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I have a virtual Windows 7 computer using VirtualBox on a Linux host. How can I mount this virtual pc's harddisk (VDI file) in Linux? It's a dynamic file, meaning that it only takes up as much space as is actually used.

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  • I also want to know more about this. So far, the only way I coul dsee would be to actually start the VM, setup a shared directory, and put files there.
    – jfmessier
    Sep 3, 2009 at 12:45
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    This is a duplicate of the question: serverfault.com/questions/210684/…. Nov 26, 2011 at 23:33
  • @IsaacSutherland This question is more than a year older than that one. Nov 27, 2011 at 15:06
  • @BartvanHeukelom The top-ranked answer at the serverfault.com question works for me. Should I have copied thkala's answer to this thread? Nov 28, 2011 at 2:44

4 Answers 4

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it looks like vdfuse is the tool you are looking for. At least for Ubuntu (and possibly Debian) hosts. If you want to compile yourself (2010 source) you can do that too. Sources seem to be here.

To install in Ubuntu use sudo apt-get install virtualbox-fuse

There is also a script vdimount script on Google Code.

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VDI is a complex format and AFAIK there's currently no software that can directly mount a dynamic VDI image, although there are plenty to converting it from/to other formats.

I hope to be wrong (or be wrong in the future, such as when someone writes that piece of software) and I'll take a look at this thread just in case ;-)

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    vdfuse works as of Ubuntu 12.04 (didn't test on any other version) for dynamic images too. Haven't tested one with snapshots yet
    – stwissel
    Jun 21, 2012 at 4:43
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I always wanted to know, if I could do that. Here is a very informative link >> http://forums.virtualbox.org/viewtopic.php?t=4748.

So it seems you can mount only fixed sized VDI files in both windows and linux.

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  • not anymore. I successfully mount variable size VDI using vdfuse
    – stwissel
    Jun 21, 2012 at 4:42
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I came across this page while looking for a way to mount dynamic VDI files. I'm still looking. There is a commercial product available for Windows called WinMount that claims to do it. This doesn't help me (or you), but may help others who also stumble upon this web page.

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