[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] How do I resize a Physical Partition in a Dom U that's "on" a Logical Volume in the Dom 0?
Hey Simon, On Fri, May 1, 2009 at 9:33 AM, Simon Hobson <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> lvextend -L +4G /dev/VG01 guest_root >> >> Can I do that "hot" without shutting down the Dom U first? Or do I >> need to shut it down THEN do the lvextend? > > You can do that 'hot' Great. That makes things easier & faster. > I'm not clear here - did you partition /dev/xvdc and create a filesystem on > /dev/xvdc1, or did you create a filesystem on /dev/xvdc ? I'm pretty foggy about the xvdc vs xvdc1 name differences but if I understand what you're asking I did the first type. I'm not even sure how I'd do the latter, or if I should. Any thoughts on that? Anyway I used Suse SLED v10's auto-installation stuff to do it. The part of the script for the xvdc device was <partitioning config:type="list"><drive> <device>/dev/xvdc</device> <initialize config:type="boolean">false</initialize> <partitions config:type="list"><partition> <create config:type="boolean">false</create> <filesystem config:type="symbol">ext3</filesystem> <format config:type="boolean">true</format> <label>GUESTROOT</label> <mount>/</mount> <partition_id config:type="integer">131</partition_id> <partition_nr config:type="integer">1</partition_nr> <partition_type>primary</partition_type> <size>max</size> </partition></partitions> <type config:type="symbol">CT_DISK</type> <use>all</use> </drive></partitioning> > If you create a filesystem on the disk device rather than partitioning it, > then you can shutdown the guest, use resize2fs to enlarge the filesystem in > it, and startup the guest. > > If you created a partition, then you will need to deal with that. I think > there was a discussion a while back on mounting partitions from a partition. > You'll need to enlarge the partition to fill the disk, and then you can > resize the filesystem in it. Other than doing it from within the guest I > don't know how to do that. Once you shutdown and then start up (NOT reboot) > the guest, it will see the new logical volume as a bigger disk - I don't > know if there is any way to make this happen 'live'. So it sounds like the 1st one is simpler. And can be done live or hot. Maybe I should just redo the whole thing to use the "create a filesystem on /dev/xvdc" way. Any pointers on that one? I've tried to follow some of those discussions, and just get lost. It seems like each message answers a question someone's not asking. Maybe I didn't find the right list yet, but so far it's all pretty confusing to me. I found the Xen wiki site. But I couldn't find any stuff about which way is the right or best approach, or especially how to do it. > You're not alone ! I guess that's a good thing :-) Thanks a bunch. Bob _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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