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5 In the Linux Easy Install dialog box, select the Use Easy Install option, provide the appropriate
information, and click Continue.
a Enter your Display Name, Account Name, and Password.
b Select Make your home folder accessible to the virtual machine to have Linux Easy Install
configure your home folder as a shared folder, so you can share files between the virtual
machine and your Mac.
6 If you selected to make your home folder accessible, select either Read only or Read & Write
for your virtual machine.
7 In the Finish panel, you can use default settings or customize the settings before powering on
the virtual machine to start the operating system installation.
Option Action
To create the virtual machine
according to the specifications listed
in the Finish panel
a Click Finish.
b Indicate the location to save the virtual machine to or accept the default,
such as the your home directory/Virtual Machines folder.
c (Optional) To share the virtual machine with other users on the Mac host,
save the virtual machine to the Shared folder and select the Share this
virtual machine with other users on this Mac check box. Deselect the
check box to save to the Shared folder but not share the virtual machine
with other users on the Mac host. See
Creating a Shared Virtual Machine
in Fusion .
To change disk size or other
standard settings of the virtual
machine
a Click Customize Settings.
b Save the new virtual machine.
c Make changes to the virtual machine’s disk size, processor usage,
removable devices, and other configurations on the Settings window.
Results
Fusion starts the new virtual machine, installs the operating system, and installs VMware Tools.
Creating a macOS Virtual Machine in Fusion
You can install Mac OS X, OS X, or macOS in a virtual machine. Fusion creates the virtual machine,
opens the operating system installation assistant, and installs VMware Tools. VMware Tools loads
the drivers required to optimize a virtual machine's performance.
Mac OS X, OS X, or macOS virtual machines that you create in Fusion can run on any
Apple-branded hardware that uses Intel processors. The Apple licensing agreement defines the
situations when it is permissible to virtualize Mac OS X, OS X, or macOS. Fusion does not change
these terms or enable macOS on non-Apple hardware. You cannot use a Mac OS X, OS X, or
macOS virtual machine in another VMware product, such as Workstation Pro.
Fusion supports the following Mac server and client versions for the guest operating system:
n Mac OS X Server 10.5, 10.6
n Mac OS X 10.7
Using VMware Fusion
VMware, Inc. 63