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    disk partitioning question  
Brian Kuebert


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01-07-06 10:48 PM

Hi Folks-

I installed Debian Sarge on my laptop (HP nc8000) and after learning a
whole lot about the process, recompiling the kernel many times, and
getting comfortable with the system I'm very happy with what I've got.
With one exception.  When I did the install I should have selected the
option to only have a single partition for my hard disk.  Instead I
chose the option that gave me a 8GB for / and created another partition
for /home (72GB or so).  My 8 GB partition is approaching full and what
I'd really like to do is just have a single large partition.  I've
googled the subject but it doesn't look like there are really any good
ways to do this - what I've found says you can resize partitions and
what I think I want to do is merge them.

If anyone has any advice / tips on the subject I would greatly
appreciate the input.

-Brian





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    Re: disk partitioning question  
SteveSch


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01-08-06 10:47 PM

On Sat, 07 Jan 2006 23:43:03 +0000, Brian Kuebert wrote:

> for /home (72GB or so).  My 8 GB partition is approaching full and what
> I'd really like to do is just have a single large partition.  I've

Hi Brian,

Sorry, I don't really have a solution just a question.

My / is 9.2G and right now I'm using 2.1G with 6.7G available. I actually
wish I had made it smaller.

What do you have that's taking soooo much space?

Here is a link that tells about how to tell where all the space is taken
up

http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/143

You might also want to search http://linuxquestions.org.

I'm guessing your /var or /tmp directory is filling up but that's just a
guess. There are people here that know much more than I do and will be
able to give what will probably be a better answer.

Steve





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    Re: disk partitioning question  
Michael Paoli


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01-09-06 07:52 AM

Brian Kuebert wrote:
> I installed Debian Sarge on my laptop (HP nc8000) and after learning a
...
> With one exception.  When I did the install I should have selected the
> option to only have a single partition for my hard disk.  Instead I
> chose the option that gave me a 8GB for / and created another partition
> for /home (72GB or so).  My 8 GB partition is approaching full and what
> I'd really like to do is just have a single large partition.  I've

One may find LVM to be a better long-term solution.  To get from where
you are to a solution that mostly or entirely uses LVM could take
several steps, but it certainly can be done as long as you have space
to backup the data, or have sufficient wiggle room (existing spare
space), it should be feasible to get to a more flexible structured
layout.

E.g. one could boot from recovery/install media (if/as needed), shrink
existing filesystems and partitions (in that order) as appropriate,
repartition - allocating the freed regions to LVM, create
filesystem(s), etc. under LVM on the LVM partition(s), and repeat as
required until one has obtained the desired structure.

E.g., my IBM ThinkPad T40p TYPE 2373-G1U partition table appears as
follows:
$ sudo sfdisk -uS -l /dev/hda

Disk /dev/hda: 4764 cylinders, 240 heads, 63 sectors/track
Units = sectors of 512 bytes, counting from 0

Device Boot    Start       End   #sectors  Id  System
/dev/hda1            63    619919     619857  83  Linux
/dev/hda2   *    619920  36363599   35743680   7  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/hda3      36363600  36635759     272160  1c  Hidden W95 FAT32
(LBA)
/dev/hda4      36635760  72031679   35395920  85  Linux extended
/dev/hda5      36650880  37255678     604799  83  Linux
/dev/hda6      37255680  41449967    4194288  82  Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/hda7      41459040  43636318    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda8      43636320  45813598    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda9      45813600  47990878    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda10     47990880  50168158    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda11     50168160  52345438    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda12     52345440  54522718    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda13     54522720  56699998    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda14     56700000  58877278    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda15     58877280  61054558    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda16     61054560  63231838    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda17     63231840  65409118    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda18     65409120  67586398    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda19     67586400  69763678    2177279  8e  Linux LVM
/dev/hda20     69763680  71940958    2177279  8e  Linux LVM

At present I've got 8 volumes (mostly or entirely used as filesystems)
under LVM.  It's much more flexible than partitioning - e.g. I can
typically create and grow them (as long as I still have room), all
live, without need to reboot or repartition.

If/when I want to arrange other partition(s) to use for some other
purpose, that's fairly flexible too - I can use pvmove, if/as needed to
shuffle stuff off one or more contiguous LVM partitions, remove them
from LVM and then change the applicable partition(s) as desired.

Though one can also have /boot, /, and swap under LVM, thus far I
haven't done so, but I have essentially all the other LINUX stuff
under LVM - here's a quick peek at much of what mount(8) shows me:
/dev/hda5 on / type ext3 (rw,errors=remount-ro)
/dev/hda1 on /boot type ext3
(ro,nosuid,nodev,noatime,errors=remount-ro)
/dev/vg00/lvol1 on /usr type reiserfs (ro,nodev,noatime)
/dev/vg00/lvol2 on /var type reiserfs (rw,nosuid,nodev)
/dev/vg00/lvol3 on /home type reiserfs (rw,nosuid,nodev)
/dev/vg00/lvol5 on /var/local/pub type reiserfs
(ro,nosuid,nodev,noatime)
/dev/vg00/lvol4 on /var/local/pub/iso/knoppix type reiserfs
(ro,nosuid,nodev,noatime)
/dev/vg00/lvol7 on /var/local/pub/iso/debian type reiserfs
(ro,nosuid,nodev,noatime)
And what df -k shows me for those filesystems:
Filesystem           1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda5               292828    102475    175234  37% /
/dev/hda1               300137     11629    273012   5% /boot
/dev/vg00/lvol1        3317652   2993756    323896  91% /usr
/dev/vg00/lvol2        1740740   1668852     71888  96% /var
/dev/vg00/lvol3         860128    811980     48148  95% /home
/dev/vg00/lvol5        3768200   3647968    120232  97% /var/local/pub
/dev/vg00/lvol4         749540    746320      3220 100%
/var/local/pub/iso/knoppix
/dev/vg00/lvol7         692196    688936      3260 100%
/var/local/pub/iso/debian

And yes, I'm running a Debian (mostly) Sarge system (it was mostly
Woody with a fair bit of Sarge when the presentation, noted by the URL
below, was given).

SEE ALSO
http://www.rawbw.com/~mp/linux/lvm/balug/
resize2fs(8)
resize_reiserfs(8)
mount(8)
parted(8)
fdisk(8)
sfdisk(8)
pvcreate(8)
vgcreate(8)
lvcreate(8)
...






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