• Since much of my job involves rolling out Linux solutions I’ve been experimenting with VMware Fusion Beta for the Macintosh in my development environment. Given that the product is still in beta, I have very few complaints about its actual stability. Most of the features work reliably as advertised, but there are some basic points of functionality that I feel the software is lacking. More on that later.

    First, let’s take a look at exactly what VMware Fusion is. At its core, the package allows the user to create and run virtual machines on the Macintosh. For those who are new to virtualization, it is a way to run multiple virtual computers on one actual computer. The hardware resources are abstracted and shared to the virtual machines through the virtualization software — in this case VMware Fusion. A complete description on virtualization can be found here.

    Previous to Fusion, only VMware player was available to Macintosh users, so it is nice to actually be able to create virtual machines locally. The snapshot feature is also very nice for development purposes since you can instantly roll back to a previous working state should you corrupt the software on the virtual machine.

    Perhaps the problem that annoyed me most, however, was the fact that there is no clear way to delete virtual machines from within the software. I actually tried to get rid of one by deleting this folder:

    /Volumes/Macintosh HD/Users/myaccount/Documents/Virtual Machines/Mymachine.vmwarevm

    But I just ended up breaking the “Virtual Machine Library” application and having to uninstall and reinstall everything from scratch. The process detailing how to delete a virtual machine did not exist anywhere in the VMware Fusion FAQ or documentation as far as I could tell. Granted, it’s beta software, but I would think this should be a core feature of any virtualization product. At least they provide an “Uninstaller” script.

    VMware Fusion is a basic piece of software that succeeds in fulfilling the most fundamental of virtualization requirements. If all you want to do is be able to run a virtual machine or two on your Mac, it will most likely work for you. If you are looking to deploy it as part of an enterprise solution, I would suggest letting the product mature a while and using something like Parallels instead.

    This entry was posted on Tuesday, June 12th, 2007 at 11:29 am and is filed under Data and Technology. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
  • 13 Comments

    Take a look at some of the responses we've had to this article.

    1. bkh
      Posted on June 17th

      Thanks for posting this. I was trying to find a way to remove a VM also, but couldn’t find any documentation about it. I had set up a VM with Fusion, but then decided to use the BootCamp partition instead. So now I have a 20GB VM not doing much of anything for me. Blah.

    2. Posted on July 30th

      Yup no info on deleting - just hit delete when selected in the window… far too easy - then close and delete folder which you indicated. Then uninstall and use Parallels ;)

    3. psaltyne
      Posted on August 19th

      yes, i am extremely annoyed too. i had already installed bootcamp, and when i installed Fusion and started running XP, it asked me to reactivate windows - and it never would let me. ahhhh…now it’s been deleted and i can run windows via bootcamp in peace.

    4. Posted on September 2nd

      I hope this helps. I am using VMWARE in Ubuntu. Removing a virtual machine is a piece of cake.
      1. Boot VMWARE
      2. Hit F9 or from the VIEW menu select “Inventory
      ” This will open a side window on the left.
      3. Right click on the Virtual Machine you wish to remove.
      4. Select “remove from disk”

      Good Luck

    5. James the Stud
      Posted on September 21st

      Fusion Rocks — it kicks parallels @$$

    6. Eric Tung
      Posted on October 1st

      The correct way to delete a virtual machine is to delete /Volumes/Macintosh HD/Users/myaccount/Documents/Virtual Machines/Mymachine.vmwarevm, just like you would any other document. You should go over to the VMware Fusion forums and give some more details about how it caused the Virtual Machine Library to break (also, this isn’t a separate application) and/or report a bug.

    7. jim barnes
      Posted on October 2nd

      Hello have you seen this yet

      http://www.moka5.com/products/baremetal.html

      I use the livePC version under WinXP but this version is for “any intel based computer” so it will work on the new dual core macs or at least thats what it seems to imply.

    8. ethernos
      Posted on October 20th

      delete that directory and the vmwarevm/Users/mathieuvigouroux/Library/Preferences/VMware\ Fusion

    9. aeon
      Posted on January 9th

      thanks, eric tung! I was able to get rid of one virus-packed virtual machine.

    10. Jack LaCorte
      Posted on February 16th

      To delete a virtual machine in Leopard go to /Volumes/Macintosh HD/Users/myaccount/LibraryApplication Support/VMWare Fusion/Virtual Machines/Boot Camp and delete the folder containing the virtual machine you wish to delete.

    11. Eric
      Posted on February 19th


      Previous to Fusion, only VMware player was available to Macintosh users,

      …Where?? This is all that I need, and no, according to everything I find, Fusion IS VMWare Player for OS/x, there is NO free player for OS/x, only a worthless trial.

      If I’m incorrect, then please point me in the direction of the free vm player for OS/X, otherwise, check your facts.

    12. Lander
      Posted on April 14th

      I had installed XP Home under Fusion, but want to use XP Pro instead. I just dragged the XP Home out of the Virtual Machine Library (application window, not file directory) and into the trash can. Looks gone to me.

      There is a reference to removing certain files at
      http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080123153021AA1fqxb
      but I could not find the files types listed there or the ones mentioned in these posts.

      vmware fusion help says to 1) power off the VM, 2) use finder - user/documents/virtual machines/(VMfile), 3) drag vmfile to trash.

    13. Jim Barton
      Posted on September 10th

      Eric, comment 6 was a Godsend– too easy! Worked great! I am a 25 year Dos/windows guy, and I find I am stopped by many Mac things because they require only 1 easy step, and I don’t know what it is. I owe you…
      Jim

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