Expand a virtual disk with new physical disks?

Hello people,

Pleas in law not to shoot me to ask what I fear it may have already answered somewhere and my research is poor and as still not turned up the answer.

I'm relatively new to VMware, previous job was especially MS Hyper-V and is always to some extent.

Hower to the point in question, I have a single host (VMware ESXi 5.0.0) with a single server VMware 2008R2 on her guest and the C: drive is quickly running out of space. The existing, aligned hard disk virtual hard disk has 10 GB free to extend the ramdisk with.

Therefore, my thoughts are I might add an another one or two new physical disks and add them to the data store that is aligned with the virtual C:\drive to the comment server, I would then be able to extend the exisitng C:\ virtual hard disk with the new ability to drive two new physical drives added?

Hope this sense makses, hoing it's okay and I get out of jail!

Thank you very much

Graeme

Hello

Please see this link because it deals with the procedure to enlarge a vmdk and extend partition in comments

First enlarge the data store after the addition of physical drives. Select the data store, properties, increase and the LUN detected.

Then use the vmkfstools as explained in the video to develop

http://blogs.VMware.com/kb/2010/02/how-to-expand-a-VMDK-and-extend-a-partition-in-for-VMware-ESX.html

Tags: VMware

Similar Questions

  • takes forever to expand the virtual disk

    I am expanding my virtual disk using the pdf file;  "Resize a virtual disk for Windows clients."

    A few months ago, I used this tutorial to resize with success of 20 to 40 GB but now I need more space.  But something does not work at the moment.  I am stuck at part 1, step 5.  I downloaded the most recent vdiskmanager GUI (I think it's more up-to-date, it is dated from 18/06/2007) and launched the MISTLETOE, my hard file selected, choose 75 GB and results opens the window.  BUT it has now been about 45 minutes and as far as I can say that nothing is happening.

    It takes so long?  Any suggestions?

    Thank you

    Bonnie

    If the actual size of the existing virtual hard disk is close to full capacity of 40 GB then it can take some time to develop.  Also because it creates a new file (s) hard, you must also make adequate free space on the host HDD to finish the process and because you use a 3rd party utility to interface with the VMware real Fusion of the program that is doing the job, the actual process may have a problem and do not make it to the 3rd party utility.

    What version of Fusion are you using?  If 2.x you do not need the 3rd party utility and make a resizing of the setting of Virtual Machines

    You can use the activity monitor to see if the process is still ongoing and or if there is the disk activity as in the file is always written.

    VMware-vdiskmanager is what did increase it then look for vmware-vdiskmana (full name does not show in the activity monitor) and see what's under its weight.

  • What is the right way to expand the virtual disk and then the OS partition?

    I have a Windows XP operating system in a virtual machine VMware.  I have

    you want to increase the size of the hard drive.  It currently has a 50 GB

    partition on a 50 GB VHD.  I increase the size of the

    50 GB to 100 GB in VMware virtual hard drive.  Then, can I use

    Windows disk management to increase the size of my partition of the

    side OS to use all the 100GB he sees now?  Or will

    corrupt my data or cause a problem as I really need to

    use a third party tool like EAUSUS inside Windows to extend Windows

    on the size of the virtual hard disk?

    In fact the way you describe, resize the virtual disk and then developing the partition are the way to go. But there are some things that you should be

    aware of.

    -If the VHD is on an IDE controller, you may not be able to resize the virtual disk. In this case use the converter. With the converter, you can resize the disk including the partition and - if desired - replace the IDE controller by a SCSI controller.

    -If you have only one partition under XP (that is, drive c :)) you cannot extend the partition with the diskmanager/diskpart. In this case, start your virtual machine from a CD/DVD Vista/Windows 7 in Repair Mode, open a command line and use "diskpart" from there to "extend" your partition.

    André

  • Help, please! Snapshot after expand VM, virtual disk parent has changed since the child was created

    OK, here's the situation, (maybe you can find a lot of discussion on this one)

    I have a vmware server running SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 10. I use as its host vmware ESX 3.0.1.

    I realize that I need to extend the drive because he must have more space disk for the production server. Then I resize the disk using vmkfstools x 90 G TARANTELA - TEST.vmdk. The bad news is, I didn't know that the server has a snapshot on VI client. As you know, the error occurred:

    Failed to open the disc

    "/ vmfs/volumes/4652e777-3eb2a038-8fce-0019bb343796/TARANTELLA-TEST-000007.vmdk" or one of the snapshot disks it depends on.

