Support Overview

A guest operating system is an operating system installed on a host machine (a physical machine) and run virtually on VMware.  IS&T supports installation of Windows (XP and Vista) and Red Hat Enterprise Linux as guest operating systems on VMware Fusion and Workstation.

Athena guest operating systems are not yet recommended or supported by IS&T.  There are several known issues in the areas of networking, licensing, authentication, and time synchronization.  The IS&T Vmware project team is currently reviewing these issues and may offer Athena guest operating system support in the future if they are resolved.

Virtual machines not created by VMware (converted from other virtualization systems)are not supported or recommended by IS&T.


Licensing

Licensing Statement 
You are responsible for ensuring that all software (applications and operating systems) you run on your virtual machines are licensed to run on those virtual machines.  Be aware that some vendors may have licensing restrictions related to virtual machines.

OS Licensing Overview
Note: this information is not comprehensive.  Review your licenses for additional information.


Before You Begin


 Installing

  1. Follow the instructions in [VMware's Guest Operating System Install Guide|http://web.mit.edu/ist/products/vmware/GuestOS.pdf]\[PDF\]
  2. Install/configure the auto-update service for your guest operating system, if needed.  For more information, see: Red Hat Network and MIT Windows Automatic Update Service (WAUS)
  3. Install available OS updates and virus protection software to secure your machine.

Using your Virtual Machines

We strongly recommend treating each virtual machine as if it was a physical machine for most activities.  Virtual machines are vulnerable to most of the same things as physical machines including data loss/corruption, hardware failures, viruses, and hackers.  Install and use virus scanning software.  Take regular updates to your operating system, preferably via an automatic update system.  Make regular backups of important data.  Follow the recommended best practices for your guest operating system.  In most cases, simply treat your virtual workstation as you would any other machine.