hi How to view the VGDA content? Rajani -----Original Message----- From: linux-lvm-bounces@redhat.com [mailto:linux-lvm-bounces@redhat.com] On Behalf Of Klaus Strebel Sent: Thursday, December 16, 2004 9:52 PM To: LVM general discussion and development Cc: linux-lvm@redhat.com Subject: Re: How to increase/decrease space AdabalaP@schneider.com wrote: Hi Abdala, seem's that you mix disks, partions, and filesystems. Here a little PC-primer that you get an idea what all the other people are talking about. 1. You have a disk - obviously an IDE-drive 'caue the Linux device name is hda. 2. On the disk, you have 2 Partitions, named hda1 and hda2. 3. On the first partition, you have an ext3 filesystem (?) probably for /boot ??, the second partition is the only phisical volume of your volume group VolGrp00 managed by LVM2, countaining several logical volumes. 4. The logical volumes in your volume group VolGrp00 containing are formatted with a ext3 filesystem. > Austine, > > I have a hard disk of 4.8GB which i partitioned it into 2 parts (hda1 = 100 > meg, hda2 = 4.7gb). The whole disk is of ext3 file system type. This means, that /dev/hda is an ext3 filesystem ... if that's the case, then the filesystem spans all partiotions and all the logical volumes and if you were able to mount it, you will surely damage all the other stuff on you drive ... well, you can't : i think Linux doesn't allow mounting of overlapping devices/partitions, and if it does, the filesystem is surely already damaged ... > The hda2 is managed by using lvm2. But you said, all drive is ext3 - well, seems you mixed something up ;-) > Following is the partition sizes of the hda2 disk; > > hda2 VolGrp00 4.6 gb > > / VolGrp00/LogVol00 450 meg 35% used > /usr VolGrp00/LogVol04 1.9 gb 92% used > /usr/local VolGrp00/LogVol05 128 meg 25% used > /home VolGrp00/LogVol03 128 meg 60% used > /opt VolGrp00/LogVol02 128 meg 35% used > /var VolGrp00/LogVol07 450 meg 30 % used > swap VolGrp00/LogVol01 342 meg > > Here is sequence of steps that i have performed to inc/dec the partition > sizes; > > tried to increase /usr size by 400 meg. > > #lvresize -L +450 VolGrp00/LogVol04 > > when i display using the "lvdisplay VolGrp00/LogVOl04" i see 2.4 gig > allocated to this partition, but when i see it through "df -m /usr" it > hasn't changed. > > So, As per Jason's email i have done the below; > > #lvextend -L2.4G VolGrp00/LogVol04 So you resized the logical volumes, which is a kind of 'virtual partition', but the filesystem is still of the same size, it doesn't recognize the the 'device' or 'partition' it lives on has grown, so you have to tell him to (Jason Martin told you earlier, and pointed you to the LVM-HOWTO <http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/extendlv.html>). Instead of complainig you should have better read that doc, and you'd know what to do. > > But again this hasn't changed my "df -m /usr" output. > > I thought using LVM commands one should be able to take care of the inc/dec > of partitions sizes under a given VG. Why should i be using "fdisk" and > "e2fsadm" ? Well, if you'd read the e2fsadm man page before growing your lvol, you'd have known what to do. For an offline ext3 (don't know Fedora, propably they aleady use the online resize patches for ext3 ?), you can use resize2fs to grow your filesystem. > > If i have missed or done any thing wrong while resizing the partitions can > please provide me an example so that i could try it. Jason pointed you there in the first reply to your request, so Read That Fucking Manual ;-). Ciao Klaus -- Mit freundlichen Grüssen / best regards Klaus Strebel, Dipl.-Inform. (FH), mailto:klaus.strebel@gmx.net /"\ \ / ASCII RIBBON CAMPAIGN X AGAINST HTML MAIL / \ _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/ _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/