    Reason: The virtual disk parent has been changed since the child was created

    Then I remove the snapshot of the VI client and re-save the virtual machine to inventory, but it may yet open the disc unless I edited the .vmx line file:

    scsi0:0. FileName = 'TARANTELA-TEST - 000007.vmdk '.

    TO

    scsi0:0. FileName = ' TARANTELA - TEST.vmdk.

    It runs as the first time I installed the system, but all the important configuration is in 'TARANTELA-TEST - 000007.vmdk' snapshot.

    Someone there the sollution, how can I do my work of snapshot again?

    Kind regards

    Arfal

    In SL32-AP-TARANTELA - TEST2.vmdk

    change

    CID=dc621992
    

    TO

    CID=ce700012
    

    and

    RW 188743680 VMFS "SL32-AP-TARANTELA-TEST2-flat.vmdk"
    

    TO

    RW 31457280 VMFS "SL32-AP-TARANTELA-TEST2-flat.vmdk"
    

    and

    ddb.geometry.cylinders = "11748"
    

    TO

    ddb.geometry.cylinders = "1958"
    

    in SL32-AP-TARANTELA-TEST2 - 000007.vmdk

    change

    RW 188743680 VMFSSPARSE "SL32-AP-TARANTELA-TEST2-000007-delta.vmdk"
    

    TO

    RW 31457280 VMFSSPARSE "SL32-AP-TARANTELA-TEST2-000007-delta.vmdk"
    

    And then you change the changes you have made to the VMX file.

    Try power o the VM - you will get probably mistakes (inside the virtual machine).

    If this works report back (we are not yet made).

  • Create a virtual machine with the physical RAM total?

    I want to virtualize ESXi 4 on my MacBook Pro. However, I have 2 GB of RAM and ESXi 4 requires a minimum of 2 GB.

    I posted in the community of ESXi (is it possible to virtualize ESXi 4 with less than 2 GB of RAM?) and there is a solution for using ESXi with less RAM, but the problem is that I first need to run the installation with 2 GB.

    Basically, I tried to create a virtual machine with 2 GB, but the maximum I can use is 1840MB. Is it something that I do with Fusion to increase this limit? I understand that I am under a host operating system and requiring too little RAM, but just to get through the ESXi installation isn't it possible to push the VM of RAM to 2 GB and the host what OS increase the pagefile to deal with the lack of RAM?

    Any help would be appreciated!

    Thank you

    You may be able to edit the .vmx file and change the memsize option either 2048 or more. The merger is able to start a virtual machine with more memory that the host, just UI prevents common users to exceed the limits of security in general.

    I'm not quite sure what would happen if the VM actually tries to use all of the memory. If all goes well, it will be just talk and run slowly. Of course, the worst case are that it crashes.

  • Unable to expand the virtual disk?

    When you try to extend a hard disk with vmkfstools, I get this meesage:

    Impossible to extend the drive: device or resource busy (1048585

    If I use the customer VI to extend the hard disk (only occurs with this particular drive), there are completed successfully, but no change? I'm going down this same result with vm

    I have esx3.5 VC2.5 U2 and should be able to do it while its still works.

    AY ideas would be most appreciated.

    There is overhead when you extend and you don't have enough. Not for snapshots. I would like to get busy working on a movement since you have not much room for anything whatsoever on that LUN.

  • Expand a virtual disk in VMware?

    I was wondering if it is possible to extend the system on one of my virtual machines partition? I know that I can add another hot player, but I desperately need to extend system partition... Thanks in advance

    If your virtual machine is Windows 2008 and you use ESX 3.5 U2 so you can develop the disk online. Change the settings on the virtual machine, and then in the prompt use diskpart to extend the system partition to use the extra space.

    If you use an earlier version of Windows or ESX, you can always extend the partition but the virtual machine must be turned off. Power off the virtual machine, rotate the VMDK is through changing the settings (ESX3.5) or vmkfstools-x console, then attach the drive system of the virtual machine to a different VM Windows or start the virtual from a WinPE computer. ISO and use diskpart to extend partition as described above.

    For more information about the use of MS diskpart just google, plenty of info out there.

  • How to expand your virtual hard disk while host hard disk space is not enough?

    People,

    Hello. I use VM Player 3. My host computer is Windows 7 and VM is Oracle Linux 5. I need to expand the virtual hard drive Oracle Linux 5 from 100 GB to 150 GB. When I click on VM > Settings > hard drive > utilities > expands...

    The error message:

    There is not enough space on the file system for the selected operation.

