Specifications
Table Of Contents
- Getting Started with VMware Player
- Contents
- Getting Started with VMware Player
- Introduction and System Requirements
- Installing and Using Player
- Creating Virtual Machines
- Understanding Virtual Machines
- Preparing to Create a Virtual Machine
- Create a Virtual Machine
- Use Easy Install to Install a Guest Operating System
- Install a Guest Operating System Manually
- Importing Virtual Machines
- Installing and Upgrading VMware Tools
- Installing VMware Tools
- Upgrading VMware Tools
- Configure Software Update Preferences
- Configure VMware Tools Updates for a Specific Virtual Machine
- Manually Installing and Upgrading VMware Tools
- Manually Install or Upgrade VMware Tools in a Windows Virtual Machine
- Manually Install or Upgrade VMware Tools in a Linux Virtual Machine
- Manually Install or Upgrade VMware Tools in a NetWare Virtual Machine
- Manually Install or Upgrade VMware Tools in a Solaris Virtual Machine
- Manually Install or Upgrade VMware Tools in a FreeBSD Virtual Machine
- Start the VMware User Process Manually If You Do Not Use a Session Manager
- Uninstall VMware Tools
- Virtual Machine Files
- Using Virtual Machines
- Starting Virtual Machines in Player
- Stopping Virtual Machines in Player
- Transferring Files and Text
- Using the Drag-and-Drop Feature
- Using the Copy and Paste Feature
- Using Shared Folders
- Mapping a Virtual Disk to the Host System
- Add a Host Printer to a Virtual Machine
- Using Removable Devices in Virtual Machines
- Install New Software in a Virtual Machine
- Changing the Virtual Machine Display
- Download a Virtual Appliance in Player
- Remove a Virtual Machine from the Library in Player
- Configuring and Managing Virtual Machines
- Change the Name of a Virtual Machine
- Change the Guest Operating System for a Virtual Machine
- Change the Working Directory for a Virtual Machine
- Change the Virtual Machine Directory for a Virtual Machine
- Change the Memory Allocation for a Virtual Machine
- Configuring Video and Sound
- Moving Virtual Machines
- Delete a Virtual Machine
- View the Message Log for a Virtual Machine
- Using the VIX API
- Configuring and Managing Devices
- Configuring DVD, CD-ROM, and Floppy Drives
- Configuring a USB Controller
- Configuring and Maintaining Virtual Hard Disks
- Configuring Virtual Ports
- Add a Virtual Parallel Port to a Virtual Machine
- Configure a Virtual Parallel Port on a Linux 2.6.x Kernel Host
- Configure Permissions for a Parallel Port Device on a Linux Host
- Troubleshoot ECR Errors for Parallel Ports
- Add a Virtual Serial Port to a Virtual Machine
- Change the Input Speed of a Serial Connection
- Configuring Generic SCSI Devices
- Configuring Eight-Way Virtual Symmetric Multiprocessing
- Configuring Keyboard Features
- Modify Hardware Settings for a Virtual Machine
- Configuring Network Connections
- Index
Procedure
1 Select the virtual machine and select Player > Manage > Virtual Machine Settings.
2 On the Hardware tab, click Add.
3 In the New Hardware wizard, select Hard Disk.
4 Select Create a new virtual disk.
5 Select the disk type.
Option Description
IDE
Create an IDE device. You can add up to four IDE devices to a virtual
machine.
SCSI
Create a SCSI device. You can add up to 60 SCSI devices to a virtual
machine.
SATA
Create a SATA device. You can add up to 120 SATA devices: four
controllers and 30 devices per controller.
6 (Optional) To exclude the disk from snapshots, select Independent for the mode and select a
persistence option.
Option Description
Persistent
Disks in persistent mode behave like conventional disks on a physical
computer. All data written to a disk in persistent mode is written
permanently to the disk.
Nonpersistent
Changes to disks in nonpersistent mode are discarded when you power off
or reset the virtual machine. With nonpersistent mode, you always restart
the virtual machine with a virtual disk in the same state. Changes to the
disk are written to and read from a redo log file that is deleted when you
power off or reset the virtual machine.
7 Set the capacity for the new virtual hard disk.
You can set a size between 0.001GB and 8TB for a virtual disk.
8 Specify how to allocate the disk space.
Option Description
Allocate all disk space now
Allocating all of the disk space when you create the virtual hard disk can
enhance performance, but it requires all of the physical disk space to be
available now. If you do not select this setting, the virtual disk starts small
and grows as you add data to it.
Store virtual disk as a single file
Select this option if the virtual disk is stored on a file system that does not
have a file size limitation.
Split virtual disk into multiple files
Select this option if the virtual disk is stored on a file system that has a file
size limitation. When you split a virtual disk less than 950GB, a series of
2GB virtual disk files are created. When you split a virtual disk greater
than 950GB, two virtual disk files are created. The maximum size of the
first virtual disk file is 1.9TB and the second virtual disk file stores the rest
of the data.
9 Accept the default filename and location, or browse to and select a different location.
10 Click Finish to add the new virtual hard disk.
The wizard creates the new virtual hard disk. The disk appears to the guest operating system as a new,
blank hard disk.
11 Click OK to save your changes.
Chapter 6 Configuring and Managing Devices
VMware, Inc. 83










