You can check the size of partitions after booting your Linux with the df -h command. If your Linux installed on a VM uses LVM to manage disk volumes, you have at least two options for disk management when increasing the size of a virtual disk. In this section of the blog post, I explain how to increase the size of a virtual disk in VMware vCenter by using vSphere Client and how to extend partition size in the Windows VM.
The workflow for Windows 10, Windows 8, and Windows 7 is similar. First, you must increase the size of a virtual disk used by a virtual machine. Select a virtual machine whose virtual disk you want to expand, right-click the VM, and in the menu that opens, hit Edit Settings to open the virtual machine settings. In the Virtual Hardware tab, expand settings for the needed hard disk, for example, Hard disk 1. Enter the new size for the selected hard disk.
Hit OK to save settings and expand the disk. If hard disk settings are greyed out, power off the VM and try again. Make sure that there are no snapshots for VM disks. The virtual hard disk has now been expanded, but the size of partitions remains the same. Open Computer Management , and then open Disk Management. You can open the Disk Management snap-in in different Windows versions from the command line interface by running the diskmgmt.
Right-click the needed partition , and in the context menu, click Extend Volume. Note : There must be free space right after the partition that you want to extend. If you have two partitions on a disk C: and D: , and you want to extend the first partition C: , your unallocated disk space should be between the first and the second partition after C: and before D:.
Select Disks. Select unallocated disk space on your disk to be used to extend the needed disk partition. In my example, I select 10 GB of unallocated disk space that appeared after increasing the size of the virtual disk. You can select the amount of disk space in MB it can be less or equal to the size of unallocated disk space.
Now the partition size has been increased, and there is no unallocated disk space on the virtual disk. You can check the free space in the Disk Management window and in Windows Explorer. In modern versions of Windows, you can extend partitions, including a system partition, right in the operating system by using the Disk Management snap-in.
If you cannot install Windows XP on modern hardware due to ended support and missing drivers, you can still use this operating system on virtual machines.
In this section, I explain how to increase the size of a virtual disk used by the Windows XP VM and how to extend a partition on this virtual disk after. Note : As security patches are not released for Windows XP and Windows Server now, avoid connecting machines running these operating systems to a production network to avoid security issues.
Attackers can use unpatched software vulnerabilities to initiate malware attacks. Windows XP is used as an example in this section of the blog post. Microsoft recommends that you use the latest versions of Windows. I use the native command-line Windows tool that is available in Windows XP and all newer Windows versions and editions.
Many users have an ISO installation image of modern Windows versions, and this method is affordable. I use the Windows 10 installation image to boot from this virtual DVD image, run diskpart and resize a partition. You can use this method to extend partitions on machines running other Windows versions.
You can use this method to resize virtual disks and partitions of VMs running on VMware Workstation on your computer. Just keep in mind that the locations of VM files are different in this case. Before increasing the size of a virtual disk in my VM running Windows XP, the disk partitioning scheme in Disk Management looks as on the following screenshot. There is one GB virtual hard disk and one partition C: that fills all disk space.
Windows is installed on this NTFS partition. Enter administrative credentials for the selected server by default, the root username is used for ESXi hosts and administrator vsphere. Select a VM whose virtual disk you want to expand in the list of VMs on the appropriate server.
Shut down the VM. In the Hardware tab, select the hard disk that you want to expand, then in the right section of the window, click the Expand button. Enter the new maximum disk size.
I expand my virtual disk from 10 GB to 18 GB. VMware displays the following notification:. Expand increases only the size of a virtual disk. Sizes of partitions and file systems are not affected. When the disk is successfully expanded, a message is displayed with the reminder to repartition the disk. Hit OK to close this window. Now in the hard disk options of VM hardware, you see that the size of the virtual disk has been increased to 18 GB.
You can also insert an optical disc into a physical drive of the ESXi server or a computer running VMware Workstation. Hit OK to save the VM configuration and close the window.
DragonPlus took it upon themselves to create the helpfully named Double! Expand Memory Converter, a product that tries to eliminate some wallet pain when trying to add storage to the PSP. The concept is simple: the product plugs into the Pro Duo slot and then it allows you to use your SD cards via a device that fits onto the back of the PSP.
The SD slots slide into two of the screw-holes on the back of the system, making installation instant and very easy. I had an issue with the cable that attaches the Pro Duo adaptor to the piece on the back of the PSP: it looked slight. I was scared that both pieces would hinder my ability to play the PSP as I was used to.
As it turns out it's actually still pretty comfortable to hold, although I wouldn't try to put any pressure at all on the connective cable. Open all the programs and applications you would normally use at the same time; if you discover your system become slow or unstable, this indicates more virtual memory is needed.
The second way: how to test by using Task Manager. Microsoft allows you to use an external hard drive as RAM on Windows You should open Control Panel, access Advanced system settings, and choose the external hard drive to configure manually.
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