add section under construction to a bunch of file; fetch contents from the white-paper
2.3 KiB
title | description | published | date | tags | editor | dateCreated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Resize an existing virtual disk | true | 2021-11-13T17:49:11.922Z | markdown | 2021-11-13T11:41:29.087Z |
Section under construction {.is-warning}
Resize a disk
Introduction
As per the software description : "qemu-img allows you to create, convert and modify images offline. It can handle all image formats supported by QEMU."
Expanding a new disk implies creating a new blank image of the desired size and "copy" the existing disk into this new bigger image using virt-resize.
In-place expansion is not supported, which mean than a copy of the disk to be expanded has to be created {.is-info}
Installation
- On Fedora-related distributions,
virt-resize
is provided by theguestfs-tools
package :
# dnf install guestfs-tools
Usage
- Create a new disk image
In-place expansion is not supported. A new disk of the desired size has to be created.
Use the following command to create phyllome_but_bigger.img
, a disk of 15 GiB
$ qemu-img create -f raw phyllome-bigger.img 15G
- Expand the root partition
This command only works if the root partition is located on vda3 and if the disk image filesystem uses EXT4.
{.is-warning}
This command bellow requires root privileges.
# virt-resize --expand /dev/vda3 phyllome.img phyllome_but_bigger.img
[ 0.0] Examining phyllome.img
**********
Summary of changes:
/dev/vda1: This partition will be left alone.
/dev/vda2: This partition will be left alone.
/dev/vda3: This partition will be resized from 5G to 15G. The
filesystem ext4 on /dev/vda3 will be expanded using the ‘resize2fs’
method.
**********
[ 2.1] Setting up initial partition table on phyllome-bigger.img
[ 12.9] Copying /dev/vda1
[ 13.1] Copying /dev/vda2
[ 13.4] Copying /dev/vda3
100% ⟦▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒⟧ 00:00
[ 38.3] Expanding /dev/vda3 using the ‘resize2fs’ method
Resize operation completed with no errors. Before deleting the old disk,
carefully check that the resized disk boots and works correctly.
- Inform your virtual machine to use the new disk
To-do