0

I have the following info using df:

 francis@playground  /var/log  sudo df -h
Filesystem                         Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev                               2.9G     0  2.9G   0% /dev
tmpfs                              595M   46M  549M   8% /run
/dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv   39G   39G     0 100% /
tmpfs                              3.0G     0  3.0G   0% /dev/shm
tmpfs                              5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock

My volume group is using /dev/sda3.

The thing is, I enlarged the disk of this VM to 81G (it was 40GH). Then, I used fdisk to delete /dev/sda3 and create a new partition with the new space. It worked:

Device       Start       End   Sectors Size Type
/dev/sda1     2048      4095      2048   1M BIOS boot
/dev/sda2     4096   2101247   2097152   1G Linux filesystem
/dev/sda3  2101248 171966430 169865183  81G Linux filesystem

Disk /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv: 38.97 GiB, 41821405184 bytes, 81682432 sectors Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes

However, I the volume group doesn't see the new space:

  --- Volume group ---
  VG Name               ubuntu-vg
  System ID
  Format                lvm2
  Metadata Areas        1
  Metadata Sequence No  6
  VG Access             read/write
  VG Status             resizable
  MAX LV                0
  Cur LV                1
  Open LV               1
  Max PV                0
  Cur PV                1
  Act PV                1
  VG Size               <38.95 GiB
  PE Size               4.00 MiB
  Total PE              9971
  Alloc PE / Size       9971 / <38.95 GiB
  Free  PE / Size       0 / 0

How can I get it to see the new, enlarged /dev/sda3?

1 Answers1

0

I guess I had to extend it as directed here: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/138090/cant-resize-a-partition-using-resize2fs

I needed to resize the physical volume first with pvresize. After that, the extra space became visible for the volume group/logical volume.