Shrink Qcow2 Disk Files: Difference between revisions
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==Linux Guest Preparaton== | ==Linux Guest Preparaton== | ||
Use: | Use the following command to zero out your disk: | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
dd if=/dev/zero of=/mytempfile | dd if=/dev/zero of=/mytempfile |
Revision as of 06:34, 9 September 2015
Over time a guest's *.qcow2 disk files can grow larger than the actual data stored within them. This can also happen faster if you defragment the partitions within the guest itself. In order to shrink the *.qcow2 files, you'll need to zero out all free space of the partitions contained within the guest first. Below is the process:
Windows Guest Preparaton
These steps are all performed within the Windows guest.
- Defragment your Windows guest's drives either by using the built in defragment program or a 3rd party one such as Defraggler or UltraDefrag.
- Zero out the free space either using SDelete (recommended) or Eraser. See either section below:
Zero Using SDelete
- Download SDelete and save it somewhere on your system (eg.
C:\windows\system32\
). - Run SDelete and zero free space:
sdelete -z
Zero Using Eraser
- Download and install the latest Eraser inside the XP VM.
- Load Eraser.
- Edit main settings. Change default file erasure and unused space erasure methods to British HMG IS5 (Baseline) (1 pass). This will zero out space instead of using random data.
- Create a new job under Erase Schedule and add the free space from the C:\ drive (and any other drive you want to shrink).
- Run the job.
- Note: I've had Eraser crash during this process. If this happens, it will leave a directory under the root of your drive with all sorts of random data in it. You'll want to delete this folder and start the process again. Keep running the process until it goes through without crashing. Hopefully the folks at Eraser are working on the stability of this new version.
Linux Guest Preparaton
Use the following command to zero out your disk:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/mytempfile # that could take a some time rm -f /mytempfile
Shrink the Disk File
- Shut down the VM.
- Log into the Proxmox shell and go to the VM's disk storage directory.
- Note: These next two steps assume that source is your original disk and shrunk us the new shrunken disk. Change the file names to meet your needs.
Also the -c flag means compression and can probably degrade the disk speed a bit.
qemu-img convert -c -O qcow2 source.qcow2 shrunk.qcow2
- Backup the original disk file and move the shrunken disk into its place:
mv source.qcow2 source-bak.qcow2 mv shrunk.qcow2 source.qcow2
- Boot your VM and verify all is working.
- When you verify all is well, it should be safe to either delete the backup of the original disk, or move it to an offline backup storage.