You can specify monitor resolution settings, configure multiple monitors, and select accelerated graphics capabilities for a virtual machine. You can use the multiple-monitor feature when the virtual machine is in full screen mode.
For Windows guests, to use DirectX 9 accelerated graphics, the guest operating system must be Windows XP or later. To use DirectX 10 accelerated graphics, the guest operating system must be Windows Vista or later. To use DirectX 10.1 or DirectX 11 accelerated graphics, the guest operating system must be Windows 7 or later.
Prerequisites
- Verify that the latest version of VMware Tools is installed in the guest operating system.
- Verify that the guest operating system in the virtual machine is Windows XP or later, or Linux.
- If you plan to use DirectX 9, DirectX 10, DirectX 10.1, or DirectX 11 accelerated graphics, prepare the host system. See Prepare the Host System to Use 3D Accelerated Graphics.
- If the guest operating system is Windows 7 or later and you want Workstation Player to automatically adjust the virtual machine user interface size, update VMware Tools in the guest to the newest version.
- If you are using Windows 8.1 (Update 2) or Windows 10, Workstation Player detects the DPI on each monitor and scales the virtual machine to match the DPI on the host.
Procedure
- Select the virtual machine and select .
- On the Hardware tab, select Display.
- (Optional) To run applications that use DirectX 9, DirectX 10, DirectX 10.1 or DirectX 11 accelerated graphics, select Accelerate 3D graphics.
- Specify whether host settings determine the number of monitors.
Option |
Description |
Use host setting for monitors |
When you select this setting, the SVGA driver uses a maximum bounding box width of 7680 and a maximum bounding box height of 4320. The virtual machine uses the number of monitors on the host system. The guest monitors cannot exceed the maximum bounding box that the SVGA driver uses, 7680x4320. You should select this setting in most cases. |
Specify monitor settings |
Set the number of monitors that the virtual machine will see, regardless of the number of monitors on the host system. This setting is useful if you use a multimonitor host system and you need to test in a virtual machine that has only one monitor. It is also useful if you are developing a multimonitor application in a virtual machine and the host system has only one monitor. After you power on the virtual machine, the guest operating system sees the number of monitors that you specified. Select a resolution from the list or type a setting that has the format width x height, where width and height are the number of pixels. |
- (Optional) Select the maximum amount of guest memory that can be used for graphics memory using the drop-down menu. The default value of video memory varies by guest OS.
Guest OS |
Default |
HW Version |
Windows 7 and later |
1 GB |
HW-v18 earlier |
Windows XP and earlier |
512 MB |
HW-v18 earlier |
Linux |
768 MB |
HW-v18 earlier |
All OS types |
8 GB |
HW-v18 and later |
Note: If you manually edited the
.vmx
file to change the memory size for the virtual machine, the value you entered in the
.vmx
file is displayed, labeled
Custom.
- To enable display scaling for a virtual machine with a Windows 7 or later guest, select Automatically adjust user interface size in the virtual machine.
- Click OK to save your changes.