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Fission

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Intro

Fission is a simple command line tool for managing VMware Fusion VMs. Only Fusion 3.x is currently supported. See Fusion Version Support for more info.

Install

gem install fission

Usage

Clone

fission clone existing_vm new_vm [--start]

If you provide '--start', then the new VM will be powered on after cloning

Delete

fission delete my_vm [--force]

Deletes the VM. This will delete the files from disk and remove the related metadata in Fusion.

By default, the VM will not be deleted if:

Providing '--force' will:

Info

fission info my_vm

Outputs information about the VM

Snapshot Create

fission snapshot create my_vm snapshot_name

Creates a snapshot for the VM

In order to create the snapshot:

Snapshot Delete

fission snapshot delete my_vm snapshot_name

Deletes a snapshot for the VM

If you have the Fusion GUI running, the VM must be running in order to delete the snapshot.

Snapshot List

fission snapshot list my_vm

Lists the snapshots for the VM

Snapshot Revert

fission snapshot revert my_vm existing_snapshot

Reverts a VM to an existing snapshot

In order to revert to the snapshot:

Start

fission start my_vm [--headless]

Starts the VM

Providng '--headless' will start the VM without a Fusion GUI console

Note that the Fusion GUI cannot be running to start a VM with '--headless'

Status

fission status

Displays the status (running or not) of all of the VMs found

Stop

fission stop my_vm

Stops the VM

Suspend

fission suspend [my_vm | --all]

Suspends the VM or all running VMs

Help

fission -h

or just

fission

Configuration

By default, fission will use the default VMware Fusion VM directory (~/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/) when cloning. If you want to use a different directory, you can set this in a config file.

The config file needs to be in YAML format and live at '~/.fissionrc'

$cat ~/.fissionrc
---
vm_dir: "/vm"

Fusion Version Support

As of now, only Fusion 3.x is supported (that's what I have available to test). It's my understanding that some folks are currently using fission with Fusion 4.x as well. In order to have fission work with Fusion 4.x, you will need to tell fission where the Fusion 4.x vmrun file is. You can do so with the following item placed in your ~/.fissionrc (remember, YAML format):

vmrun_bin: /Applications/VMware Fusion.app/Contents/Library/vmrun

Other Notable Info

The name of the VM used in the previous examples should be the directory name of the VM minus the '.vmwarevm' extension. Typically the VM name and the directory name are the same.

As of now, VMware Fusion doesn't provide an easy, out of the box, way to modify the personality (hostname, ip, etc.) of a VM. Because of this, a clone created by fission is an exact copy of the original (including hostname, ip address, etc.). Most likely, this isn't what you want.

One approach is to create a VM which will act as a template. Create the VM with the desired install method (ideally with easy install) and settings, but do not power on the VM. You can then create clones from this VM 'template'. When you power on the clone, it will start the OS install process (and assign a new ip, etc.).

Fission with RVM

Please see the following gist for a walkthrough of making fission available regardless of ruby environment when using RVM https://gist.github.com/1203167

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License

See LICENSE