Quote:In simple terms, VMware Workstation allows one physical machine to run multiple operating systems simultaneously. Other VMware products help manage or migrate VMware virtual machines across multiple host machines.
VMware Workstation cannot use more than 2 CPUs (or cores) per virtual machine. This means that a single virtual machine cannot use the full power of the underlying hardware on machines with the total number of cores greater than 2 (Quad Core 2, or 2 x Core 2).
Well, as stated; VMware would do actually... what? For our proplem? From what I read when I follow that link, you are able to host several operating systems on one and the same machine. However, that does not mean you are able to merge multicores to pretend having a singlecore, if I gather your question correctly?. And this is the point where I jump off that train because the FLserver.exe file is unable to get advantage of a multicore architecture. Only one single processor / core per instance of FLserver. The program would need to be rewritten to handle multicores, and before that happens, I guess it is more likely to host several instances of FLserver and hook the characters from one server to the other on demand.
If you want to test, I guess everybody would be happy to see somebody help Cannon (and the others, honestly, I have no clue who else works with FLhook coding). The two unexploited options are; reverse compile the server program or code additional lines for FLHook so it is able to intercept the info running from the server and what would be needed to get one character to another instance of the server (preferably, without forcing an autokick/autorelog).
To hunt the prey is life,
to lose the prey is death,
to hunt the loss is insane...