13.0

Table Of Contents
Procedure
1 On the host, from the VMware Fusion menu bar, select Virtual Machine > Install VMware
Tools.
If an earlier version of VMware Tools is installed, the menu item is Update VMware Tools.
2 In the virtual machine, open a terminal window. Run the mount command with no arguments
to determine whether your Linux distribution automatically mounted the VMware Tools virtual
CD-ROM image.
If the CD-ROM device is mounted, the CD-ROM device and its mount point are listed in a
manner similar to the following output:
/dev/cdrom on /mnt/cdrom type iso9660 (ro,nosuid,nodev)
If the VMware Tools virtual CD-ROM image is not mounted, mount the CD-ROM drive.
a If a mount point directory does not already exist, create it.
mkdir /mnt/cdrom
Some Linux distributions use different mount point names. For example, on some
distributions the mount point is /media/VMware Tools rather than /mnt/cdrom. Modify
the command to reflect the conventions that your distribution uses.
b Mount the CD-ROM drive.
mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom
Some Linux distributions use different device names or organize the /dev directory
differently. If your CD-ROM drive is not /dev/cdrom or if the mount point for a CD-ROM
is not /mnt/cdrom, modify the command to reflect the conventions that your distribution
uses.
3 Change to a working directory, for example, /tmp.
cd /tmp
4 Delete any previous vmware-tools-distrib directory before you install VMware Tools.
The location of this directory depends on where you placed it during the previous installation.
Often this directory is placed in /tmp/vmware-tools-distrib.
List the contents of the mount point directory and note the file name of the VMware Tools tar
installer.
ls mount-point
Uncompress the installer.
tar zxpf /mnt/cdrom/VMwareTools-x.x.x-yyyy.tar.gz
Using VMware Fusion
VMware, Inc. 80