/productLocker/ However, you don’t access it directly. Instead, you attach it to a VM via the vSphere Client or CLI.
This piece explores the VMware Tools ISO from every angle: what it is, why it exists, where to find it, how to mount it manually, and how to troubleshoot the myriad issues that can arise when virtual machines fail to recognize or properly install the tools. 1.1 The Role of VMware Tools VMware Tools is a suite of utilities and drivers installed inside the guest operating system of a VM. Without it, a VM runs on generic, fallback drivers that offer poor video resolution, sluggish network performance, incorrect time synchronization, and no ability to perform graceful shutdowns or quiesced snapshots. vmware tools iso
sudo tar -xzf VMwareTools-*.tar.gz -C /tmp/ cd /tmp/vmware-tools-distrib/ sudo ./vmware-install.pl -d Modern recommendation: Instead of the ISO, use: /productLocker/ However, you don’t access it directly
sudo mkdir -p /mnt/cdrom sudo mount /dev/cdrom /mnt/cdrom cd /mnt/cdrom For Red Hat/CentOS: Whether you are manually mounting windows
Understanding where the ISO lives, how to mount it, when to use it (and when to avoid it in favor of open-vm-tools), and how to troubleshoot its myriad quirks is a fundamental skill for any virtualization administrator. Whether you are manually mounting windows.iso in Workstation to get drag-and-drop working, or troubleshooting a product locker error on a critical ESXi host, the humble ISO remains an enduring cornerstone of VMware’s virtualization stack.
vmware-vmssetup-tools --version 6.1 To ISO or Not to ISO? With the rise of open-vm-tools (for Linux) and native OS vendors bundling VMware drivers, the ISO is becoming less common for modern Linux VMs. However, for Windows, macOS, Solaris, and legacy systems, the ISO remains essential.