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OPS235 Lab 2 - CentOS7 - VMware

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<ol><li value="2">The '''vmrun''' command is run with various arguments. The most common are: '''stop''', '''start''', '''reset''', '''suspend''', '''pause''', '''list''', and '''clone'''. This command is run with basically the same syntax regardless of the operating system that you are running.<br><br></li><li>Shut-down all of your VMs.</li><li>Issue the following command:<br><b><code><span style="pointer-events: none;cursor: default;color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">vmrun start path-to-centos1.vmx</span></code></b>. What happens?</li><li>Use the vmrun command to start the other VMs.</li><li>Issue the following command:<br><b><code><span style="pointer-events: none;cursor: default;color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">vmrun start path-to-centos4.vmx</span></code></b>. What happens?</li><li>Issue the following command:<b><code><span style="pointer-events: none;cursor: default;color:#3366CC;font-size:1.2em;">vmrun list path-to-centos1.vmx</span></code></b>. What happens? Why would you use this command?</li><li>Depending of your Operating system platform (Linux Bash Shell script, Windows Powershell script), download the following scripts in the table below to your current directory and run to see what happens. Notice how the '''for''' loop is used to in order to start and stop multiple VMs.</li></ol>
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<td style="border-bottom: thin solid black;font-weight:bold;background-color:#ffffff;">Operating System</td>
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