 Hi, this is Don Scheng with the Red Hat developer program today. We're going to in this video We're going to take a look at how to install .NET framework in your RAL virtual machine if you don't have the virtual machine installed check the link below For instructions a little short five minute video on how to install so I'm at the PowerShell prompt So I'm going to SSH into my VM. I've already started it And then it's just a matter of running Six commands and Tweaking a file So so forgive my bad typing. I could you know cut and paste but that'd be too easy, wouldn't it? So the first thing I want to do is get a list of what's available in my subscription Because at the end there's a pool ID right there it is and I'm going to use that in the next statement Copy that attach Well, I'm not taking very well the day. I It sounds like I'm really hammering my keyboard, but I'm not just the sound travels through my desk and into the microphone So that's why I'm not I'm really not abusing my keyboard. I promise So this is going to attach to that pool which includes the software I need And then I'm really not on today I'm going to tell which repo to enable Which will be well Seven Now in my case, I'm using server here. There's also workstation If you're running red hat enterprise language workstation, but I'm running server And that's what you get with the VM that you download with the red hat development suite Okay, this this takes a little bit of time For some stuff down at the end And then after this we we basically have to install a Utility and then we actually install Got in the core Okay, it's enabled You know young install That's why I mean, I don't bother asking me You know if I approve of it because you know you're gonna say yes So this installs it Utility It's not huge though. The one of the nice things about that in that core is it's really compact when you Like you only get the core and basically the very Functionally very very basic and then when you when you code you You tell it which dependencies you want to pull the bits that down in so that's really nice because you can get a lot smaller You know applications So now it's now it's installed But it's not available And when I run this command, it's gonna it's gonna enable it, but it's gonna open a new bash session What they do So now I should have gotten that available thing there it is but what I want to do yet is Is add it to this file or see which is off the root It's off the root of the user The user's home director there go down here and add if you've never used them. Oh boy, it's fun So this source which basically like runs a file in But what what happens here is every time you log in To your VM now it'll run this and then they will dot net core So if I do an exit here watch it doesn't get out of VM because remember I started another bash session So now I exited the second one exit now now I'm back to PowerShell Directly show you right now vagrant SSH and every time I do this now the dot net core will be available Let's see. Boom. There it is. So that's how you do the install the next video I do I'll show you how to share files between Your VM and your Windows host and then that opens doors like then you'll be able to edit from Visual Studio code In Windows against files that are on your VM. So there you go That's this video and stay tuned and watch out for the next one. Thanks Just to recap. Here's a list of the steps that we did Notice that the first step you get the pool ID and then you use that on the second step The rest will be the same The third step if you're using workstation substitute the word workstation for the word server Otherwise, that's it. You're good to go