On 5/23/21 4:04 AM, Michael wrote:
>> On Sat, May 22, 2021, 17:02 <thelma@sys-concept.com> wrote:
>>> Is anybody running Windows 10 Pro 64bit in Virtualbox?
>>> Is it stable?
>>> Is it easy to resize?
>
> I forgot to mention stability and resizing ...
>
> In one case after a major update the Win10 desktop became terribly unstable,
> menus not showing up, everything on the desktop taking minutes to respond to a
> mouse click or keyboard press. Eventually I realised the transparency had
> been enabled by the update and this was cause any desktop graphics to render
> partially and with a lot of latency. Disabling transparency restored the
> previous normal desktop behaviour. This was on a host with an old AMD-Radeon
> APU. Other video cards and drivers may not have such a problem, but I thought
> it worth mentioning.
>
> Resizing the C:\ drive partition is straight forward, in most cases. You can
> use 'VBoxManage modifyhd' in a terminal to increase the virtual disk size, or
> the VBox GUI Virtual Media Manager tab. Then use the Windows Disk Management,
> or boot the VM with GParted and resize the OS partition & filesystem.
> However, Windows 10 tends to create additional partitions as part of
> installation, or subsequent major updates. These are called System Reserve
> Partitions (SRP). Initially one is created at the start of the disk to
> contain bitlocker, boot and Windows Restore data. After certain major
> updates, or if the Windows 10 installation was an in situ upgrade from an
> older Windows 7 installation, such an SRP can be placed after the C:\ drive.
> In one case, changing an installed system from MBR to GPT/UEFI also created an
> ESP after the C:\ drive. It follows you won't be able to increase the size of
> the C:\ partition without moving any partitions following it out of the way
> first, increasing C:\, then restoring the moved partitions. Since an
> otherwise 5 minute disk & partition resizing exercise can develop into a
> prolonged and pre-planned effort, you'd be better off sizing up the virtual
> disk before you start installing MSWindows.
>
> Big upgrade releases every six months may require more temporary storage space
> to create a backup in case the upgrade fails. If enough space is not
> available on the disk, the the OS will ask you to insert a USB drive to be
> used during the upgrade. You can also create and attach a new virtual disk
> for this purpose.
>
> Finally, there's the Windows 10 'Storage Spaces' replacing Dynamic Disks, if
> you want to create a RAID in software. I understand you use it to add more
> disks/partitions, like you would with a RAID, but I have never used this to
> know what it can achieve in terms of resizing.
Thank Michael for the update. It is handy.
When you are talking about "transparency" you mean inside Windows 10, isn't it?
I've experimented with resizing Windows 10 32bit (currently installed) using gparted and it went very well, no problems.
I'm not sure with switching to Windows 10 64bit will help or not.