Each step below, provides the necessary instructions and a link to a document to perform the steps and taking corrective actions. The steps are ordered in the most appropriate sequence to isolate the issue and to identify the proper resolution. They are also ordered in the most appropriate sequence to minimize data loss. After completing each step, try starting the virtual machine again. Work through each troubleshooting step in order, and do not skip a step.
To troubleshoot a Windows virtual machine displaying a blue screen:
- Restart the virtual machine.
- Restart your Mac.
- Repair your virtual disk and any snapshot disks. For more information, see Repairing a sparse virtual disk in Fusion (1023888).
- If this is a Boot Camp virtual machine, try deleting the metadata files. For more information, see A Boot Camp virtual machine fails to power on with a disk error (1003483).
- If you see a STOP 7B error when booting and the virtual machine is based on a Boot Camp partition, was created with the help of Migration Assistant or vCenter Converter, or was upgraded to Windows 7, try removing the SCSI controller. For more information, see Troubleshooting Stop errors when using Boot Camp virtual machines (1003485)
Note: If this step does not solve the issue, be sure to reverse the change you made.
- If the virtual machine was converted or migrated from a physical machine or a different virtualization platform (such as Parallels or Virtual PC), change the SCSI controller. For more information, see Changing the type of SCSI controller used in a Fusion virtual machine (1020879).
Note: If this step does not solve the issue, be sure to reverse the change you made.
- Try to boot into Safe Mode. For more information, see Booting a Windows guest operating system into Safe Mode (1004011).
Note: Depending how your keyboard is configured, you may need to press fn+F8 rather than just F8.
If Windows boots into Safe Mode but does not boot normally:
- Run a disk check
-
For Windows XP, after running a disk check, run a System File Check. In the same command prompt window, enter:
sfc /scannow
Note: You may be prompted for your Windows installation CD.
-
Repair Windows using your Windows installation CD:
- Confirm that there are no file system issues on your Mac's hard drive. For more information, see Performing a disk repair in Mac OS (1020943).
- Confirm that your Mac's RAM is working correctly. For more information, see Checking physical memory (RAM) on a Mac for VMware Fusion (1021740).
- Contact Microsoft for assistance resolving the blue screen error.
Note: The preceding links were available as of September 14, 2010 . If you find the links to be broken, provide feedback on the article and a VMware employee will update the article as necessary.
If the issue continues to exist after trying the steps in this article: