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4 When prompted by VMware Tools, restart the virtual machine.
What to do next
If the VMware Tools installation does not complete properly, install VMware Tools manually. See
Installing and Using VMware Tools.
You might have to reactivate your Windows operating system in the new virtual machine when
you power it on.
Importing Windows Virtual Machines
You can import into Fusion virtual machines that you created with Parallels Desktop, as well as
virtual machines using the Open Virtualization Format (OVF).
Fusion can import virtual machines created with Parallels or OVF.
When you import a Parallels virtual machine, Fusion creates a VMware virtual machine based on
the original virtual machine. The import process is nondestructive, so you can continue to use the
original source virtual machine with the product you use to create the source virtual machine.
Fusion can also import the contents of the Boot Camp partition as a virtual machine, creating a
completely new VMware virtual machine based on the partition. This is a separate entity, not tied
to the partition like the virtual machine described in Power On the Boot Camp Partition as a
Virtual Machine. You can then reclaim the space by deleting the Boot Camp partition, which
restores the drive to a single volume.
Supported Guest Operating Systems for Import
A guest operating system is the system that runs in a virtual machine. Fusion supports importing
Parallels virtual machines with certain operating systems.
Fusion supports importing the following operating systems:
n Microsoft Windows 10
n Microsoft Windows 8
n Microsoft Windows 7
n Microsoft Windows Vista
n Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 3
n Microsoft Windows XP Service Pack 2
Virtual machines must be powered off before you import them.
If your copy of Windows was not licensed with a volume-license key, you might need to
reactivate it when it starts inside Fusion.
Using VMware Fusion
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