■ You cannot mount virtual disks that are in use by a running or suspended virtual machine. You can mount disks from a powered off virtual machine, disks not associated with a virtual machine, or base disks when a Windows virtual machine is running off a snapshot (read-only).
■ On Windows virtual machines you can mount previous snapshots read-only. On Linux virtual machines you cannot mount previous snapshots.
■ If you specify a virtual disk with snapshots on a powered off virtual machine, VixMntapi locates and mounts the last snapshot in the disk chain. While a disk is mounted, do not revert to a previous snapshot using another VMware interface – this would make it impossible to unmount the partition.
■ You cannot mount virtual disk if any of its .vmdk files are encrypted, compressed, or read-only. However you can change these attributes and then mount the virtual disk.
■ With Linux, kernel version 2.6 or higher is required to run the FUSE (file system in user space) module. You cannot mount Linux swap or extended partitions. Logical Volume Manager (LVM) is not supported.
■ You can mount Windows virtual disks on Windows hosts (with an NTFS volume) or Linux virtual disks on Linux hosts. Cross-mounting is restricted but may be allowed for cross-formatted file systems.