Too many vmware files on documents












0















I have installed sierra on vmware workstation pro. When I looked up my vmware files on my documents, I recognized that the folder includes lots of vmdk files. Can I delete some of them ?



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  • These files are the virtual disk files, if you delete them, you will lose any installed VMs. Simple awnser, if you don't want to delete your MacOS VM, don't delete them.

    – mt025
    Oct 26 '17 at 20:47








  • 1





    How large is your VM hard drive?

    – music2myear
    Oct 26 '17 at 21:07
















0















I have installed sierra on vmware workstation pro. When I looked up my vmware files on my documents, I recognized that the folder includes lots of vmdk files. Can I delete some of them ?



enter image description here










share|improve this question

























  • These files are the virtual disk files, if you delete them, you will lose any installed VMs. Simple awnser, if you don't want to delete your MacOS VM, don't delete them.

    – mt025
    Oct 26 '17 at 20:47








  • 1





    How large is your VM hard drive?

    – music2myear
    Oct 26 '17 at 21:07














0












0








0








I have installed sierra on vmware workstation pro. When I looked up my vmware files on my documents, I recognized that the folder includes lots of vmdk files. Can I delete some of them ?



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















I have installed sierra on vmware workstation pro. When I looked up my vmware files on my documents, I recognized that the folder includes lots of vmdk files. Can I delete some of them ?



enter image description here







vmware






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share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Oct 26 '17 at 21:07









music2myear

31.8k859101




31.8k859101










asked Oct 26 '17 at 19:56









Burak nurcicekBurak nurcicek

1




1













  • These files are the virtual disk files, if you delete them, you will lose any installed VMs. Simple awnser, if you don't want to delete your MacOS VM, don't delete them.

    – mt025
    Oct 26 '17 at 20:47








  • 1





    How large is your VM hard drive?

    – music2myear
    Oct 26 '17 at 21:07



















  • These files are the virtual disk files, if you delete them, you will lose any installed VMs. Simple awnser, if you don't want to delete your MacOS VM, don't delete them.

    – mt025
    Oct 26 '17 at 20:47








  • 1





    How large is your VM hard drive?

    – music2myear
    Oct 26 '17 at 21:07

















These files are the virtual disk files, if you delete them, you will lose any installed VMs. Simple awnser, if you don't want to delete your MacOS VM, don't delete them.

– mt025
Oct 26 '17 at 20:47







These files are the virtual disk files, if you delete them, you will lose any installed VMs. Simple awnser, if you don't want to delete your MacOS VM, don't delete them.

– mt025
Oct 26 '17 at 20:47






1




1





How large is your VM hard drive?

– music2myear
Oct 26 '17 at 21:07





How large is your VM hard drive?

– music2myear
Oct 26 '17 at 21:07










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














From the VMware Documentation Center:




vname-s###.vmdk



If you specified that the files can increase, filenames include an s
in the file number, for example, Windows 7-s001.vmdk.



If you specified that the virtual disk is divided into 2GB sections,
the number of files depends on the size of the virtual disk. As data
is added to a virtual disk, the files increase to a maximum of 2GB
each.




In other words:



Your virtual hard drive(s) are split into multiple discrete files on your hypervisor file system.



Don't delete them.



VMware will manage its own files according to its own rules and taking into account any settings you may have set. Leave them alone.






share|improve this answer


























  • You were right. I fixed that.

    – music2myear
    Oct 27 '17 at 15:58











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














From the VMware Documentation Center:




vname-s###.vmdk



If you specified that the files can increase, filenames include an s
in the file number, for example, Windows 7-s001.vmdk.



If you specified that the virtual disk is divided into 2GB sections,
the number of files depends on the size of the virtual disk. As data
is added to a virtual disk, the files increase to a maximum of 2GB
each.




In other words:



Your virtual hard drive(s) are split into multiple discrete files on your hypervisor file system.



Don't delete them.



VMware will manage its own files according to its own rules and taking into account any settings you may have set. Leave them alone.






share|improve this answer


























  • You were right. I fixed that.

    – music2myear
    Oct 27 '17 at 15:58
















2














From the VMware Documentation Center:




vname-s###.vmdk



If you specified that the files can increase, filenames include an s
in the file number, for example, Windows 7-s001.vmdk.



If you specified that the virtual disk is divided into 2GB sections,
the number of files depends on the size of the virtual disk. As data
is added to a virtual disk, the files increase to a maximum of 2GB
each.




In other words:



Your virtual hard drive(s) are split into multiple discrete files on your hypervisor file system.



Don't delete them.



VMware will manage its own files according to its own rules and taking into account any settings you may have set. Leave them alone.






share|improve this answer


























  • You were right. I fixed that.

    – music2myear
    Oct 27 '17 at 15:58














2












2








2







From the VMware Documentation Center:




vname-s###.vmdk



If you specified that the files can increase, filenames include an s
in the file number, for example, Windows 7-s001.vmdk.



If you specified that the virtual disk is divided into 2GB sections,
the number of files depends on the size of the virtual disk. As data
is added to a virtual disk, the files increase to a maximum of 2GB
each.




In other words:



Your virtual hard drive(s) are split into multiple discrete files on your hypervisor file system.



Don't delete them.



VMware will manage its own files according to its own rules and taking into account any settings you may have set. Leave them alone.






share|improve this answer















From the VMware Documentation Center:




vname-s###.vmdk



If you specified that the files can increase, filenames include an s
in the file number, for example, Windows 7-s001.vmdk.



If you specified that the virtual disk is divided into 2GB sections,
the number of files depends on the size of the virtual disk. As data
is added to a virtual disk, the files increase to a maximum of 2GB
each.




In other words:



Your virtual hard drive(s) are split into multiple discrete files on your hypervisor file system.



Don't delete them.



VMware will manage its own files according to its own rules and taking into account any settings you may have set. Leave them alone.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Oct 27 '17 at 15:59

























answered Oct 26 '17 at 21:10









music2myearmusic2myear

31.8k859101




31.8k859101













  • You were right. I fixed that.

    – music2myear
    Oct 27 '17 at 15:58



















  • You were right. I fixed that.

    – music2myear
    Oct 27 '17 at 15:58

















You were right. I fixed that.

– music2myear
Oct 27 '17 at 15:58





You were right. I fixed that.

– music2myear
Oct 27 '17 at 15:58


















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