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问题:
I've run out of space on a virtual machine disk which is a vmdk and need to resize the virtual image. Resizing with the command
vboxmanage modifyhd Machine-disk1.vmdk --resize 30720
gives the error
Progress state: VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED
VBoxManage: error: Resize hard disk operation for this format is not implemented yet!
How can I resize a vmdk image?
回答1:
yes, Brian, you are right: those are the steps, but if you want to end having back a vmdk hard disk (maybe you are interested in using the disk in vwmare too) you miss one more step. So the complete howto is:
VBoxManage clonemedium "source.vmdk" "cloned.vdi" --format vdi
VBoxManage modifymedium "cloned.vdi" --resize 51200
VBoxManage clonemedium "cloned.vdi" "resized.vmdk" --format vmdk
The above will resize the hard disk up to 50GB (50 * 1024MB).
To complete things you need to resize the drive too! To achieve this, you might want to download gparted iso and boot from that iso to resize your drive (select the iso from within the virtualbox settings).
P.S. If your new size is too small, you'll get the same error even with your new vdi file.
回答2:
I was able to resize the vmdk by cloning it and then modifying and resizing.
vboxmanage clonehd "virtualdisk.vmdk" "new-virtualdisk.vdi" --format vdi
vboxmanage modifyhd "new-virtualdisk.vdi" --resize 30720
回答3:
I have a Windows 7 client on a Mac host and this post was VERY helpful. Thanks.
I would add that I didn't use gparted. I did this:
- Launch new enlarged vmdk image.
- Go to Start and right click Computer and select Manage.
- Click Disk Management
- You should see some grayed space on your (in my case) C drive
- Right click the C drive and select Extend Volume.
- Choose size and go
Sweet! I preferred that to using a 3rd party tool with warnings about data loss.
Cheers!
回答4:
VBoxManage does the trick, but don't forget that you have to use GParted or another tool to allocate the free space created with VBoxManage.
Have a look to my blog post to get detailed information and step by step screenshots.
回答5:
Actually, Only this these commands are needed:
VBoxManage clonehd "source.vmdk" "cloned.vdi" --format vdi
VBoxManage modifyhd "cloned.vdi" --resize 51200
Then, you can select cloned.dvi in Virtualbox GUI storage.
After that, start the virtual windows and expand your C disk as the methods of Code Chops.
It is not necessary to convert the *.vdi file to *.vmdk file back.
回答6:
Since this is a vmdk file, you could use VMWare's vdiskmanager
, if it's available for your platform. VMWare has x86 Linux, Windows, and OS X versions here.
And then you just do:
1023856-vdiskmanager-windows-7.0.1.exe -x 30720M Machine-disk1.vmdk
It avoids having to clone, then expand the disk. Now, the downside is you need the extra tool, and vmdk is VMWare's disk format, and you're still using Virtualbox, so there could be incompatibilities.
qemu-img
might also work, but I'm not sure if it supports resizing vmdk files. It would look something like:
qemu-img resize Machine-disk1.vmdk +8G
And just a reminder, with both, you still have to grow the partition after resizing the underlying disk. All these tools are essentially dd if=/dev/old_disk of=/dev/new_disk bs=16M
.
回答7:
You can use Vmware player to resize a vmdk.
This removes the round trip conversion (noted in other posts) if you want to keep it in vmdk format. Just make sure that when you add the vmdk into vmware, don't click upgrade format when prompted, keep the current one in case VirtualBox doesn't accept it.
回答8:
For shrinking image size I use the following steps:
- On the client machine
cat /dev/zero > z;sync;sleep 3;sync;rm -f z
- Shut down client machine
- On the host
VBoxManage clonehd "source.vmdk" "cloned.vdi" --format vdi
- On the host
VBoxManage modifyhd cloned.vdi --compact
- On the host
VBoxManage clonehd "cloned.vdi" "resized.vmdk" --format vmdk
回答9:
As mentioned in the answer by Luca the required steps are:
Clone the VMDK image to VDI format
VBoxManage clonehd "source.vmdk" "cloned.vdi" --format vdi
Resize the VDI image
VBoxManage modifyhd "cloned.vdi" --resize 51200
Clone back to VMDK format
VBoxManage clonehd "cloned.vdi" "resized.vmdk" --format vmdk
Step 3 is optional if you can use a VDI image instead.
All these steps can be carried out in the VirtualBox graphical user interface as well, under File -> Virtual Media Manager
. Select the drive you want to clone, and then choose Copy
. A dialog opens that allows you to choose the disk format and options. To resize a VDI image, just use the slider in the bottom (click on Properties
if it's not visible).
Finally, you may need to change the disk size in the guest OS as well:
- Run the guest OS and resize the disk partition(s). If you are running Linux, you can use
gparted
or kparted
.
回答10:
Tried all the solutions here, but nothing seemed to work. After hours of digging I found this blog post and like magic everything works. I had to make little adjustments so here is the modified version. Tested with Docker version 17.06.0-ce, build 02c1d87.
