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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Unable to reduce the size of volume group? Post 302587062 by pinga123 on Wednesday 4th of January 2012 04:20:06 AM
Old 01-04-2012
^^No its not the case i want to reduce the size of harddisk (I mean virtual harddisk for e.g vmdk file in vmware ,img file in Oracle VM).

I m using Oracle VM 2.2.

There is one more issue now.
I somehow managed to reduce the size of virtual disk from 200 to 150 but i dont see any changes.

Code:
# fdisk -l

Disk /dev/xvda: 13.3 GB, 13316728320 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 1619 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes

    Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/xvda1   *           1          12       96358+  83  Linux
/dev/xvda2              13        1357    10803712+  83  Linux
/dev/xvda3            1358        1619     2104515   82  Linux swap / Solaris

Disk /dev/xvdb: 161.0 GB, 161061273600 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 19581 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes

    Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/xvdb1               1       26108   209712478+   5  Extended
/dev/xvdb5               1       26108   209712447   8e  Linux LVM

Disk /dev/xvdb is changed from 161.0 GB from 200GB.
but still vgdisplay is showing 200GB????


Code:
# vgdisplay
  --- Volume group ---
  VG Name               vg00
  System ID
  Format                lvm2
  Metadata Areas        1
  Metadata Sequence No  6
  VG Access             read/write
  VG Status             resizable
  MAX LV                0
  Cur LV                2
  Open LV               2
  Max PV                0
  Cur PV                1
  Act PV                1
  VG Size               200.00 GB
  PE Size               4.00 MB
  Total PE              51199
  Alloc PE / Size       25600 / 100.00 GB
  Free  PE / Size       25599 / 100.00 GB
  VG UUID               NL5ws1-uaxQ-Wmtm-75GZ-WnQX-S7Vd-XeHJuS

---------- Post updated at 04:20 AM ---------- Previous update was at 04:14 AM ----------

Code:
# pvscan
  PV /dev/xvdb5   VG vg00   lvm2 [200.00 GB / 100.00 GB free]
  Total: 1 [200.00 GB] / in use: 1 [200.00 GB] / in no VG: 0 [0   ]

If you notice the above output /dev/xvdb5 is showing 200gb but actually it is 150 gb only
 

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DISKTAB(5)							File Formats Manual							DISKTAB(5)

NAME
disktab - disk description file SYNOPSIS
#include <disktab.h> DESCRIPTION
Disktab is a simple date base which describes disk geometries and disk partition characteristics. The format is patterned after the term- cap(5) terminal data base. Entries in disktab consist of a number of `:' separated fields. The first entry for each disk gives the names which are known for the disk, separated by `|' characters. The last name given should be a long name fully identifying the disk. The following list indicates the normal values stored for each disk entry. Name Type Description ns num Number of sectors per track nt num Number of tracks per cylinder nc num Total number of cylinders on the disk b0 str Filename of block zero primary bootstrap for device ba num Block size for partition `a' (bytes) bd num Block size for partition `d' (bytes) be num Block size for partition `e' (bytes) bf num Block size for partition `f' (bytes) bg num Block size for partition `g' (bytes) bh num Block size for partition `h' (bytes) fa num Fragment size for partition `a' (bytes) fd num Fragment size for partition `d' (bytes) fe num Fragment size for partition `e' (bytes) ff num Fragment size for partition `f' (bytes) fg num Fragment size for partition `g' (bytes) fh num Fragment size for partition `h' (bytes) pa num Size of partition `a' in sectors pb num Size of partition `b' in sectors pc num Size of partition `c' in sectors pd num Size of partition `d' in sectors pe num Size of partition `e' in sectors pf num Size of partition `f' in sectors pg num Size of partition `g' in sectors ph num Size of partition `h' in sectors se num Sector size in bytes (default 512) sf bool supports bad144-style bad sector forwarding so bool partition offsets in sectors ty str Type of disk (e.g. removable, winchester) Disktab entries may be automatically generated with the diskpart program. FILES
/etc/disktab SEE ALSO
newfs(8), diskpart(8), getdiskbyname(3) BUGS
This file shouldn't exist, the information should be stored on each disk pack. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 17, 1986 DISKTAB(5)
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