6.7

Table Of Contents
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To quiesce the virtual machine files, verify that the virtual machine is powered on and that VMware
Tools is installed.
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Verify that you have the Virtual machine .Snapshot management. Create snapshot privilege on
the virtual machine.
Procedure
1 Right-click the virtual machine the inventory and select Snapshots > Take Snapshot.
The Take Snapshot dialog box opens.
2 Type a name for the snapshot.
3 (Optional) Type a description for the snapshot.
4 (Optional) Select the Snapshot the virtual machine’s memory check box to capture the memory of
the virtual machine.
5 (Optional) Select the Quiesce guest file system (Needs VMware Tools installed) check box to
pause running processes on the guest operating system so that file system contents are in a known
consistent state when you take the snapshot.
Quiesce the virtual machine files only when the virtual machine is powered on and you do not want to
capture the virtual machine's memory.
6 Click OK.
Restoring Snapshots
To return a virtual machine to its original state, or to return to another snapshot in the snapshot hierarchy,
you can restore a snapshot.
When you restore a snapshot, you return the virtual machine's memory, settings, and the state of the
virtual machine disks to the state they were in at the time you took the snapshot. If you want the virtual
machine to be suspended, powered on, or powered off when you start it, make sure that it is in the correct
state when you take the snapshot.
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:
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The current disk and memory states are discarded, and the virtual machine reverts to the disk and
memory states of the parent snapshot.
vSphere Virtual Machine Administration
VMware, Inc. 249