This entry provides a summary of a basic technique that we use. I'm sure this is documented elsewhere, however sometimes unique perspectives can be illuminating.
Open two terminal windows and use sudo or become root. In one terminal, issue the dd command shown in the image below to create a huge file in /tmp to fill up the disk space with zeros. Zeros are highly compressible. You can repeat the command or change the arguments, depending on the size of the volume.
- dd if=/dev/zero of=/tmp/full bs=100M count=500
While that is
running, check the progress using the df command in the other terminal window. When the disk is full, stop
the dump command (ctrl-c) and then remove the huge temporary files and then shutdown your
system.
Next, run the vmware-vdiskmanager.exe utility to decompress and shrink your virtual disk volume. So first use the -d option, passing in the name of the VMDK file, and when that is completed, run again with the -k option. In our case, the resultant OVA file went down from 17GB to 1.3GB. Cool Bytes.
(Windows Example is referenced below)
C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware>"C:\Program Files (x86)\VMware\VMware Workstation\vmware-vdiskmanager.exe"
VMware Virtual Disk Manager - build 1895310.
Usage: vmware-vdiskmanager.exe OPTIONS
Offline disk manipulation utility
Operations, only one may be specified at a time:
-d : defragment the specified virtual disk. Only
local virtual disks may be defragmented.
-k : shrink the specified virtual disk. Only local
virtual disks may be shrunk.
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