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Vmware fusion for mac 7 extend disk size
Vmware fusion for mac 7 extend disk size








vmware fusion for mac 7 extend disk size
  1. #VMWARE FUSION FOR MAC 7 EXTEND DISK SIZE ISO#
  2. #VMWARE FUSION FOR MAC 7 EXTEND DISK SIZE DOWNLOAD#

Select “GParted Live (Default settings)”. Click on the “Start” icon to boot up the Docker virtual machine, which will launch the GParted ISO.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.Mount the cloned VDI volume via the “Add CD/DVD Device” option.

#VMWARE FUSION FOR MAC 7 EXTEND DISK SIZE ISO#

  • Mount the GParted ISO via the “Add CD/DVD Device” option.
  • Launch the VirtualBox application, select default VM and click on the “Settings” gear on top.
  • We recommend at least 64GB vboxmanage modifyhd /full/path/to/disk_resized.vdi -resize.
  • Resize the newly cloned VDI volume to the desired capacity.
  • 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. Stop the Docker virtual machine docker-machine stop default.īoot2Docker package installer ships with a VMDK volume, which VirtualBox’s native tools cannot resize.

    #VMWARE FUSION FOR MAC 7 EXTEND DISK SIZE DOWNLOAD#

    Download GParted Live CD/USB/HD/PXE Bootable Image.To make sure the Docker virtual machine has plenty of disk space, we should resize /dev/sda1 to a number that is more reasonable. 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.

    vmware fusion for mac 7 extend disk size

    Tested with Docker version 17.06.0-ce, build 02c1d87. I had to make little adjustments so here is the modified version.

    vmware fusion for mac 7 extend disk size

    After hours of digging I found this blog post and like magic everything works. Tried all the solutions here, but nothing seemed to work. Your system must now be ready to use, with extended allocations !! $ lvextend -L +100G /dev/mapper/myfs-vg-cloudįilesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on for Ubuntu running on virtual-machine : use GParted)Ĥ) Extend the filesystem - lvextend -L +50G

  • Even after expansion, not readily available inside the vmdk's OS (step 3,4,5)ġ) convert to ".vdi" first - VBoxManage clonehd v1.vmdk v1.vdi -format vdiĢ) expand the size using command-line (Ref: tvial's blog for step by step info)Įxpand from the Virtual Media Manager in VirtualBox.ģ) Expand the size of drive, with new allocation (e.g.
  • Rather fixed size allocation (step 1,2).









  • Vmware fusion for mac 7 extend disk size