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VMware GSX Server 2.5.2


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Installing an Operating System onto a Raw Partition from a Virtual Machine

Installing an Operating System onto a Raw Partition from a Virtual Machine

In some situations, you may want to install a guest operating system directly on a physical disk or partition — known as a raw disk — even if you do not need to boot that disk on the host, outside of the virtual machine.

It is possible to use either an unused partition or a completely unused disk on the host as a disk in the virtual machine. However, it is important to be aware that an operating system installed in this setting probably cannot boot outside of the virtual machine, even though the data is available to the host.

If you have a dual-boot system and want to configure a virtual machine to boot from an existing partition, see Configuring a Dual-Boot Computer for Use with a Virtual Machine. The instructions in this section do not apply to a disk with a previously installed operating system.

As with virtual disks, raw disks can be used in persistent, undoable and nonpersistent modes. For details on these modes, see Disk Modes: Persistent, Undoable and Nonpersistent.

Caution: Raw disks are an advanced feature and should be configured only by expert users.

GSX Server uses description files to control access to each raw disk on the system. These description files contain access privilege information that controls a virtual machine's access to certain partitions on the disks. This mechanism prevents users from accidentally running the host operating system again as a guest or running a guest operating system that the virtual machine is not configured to use. The description file also prevents accidental writes to raw disk partitions from badly behaved operating systems or applications.

Use the New Virtual Machine Wizard (on Windows hosts) or Configuration Wizard (on Linux hosts) to configure a virtual machine to use existing raw disk partitions. The wizard guides you though creating a configuration for a new virtual machine including configuring the raw disk description files. Rerun the wizard to create a separate configuration for each guest operating system installed on a raw partition.

Note: While installing the guest operating system on a raw disk, if your virtual machine does not boot from the CD-ROM, try changing the boot order in the virtual machine's BIOS. Restart the virtual machine, then press F2 while the virtual machine is booting to enter the BIOS. Change the boot order there.

Read the section appropriate to your GSX Server host operating system.

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