Maybe some friends still don’t know how to use sandboxie to back up a virtual machine? Then the editor below will explain to you how to use sandboxie to back up a virtual machine. Friends who don’t know yet can come and take a look. I hope it can help you.
First, after installing sandboxie, double-click the yellow icon on the taskbar and open it according to "/Sandbox/Set Save Folder" on the main interface of sandboxie. Select a drive letter with ample disk space among the drive letters on the right, and then click OK.
In the main interface of sandboxie, follow "/Sandbox/Create New Sandbox" to open and create a new sandbox.
Right-click the vmware player shortcut, check Run as uca administrator, and click the name of the sandbox we just created. Simply write an email address and enter the main interface of the virtual machine software.
In the main interface of vmware player, follow "/player/File/Open" to open the resource manager, find the virtual machine file .vmx in the resource manager, and click Open.
Friends who have newly installed sandboxie should also be prompted with insufficient space and ask whether to expand the space. At this time, double-click the requested content in the pop-up request box, and the memory of sandboxie will be expanded.
Do not do any operations on vmware player, whether it prompts not responding or prompts that this virtual machine may be moved or copied.
When Windows 10 users want to determine whether to copy, they can open the Task Manager and observe the read and write status of the disk in "/Performance/Disk/".
In other systems, you can also right-click the properties of the sandbox folder from time to time to observe whether the folder content increases.
Because my OS The two sandboxes have almost the same properties and occupy almost the same space.
During the process, you may encounter problems such as the virtual machine may be moved or copied, the mks drag-and-drop function cannot be initialized, the keyboard hook value, etc. Follow the recommended answers and click all the way to see the system startup screen.
The first boot may be slow, but the system backed up here has also been booted successfully.
Note: After selecting the .vmx file of the virtual machine, if you are prompted to expand the sandboxie, double-click it; if the vmware player does not respond, it is not stuck, but it is copying the virtual machine system.
The above is the method of using sandboxie to back up a virtual machine explained by the editor. Friends in need can take a look. b