12.0

Table Of Contents
To install the operating system, use the procedure for creating a virtual machine for any
supported operating system. See Create a Virtual Machine for Any Supported Operating System.
Creating a Shared Virtual Machine in Fusion
You can create a shared virtual machine in Fusion that can be accessed by all users on the local
Mac host.
Unless you specify a file location for a virtual machine when you create it, Fusion saves the virtual
machine package to a default location, such as the
your home directory
/Virtual Machines folder.
See Default File Location of a Virtual Machine.
This folder has limited permissions that allow only the creator of the virtual machine to use it. To
allow other users on the Mac host to access the virtual machine, save it to the /Users/Shared
folder on the Mac.
With a shared virtual machine, the user can log out of the current account on the Mac host, and
another user on the Mac host can log in to access the virtual machine.
The Run Windows applications from your Mac's Applications folder option is not available on
shared virtual machines.
Important Shared virtual machines in Fusion work differently than shared virtual machines in
Workstation Pro. In Workstation Pro, a shared virtual machine is a virtual machine on the host
system that remote Workstation Pro users can access as a remote virtual machine. In Fusion,
shared virtual machines can be accessed only on the local Mac host.
Create a Virtual Machine from a Mac Recovery Partition
You can use the recovery partition on your Mac to create virtual machines running macOS.
Unless you specify a file location for a virtual machine when you create it, Fusion saves the virtual
machine package to a default location, which can vary. See Default File Location of a Virtual
Machine.
Prerequisites
n You must have a recovery partition on your Mac to create this kind of virtual machine.
n You must have Mac OS X 10.11 or later.
Procedure
1 Select File > New.
A dialog box appears with the Select the Installation Method panel showing.
2 Click Install macOS from the recovery partition.
3 Select a recovery partition and click Continue.
If you have more than one recovery partition, a list of partitions is presented from which to
choose.
Using VMware Fusion
VMware, Inc. 61