Once developers really start containerising their applications, they often generate a large number of images and quickly fill up the 20GB hard drive space allocated to the Docker virtual machine by default. To make sure the Docker virtual machine has plenty of disk space, we should resize /dev/sda1 to a number that is more reasonable.
- Download GParted Live CD/USB/HD/PXE Bootable Image.
Stop the Docker virtual machine docker-machine stop default
.
Boot2Docker package installer ships with a VMDK volume, which VirtualBox’s native tools cannot resize. In order to resize the Docker disk volume, first clone the VDI volume from the default VMDK volume vboxmanage clonehd /full/path/to/disk.vmdk /full/path/to/disk_resized.vdi --format VDI --variant Standard
.
- Resize the newly cloned VDI volume to the desired capacity. We recommend at least 64GB
vboxmanage modifyhd /full/path/to/disk_resized.vdi --resize <size in MB>
.
- Launch the VirtualBox application, select
default
VM and click on the “Settings” gear on top.
- Click on the “Storage” icon. Remove the default VMDK volume.
- Add a new IDE controller.
- Mount the GParted ISO via the “Add CD/DVD Device” option.
- Mount the cloned VDI volume via the “Add CD/DVD Device” option.
- If you are running Docker on a computer with a solid-state hard drive, please make sure the “Solid-state Drive” option is selected for the cloned VDI volume.
- Click on the “Start” icon to boot up the Docker virtual machine, which will launch the GParted ISO. Select “GParted Live (Default settings)”.
- Set the policy for handling keymaps to “Don’t touch keymap”.
- Set language preference to option “33”, which maps to “US English”.
- Select option “1” to run “Forcevideo” and configure X manually.
- Keep the default resolution of “1024×760” by selecting option “2”.
- Keep the default “vesa” as the VGA card.
- Keep the default colour depth of “24” by selecting option “0”.
- Once GParted launches, click on the “Resize/Move” icon.
- Set the new disk volume size to desired size by dragging the slider. In this example, the maximum size is 127,035MB. Click on the “Resize/Move” button to start the process.
- Confirm the resizing operation by clicking on the “Apply” button.
- Power off the machine after the resizing operation finishes.
- Remove the GParted ISO.
- Log into the Docker virtual machine to verify that the volume resizing was successful by starting machine
docker-machine start default
- If you experience network issues, restart the docker-machine
回答11:
VirtualBox for Windows
Resizing your disk file while preserving your virtual machine settings!
Step 1 - Resize the disk file
Start cmd.exe
cd
to Oracle VM VirtualBox's dir (on 64-bit systems: "C:\Program Files\Oracle\VirtualBox\"
)
Run these commands (as above):
VBoxManage clonehd "C:\path\to\source.vmdk" "C:\path_to\cloned.vdi" --format vdi
VBoxManage modifyhd "C:\path\to\cloned.vdi" --resize 51200
Windows explorer and "copy address as text" via the address bar should help you get the path you need.
On windows system, The VirtaulBox VM directory underneath your user may contain an XML formatted database file of settings you've configured for your VM. Rename this file, with a .bak
extension (it has a .vbox
extension). Rename the original .vmdk
file with a .bak
extension as well to avoid another error. You can now safetly perform the third step without the error message to convert the machine back to .vmdk
format, or the "duplicate disk" error.
VBoxManage clonehd "C:\path_to\cloned.vdi" "C:\path_to\source.vmdk" --format vmdk
You will be presented with a UID token. Copy this token by drag-highlighting it from the Windows Command Interpetor window and using the Ctrl+C
keyboard shortcut.
Open the .vbox.bak
file in a text editor such as Notepad++. You'll be presented with an XML-like database file. Look for these lines:
<VirtualBox xmlns="http://www.virtualbox.org/" version="1.16-windows">
<Machine uuid="{some uid}" name="source disk name" OSType="the_vbox_OS" snapshotFolder="Snapshots" lastStateChange="2043-03-23T00:54:18Z">
<MediaRegistry>
<HardDisks>
<HardDisk uuid="{some uid}" location="C:\path_to\source.vmdk" ...
On the line <HardDisk uuid="{some uid}" location="C:\path_to\source.vmdk" ...
, delete the old UID token between the brackets and paste the one you copied from the command window. Make sure that you leave the brackets in place!
Save this file, and exit your text editor. Rename the .vbox.bak
file to give it back its expected extension of .vbox
.
Step 2 - Remove the junk
It is now safe to remove the .bak
files remaining in the directory. What remains is a resized .vmdk
with an updated .vbox
database while with your previously preserved VirtualBox Manager settings.
Step 3 - Resize the disk's partition to fill the free space
You can now start the VirtualBox VM Manager and execute your VM, using the appropriate tools for the operating system to fill the new free space.
