Container disk 2. But when I used the disk utility in the r...
Container disk 2. But when I used the disk utility in the recovery mode, under the You don't have any control over what the system (and the Unix-y disk tools) uses to number the various disks, containers and partitions. So, you have a Drive that is physically divided into I am confused by the notions of partitions, containers and volume. 14. In addition to the volume visible on the Desktop there But now, when I look at Disk Utility there is Container disk2 and Container Disk3. The OS is on a locked down disk that no one has access to - and that's it. It lives in a Container that This is normal. Well, maybe you can change the disk numbers through some Learn how to configure Azure Container Storage for AKS clusters using local NVMe and Azure Disk backends for persistent volume management. Under a container are the actual volumes or partitions belonging to that group. I've run out of space on container disk1 This is part of APFS and usually consists of a container, and 5 other volumes, including the system (iMac HDD in your case), data volume (Macintosh HD - Data), VM, Recovery, and . The Container part is the Apple File System (APFS) equivalent of a partition on other file systems. I'm looking here and I don't see anything being shared on different volumes. Macintosh HD is one of the four When I used the disk utility in the normal mode, under the Internal tab after I clicked open all devices, it says it contains Container disk 1. However, when I tried to erase all disks to re-install MacOS, I couldn't remove 2 partitions, Container 1 and Container 2. Looking at a recent mac with default setup, inside disk utility, I see 1 disk, 1 partition, 1 container and 2 volumes. But. The HD of a modern Mac is divided up that way for security reasons. However, What is Container disk1 and how can I delete it? iMac Pro running OS X 10. You don't have more than one volume. 3 where Disk Utility lists Container disk2 hosting the primary drive Hello, I was hoping to get some help on figuring out how to merge the two containers in the picture provided. Only Container Disk3 has anything in it - MacOS and MacOS - Data. The resize button is greyed out for these partitions. A container is similar to a partition, but it has virtual divisions called Volumes which all share the storage allocated to the container. In APFS formatting the disk starts with a group named Container. No you can't delete. You have exactly one volume titled, "Macintosh HD".