Open up the Command Prompt. In both Windows 8 and Windows 7, it can be found by typing “cmd” into the Start Menu search box. If everything worked, you should see a message saying “UUID change to: …” and then the VirtualBox should work. All fixed!
The correct command is the following one.
VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid "/home/user/VirtualBox VMs/drupal/drupal.vhd"
The path for the virtual disk contains a space, so it must be enclosed in double quotes to avoid it is parsed as two parameters.
The following worked for me:
run VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid "VDI/VMDK file" twice (the first time is just to conveniently generate an UUID, you could use any other UUID generation method instead)
open the .vbox file in a text editor
replace the UUID found in Machine uuid="{...}" with the UUID you got when you ran sethduuid the first time
replace the UUID found in HardDisk uuid="{...}" and in Image uuid="{}" (towards the end) with the UUID you got when you ran sethduuid the second time
If you've copied a disk (vmdk file) from one machine to another and need to change a disk's UUID in the copy, you don't need to change the Machine UUID as has been suggested by another answer.
All you need to do is to assign a new UUID to the disk image:
VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid your-box-disk2.vmdk
UUID changed to: 5d34479f-5597-4b78-a1fa-94e200d16bbb
and then replace the old UUID with the newly generated one in two places in your *.vbox file
<MediaRegistry>
<HardDisks>
<HardDisk uuid="{5d34479f-5597-4b78-a1fa-94e200d16bbb}" location="box-disk2.vmdk" format="VMDK" type="Normal"/>
</HardDisks>
and in
<AttachedDevice type="HardDisk" hotpluggable="false" port="0" device="0">
<Image uuid="{5d34479f-5597-4b78-a1fa-94e200d16bbb}"/>
</AttachedDevice>
It worked for me for VirtualBox ver. 5.1.8 running on Mac OS X El Capitan.
I have searched the web for an answer regarding MAC OS, so .. the solution is
cd /Applications/VirtualBox.app/Contents/Resources/VirtualBoxVM.app/Contents/MacOS/
VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid "full/path/to/vdi"
Though you have solved the problem, I just post the reason here for some others with the similar problem.
The reason is there's an space in your path(directory name VirtualBox VMs
) which will separate the command. So the error appears.
The command fails because it has space in one of the folder name, i.e. 'VirtualBox VMs.
VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid /home/user/VirtualBox VMs/drupal/drupal.vhd
If there is no space at folder name or file name, then the command will work even without quoting it, e.g. after changing 'VirtualBox VMs' into 'VBoxVMs'
VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid /home/user/VBoxVMs/drupal/drupal.vhd
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