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<table border="0" cellspacing= Officially Supported Guest Operating Systems "0" width="100%"><tr><td width="20%">[[A Guided Tour of the VMware Server 2.0 Infrastructure Web Access Interface|Previous]]<td align="center">[[VMware Server 2.0 Essentials|Table of Contents]]<td width="20%" align="right">[[Creating VMware Server 2.0 Virtual Machines|Next]]</td><tr><td width="20%">A Guided Tour of the VMware Server 2.0 Infrastructure Web Access Interface<td align="center"><td width="20%" align="right">Creating VMware Server 2.0 Virtual Machines</td></table><hr>
Guest operating systems fall into two categories, officially supported and unsupported. As with host operating systems, just because a guest operating system is not officially supported does not necessarily mean that it won't run as a guest operating system in VMware Server 2.0 virtual machine. For example, Fedora Linux is not, at the time of writing, an officially supported guest operating system, yet based on testing it appears to function perfectly well within a VMware Server 2.0 virtual machine.
With <htmlet>vmware</htmlet>  In the world of VMware Server 2.0 there are both ''supported'' and ''unsupported'' guest operating systems. It is important to understand, however, that just because an operating system is not officially supported to run within a VMware Server virtual machine does not necessarily mean it will not actually work in this environment. It simply means that VMware, Inc. has not actually validated that it will work. In fact, the majority of operating systems missing from the officially supported list will actually run without any problems in VMware Server.  If the required guest operating system is not officially supported it is still worth trying to run it inside a VMware Server virtual machine. After all, when virtual machines can be created in minutes (and deleted in seconds if a test fails), there is little to lose in a little guest operating system experimentation. == Unsupported Linux Guest Operating Systems == There are many Linux distributions and versions freely available today, and as such it would be impossible for VMware to validate every single one. It is important to note, however, that even if a specific Linux guest operating system is not listed as being officially supported, it does not necessarily mean it will not run within VMware Server 2.0. In fact, it is usually sufficient to select the closest match from the list. In the case of unsupported Linux distributions, identify the kernel version (current mainstream versions are 2.4 and 2.6) and whether the operating system is 32-bit or 64-bit, and then make an appropriate selection from the ''Other Linux'' options. In most cases, the Linux distribution will run perfectly (or at least no less perfectly than a supported distribution) within the VMware Server virtual machine. == Officially Supported Guest Operating Systems == With the above information in mind, the following tables list the current officially supported VMware Server 2.0 guest operating systems:
=== Microsoft Windows (64-bit) ===
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