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How to clone virtual machines in VMware vSphere

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To clone virtual machines in VMware vSphere

vSphere is VMware' s cloud computing virtualization platform. It is simple to clone virtual machines via VMware vSphere. This tutorial will guide you through the procedure to clone virtual machines in VMware vSphere.

To clone virtual machines

To begin with the process, first you need to select VMs and templates as follows.
1

Once selected, right click a VM to create its clone and then select clone option, from that click on clone to virtual machine.
2
Give name for the new VM and select the data center for the vm location then click on next
3
Next select the esxi host for the computer resource and then click on next.
4
Once it is done, select the storage for the new virtual machine and then click on next.
5

After it is done, select the clone option. Here the hardware for the VM clone is going to be customized.
6
After customizing the hardware, click on next
7
Finally, click finish to create a new VM using clone option.
8
Cloning of the virtual machine is in progress.
9
A new clone of the VM is created.
10

Wasn' t that a simple procedure? Stay connected to learn more about VMware in the future articles.

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Frequently asked questions ( 5 )

Q

How to migrate to VMware vSphere 5?

A

For migrate to VMware vSphere 5, refer the following link as give below "https://www.vmware.com/content/dam/digitalmarketing/vmware/en/pdf/support/vsphere-migration-prerequisites-checklist.pdf"

Q

Whther the VMware products will support Multicore systems?

A

Yes, The VMware products will support Multicore systems and its entirely based on Virtualization algorithm.

Q

What are the alternative tools available for the VMWare products?

A

The following things are the alternative for the VMWare products,
VirtualBox,
QEMU,
KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine),
Parallels Desktop

Q

Why does the vCenter memory utilization counter always look so high (with Large Pages and TPS)?

A

When clients are using hardware that supports MMU
, by default vSphere will use large memory pages (2MB in size) to back all guest memory first. So it's not until the memory allocator runs out of physical memory that it will start to use technologies like TPS which uses 4KB memory pages) and ballooning; typically when about 92-94% of the memory is allocated. vCenter will report high memory utilization as all physical memory is used up.

Q

What is the difference in performance between physical RDM and vmdk on VMFS?

A

The difference is negligible and you should not see a difference between physical RDM and vmdk on VMFS.

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