For Windows VMs, use diskpart
from the command prompt booted from the Windows Recovery Consule (recovery partition) to SELECT DISK 1
, LIST PARTITION
and gather the partition number of your C:\
drive, then SELECT PARTITION #
. You can use the EXTEND SIZE=mb
to resize the Windows C:\ drive to the appropriate value. Make sure you leave room for the recovery and boot partitions! It's safe to subtract 4096 MB from your new virtual disk size to get this value, because of shadow copy and windows recovery files.
For Linux VMs, a live .ISO
of gparted you can boot with the VM's disk file can be found at: http://gparted.org/ It will get you straight into a graphical user interface-based gparted-gtk, from where you can fill your free space.
For PPC / Mac VMs, Disk Utility
from the Finder will asisst you in filling the free space, but you may want to consider the gparted Linux option, as currently the only method of which to boot MacOSX in VirtualBox is hackintosh, and you cannot extend your volume while booted into MacOSX. You may also want to seek out tweaking the VM's settings temporarily for gparted
, to get it to boot. MacOSX partitions are recognized by gparted as HFS
- "Heaping File System" partitions.
Step 4 - Cat Photos
Because the internet. ;) You're finished. Enjoy your new resized virtual .vmdk
disk image with VirtualBox for Windows!
回答12:
Here's a way to resize your VirtualBox disk, regardless of whether it is a fixed format or dynamic format disk. Specifically, it prevents the error you had when you disk is fixed-format.
⚠️ Backup the virtual disk. You never know what might go wrong.
On your host:
Open a terminal window.
On Windows: Open the command prompt cmd
.
Go to the directory with the virtual disk you want to resize. For example:
cd "My VMs"
Create a new VirtualBox disk with your desired filename, size (in megabytes) and format (either Standard
(dynamic) or Fixed
). For example, to create a 50 GB fixed-format disk called MyNewDisk.vdi
:
VBoxManage createmedium --filename "MyNewDisk.vdi" --size 50000 --variant Fixed
If VBoxManage
is not recognized as a command, specify the full path to it. It can be found in the VirtualBox installation directory. On Windows the above command would become:
"C:\Program Files\Oracle\VirtualBox\VBoxManage.exe" createmedium
--filename "MyNewDisk.vdi" --size 50000 --variant Fixed
Copy the original disk to the new disk.
VBoxManage clonemedium "MyOriginalDisk.vdi" "MyNewDisk.vdi" --existing
The resize is done! You can check the properties of the new disk if you want:
VBoxManage showmediuminfo "MyNewDisk.vdi"
Change the virtual machine to use the new disk instead.
Next, on your guest OS you need to resize the partitions to use the newly available space.
回答13:
I've got here because I needed to resize a disk for my Docker (CoreOS) development environment.
CoreOS docs says there's no need to resize the OS partition - that's bogus. After you resize the virtual disk you should follow these instructions and resize the OS partition via GParted:
https://docs.docker.com/articles/b2d_volume_resize/
回答14:
A quick and simple option:
- Turn off machine
- Create new virtual box disk with desired size
Move content from old disk to inside new disk:
vboxmanage clonehd "source-disk.vmdk" "new-disk.vmdk" --existing
Turn on machine
- You may have to resize partition in OS to fill the rest of the disk
Warning
If new disk is shorter than source, you will loss the data located from the new disk size position on the source disk.
You may prevent this deallocating delta space, where delta = size(source-disk) - size(new-disk), at the end of source disk inside OS before step 1.
回答15:
Download/Install/Use VMWare Workstation and create new VM Based on your current vmdk file and then you can resize your vmdk. For details regarding this matter google for VMWare.
回答16:
Simply you have to follow the following steps:
- Power off your machine.
- Right click on virtual machine name > Settings > Storage
- Click on Controller : SATA > Add Hard Disk.
- Choose the new hard disk drive type size and hit create.
- Discard the machine state.
- Insert Ubuntu Live CD.
- Boot from ubuntu live cd.
- Open "gparted" (It's installed, not need to installation).
- Check if the system see your new created hard disk.
- Open Terminal.
- Type the following code.
- sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=/dev/sdb (The first is the old partition path, the second is the new partition path).
- Wait until its finish copying data (This step may take some time according to your host specs).
- After finish copying, return to gparted and select refresh devices.
- Select the new partition /dev/sdb it must be typical to the old one after doing dd command.
- It'll show the expanded space as unlocated data.
- Delete Swap partition/Extended partition.
- Right click on root partition /dev/sdb > Resize
- Allocate the whole space without swap allocation.
- Create new extended partition > Choose extended > Create
- Create new linux-swap partition > choose linux-swap > Create
- Now turn off your running machine.
- Right click on machine > settings > Storage.
- Eject ubuntu live cd.
- Right click on the old hard disk > remove attachment.
- Now you can start your vm from the newly created hard disk.
- Check the storage by enter df -kh command.
- It must show you the new size.
Congratulation, enjoy your free space.
This video will help you:
https://youtu.be/ikSIDI535L0