    To after my understanding, we have enough room to store the VHD original more expanded VHD.

    This means that the free space on the host needs to be 100 GB + 150 = 250 GB

    The total size of the hard disk of the Windows 7 host is 284 GB. The VM already occupies 100 GB of 284 GB. The maximum free space is 184 GB less space and boot OS. This means that I can't develop the 100 GB to 150 GB VHD.

    But I have to expand the virtual hard disk! I don't know if there are other ways to expand the virtual hard disk.

    My question is:

    Folk understand some ways to expand the virtual hard drive ranging from 100 GB to 150 GB drive hard host is only 284 GB?

    Thanks in advance.

    You explained, it is the behavior with monolithic virtual disks, which is a unique hard file. Because the file requires more space for its metadata at the beginning of the file, all the blocks of data must be copied to a new file. With the format of sparse file 2 GB virtual disks can be extended without the need to copy the data into a new file hard, because each the hard contains its own metadata. In case you don't have at least ~ 100GB of disk space you can use vmware-vdiskmanager convert/clone the virtual drive command line utility in a format of 2 GB sparse file, delete the original virtual disk (after saving), then use vmware-vdiskmanager again to rename the new virtual disk to the old name. Once done, you will be able to expand the virtual disk as required.

    André

  • How to extend a virtual disk on WS7?

    I use a virtual machine of WS7 running Win7x64 as my software development system.

    He has a 100 GB virtual disk and now I try to install Embarcadero RAD Studio XE7 on that, but is greeted by a message saying that the 33.6 GB of free space is not enough...

    He needs 37 a few GB.

    So now that I look at my options and the first, we must somehow extend the virtual disk (vmdk file) to a larger size.

    Is it possible at all the tool magic VMware or what I need to create a new record and the use of some software cloning inside the VM for Win7 to transfer the content courses like the one made when moving to a bigger real physical drive?

    Looks like it should be possible so to increase the size of the car without touching the data such that the partition holding the 100 GB drive is not now the disk is full.

    In this case, I use Win7 tools to extend the partition to use the full disk.

    Any advice/suggestions?

    Expand a virtual disk is a fairly straightforward task. Make sure that the virtual machine have Active snapshots and then increase the size of the virtual disk by typing in its new size in settings of the virtual machine HARD drive. After increasing the virtual disk, you must increase the partition within the guest OS. For Windows 7, this can be done in the disk management interface.

    Remember that when you set up a monolithic virtual disk for the virtual machine (i.e. a single hard large file), a new virtual disk will be created and all content will be copied on to this new hard file, which will have some time at the end, but it will also take the additional temporary disk space.

    André

  • Virtual disk expansion

    I've added four new hard drives at 8 on my ax100 and configured ' DISK POOL 1, include 11 records. A drive is configured as a hot spare. Then, I have expanded the "Virtual Disk 1' to include all the"POOL1 DISC' again. I was expecting the SAN will appear as a 6 to drive in Win2003. However, it proved that I need to format the 4 additional disks and set up as a new partition. I need a shared 6 to disk, not two separate 4TB and shared 2 TB drives. I plugged a different server in the same San using the switch, but it also shows the SAN as two separate partitions.

    Is there an operation that is not destructive to consolidate all readers, both old and newly added, in a huge partition/drive and see it as such in Win2003? It would be difficult to make two backups one 6 to SAN, destroy the virtual disk, recreate a large drive virtual and end of restoration. Help, please. Thank you.


  • How to extend a virtual disk in a workflow

    Hello together,

    I have a problem in the creation of a Workflow.

    I want to deploy a virtual with a CustSpec computer (works fine). After the deploymente, I want to thank the disc - it's my problem.

    Did anyone of you knows how to expand a virtual disk to a virtual machine?

    Thank you very much

    Marc

    I have not tried this at my end, but you can try something like this:

    You need create a scriptable task and the research of the class script VirtualLsiLogicController from the API Explorer. The properties that need are required to set as seen in the reference of vSphere are:

    -busnumber (can be set to 0)

    -button (can be set to 0)

    -sharedBus (set VirtualSCSISharing.physicalSharing) / / VirtualSCSISharing is an enum type, consult the API Explorer

    After you set the object above (VirtualLsiLogicController), it defined in the the virtualdeviceconfigspec object and the value of this deviceconfigspec to the devicechange of the virtualmachine context property (as previously done for adding a virtual disk).

    I hope that helps!

