So basically, you need the reverse sparsify command, right? ;-)
I only find several mailing list thready asking why someone would want
thick-provisioning but it happened eventually. I suppose cloning and
flattening the resulting image is not a desirable workaround.
Zitat von Frank Schilder <frans@xxxxxx>:
Hi all,
I need to increase the size of images created with
--thick-provision. Using resize will just change the provisioned
size, but not allocate/initialize the additional space. I seem to be
unable to find an option that will maintain thick provisioning of an
image when resizing.
Is there a way to resize thick provisioned images properly, that is,
maintaining thick provisioning?
Thanks and best regards,
=================
Frank Schilder
AIT Risø Campus
Bygning 109, rum S14
_______________________________________________
ceph-users mailing list -- ceph-users@xxxxxxx
To unsubscribe send an email to ceph-users-leave@xxxxxxx
_______________________________________________
ceph-users mailing list -- ceph-users@xxxxxxx
To unsubscribe send an email to ceph-users-leave@xxxxxxx