I'm going to have to resize a partition (shrink it) to make room for more swap space. This is actually not too big of a deal, since we're not talking about a "system" partition (/, /var, /usr, etc), but one where an application resides. So I won't even have to go to "rescue" mode to do this. I can umount this thing live. (and since I'm working on it remotely, that's important).
But this system was not configured with LVM. So it occurs to me, that in dealing with a non-LVM partition(s), if the swap space I want to enlarge isn't next to the partition I shrink, my options would be to:
1. Manually "move" the other partitions, probably very risky
2. Simply make a second swap space that's next to the partition I shrink.
Have I got the right idea? === Al
I'm going to have to resize a partition (shrink it) to make room for more swap space. This is actually not too big of a deal, since we're not talking about a "system" partition (/, /var, /usr, etc), but one where an application resides. So I won't even have to go to "rescue" mode to do this. I can umount this thing live. (and since I'm working on it remotely, that's important).
But this system was not configured with LVM. So it occurs to me, that in dealing with a non-LVM partition(s), if the swap space I want to enlarge isn't next to the partition I shrink, my options would be to:
Manually "move" the other partitions, probably very risky
Simply make a second swap space that's next to the partition I
shrink.
Have I got the right idea? === Al
You could also create a swap file and put it in the partition you would be shrinking and use that instead of repartitioning.
Barry