    -Angela-

  • Reduce the size of the virtual disk RAID 5

    I have Windows Server 2003 is installed on a virtual disk PERC H700 RAID-5. Total size of the disk is 5.5 TB. The problem is that WinServer 2003 cannot use the disk due to the MBR 2 TB limit (and I can't convert to GPT without destroy all partitions, which is what I try to avoid). Since 3.5 TB of drive space is unallocated (and reconciliations), is there a way to reduce the size of the virtual disk to remove this space which can not be used anyway? Then, I could by using the remaining capacity to create a new virtual disk that can be set up as GPT and access the space through it (or two new virtual drives 2 TB and 1.5 TB in size). I know that you can expand a virtual disk, but you can a shrink?

    No, you can develop most of the virtual drives, but you will not be able to reduce them.

    You will have to start on this subject, creating a VD less than 2 TB for boot/OS disk, then the rest can be used in an another VD.

  • Save the number of the Virtual Machine: expand the size of the virtual disk of Guest OS affect the physical disk on the host operating system files?

    People,

    Hello. I use 3 Player VM and Guest OS Windows Server 2003. The host OS is Windows 7. I need to increase the size of the VM disk, so who can install several systems in the guest OS. If something bad happens during the expansion of the size of the virtual disk, the guest operating system and its Applications will not work. Thus, before expanding the size of the virtual disk, I need to back up the virtual machine hard disk external.

    I have check the disk hard host operating system Windows 7, the path is C:\VirtualMachine\WindowsServer2003\... When I get to the top of the virtual machine on the external hard drive, simply select the 'VirtualMachine' folder and save automatically. I have 3 questions as follows:

    First of all, if something bad happens during the expansion of the size of the virtual disk, the guest operating system and its Applications do not work. Can I just delete the folder 'VirtualMachine' in the host operating system?

    Secondly, the problem of the first question does not affect files in the physical hard disk to host operating system?

    Third, if something wrong happens during expand the size of the virtual disk of OS guest, I simply delete the folder 'VirtualMachine' in the host operating system and load the original 'VirtualMachine' from the external hard drive in the host operating system. Works correctly as long as one is the Virtual Machine before Stude the virtual disk size?

    Thank you.

    First of all, if something bad happens during the expansion of the size of the virtual disk, the guest operating system and its Applications do not work. Can I just delete the folder 'VirtualMachine' in the host operating system?

    Yes.

    Secondly, the problem of the first question does not affect files in the physical hard disk to host operating system?

    N °

    Third, if something wrong happens during expand the size of the virtual disk of OS guest, I simply delete the folder 'VirtualMachine' in the host operating system and load the original 'VirtualMachine' from the external hard drive in the host operating system. Works correctly as long as one is the Virtual Machine before Stude the virtual disk size?

    Yes.

    That's right, as long as you have not added and other virtual disks of different folders on the host of the virtual machine, you can probably did not.

    After developing the size of the virtual disk, you must also change the size of the partition in the guest operating system.

    André

  • I can't power on a virtual machine (with linked disks) after the addition of new hosts of Lab Manager

    ENVIRONMENT

    -Lab Manager 3 using VC 3.5

    -Initially the 2 hosts in a cluster and managed by LM

    -Added new cluster with 2 new hosts in VC

    -Two bunches pointing to the same NFS storage

    PROBLEM

    -When you try to turn on a computer in new cluster, I get a "requested file" "not found" error

    RESULTS

    -This seems to happen only when creating a virtual machine that has virtual disks of parent; most of our VMS is linked clones

    -When you look at the log file, please see attachment, we found the following:

    It is the location of the new virtual machine in the new host:

    /vmfs/volumes/fabdf38d-beff047d/LMW2K3/2909/002909-T_XP_SP3_32b.VMDK

    When you look at the hard, it points to the parent disk, but it seems that it does not:

    /vmfs/volumes/6586c772-53eee1bb/LMW2K3/2904/002904-T_XP_SP3_32b.VMDK

    Please note th volumen IDS are different and can not get the disc parent of the new machine.

    SOLUTIONS?

    Thank you

    Jose

    You should immediately stop using the new hosts otherwise creating new virtual machines can spoil the vmdk channels. Try http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1005930.

  • 2 new physical disks with no status critical yellow exclamation Point

    RAID 1 virtual disk built 100% with failure predicted no.. Everything seems to work fine, but to Manage open there is a yellow exclamation by both drives.

    Is there a problem I need to support?

    Thanks Troy

    These disks were bought from Dell? If this isn't the case, then it's maybe just a warning that you use not certified Dell readers. This can be safely ignored, but not off.

Maybe you are looking for