07.03.2016 · It is not common for a Fusion virtual disk to be thick, but it is possible by ticking the "pre-allocate disk space" checkbox. The most common and generally perceived best format for a virtual machine disk on a hosted platform such as VMware Fusion or VMware Workstation is: split disk, non pre-allocated.
08.01.2019 · The Virtual Machine ‘Windows Server 2016 Standard (Base Copy)’ failed to start because there is not enough disk space. The system was unable to create the memory contents file on ‘C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Hyper-V\Virtual Machines\ABC.VMRS’ …
04.02.2014 · I have a Window 8.1 host trying to start a virtual machine through Hyper-V. The VM is configure to use 10GB of RAM, I have 16GB, it should start but it doesn't. Instead I get the message '{VM NAME}' could not initialise. Not Enough Memory in the system to start the virtual machine {VM NAME} The host has 16GB RAM, of which only 4.8GB is in use.
You appear to be out of diskspace on the host. You'll have to reduce the memory used by the VM, since Hyper-V requires a "hibernation file" on the host for ...
02.11.2017 · There is absolutely nothing useful in event viewer under Hyper-V VMMS. It states: 'Virtual Machine' failed to start. Then gives my virtual machine ID#. Under Hyper-V Worker --> Admin, I have the following message: Virtual Machine Worker Process initialization has timed out, and will terminate.
Bad news is that the default disk size was used when the VMs were created. ... "Start-VM" returned an error that said there was not enough disk space to ...
After extending disk space on one of VM drive (from 50GB to 100GB), we can't start the VM with this message: "Could not initialize memory: There is not ...
19.06.2020 · There's not enough disk space available to start the Windows virtual machine. Free at least XX MB on the hard disk that stores the "Windows" virtual machine and try again. Cause. The notification above mean you are running out of free space on your host macOS® hard drive. Resolution. Find how much space is left on your Mac hard drive: