Final tweaks.

Signed-off-by: Hollie Teal <hollie@docker.com>
This commit is contained in:
Hollie Teal 2014-08-28 13:51:38 -07:00
parent ce73a3bcf7
commit 0f8d461ed7
1 changed files with 7 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ VirtualBox.
Issue the command to stop the Boot2Docker VM on the command line:
`$ boot2docker stop`
$ boot2docker stop
## 2. Clone the VMDK image to a VDI image
@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ it.
Using the command line VirtualBox tools, clone the VMDK image to a VDI image:
`$ vboxmanage clonehd /full/path/to/boot2docker-hd.vmdk /full/path/to/<newVDIimage>.vdi -—format VDI -—variant Standard`
$ vboxmanage clonehd /full/path/to/boot2docker-hd.vmdk /full/path/to/<newVDIimage>.vdi -—format VDI -—variant Standard
## 3. Resize the VDI volume
@ -36,17 +36,17 @@ Choose a size that will be appropriate for your needs. If youre spinning up a
lot of containers, or your containers are particularly large, larger will be
better:
`$ vboxmanage modifyhd /full/path/to/<newVDIimage>.vdi —-resize <size in MB>`
$ vboxmanage modifyhd /full/path/to/<newVDIimage>.vdi —-resize <size in MB>
## 4. Download a disk partitioning tool ISO
To resize the volume, we'll use [GParted](http://gparted.sourceforge.net/download.php/).
Once you've downloaded the tool, add the ISO to the Boot2Docker VMs IDE bus.
Once you've downloaded the tool, add the ISO to the Boot2Docker VM IDE bus.
You might need to create the bus before you can add the ISO.
**Note:**
It's important that you choose a partitioning tool that is available as an ISO so
that the Boot2Docker VM can be booted with it.
> **Note:**
> It's important that you choose a partitioning tool that is available as an ISO so
> that the Boot2Docker VM can be booted with it.
<table>
<tr>