WipeOut wrote:
Hi,
Something I haven't done before is reduce the number of volumes on my server.. Here is my current disk setup..
[root@server1 /]# df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-RootVol00 15G 1.5G 13G 11% / /dev/md0 190M 42M 139M 24% /boot /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-DataVol00 39G 16G 22G 42% /data none 157M 0 157M 0% /dev/shm /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-HomeVol00 77G 58G 15G 80% /home /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-VarVol00 16G 382M 15G 3% /var
Rather than try and reduce the size of the VarVol00 volume to make more unallocated space which I have heard is a little dangerous.. I would like to get rid of the VarVol00 and have the /var directory on the RootVol00 volume.. Then I can allocate some of the free space to HomeVol00 which is filling up..
So how do I do this?
Do I simply copy /var to /var2 and then edit the /etc/fstab file to remove the line that mounts VarVol00??
Then at what point and how do I rename /var2 to /var to get it all working as normal again?
Should this all be done in "single" mode?
It depends (as always). You need to unmount /var Perhaps this can be done in single user mode. If not (some services still running that have files open) than just use rescue mode. # something like this: rsync -av /var/ /var2 telinit s umount /var rmdir /var (it's probably empty) mv /var2 /var vi /etc/fstab telinit 3 (or 5)
To my understanding sometimes it is possible to resize live ext3 filesystems. (No experience myself). In that case you could simply do something like this:
resize2fs /dev/VolGroup00/VarVol00 2G lvreduce -L2G /dev/VolGroup00/VarVol00
I would still prefer to do this when the disk is unmounted and checked (e2fsck -f /dev/VolGroup00/VarVol00). But in that case you of course get rid of the partition VarVol00 anyhow.
Theo