8.1

Table Of Contents
Procedure
1 Select the virtual machine to view snapshots for in one of the following ways.
n
Select the virtual machine from the Virtual Machine Library.
n
Open the virtual machine.
2 Open the Snapshots window for the selected virtual machine in one of the following ways.
n
Select Virtual Machine > Snapshots.
n
Click the Snapshots button in the virtual machine toolbar.
Take a Snapshot
Take a snapshot of the virtual machine's current state from the Snapshots window for that virtual machine.
The virtual machine does not need to be powered on for you to take a snapshot.
You cannot take a snapshot of a Boot Camp virtual machine. Snapshots rely on being able to save a known
state that will not change. This is not possible with Boot Camp, in which you can boot natively into
Windows in the Boot Camp partition. Once that happens, the known state would be lost and data loss
would occur.
Procedure
1 In the Snapshots window of the virtual machine, select the Current State if it is not selected.
2 Click Take.
3 Name the new snapshot and give it a description in the dialog.
4 Click Take.
Fusion takes the snapshot of the current state of the virtual machine.
5 Close the Snapshots window.
Restore a Virtual Machine to the State in a Snapshot
You can restore a virtual machine to an earlier state.
Procedure
1 Select Virtual Machine > Snapshots.
2 Select the snapshot to restore.
3 Click Restore.
4 Click either Save to save a snapshot of the current state before you restore the virtual machine to the
selected snapshot state, or Don't Save a snapshot.
The virtual machine is restored to the state that the selected snapshot captured.
Delete a Snapshot
You can manually delete snapshots that you no longer need or to make more disk space available.
The virtual disk files that a snapshot creates do not contain the entire contents of the virtual machine's
virtual disk. When you delete a snapshot, you must consolidate the changes that it captured into the
original, parent virtual disk.
You cannot delete the snapshot showing the "Current State" of the virtual machine.
Using VMware Fusion
92 VMware, Inc.