18.08.2013 Views

vSphere Virtual Machine Administration - Documentation - VMware

vSphere Virtual Machine Administration - Documentation - VMware

vSphere Virtual Machine Administration - Documentation - VMware

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>vSphere</strong> <strong>Virtual</strong> <strong>Machine</strong> <strong>Administration</strong><br />

Customize <strong>Virtual</strong> <strong>Machine</strong> Hardware in the <strong>vSphere</strong> Web Client<br />

Before you deploy a new virtual machine, you have the option to configure the virtual hardware. When you<br />

create a virtual machine, the virtual disk is selected by default. You can use the New device drop-down menu<br />

on the Customize Hardware page to add a new hard disk, select an existing disk, or add an RDM disk.<br />

For information about virtual disk configuration, including instructions for adding different types of disks,<br />

see “Add a Hard Disk to a <strong>Virtual</strong> <strong>Machine</strong> in the <strong>vSphere</strong> Web Client,” on page 131.<br />

For help configuring other virtual machine hardware, see Chapter 7, “Configuring <strong>Virtual</strong> <strong>Machine</strong> Hardware<br />

in the <strong>vSphere</strong> Web Client,” on page 105.<br />

Procedure<br />

1 (Optional) To add a new virtual hardware device, select the device from the New device drop-down menu<br />

and click Add.<br />

2 (Optional) Expand any device to view and configure the device settings.<br />

3 To remove a device, move your cursor over the device and click the Remove icon.<br />

This icon appears only for virtual hardware that you can safely remove.<br />

4 Click Next.<br />

Finish <strong>Virtual</strong> <strong>Machine</strong> Creation<br />

Before you deploy the virtual machine, you can review the virtual machine settings.<br />

Procedure<br />

1 Review the virtual machine settings and make changes by clicking Back to go back to the relevant page.<br />

2 Click Finish.<br />

The virtual machine appears in the <strong>vSphere</strong> Web Client inventory.<br />

Clone a <strong>Virtual</strong> <strong>Machine</strong> in the <strong>vSphere</strong> Web Client<br />

Cloning a virtual machine creates a virtual machine that is a copy of the original. The new virtual machine is<br />

configured with the same virtual hardware, installed software, and other properties that were configured for<br />

the original virtual machine.<br />

NOTE When heavily loaded applications, such as load generators, are running in the guest operating system<br />

during a clone operation, the virtual machine quiesce operation can fail and <strong>VMware</strong> Tools might be denied<br />

CPU resources and time out.<br />

Prerequisites<br />

If a load generator is running in the virtual machine, stop it before you perform the clone operation.<br />

You must have the following privileges to clone a virtual machine:<br />

n <strong>Virtual</strong> machine.Provisioning.Clone virtual machine on the virtual machine you are cloning.<br />

n <strong>Virtual</strong> machine .Inventory.Create from existing on the datacenter or virtual machine folder.<br />

n <strong>Virtual</strong> machine.Configuration.Add new disk on the datacenter or virtual machine folder.<br />

n Resource.Assign virtual machine to resource pool on the destination host, cluster, or resource pool.<br />

n Datastore.Allocate space on the destination datastore or datastore folder.<br />

n Network.Assign network on the network to which the virtual machine will be assigned.<br />

30 <strong>VMware</strong>, Inc.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!