[CentOS] enlarging partition and its filesystem

2016-05-18 Thread Fred Smith
Hi all!

I've got a VM at work running C6 on HyperV (no, its not my fault,
that's what the company uses. I'd rather gag myself than own one
of th ose things.)

I ran out of disk space in the VM, so the admin enlarged the virtual disk.
but now I realize I don't know how to enlarge the partition and its
filesystem.

I'll be googling, but in case I miss it, it'd be great if someone could
point me in the right direction.

thanks!

Fred

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Re: [CentOS] enlarging partition and its filesystem

2016-05-18 Thread Ian Brown
Hi Fred,
That would depend on what the underlying device is using.
Do you know if you are using LVM or not?

Type `lvdisplay` at the console to display any logical volumes. If you are
using LVM, you should see one named something like 'VolGroup00_lv-root'
If this is the case, something like this should help, but I have listed out
the steps below for the TL;DR version:
https://wiki.centos.org/TipsAndTricks/ExpandLV

*pvcreate /dev/xvdb*(xvdb is the Xen version, you may see sdb or some
other combination.)
*vgextend VolGroup00 /dev/xvdb*(Where VolGroup00 is the Volume Group
you found before)
*lvextend -l +100%FREE /dev/VolGroup00/lv-root* (Or where ever the LVM
device is created. lvdisplay will show you this.)

Then simply:
*resize2fs /dev/VolGroup00/lv-root*
to expand the filesystem on the new block device.

Hope that helps.

Cheers,
Ian

On 19 May 2016 at 05:33, Fred Smith  wrote:

> Hi all!
>
> I've got a VM at work running C6 on HyperV (no, its not my fault,
> that's what the company uses. I'd rather gag myself than own one
> of th ose things.)
>
> I ran out of disk space in the VM, so the admin enlarged the virtual disk.
> but now I realize I don't know how to enlarge the partition and its
> filesystem.
>
> I'll be googling, but in case I miss it, it'd be great if someone could
> point me in the right direction.
>
> thanks!
>
> Fred
>
> --
>
> ---
> Under no circumstances will I ever purchase anything offered to me as
> the result of an unsolicited e-mail message. Nor will I forward chain
> letters, petitions, mass mailings, or virus warnings to large numbers
> of others. This is my contribution to the survival of the online
> community.
>  --Roger Ebert, December, 1996
> - The Boulder Pledge
> -
> ___
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS@centos.org
> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>

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Re: [CentOS] enlarging partition and its filesystem

2016-05-18 Thread Anthony K

On 19/05/16 05:33, Fred Smith wrote:

I'll be googling, but in case I miss it, it'd be great if someone could
point me in the right direction.

thanks!

Fred

You'll need to use an external tool (such as gparted) to extend the 
partition to use up the new extent, then follow what Ian Brown suggested.


Had the admin simply added a new drive, then you'd follow what Ian Brown 
recommended without having the need to use an external tool.



My $0.02,
ak.
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Re: [CentOS] enlarging partition and its filesystem

2016-05-18 Thread Fred Smith
On Thu, May 19, 2016 at 09:23:16AM +1000, Anthony K wrote:
> On 19/05/16 05:33, Fred Smith wrote:
> >I'll be googling, but in case I miss it, it'd be great if someone could
> >point me in the right direction.
> >
> >thanks!
> >
> >Fred
> >
> You'll need to use an external tool (such as gparted) to extend the
> partition to use up the new extent, then follow what Ian Brown
> suggested.

I've used gparted live cd a number of times, but don't think I knew
that it handled lvm2 also. Since it does, if I resize the lvm,
wouldn't the contained filesystem be automatically resized too?
(as it has been when I've resized physical partitions containing
NTFS and EXT2/3/4 filesystems.)

> 
> Had the admin simply added a new drive, then you'd follow what Ian
> Brown recommended without having the need to use an external tool.

yeah, in hindsight (which is always 20-20) it would have been easier.

A problem I have is that I have no admin access to the HyperV server,
at all, AFAIK I cannot even boot up a live CD in that VM without 
getting admin help. I'd certainly want to do this resizing when the
system in that VM is not running on the LVM I'm resizing, so I'll
have to see if I can get the admin to boot up the gparted live cd
for me.

thanks to both you and Ian!

