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I am using VirtualBox 4.2.18 and Vagrant 1.3.3 on Window 7. I have done a vagrant box add

vagrant box add MyBox http://ergonlogic.com/files/boxes/debian-LAMP-current.box

But, when I get to the step of vagrant up I get the following error: "vboxmanage.exe error could not rename the directory..."

Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks, Derek

3
  • 2
    Enable debug VAGRANT_LOG=debug vagrant up and see more output. Is VAGRANT_HOME present?
    – Terry Wang
    Sep 25, 2013 at 21:14
  • Thanks Terry! That was a very helpful tip and got me further along. I can see now that the command that is failing is: VBoxManage modifyvm f975034b-43c2-46cb-abfc-6c233d23d61c --name Vagrant_default_1380153421 which throws the rename error.
    – geo derek
    Sep 26, 2013 at 0:41
  • There are a number of upvotes on my answer if you wanted to select a correct one :) Jan 24, 2022 at 12:14

15 Answers 15

40

I tried:

  • vagrant destroy -f
  • manually deleting the virtualboxes in their directory
  • restarting my machine
  • reinstalling both vagrant and virtualbox
  • downgrading vagrant and virtualbox
  • running with sudo

and nothing worked. The only thing that worked for me was opening Virtualbox interface and going to Preferences and changing the Default Machine Folder from VirtualBox VMs to just VMs

Wasted about 4 hours of my time on that problem. Hopefully someone with the same problem finds this post.

4
  • 3
    Thanks to your reply, I've only wasted ~30 mins of my time.
    – trivektor
    Apr 7, 2015 at 20:38
  • 2
    I would up vote this 100 times, if I could! Thank you!
    – Schwesi
    Apr 26, 2017 at 9:37
  • 4
    +1 because this might have helped me, but only after destroying all boxes with vagrant destroy and then manually creating a C:\Users\myusername\VMs folder. Thanks.
    – Ryan
    Jun 3, 2017 at 18:09
  • 2
    i wasted 45 min,before hitting this post Apr 27, 2022 at 13:44
12

I went to the Directory

VirtualBox VMs

And deleted everything inside. Then I just did vagrant up, and it worked.

1
  • This worked for me as well. Although make sure that before you delete everything inside, you run vagrant destroy -f Oct 23, 2017 at 14:06
3

I was finally able to figure this out. Turns out it is useful to know how to set two specific directory paths for VirtualBox. This was particularly useful because I run my machine under an account that does not have administrative privileges. So I needed to get VirtualBox to used directory paths which I had access to security-wise. The first is the VBOX_USER_HOME environment variable which can be done within the System Properties/Environment Variables on Windows 7. In this way the VBOX_USER_HOME variable will control where the .VirtualBox directory goes. Secondly, set where the *.vbox files goes which is typically a directory called VirtualBox VMs. To set this path open the VirtualBox GUI and go to File  Preference and set the path at the Default Machine Folder input box.

Hopefully this info will help others.

Derek

2
  • I also had problem with admin privileges. By default, VirtualBox creates machines in a unit that requires admin privileges to run. This is not a problem for VirtualBox, but it causes problem for external programs trying to work on this folder. Dec 10, 2014 at 10:05
  • Could you explain more of what needs to be set for the VBOX_USER_HOME and in the virtual box GUI?
    – gst
    Aug 1, 2019 at 14:18
3

Thing that worked for me:

1) I had to manually delete C:\Users\My_name\VirtualBox VMs\machine_name folder.
2) To prevent this from happening again, before 'vagrant destroy' command I always stop current machine with 'vagrant suspend'.

2
  • does not work every time , sometimes it says the folder is in use. Sep 14, 2021 at 20:39
  • Well, I think that killing Vagrant process before trying to delete a folder would solve the issue :) Aug 29, 2022 at 15:44
1

I just removed every sub folder under this folder and it worked

1

Don't destroy your vagrant machine! This is a last option.

Write in you console:

VBoxManage list vms

Copy id of your machine, something like:

7fca07b2-65c6-420e-84b5-b958c15449a1

Open your vagrant machine id file, something like:

.vagrant/machines/default/virtualbox/id

Replace with id you just copied and do:

Vagrant up

This allways works for me. If not, only as last option you can try: vagrant destroy -f

1
  • VBoxManage wasn't available in PATH, so I had to find it in C:\Program Files\Oracle\VirtualBox>VBoxManage list vms. But this worked just now in Windows 10 with Laravel/homestead. Sep 3, 2021 at 9:32
1

On Windows 10 using VirtualBox v6.1.26 I encountered the same problem.

Here is how I could re-create the VM after a broken vagrant destroy

Try:

  1. Run vagrant destroy -f
  2. Check the available machines with vagrant global-status --prune
  3. Find the VMs folder in C:/Users/your_username/.VirtualBoxMachines and try deleting the one with the name of your machine using the file explorer manually
    • If you cannot delete the folder (some processes has open files with in it), try restarting your computer and delete then
  4. Now it should work again with vagrnat up

This worked for me!

0

That error means there is other VM in Virtual Machine with the same name as the one you used for this VM. So go back to the folder of that VM you run previously and destroy it with "vagrant destroy -f". Then try again running this VM.

0

Vagrant

Working with Vagrant I had a similar error. This was due to naming conflicts. What solved it for me was to remove the name of the instance from the Vagrantfile.

vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id,
              "--name", "oracle",
              "--memory", "512",
              "--natdnshostresolver1", "on"]

Change that to

vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id,
              "--memory", "512",
              "--natdnshostresolver1", "on"]
0

You Just need find your folder called VirtualBox VMs

In that folder should see your machines enter image description here

And rename what folder you want, and run:

vagrant up

So you have run it successfully.

0
  1. vagrant destroy -f
  2. find the folder VirtualBox VMs --> delete the machine you want to rename

  3. Run vagrant up in your project root

This worked for me!

0

i don't know how it works but i just kill the process of VB like the Following image and i run 'vagrant reload'

kill process

0

In windows OS, if none of these solution works, try to run the command in PowerShell as Administrator.

-1

Gentleman and ladies oh no. Just go to the vagrant file change the file vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--name", "oracle", "--memory", "512", "--natdnshostresolver1", "on"]

change the name variable as it conflicts with another 'installed' or failed to 'installed' vagrantbox. the new Vagrantfile should be like: vb.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--name", "oracle2", "--memory", "512", "--natdnshostresolver1", "on"]

-1

On Ubuntu 20.04

First, run

vagrant destroy

Go to this directory

/home/your_username/VirtualBox VMs

This step deletes all your VMs:

Delete all files and directories in that directory like so

rm -rf *

And then run

vagrant up 

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