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Table Of Contents
What to do next
If a new virtual hardware version is available for the virtual machine, upgrade the virtual hardware.
Manually Install VMware Tools on Linux
You can manually install VMware Tools on a Linux virtual machine using the command line. For
later Linux distributions, use the integrated open-vm-tools version.
For more information about Linux distributions supported by Open VM Tools, see Open VM
Tools (README) and the VMware Compatibility Guide at https://www.vmware.com/resources/
compatibility/search.php.
VMware Tar Tool for Linux virtual machine is feature-frozen at version 10.3.10, so the tar tools
(linux.iso) included in Workstation Player is 10.3.10 and will not be updated. Due to this change,
the Install/Update/Reinstall VMware Tools menu is not available for the following Linux virtual
machines:
n Modern Linux distributions not officially supported by tar tools.
n Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 and later releases.
n CentOS 8 and later releases.
n Oracle Linux 8 and later releases.
n SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 and later releases.
n Linux kernel version is 4.0 or later, and the version of the installed Open VM Tools is 10.0.0 or
later.
n Linux kernel version is 3.10 or later, and the version of the installed Open VM Tools is 10.3.0 or
later.
For the Linux virtual machines that have Open VM Tools installed but are not in the scope
mentioned in the preceding bullet, Install/Update/Reinstall VMware Tools menu is enabled, so
that you can install bundled tar tools on top of Open VM Tools to get Shared Folder (HGFS)
feature support.
For old Linux virtual machines not supported by Open VM Tools, perform the following steps to
install tar tools.
Prerequisites
n Power on the virtual machine.
n Verify that the guest operating system is running.
n Because the VMware Tools installer is written in Perl, verify that Perl is installed in the guest
operating system.
Using VMware Fusion
VMware, Inc. 79