Probably your virtual drive. When you first set up the virtual machine
you tell it how much of your Mac's disk space you will allow it to use.
In any case, you can quickly verify this by doing Get Info (command-I)
from the finder on your Mac's drive to find out how much is left. If you
really
@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: A VM Fusion question about disks
Probably your virtual drive. When you first set up the virtual machine you tell
it how much of your Mac's disk space you will allow it to use. In any case, you
can quickly verify this by doing Get Info (command-I) from the finder
should concentrate on
pruning.
*From:*macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com]
*Sent:* Friday, December 12, 2014 1:08 PM
*To:* macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
*Subject:* Re: A VM Fusion question about disks
Probably your virtual drive. When you first set up
As I recall, if you have the VM sharing, it doesn’t set an upper limit.
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com [mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com]
Sent: Friday, December 12, 2014 2:48 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: A VM Fusion question about disks
Right
*Subject:* Re: A VM Fusion question about disks
Right, but there is a limit to the expansion. So if you set up a
Windows VM with a 40GB automatically expanding drive Windows will say
it's a 40GB drive but on the Mac it might initially only use 10GB. As
you add apps and such it will grow but only