmwgfx drm
(direct rendering manager) driver".
$ sudo grep -i resolution vmware*
...
vmware-vmsvc-root.log:[2024-09-17T09:12:49.394Z] [ message] [resolutionCommon] [1327] resolutionCheckForKMS: dlopen succeeded.
vmware-vmsvc-root.log:[2024-09-17T09:12:49.397Z] [ message] [resolutionCommon] [1327] resolutionCheckForKMS: System support available for resolutionKMS.
vmware-vmsvc-root.log:[2024-09-17T09:12:49.397Z] [ message] [vmtoolsd] [1327] Plugin 'resolutionKMS' initialized.
...
vmware-vmusr-REDACTED.log:[2024-09-17T09:14:52.683Z] [ message] [resolutionCommon] [3348] resolutionCheckForKMS: dlopen succeeded.
vmware-vmusr-REDACTED.log:[2024-09-17T09:14:52.685Z] [ message] [resolutionCommon] [3348] resolutionCheckForKMS: System support available for resolutionKMS.
vmware-vmusr-REDACTED.log:[2024-09-17T09:14:52.685Z] [ message] [resolutionSet] [3348] ResolutionToolkitInit: Backing off for resolutionKMS.
13. (optional) On Sep 24, 2024, for good measure I also verified that `sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade` did not change the observed behavior so the latest Ubuntu stable release appears to be affected and I do not believe any other packages affect the observed behavior. Furthermore, the latest stable release kernel at this time was:
uname -r
6.8.0-45-generic
Testing steps - latest mainline kernel v6.11
============================================
The latest mainline kernel was also tested from
https://kernel.ubuntu.com/mainline/v6.11/ with the same observed
behavior.
1. Checksums of version used:
# Checksums, check with the command below:
# shasum -c CHECKSUMS
#
# Checksums-Sha1:
59d8a86a327389bafda66d18baaa4b8db6351e66 linux-headers-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb
98cf819f700c596a3a61d54ec3165a011ef842ea linux-headers-6.11.0-061100_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_all.deb
a479c725d1f846e2b7d7d45daf0f6ef7f5fe596b linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb
2408c34f460a98883a046995be16831f03d7a60e linux-modules-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb
#
# Checksums-Sha256:
3d13b2ee8327e73d68220687604382847e43b9dcdf115e37b52bebb68cde4faf linux-headers-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb
9d296b9e5172cf78bf2fc535c72667c8cb0160a457617b580e79e82897cd0280 linux-headers-6.11.0-061100_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_all.deb
8881567927f704a03e80b7d7af2e94e6741af49e4a00c073ef5b3e70da631b89 linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb
f2ad25b72ad8be3478a7d679e9ad70e4ed4c3d5904fcb75da76acebc82357717 linux-modules-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb
2. Install kernel in Ubuntu 24.04.1:
$ sudo dpkg -i *.deb
(Reading database ... 310509 files and directories currently installed.)
Preparing to unpack linux-headers-6.11.0-061100_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_all.deb ...
Unpacking linux-headers-6.11.0-061100 (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) over (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Preparing to unpack linux-headers-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb ...
Unpacking linux-headers-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) over (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Preparing to unpack linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb ...
Unpacking linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) over (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
/var/lib/dpkg/info/linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic.postrm ... removing pending trigger
Preparing to unpack linux-modules-6.11.0-061100-generic_6.11.0-061100.202409151536_amd64.deb ...
Unpacking linux-modules-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) over (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Setting up linux-headers-6.11.0-061100 (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Setting up linux-headers-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Setting up linux-modules-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Setting up linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
Processing triggers for linux-image-unsigned-6.11.0-061100-generic (6.11.0-061100.202409151536) ...
/etc/kernel/postinst.d/initramfs-tools:
update-initramfs: Generating /boot/initrd.img-6.11.0-061100-generic
/etc/kernel/postinst.d/zz-update-grub:
Sourcing file `/etc/default/grub'
Generating grub configuration file ...
Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-6.11.0-061100-generic
Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-6.11.0-061100-generic
Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-6.8.0-45-generic
Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-6.8.0-45-generic
Found linux image: /boot/vmlinuz-6.8.0-41-generic
Found initrd image: /boot/initrd.img-6.8.0-41-generic
Found memtest86+x64 image: /boot/memtest86+x64.bin
Warning: os-prober will not be executed to detect other bootable partitions.
Systems on them will not be added to the GRUB boot configuration.
Check GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER documentation entry.
Adding boot menu entry for UEFI Firmware Settings ...
done
3. Reboot with the new kernel:
2.1 Reboot the system, holding down the Shift key
2.2 In the Grub "Advanced options for Ubuntu", select the option for the 6.11.0-061100-generic kernel
2.3 Once booted, confirm the kernel version:
$ uname -r
6.11.0-061100-generic
4. Same bug observed.
(optional) Testing steps - Fedora
=================================
In the original posted question, tests of a different distribution,
Fedora, were also conducted at actionparsnip's suggestion and
exhibited the same bug. This information is probably irrelevant now
that I've tested the latest mainline kernel but is included here for
completeness. Phil B's contribution:
"I just installed Fedora 40 in VMWare to find out:
uname -r
6.10.10-200.fc40.x86_64
Same problem. So it's kernel thing, I guess."
I also verified the same:
1. Installed SHA256 (Fedora-Workstation-Live-x86_64-40-1.14.iso) =
dd1faca950d1a8c3d169adf2df4c3644ebb62f8aac04c401f2393e521395d613
without installing updates
2. Worked fine but kernel is older than Phil B's
$ uname -r
6.8.5-301.fc40.x86_64
$ echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE
wayland
$ gnome-shell --version
GNOME Shell 46.0
# After changing resolution in Gnome settings
$ xrandr |grep -o 3840x2160
3840x2160
3840x2160
3. Upgraded
$ sudo dnf check-update
4. Shutdown and reboot
5. Same bug encountered with same kernel as Phil B
$ uname -r
6.10.10-200.fc40.x86_64
$ echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE
wayland
Identification of regression introduced in linux-generic 6.8.0-44.44
====================================================================
The bug appears to be a regression introduced with linux-generic
6.8.0-44.44. However, instead of bisecting the kernel, I arrived at
this conclusion based on observations from 2 of my existing guest VMs.
Phil B also confirmed "the issue arose when upgrading linux-generic
kernel from 6.8.0-41.41 to 6.8.0-44.44" when commenting on my original
posted question.
Ubuntu 24.04.1 VM Guest 1:
- Was already Ubuntu 24.04.1, screen resolution worked fine and kernel
was 6.8.0-41-generic from linux-generic 6.8.0-41.41:
$ uname -r
6.8.0-41-generic
$ dpkg -l linux-generic
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=========================================
ii linux-generic 6.8.0-41.41 amd64 Complete Generic Linux kernel and headers
- apt list --upgradeable |grep 'linux-' showed upgrades available to
6.8.0-45.45:
linux-generic/noble-updates 6.8.0-45.45 amd64 [upgradable from: 6.8.0-41.41]
linux-headers-generic/noble-updates 6.8.0-45.45 amd64 [upgradable from: 6.8.0-41.41]
linux-image-generic/noble-updates 6.8.0-45.45 amd64 [upgradable from: 6.8.0-41.41]
linux-libc-dev/noble-updates 6.8.0-45.45 amd64 [upgradable from: 6.8.0-41.41]
linux-tools-common/noble-updates,noble-updates 6.8.0-45.45 all [upgradable from: 6.8.0-41.41]
- Selectively upgrading the above resulted in the same bug upon
reboot:
sudo apt-get install --only-upgrade linux-generic linux-headers-
generic linux-image-generic linux-libc-dev linux-tools-common
Ubuntu 24.04.1 VM Guest 2:
- Was on Ubuntu 23.10, screen resolution worked fine and kernel was
6.5.0-44-generic:
```
$ uname -r
6.5.0-44-generic
```
- Upgrading to Ubuntu 24.04.01 resulted in the same bug.
- Unlike Guest 1, though, the kernel was the older 6.8.0-44-generic
due to the timing of my upgrade:
$ uname -r
6.8.0-44-generic
$ dpkg -l linux-generic
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Architecture Description
+++-==============-============-============-=========================================
ii linux-generic 6.8.0-44.44 amd64 Complete Generic Linux kernel and headers
Hence, the above indicates:
- linux-generic 6.8.0-41.41 did not exhibit the bug
- linux-generic 6.8.0-44.44 exhibited the bug
Further evidence is from the two diffs listed at
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/6.8.0-44.44:
1. diff from 6.8.0-41.41 (in ~canonical-kernel-team/ubuntu/ppa2) to 6.8.0-44.44
2. diff from 6.8.0-43.43 to 6.8.0-44.44 (6.0 KiB)
Only the first lists changes made to vmwgfx, which I believe is the
VMware Linux graphics driver:
- drm/vmwgfx: Refactor drm connector probing for display modes
- drm/vmwgfx: Filter modes which exceed graphics memory
- drm/vmwgfx: 3D disabled should not effect STDU memory limits
- drm/vmwgfx: Remove STDU logic from generic mode_valid function
- drm/vmwgfx: Don't memcmp equivalent pointers
Thus, it seems linux-generic 6.8.0-44.44 is responsible for the
regression in behavior due to the above changes. From the git
comments, these changes appear to correspond to upstream kernel
changes:
- drm/vmwgfx: Refactor drm connector probing for display modes --> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/935f795045a6f9b13d28d46ebdad04bfea8750dd
- drm/vmwgfx: Filter modes which exceed graphics memory --> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/426826933109093503e7ef15d49348fc5ab505fe
- drm/vmwgfx: 3D disabled should not effect STDU memory limits --> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/fb5e19d2dd03eb995ccd468d599b2337f7f66555
- drm/vmwgfx: Remove STDU logic from generic mode_valid function --> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/dde1de06bd7248fd83c4ce5cf0dbe9e4e95bbb91
- drm/vmwgfx: Don't memcmp equivalent pointers --> https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/5703fc058efdafcdd6b70776ee562478f0753acb
I am unsure of how to determine what upstream release the Ubuntu
kernel is based on as the info at
https://people.canonical.com/~kernel/info/kernel-version-map.html
appears to be out of date.
