VMware Fusion Operations: Difference between revisions
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Virtual Machine -> Settings -> System Settings row -> Processors & Memory -> Processors. | Virtual Machine -> Settings -> System Settings row -> Processors & Memory -> Processors. | ||
=Rename a VM= | =Rename a VM= |
Revision as of 03:21, 1 June 2017
Internal
Procedures
Changing the Number of CPUs Allocated to a VM
Virtual Machine -> Settings -> System Settings row -> Processors & Memory -> Processors.
Rename a VM
External
Procedure
After startup, Virtual Machine -> Settings -> General -> Click the existing name of the VM to edit the text -> Rename and click outside the text box to save.
Shutdown.
Note that renaming the VM does not change the name of any bundle file on disk.
Shrink a Sparse Disk
External
Procedure
TODO: "Clean Up Virtual Machine"
Rename VM Bundle Files
This is an experimental procedure. It worked, but it is probably not supported. If not applied, a VM can be cloned but the underlying bundle files won't be renamed.
Start by renaming the top level directory so its name coincides with the new name of the VM.
Rename bundle files as follows:
old="old-name"; new="new-name"; for i in ${old}*; do mv ${i} ${i/${old}/${new}}; done
Change the sparse disk extent description. Open <new-name>.vmdk, where <new-name>.vmdk is referred from the vmx file, in vi and:
:1,$s/old-name/new-name/g
Update the snapshot file *. vmsd. Use same command in vi.
Update the .vmx and .vmxf configuration files. Use same command in vi.
Remove old logs:
rm vmware*.log