6.0.1

Table Of Contents
You can restore snapshots in the following ways:
Revert to Latest
Snapshot
Restores the parent snapshot, one level up in the hierarchy from the You are
Here position. Revert to Latest Snapshot activates the parent snapshot of the
current state of the virtual machine.
Revert To
Lets you restore any snapshot in the snapshot tree and makes that snapshot
the parent snapshot of the current state of the virtual machine. Subsequent
snapshots from this point create a new branch of the snapshot tree.
Restoring snapshots has the following effects:
n
The current disk and memory states are discarded, and the virtual machine reverts to the disk and
memory states of the parent snapshot.
n
Existing snapshots are not removed. You can restore those snapshots at any time.
n
If the snapshot includes the memory state, the virtual machine will be in the same power state as when
you created the snapshot.
Table 101. Virtual Machine Power State After Restoring a Snapshot
Virtual Machine State When Parent Snapshot Is
Taken Virtual Machine State After Restoration
Powered on (includes memory) Reverts to the parent snapshot, and the virtual machine is
powered on and running.
Powered on (does not include memory) Reverts to the parent snapshot and the virtual machine is
powered off.
Powered off (does not include memory) Reverts to the parent snapshot and the virtual machine is
powered off.
Virtual machines running certain kinds of workloads can take several minutes to resume responsiveness
after reverting from a snapshot.
NOTE vApp metadata for virtual machines in vApps does not follow the snapshot semantics for virtual
machine configuration. vApp properties that are deleted, modified, or defined after a snapshot is taken
remain intact (deleted, modified, or defined) after the virtual machine reverts to that snapshot or any
previous snapshots.
Revert to the Latest Snapshot
When you revert to the latest snapshot, you immediately restore the parent snapshot of the virtual machine.
When you revert to a snapshot, disks that you added or changed after the snapshot was taken are reverted
to the snapshot point. For example, when you take a snapshot of a virtual machine, add a disk, and revert
the snapshot, the added disk is removed.
Independent disks are also removed when you revert to a snapshot that was taken before the disk was
added. If the latest snapshot includes an independent disk, its contents do not change when you revert to
that snapshot.
Prerequisites
Verify that you have the Virtual machine.Snapshot management.Revert to snapshot privilege on the
virtual machine.
Procedure
1 Right-click a virtual machine in the inventory, and select Revert to Latest Snapshot.
2 When prompted, click Yes.
Chapter 10 Managing Virtual Machines
VMware, Inc. 199