Hi,
Apologies for the late reply. Here is the result of the command:
qemu-img info staging.img image: staging.img file format: raw virtual size: 195G (209715200000 bytes) disk size: 196G
Yes. I am looking to reduce this size to 100G.
Thanks!
On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 7:35 AM, Thomas Smith theitsmith@gmail.com wrote:
I see. So we are looking to decrease the size, not increase it. (I also assumed we were talking about a disk image.)
OP, what are you using as the backing storage device? That is, are you using a disk image or a block device?
If you are using a disk image, what format is the image? QCOW2? RAW? Something else?
- Use "qemu-img info disk.img" to determine this. Execute this command on
the host.
If you are using a block device, knowledge of your file system structure (on the host) will be necessary.
On Sun, Feb 6, 2011 at 1:14 PM, Kenni Lund kenni@kelu.dk wrote:
2011/2/6 Thomas Smith theitsmith@gmail.com:
I am coming into this discussion a little late, so apologies if I ask
for
any information previously provided. I can help you with this, but I'll need to know the domU's file system layout to do so. Can you send the output of the following commands?
- fdisk -l
- mount
- df -h
And if you're using LVM:
- vgdisplay
- lvdisplay
KVM not Xen according to original post - and the partition in the guest has already been resized with gparted, so no reason to perform any more actions within the guest - only thing missing is to resize the qemu image on the host (I assume the OP is using regular file-based images in virt-manager as nothing has been mentioned about this, eg. not iSCSI, NFS, LVM, etc.).
Best regards Kenni _______________________________________________ CentOS-virt mailing list CentOS-virt@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-virt
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