What is the difference between .vmdk and flat.vmdk




















ESXi virtual disks are actually comprised of 2 files, the virtual disk file the -flat fille and a small virtual disk descriptor file. It sounds from your description that somehow the descriptor file has become corrupted or was somehow removed. That blog post above gives details on how to recreate it, or this following blog will work just as well;.

I'd copy the file with 'flat' in the name and then rename the original, removing the 'flat' and see what happens. Ok, so the descriptor was missing then Recreating the VMDK descriptor file fixed the issue!

Thank you, Gabrielle. To continue this discussion, please ask a new question. Get answers from your peers along with millions of IT pros who visit Spiceworks. Best Answer. So, if information occupies 8GB it will be represented with four 2GB chunks, having file-s Description is a separate small file with usual.

So, it is relatively safe but not fast disk format. It is really convenient when virtual disks need to be burnt to DVD for easy carriage. Or needs to be installed on some FAT disk sic! In this case the original -flat. This file is only 16 MB in size when created and can grow in 16 MB portions, if changes made to a VM disk, exceed its original default size. But being, in essence, a copy of changes that VM disk was exposed to, -delta. After the files had been deleted I tried to power up the VM knowing it would not and received this error.

Then navigate to the Recovery VM folder. You can also go back and delete the Recovery-flat. So even though restoring a VM from a -flat. Two goals that I would like to achieve this year is to learn how to program likely Python as well as learn more about Linux. There are a few dependiences that are needed first, below is the steps I took to install VMware Workstation 10 on Linux Mint Sometime ago I asked a question over at the VMware forum about how to set default network printers on a VMware View 5.

The printers would be added to the VM just not remember the default printer setting. Although the focus in my career right now is certainly more cloud focused in Amazon Web Services and Azure, I still use my home lab a lot. This setup served me well for most of those years. It has allowed me to get many of the certifications I have, progress in my career and have fun as well.

At the start of this year I decided it was time to give the home lab an overhaul. I also wanted something that just worked, no more fooling around with network adapter drivers or doing this tweak or that tweak. I also no longer needed to be concerned about something that had a tiny footprint. I also questioned if I really needed multiple physical ESXi hosts.

So in the end, the below is what I settled on. Replacing all of my compute, most of my networking and adding more storage!

The vSphere client in vCenter 6.



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