8.1

Table Of Contents
n
Import virtual machines created with Parallels Desktop, Microsoft Virtual PC for Mac, or virtual
machines that use the OVF (Open Virtualization Format) standard.
n
Migrate your physical Windows PC to a Fusion virtual machine with the integrated Migration
Assistant.
n
Access USB devices, such as video cameras and high-speed disks, from a virtual machine.
n
Drag files between your Intel-based Mac OS X host machine and virtual machines running other x86
operating systems.
n
Fusion works with VMware virtual machines created with different VMware products. For more
information, see “Virtual Machine Compatibility,” on page 133
Supported Guest Operating Systems
Fusion supports more than 100 guest operating systems, including most versions of Windows, Mac OS X,
Mac OS X Server and Linux.
For guest operating system support, visit http://www.vmware.com/go/hcl
You can also go to the VMware Web site and click the Support tab. Under Support Resources, click the
Compatibility Guides link.
Virtual Hardware Specifications
Each virtual machine has a standard virtual hardware configuration for chip set, BIOS, ports, and so on. The
amount of memory and number of processors depends on your Mac.
Processor
n
One virtual processor on a host system with one or more logical processors
n
Up to eight virtual processors (eight-way virtual symmetric multiprocessing, or Virtual SMP™ ) on a
host system with at least four logical processors
n
The following configurations have two logical processors:
n
A multiprocessor Mac with two or more physical CPUs
n
A single-processor Mac with a multicore CPU
Chip Set
n
Intel 440BX-based motherboard
n
NS338 SIO
n
82093AA IOAPIC
BIOS
n
PhoenixBIOS 4.0 Release 6 with VESA BIOS
Memory
n
Up to 64 GB, depending on the available memory on your Mac, virtual machine hardware version, and
guest operating system support
Using VMware Fusion
18 VMware, Inc.