3.1
Table Of Contents
- Getting Started with VMware Fusion
- Getting Started with VMware Fusion
- Introduction
 - What Is a Virtual Machine?
 - What You Can Do with VMware Fusion
 - System Requirements for VMware Fusion
 - Install VMware Fusion
 - Upgrade VMware Fusion
 - Start VMware Fusion
 - Getting Up and Running
 - Create a Windows Virtual Machine with Windows Easy Install
 - Create a Virtual Machine from the Boot Camp Partition
 - Migrating an Existing PC to a Virtual Machine
 - Import an Existing Parallels Desktop or Microsoft Virtual PC 7.0 Virtual Machine
 - Using Mac Keyboards in a Virtual Machine
 - Sending the Ctrl-Alt-Delete Command to a Virtual Machine
 - Quit Your Virtual Machine
 - VMware Fusion Resources
 - Supported Guest Operating Systems
 
 
 - Getting Started with VMware Fusion
 
14 Getting Started with VMware Fusion
VMware, Inc.  
Create a Virtual Machine from the Boot Camp 
Partition
Boot Camp is an application from Apple that enables an Intel-based Mac to 
run Windows operating systems. Boot Camp creates separate Mac and 
Windows partitions on your hard disk to create a dual-boot environment, so 
that you can use either Mac OS X or Windows at boot time, but not both. 
With VMware Fusion, you can use your Windows Boot Camp partition as a 
virtual machine. This feature gives you the following abilities:
 Use your Boot Camp virtual machine and your Mac at the same time 
without rebooting to switch between them.
 Share files easily between your Boot Camp virtual machine and your 
Mac, through shared folders, and by dragging and dropping files or 
cutting and pasting text.
To create a virtual machine from the Boot Camp partition
1 From the Virtual Machine Library window, select Boot Camp partition, 
which is automatically detected, and click the run arrow.
2 Enter your Mac password to access the Boot Camp partition. 
You must have administrator privileges to use the Boot Camp as a virtual 
machine. VMware Fusion creates a virtual machine from your Boot Camp 
partition and starts Windows.
N
OTE If VMware Tools is not installed, and you reactivate Windows in your 
Boot Camp virtual machine, and subsequently boot your Boot Camp 
partition natively, you are prompted to reactivate Windows. Reactivating 
Windows in your native Boot Camp partition results in your Boot Camp 
virtual machine requiring reactivation the next time you power it on, and so 
on. Installing VMware Tools solves this problem. If you have VMware Tools 
installed, you must reactivate Windows only when you first power on your 
Boot Camp virtual machine. 










