Question

Is it possible to clone a virtual machine using VMware Fusion on Mac OS X? I'm trying the 30 day evaluation version but there doesn't appear to be a clone feature. I tried using the Finder to copy a VM's package structure but the copy didn't appear in the Virtual Machine Library.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Just use File->open to open the copy of the VM. It will probably ask you if you want to change the VM's unique ID. If you plan to run both the original and the clone at the same time, and it's not a Windows OS that needs activation, you should say yes.

OTHER TIPS

  1. In the Virtual Machine Library window select the add button (upper left)
  2. Select "New"
  3. Select "Continue without Disc" button
  4. Select "Use an existing virtual disk:"
  5. browse to where the Vm you want to clone is located. On the bottom half of the screen you have 3 options. To create a totally separate VM select the first one " Make a separate copy of the viral disk" and just follow the instructions.

just copy the folder cp -R folder newfolder (in your docs folder) Open the folder in Vmware and say you copied it Have a look on weblog.jamisburk.org, august 15

as there may be issues with networking

Justin

I don't know fusion in detail, but in VMWare Server you can just copy the files somewhere else.

Here are the instructions on VMware's site:

http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1001524

To copy the virtual machine:

  1. Power off your virtual machine.
    Note: Making a copy of a virtual machine while it is running or suspended can create a copy that may not boot.

  2. Find the virtual machine bundle. For more information, see Locating the virtual machine bundle in VMware Fusion (1007599).

  3. Drag the virtual machine bundle to the location where you want the copied bundle to be. If you are copying it to the same folder or somewhere else on your hard drive, hold down the option key -- this tells Mac OS to copy the file rather than moving it. If you are moving the bundle to another drive or a network share, Mac OS copies the file automatically. The cursor is superimposed with a green circle and a plus sign, indicating that a copy will be made.
    Note: This does not affect your current virtual machine.

If you power on the copied virtual machine, Fusion asks if you have moved the virtual machine or copied it. Select that you Moved It (unless you need to run the copied virtual machine at the same time as the original). This indicates that it is the same virtual machine, just starting from a new location, and keeps all of the settings the same.

Note: When you select the Copied It option, a new UUID and MAC address are generated, which can cause Windows to require re-activation and may cause network issues.

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