![]() DF showed my system going from 80 in use to 52 in use. Note the bits about partitioning and snapshots. Any work needed to resize the disk inside HassOS was done automatically. Start the VM and the space is automagically added to the system. With the VM shutdown, select the VDI and increase the space with the slider and click Apply. Adjusting the size of the virtual machine’s hard disk When you’re satisfied with the changes, click on Apply for them to take effect. Then, use the slider bar to adjust the size to your liking, or manually enter a number in GB or TB. How can I assign the new diskspace to my "working" partition? data]# df -hĭateisystem Größe Benutzt Verf. In the VirtualBox Manager, select File->Virtual Media Manager. Opening the Virtual Media Manager menu Click on the hard disk you wish to edit. Instead there are some tmpfs entries that I don't understand. I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes data]# fdisk -lĭisk /dev/sda: 14.0 GB, 13991149568 bytes, 27326464 sectors That’s it, now with the ‘df’ command we can see that the total available disk space has been increased. ![]() But working with the system I still get errors kind of 'no disk space available'įdisk -l shows that disk /dev/sda has 14 GB. Open the Windows Server 2008 built-in Disk Manager and right-click on the ‘C Drive’, unfortunately, you may find that the ‘Extend Volume’ option is invalid. ![]() My disk on virtual box was to small, so I made it bigger with VBoxManage and assigned the new, free space to the main partition afterwards using gparted. Once the virtual disk size has been increased at the hardware level (as mentioned in the previous part) you will now be ready to extend the system partition through the Windows GUI. For example, if you originally created a 10 GB disk which is now full, you can use the -resize 15360 command to change the capacity to 15 GB (15,360 MB).
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