6.7

Table Of Contents
For Linux virtual machines, VMware Host-Guest Filesystem is not supported in secure boot mode.
Remove VMware Host-Guest Filesystem from VMware Tools before you enable secure boot.
Note If you turn on secure boot for a virtual machine, you can load only signed drivers into that virtual
machine.
Prerequisites
You can enable secure boot only if all prerequisites are met. If prerequisites are not met, the check box is
not visible in the vSphere Client.
n
Verify that the virtual machine operating system and firmware support UEFI boot.
n
EFI firmware
n
Virtual hardware version 13 or later.
n
Operating system that supports UEFI secure boot.
Note You cannot upgrade a virtual machine that uses BIOS boot to a virtual machine that uses UEFI
boot. If you upgrade a virtual machine that already uses UEFI boot to an operating system that
supports UEFI secure boot, you can enable secure boot for that virtual machine.
n
Turn off the virtual machine. If the virtual machine is running, the check box is dimmed.
Procedure
1 Right-click a virtual machine in the inventory and select Edit Settings.
2 Click the VM Options tab, and expand Boot Options.
3 Under Boot Options, ensure that firmware is set to EFI.
4 Select your task. Select the Secure Boot check box to enable secure boot. and click OK.
n
Select the Secure Boot check box to enable secure boot.
n
Deselect the Secure Boot check box to disable secure boot.
When the virtual machine boots, only components with valid signatures are allowed. The boot process
stops with an error if it encounters a component with a missing or invalid signature.
Limit Informational Messages From Virtual Machines to
VMX Files
Limit informational messages from the virtual machine to the VMX file to avoid filling the datastore and
causing a Denial of Service (DoS). A DoS can occur when you do not control the size of a virtual
machine's VMX file and the amount of information exceeds datastore capacity.
vSphere Security
VMware, Inc. 127