Matt Churchyard via freebsd-virtualization wrote this message on Wed, Nov 25, 2015 at 10:18 +0000: > Of course that's the easy bit. The more dangerous part is resizing the > partitions inside the guest (if it's not whole disk ZFS), and then resizing > the filesystems. If the disk is GPT partitioned in the guest you will > probably have to recover the partition table first, as the secondary copy > will no longer exist at the end of the disk. You'll then need to resize the > partitions (hopefully the 'main' partition you want to resize is the last on > the disk as that'll probably make it easier). Once done you then need to > resize the filesystem. For ZFS you can usually just 'zpool online -e'. For > UFS you'll need to grow the filesystem as shown in the handbook.
I have written an rc.d script growfs that is in HEAD that makes this painless... If you have a single UFS fs, w/ the root as the last partition/fs on the disk, simply grow the disk, and then you can run "service growfs start", and it just works... This will work on any system, not just VMs... -- John-Mark Gurney Voice: +1 415 225 5579 "All that I will do, has been done, All that I have, has not." _______________________________________________ freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-virtualization To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-virtualization-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"