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Partition the new disk space

 

As outlined in my previous images the disk in my example that I am working with is /dev/sda, so we use fdisk to create a new primary partition to make use of the new expanded disk space. Note that we do not have 4 primary partitions already in place, making this method possible.

 

fdisk /dev/sda

 

We are now using fdisk to create a new partition, the inputs I have entered in are shown below in bold. Note that you can press ‘m’ to get a full listing of the fdisk commands.

 

‘n’ was selected for adding a new partition.

 

WARNING: DOS-compatible mode is deprecated. It's strongly recommended to

switch off the mode (command 'c') and change display units to

sectors (command 'u').

 

Command (m for help): n

 

‘p’ is then selected as we are making a primary partition.

 

Command action

l logical (5 or over)

p primary partition (1-4)

p

 

As I already have /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 as shown in previous images, I have gone with using ‘3’ for this new partition which will be created as /dev/sda3

 

Partition number (1-4): 3

 

We just press enter twice above as by default the first and last cylinders of the unallocated space should be correct. After this the partition is then ready.

 

First cylinder (2611-3916, default 2611): "enter"

Using default value 2611

Last cylinder, +cylinders or +size{K,M,G} (2611-3916, default 3916): "enter"

Using default value 3916

 

‘t’ is selected to change to a partition’s system ID, in this case we change to ‘3’ which is the one we just created.

 

Command (m for help): t

Partition number (1-5): 3

 

The hex code ‘8e’ was entered as this is the code for a Linux LVM which is what we want this partition to be, as we will be joining it with the original /dev/sda5 Linux LVM.

 

Hex code (type L to list codes): 8e

Changed system type of partition 3 to 8e (Linux LVM)

 

‘w’ is used to write the table to disk and exit, basically all the changes that have been done will be saved and then you will be exited from fdisk.

 

Command (m for help): w

The partition table has been altered!

 

Calling ioctl() to re-read partition table.

 

WARNING: Re-reading the partition table failed with error 16: Device or resource busy.

The kernel still uses the old table. The new table will be used at

the next reboot or after you run partprobe(8) or kpartx(8)

Syncing disks.

 

You will see a warning which basically means in order to use the new table with the changes a system reboot is required. If you can not see the new partition using “fdisk -l” you may be able to run “partprobe -s” to rescan the partitions. In my test I did not require either of those things at this stage (I do a reboot later on), straight after pressing ‘w’ in fdisk I was able to see the new /dev/sda3 partition of my 10gb of space as displayed in the below image.

 

For CentOS/RHEL run a “partx -a /dev/sda3” to avoid rebooting later on.

 

fdisk

 

That’s all for partitioning, we now have a new partition which is making use of the previously unallocated disk space from the increase in VMware.

Increasing the logical volume

 

We use the pvcreate command which creates a physical volume for later use by the logical volume manager (LVM). In this case the physical volume will be our new /dev/sda3 partition.

 

root@Mega:~# pvcreate /dev/sda3

Device /dev/sda3 not found (or ignored by filtering).

 

In order to get around this you can either reboot, or use partprobe/partx as previously mentioned to avoid a reboot, as in this instance the disk does not appear to be there correctly despite showing in “fdisk -l”. After a reboot or partprobe/partx use the same command which will succeed.

 

root@Mega:~# pvcreate /dev/sda3

Physical volume "/dev/sda3" successfully created

 

Next we need to confirm the name of the current volume group using the vgdisplay command. The name will vary depending on your setup, for me it is the name of my test server. vgdisplay provides lots of information on the volume group, I have only shown the name and the current size of it for this example.

 

root@Mega:~# vgdisplay

--- Volume group ---

VG Name Mega

...

VG Size 19.76 GiB

 

Now we extend the ‘Mega’ volume group by adding in the physical volume of /dev/sda3 which we created using the pvcreate command earlier.

 

root@Mega:~# vgextend Mega /dev/sda3

Volume group "Mega" successfully extended

 

Using the pvscan command we scan all disks for physical volumes, this should confirm the original /dev/sda5 partition and the newly created physical volume /dev/sda3

 

root@Mega:~# pvscan

PV /dev/sda5 VG Mega lvm2 [19.76 GiB / 0 free]

PV /dev/sda3 VG Mega lvm2 [10.00 GiB / 10.00 GiB free]

Total: 2 [29.75 GiB] / in use: 2 [29.75 GiB] / in no VG: 0 [0 ]

 

Next we need to increase the logical volume (rather than the physical volume) which basically means we will be taking our original logical volume and extending it over our new partition/physical volume of /dev/sda3.

 

Firstly confirm the path of the logical volume using lvdisplay. This path name will vary depending on your setup.

 

root@Mega:~# lvdisplay

--- Logical volume ---

LV Path /dev/Mega/root

 

The logical volume is then extended using the lvextend command.

 

root@Mega:~# lvextend /dev/Mega/root /dev/sda3

Extending logical volume root to 28.90 GiB

Logical volume root successfully resized

 

There is then one final step which is to resize the file system so that it can take advantage of this additional space, this is done using the resize2fs command for ext based file systems. Note that this may take some time to complete, it took about 30 seconds for my additional space.

 

root@Mega:~# resize2fs /dev/Mega/root

resize2fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)

Filesystem at /dev/Mega/root is mounted on /; on-line resizing required

old desc_blocks = 2, new_desc_blocks = 2

Performing an on-line resize of /dev/Mega/root to 7576576 (4k) blocks.

The filesystem on /dev/Mega/root is now 7576576 blocks long.

 

Alternatively if you’re running the XFS file system (default as of RedHat/CentOS 7) you can grow the file system with “xfs_growfs /dev/Mega/root”.

 

That’s it, now with the ‘df’ command we can see that the total available disk space has been increased.

 

 

 

 

 

fdisk /dev/sda

reboot

pvcreate /dev/sda3

vgdisplay

vgextend centos_itb-s0090 /dev/sda3

pvscan

lvdisplay

lvextend /dev/centos_itb-s0090/home /dev/sda3

xfs_growfs /dev/centos_itb-s0090/home

df -h

lvrename /dev/centos_itb-s0090/home /dev/centos_itb-s0090/var

lvdisplay

df -h

 

vim /etc/fstab

/dev/mapper/centos_itb--s0090-var /var xfs defaults 0 0

Mount LVM partition from Imagefile

kpartx -av ITB-S0037.img

vgscan

ls -al /dev/mapper/

pvdisplay

vgchange -a y

ls -al /dev/mapper/

mount /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 /mnt/1/

mount -o loop root.img /mnt/2/

 

 

umount /mnt/1

umount /mnt/2

ll /dev/mapper/

vgchange -a n VolGroup00

kpartx -d /dev/loop0

losetup -d /dev/loop0