Getting command line errors trying to export a Fusion VM (XP.vmwarevm) to and OVF file.
# "/Applications/VMware OVF Tool/ovftool" Machines/XP.vmwarevm XP.ovf
Error: Is a directory
#
My feeling if that ovftool help and the ovftool manual do not provide simple-usage examples that relate to Mac/Fusion usage.
VMware ovftool 3.0.1 (build-801290)
VMware Fusion Professional Version 5.0.1 (825449)
Mac OS X 10.7.5
XP.vmwarevm is a single file VM (the vmdk is built-in) created with 5.0.1, set as 5+ compatible. Have tried 2-3+ compatible, also.
If I execute the ovftool by itself it replies:
Error: No source or target specified. Try 'ovftool --help' for more options.
Completed with errors
So executing ovftool --help the top part of the output states:
Usage: ovftool [options] <source> [<target>]
where
<source>: Source URL locator to an OVF package, VMX file, or virtual machine in
vCenter or on ESX Server.
<target>: Destination URL locator which specifies either a file location, or a
location in the vCenter inventory or on an ESX Server.
If <target> is not specified, information about the source is displayed to the
console.
The bottom part of the output states:
For more help, type: --help <topic>, where topics are:
locators : For detailed source and destination locator syntax
examples : For examples of use
config : For syntax of configuration files
integration : For a list of options primarily used when ovftool is exec'ed
from another tool or shellscript.
So executing it ovftool --help examples the following example shown is applicable:
ovftool /vms/my_vm.vmx /ovfs/my_vapp.ovf
(.vmx file to .ovf file. Result is put in /ovfs/my_vapp.[ovf|vmdk])
So as you can see you need to point to the .vmx
configuration file not the .vmwarevm
Virtual Machine Package.
FusionH3 wrote: XP.vmwarevm is a single file VM (the vmdk is built-in)
By default the .vmwarevm
extension is hidden and is a Virtual Machine Package which is really nothing more then a folder, not an individual file, and because it's registered with OS X Launch Services it's treated differently then a folder without the extension.
Have a look at Work with Virtual Machine Packages and then use the FQPN (Fully Qualified Path Name) to the
.vmx
configuration file for the <source>.
As an example here is the FQCL (Fully Qualified Command Line) on my system to create an .ovf file and the resulting output.
Computer:~ WKZ$ /Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/VMware\ OVF\ Tool/ovftool /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual\ Machines.localized/Windows\ XP\ Professional.vmwarevm/Windows\ XP\ Professional.vmx /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual\ Machines.localized/WinXP\ OVF/WinXP.ovf
Opening VMX source: /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/Windows XP Professional.vmwarevm/Windows XP Professional.vmx
Opening OVF target: /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/WinXP OVF/WinXP.ovf
Writing OVF package: /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/WinXP OVF/WinXP.ovf
Transfer Completed
Completed successfully
Computer:~ WKZ$
Looking in the "WinXP OVF
" folder there are now three files, WinXP-disk1.vmdk
, WinXP.mf
and WinXP.ovf
.
That about covers it!
If I execute the ovftool by itself it replies:
Error: No source or target specified. Try 'ovftool --help' for more options.
Completed with errors
So executing ovftool --help the top part of the output states:
Usage: ovftool [options] <source> [<target>]
where
<source>: Source URL locator to an OVF package, VMX file, or virtual machine in
vCenter or on ESX Server.
<target>: Destination URL locator which specifies either a file location, or a
location in the vCenter inventory or on an ESX Server.
If <target> is not specified, information about the source is displayed to the
console.
The bottom part of the output states:
For more help, type: --help <topic>, where topics are:
locators : For detailed source and destination locator syntax
examples : For examples of use
config : For syntax of configuration files
integration : For a list of options primarily used when ovftool is exec'ed
from another tool or shellscript.
So executing it ovftool --help examples the following example shown is applicable:
ovftool /vms/my_vm.vmx /ovfs/my_vapp.ovf
(.vmx file to .ovf file. Result is put in /ovfs/my_vapp.[ovf|vmdk])
So as you can see you need to point to the .vmx
configuration file not the .vmwarevm
Virtual Machine Package.
FusionH3 wrote: XP.vmwarevm is a single file VM (the vmdk is built-in)
By default the .vmwarevm
extension is hidden and is a Virtual Machine Package which is really nothing more then a folder, not an individual file, and because it's registered with OS X Launch Services it's treated differently then a folder without the extension.
Have a look at Work with Virtual Machine Packages and then use the FQPN (Fully Qualified Path Name) to the
.vmx
configuration file for the <source>.
As an example here is the FQCL (Fully Qualified Command Line) on my system to create an .ovf file and the resulting output.
Computer:~ WKZ$ /Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/VMware\ OVF\ Tool/ovftool /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual\ Machines.localized/Windows\ XP\ Professional.vmwarevm/Windows\ XP\ Professional.vmx /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual\ Machines.localized/WinXP\ OVF/WinXP.ovf
Opening VMX source: /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/Windows XP Professional.vmwarevm/Windows XP Professional.vmx
Opening OVF target: /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/WinXP OVF/WinXP.ovf
Writing OVF package: /Users/WKZ/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/WinXP OVF/WinXP.ovf
Transfer Completed
Completed successfully
Computer:~ WKZ$
Looking in the "WinXP OVF
" folder there are now three files, WinXP-disk1.vmdk
, WinXP.mf
and WinXP.ovf
.
That about covers it!
WoodyZ nailed it! Thank you...
Just in case this helps others, I was not aware of the machine.vmx file. Further adding to my confusion, was using finder to view the files that were there. With machine.vmwarevm appearing in finder as a non-descript flat file (and being perplex about where the .vmdk file disappeared to), I assumed .vmx in the reference was a type used for ESX or another VMware product. Now that I know, I know!
It is also interesting that the find command (IE find / -name "*.vmx" - print) reports the contents of .vmwarevm "directories".
(It's always the smallest points that derail us.)
I'm on vacation. I'll be back on May 27.
Please contact Pascal Robin (probin@opentext.com) or Dorel Berger (dberger@opentext.com) for any urgent matter.
Regards,
Vincent
Dear VMware,
Should I be concerned that I received this message (and a similar one for another message in the same thread) but I have not posted in this thread? In fact, I have not posted on vmware.com<http://vmware.com> for months.
Thank you,
David