Walter,
Yes (I am almost certain, but you need to try it and see). For free or
with a budget? I assume free.
You are familiar with VMware so you will want to stick with that. An
alternative would be KVM. You will want to install the VMware host
software ESXi, I think it is free.
The online info for RedHat will often also apply to Fedora. In Google,
search for rhel or RedHat or Centos or Fedora (not all at once!). Your
challenge is that Fedora is leading edge, and can be different than
RedHat. VMware migt depend on specific versions of Redhat (I have that
problem with VirtualBox).
The links below do not tell you exactly what you need, they are just
what I found quickly. Other folks will have more specific answers.
cheers -- Rick
https://www.vmware.com/pdf/vsphere4/r41/vsp_41_esxi_i_get_start.pdf
http://www.vmware.com/pdf/vsphere4/r40/vsp_compatibility_matrix.pdf
https://my.vmware.com/en/web/vmware/info/slug/datacenter_cloud_infrastructure/vmware_vsphere/6_5#open_source
http://rhelblog.redhat.com/2016/02/25/getting-started-with-the-red-hat-container-development-kit-cdk/#more-1533
On 2017-05-31 04:01 AM, Walter H. wrote:
Hello,
I'm using Windows with several virtual machines (VMware);
is there a way to use these virtual machines with Fedora as host OS?
Thanks,
Walter
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