Hi
I extended my VM fusion for mac virtual machine disk but its only half showing...
I have the latest version of VMware fusion and i am running a windows 7 virtual machine. My Win 7 virtual machine c drive was running out of space so i went to Virtual Machine > Settings > Hard Disk and used the slider to increase the disk size from 100 GB to 250 GB.
Notes:
Can anyone please help with how I can get C: drive to show the full new capacity?
Many thanks in advance. Matt
Thanks, yes, I did see that article. This part was particularly charming : "check to ensure that the volume you are trying to extend does not contain the page file. "
How one does this is a bit of a mystery. I was about to figure it out when I stumbled upon the option key issue, which worked, yet is hardly mentioned anywhere.
gdd9000 wrote: Thanks, yes, I did see that article. This part was particularly charming : "check to ensure that the volume you are trying to extend does not contain the page file. "
That caveat is primarily when using the diskpart.exe command prompt utility. Any method used while the installed OS is not booted, e.g. booting from other media like GParted Live, it doesn't matter if the page file exists or not. GParted Live can/will expand the partition without any problem under normal circumstances.
I guess in some way my situation was not normal. Glad I didnt bother going down the road of trying to figure out the page file issue. I used EaseUS, by the way, as my third party tool. I had done this once before and it worked as expected. This time was just strange.
I Stumbled upon a similar issue. In our case it was the I Volume which was extended from 200 GB to 350GB.If we opned disk management the lower window in it displayed the correct value 350 GB however on top th capacity showed up as 200 GB My computer showed the incorrect value of 200 GB,however disk part displayed corrrect 300 GB.
I also found multiple event id 55 in the event logs
This issue occurs because the NTFS driver exhausts its resources when it tries to extend the volume.
Resolution:Open command promt type diskpart
diskpart> list volume
diskpart>select volume 3 (select the number as per your requirement)
diskpart> extend filesystem
Note :No pagle file should be present on the volume.No snapshot should be present. Always have a backup of the volume.
rkk0308, you are a gentleman and a scholar!
This worked for me on the same problem. It was so fast I didn't think it worked at first. It doesn't require downloading any third party tools or re-re-sizing anything. There could not be a better solution, at least for me.
This issue occurs because the NTFS driver exhausts its resources when it tries to extend the volume.
Resolution:Open command promt type diskpart
diskpart> list volume
diskpart>select volume 3 (select the number as per your requirement)
diskpart> extend filesystem
Note :No pagle file should be present on the volume.No snapshot should be present. Always have a backup of the volume.
I had the same problem. I created a VM with two disks and I needed to increase the size of both. My VM was a Windows server 2008R2 and I used VMWare Workstation9.
-The first I had to do was delete all the snapshots took, because of my disks werent in Independent Mode.
-Second shutdown my VM and increase both disk with VMWare Utilities
-Third startup it and from Windows Disk Management tool (of VM), extend the Volume of each disk
and thats it.
rgds,
Thank you I opened disk manager and extended the partition into the new space, very very helpful
Solved, I had this problem, follow the steps below:
1 - Open your VM windows normally.
2 - open the disk manager
3 - right click on drive C:
4 - Click Attach.
Soon, it will expire. Hope this helps.