Microsoft's Virtual PC creates its virtual machine hard drives in VHD
files, and Windows 7 can now mount these directly so you can access
them in the host system. Click Start, type diskmgmt.msc and press Enter,
then click Action > Attach VHD and choose the file you'd like to
mount. It will then appear as a virtual drive in Explorer and can be
accessed, copied or written just like any other drive.
Click
Action > Create VHD and you can now create a new virtual drive of
your own (right-click it, select Initialise Disk, and after it's set up
right-click the unallocated space and select New Simple Volume to set
this up). Again, you'll be left with a virtual drive that behaves just
like any other, where you can drag and drop files, install programs,
test partitioning software or do whatever you like. But it's actually
just this VHD file on your real hard drive which you can easily back up
or share with others. Right-click the disk (that's the left-hand label
that says "Disk 2" or whatever) and select Detach VHD to remove it.
The
command line DISKPART utility has also been upgraded with tools to
detach a VHD file, and an EXPAND command to increase a virtual disk's
maximum size. Don't play around with this unless you know what you're
doing, though - it's all too easy to trash your system.
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