Appendix - Wayland vs X11 seems to be irrelevant
================================================
In my original posted question, Amir Cicak suggested that the bug only
affects Wayland, not X11 but did not provide detailed testing steps.
However, I was unable to reproduce their findings. Potentially they
have a different issue. Testing steps:
1. Confirm using Wayland
$ echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE
wayland
2. Disable Wayland
sudo sed -i.bak -e 's/^#WaylandEnable=false/WaylandEnable=false/'
/etc/gdm3/custom.conf
3. Reboot to be sure
reboot
4. Confirm X11
$ echo $XDG_SESSION_TYPE
x11
5. Same bug observed.
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 24.04
Package: linux-generic 6.8.0-45.45
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 6.8.0-45.45-generic 6.8.12
Uname: Linux 6.8.0-45-generic x86_64
ApportVersion: 2.28.1-0ubuntu3.1
Architecture: amd64
AudioDevicesInUse:
USER PID ACCESS COMMAND
/dev/snd/seq: redacted_username 2951 F.... pipewire
/dev/snd/controlC0: redacted_username 2955 F.... wireplumber
CRDA: N/A
CasperMD5CheckResult: pass
CurrentDesktop: ubuntu:GNOME
Date: Tue Sep 24 17:54:44 2024
InstallationDate: Installed on 2023-04-03 (540 days ago)
InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 22.10 "Kinetic Kudu" - Release amd64 (20221020)
IwConfig:
lo no wireless extensions.
ens33 no wireless extensions.
docker0 no wireless extensions.
Lsusb:
Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0001 Linux Foundation 1.1 root hub
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0e0f:0003 VMware, Inc. Virtual Mouse
Bus 001 Device 003: ID 0e0f:0002 VMware, Inc. Virtual USB Hub
Bus 001 Device 004: ID 1050:0407 Yubico.com Yubikey 4/5 OTP+U2F+CCID
MachineType: VMware, Inc. VMware Virtual Platform
ProcFB: 0 vmwgfxdrmfb
ProcKernelCmdLine: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-6.8.0-45-generic root=/dev/mapper/vgubuntu-root ro find_preseed=/preseed.cfg auto noprompt priority=critical locale=en_US quiet splash
RelatedPackageVersions:
linux-restricted-modules-6.8.0-45-generic N/A
linux-backports-modules-6.8.0-45-generic N/A
linux-firmware 20240318.git3b128b60-0ubuntu2.3
RfKill:
SourcePackage: linux
UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to noble on 2024-09-16 (8 days ago)
dmi.bios.date: 11/12/2020
dmi.bios.release: 4.6
dmi.bios.vendor: Phoenix Technologies LTD
dmi.bios.version: 6.00
dmi.board.name: 440BX Desktop Reference Platform
dmi.board.vendor: Intel Corporation
dmi.board.version: None
dmi.chassis.asset.tag: No Asset Tag
dmi.chassis.type: 1
dmi.chassis.vendor: No Enclosure
dmi.chassis.version: N/A
dmi.ec.firmware.release: 0.0
dmi.modalias: dmi:bvnPhoenixTechnologiesLTD:bvr6.00:bd11/12/2020:br4.6:efr0.0:svnVMware,Inc.:pnVMwareVirtualPlatform:pvrNone:rvnIntelCorporation:rn440BXDesktopReferencePlatform:rvrNone:cvnNoEnclosure:ct1:cvrN/A:sku:
dmi.product.name: VMware Virtual Platform
dmi.product.version: None
dmi.sys.vendor: VMware, Inc.
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