Fred
-- 
 Fred Smith -- fre...@fcshome.stoneham.ma.us -
   But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: 
 While we were still sinners, 
  Christ died for us.
--- Romans 5:8 (niv) --
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Re: [CentOS] enlarging partition and its filesystem

2016-05-18 Thread Wes James
Can you get buy with using lvm features, i.e., just add the chunk to the
volume you want.

Use cfdisk to create a new partition (sudo cfdisk /dev/sda)

Select the unused space, create new partition and then select write, then
quit.

reboot for changes to take.  Go in to lvm, then finally use resize2fs and
your extra space will now be used in the system.

$ sudo lvm
lvm> pvcreate /dev/sda4
  Physical volume "/dev/sda4" successfully created

lvm> pvs
  PV VGFmt  Attr PSize  PFree
  /dev/sda2  vg_c6 lvm2 a--  60.43g 0
  /dev/sda3  vg_c6 lvm2 a--  17.20g 0
  /dev/sda4lvm2 ---  19.53g 19.53g

lvm> vgextend vg_c6 /dev/sda4
  Volume group "vg_c6" successfully extended

lvm> lvextend -l +100%FREE /dev/vg_c6/lv_home
  Size of logical volume vg_c6/lv_home changed from 22.06 GiB (5648
extents) to 41.59 GiB (10647 extents).
  Logical volume lv_home successfully resized

lvm> quit
  Exiting.

$ sudo resize2fs /dev/vg_c6/lv_home
resize2fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
Filesystem at /dev/vg_c6/lv_home is mounted on /home; on-line resizing
required
old desc_blocks = 1, new_desc_blocks = 3
Performing an on-line resize of /dev/vg_c6/lv_home to 10902528 (4k) blocks.
The filesystem on /dev/vg_c6/lv_home is now 10902528 blocks long.

-

-wes





On Wed, May 18, 2016 at 1:33 PM, Fred Smith 
wrote:

> Hi all!
>
> I've got a VM at work running C6 on HyperV (no, its not my fault,
> that's what the company uses. I'd rather gag myself than own one
> of th ose things.)
>
> I ran out of disk space in the VM, so the admin enlarged the virtual disk.
> but now I realize I don't know how to enlarge the partition and its
> filesystem.
>
> I'll be googling, but in case I miss it, it'd be great if someone could
> point me in the right direction.
>
> thanks!
>
> Fred
>
> --
>
> ---
> Under no circumstances will I ever purchase anything offered to me as
> the result of an unsolicited e-mail message. Nor will I forward chain
> letters, petitions, mass mailings, or virus warnings to large numbers
> of others. This is my contribution to the survival of the online
> community.
>  --Roger Ebert, December, 1996
> - The Boulder Pledge
> -
> ___
> CentOS mailing list
> CentOS@centos.org
> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>
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Re: [CentOS] enlarging partition and its filesystem

2016-05-20 Thread Anthony K

On 19/05/16 09:54, Fred Smith wrote:

>I've used gparted live cd a number of times, but don't think I knew 
that it handled lvm2 also.


Well, what you are doing with gparted has nothing to do with LVM; just 
the drive (really, the image file) itself - similar to buying a bigger 
hdd and then cloning from old (smaller) to new (bigger). Then you have 
to boot into the system and extend the volume group, logical volume, and 
ultimately the filesystem.


>Since it does, if I resize the lvm, wouldn't the contained filesystem 
be automatically resized too? (as it has been when I've resized physical 
partitions containing NTFS and EXT2/3/4 filesystems.)


With lvm, lvextend can automatically resize the the underlying ext2/3/4 
filesystem for you if you add the extra *-r* option.  If you omit it, 
then you'll need to run *resize2fs* as detailed by Ian.  As for NTFS, 
yes, once you use finish off with gparted, then the filesystem will have 
been automatically resized to fill the entire partition (haven't worked 
on partitioning in windows for a while so don't quote me).



ak.

*Note* Now that I'm having a second look at Ian's instructions, the 
pvcreate command is not required as you are not adding a second drive, 
just making the original one bigger.

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