Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat How to resize filesystem by resizing the LUN without impact to applications.? Post 302830251 by rveri on Monday 8th of July 2013 11:15:06 AM
Old 07-08-2013
If you use hp-ux you can resize the lun (i.e increase the lun size), and in os side you can use
Code:
vgmodify

to get the new size reflect and you can extend it, in hp-ux 11.31.
However the standard method and safe method would be :
- adding more lun to the VG.
- extend the vg with the lun/PVs.
- then extend the Filesystem online.(that means without unmounting the FS),

Hope this helps.
---
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

Filesystem resize (AIX 5.3)

Hi.. I have to resize a partition(filesystem). I mean reduce the size one particular partition and increase the size of another. What should I do?? Pls help Bala (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: balaji_prk
5 Replies

2. Solaris

VxVM filesystem resize

This is actually a VxVM question. I have a volume/filesystem spread over 4*146G disks. Now I want to shrink the filesystem - which I can do using vxresize. However, I want to shrink so that two of the four disks that the filesystem occupies are removed from the volume. Can I do that? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: blowtorch
3 Replies

3. Solaris

Making filesystem on presented lun

Hi, I am working on SunOS perlrate 5.10 Generic_127111-09 sun4v sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise-T5120. The server has an LSISAS3801E HBA card installed and is connected to a StorageTek 2530 array. I have made a volume on arrary using Common Array Manager. I can see the volume on server: ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: seanban
2 Replies

4. Solaris

Netapp filer LUN Resize. Commands to run on Solaris afterwards.

Hi, I need to increase a veritas filesystem I have currently mounted on a Solaris 10 server. We can resize the LUN on the NetApp filer no problem. What I need to know is what do I do next on the Solaris 10 server I have so that it will see the increase in size. Do I run 'devfsadm' to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gwhelan
3 Replies

5. SuSE

Resize Root Filesystem in SUSE Linux

Hello Experts, I am very new to unix environment. Root filesystem in one of our Linux boxes has almost reached 100%. is there a procedure/ way to resize the root filesystem. ****************************************************** ld8331:/ # df -h|more Filesystem Size Used... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ashok1784
2 Replies

6. AIX

Dynamic LUN resize

Anyone know how to resize a LUN (if SAN disk array has increased the LUN size) and have AIX LVM know about it? Or is it automatic? Equivalent vxvm command is something like: vxdisk resize size= (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: apra143
3 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

resize a filesystem in solaris 10

i am facing a problem, i would like to resize a file system called /pcard04 i am not useing any voulme manager and we have a NETAPP center storge. what i did is root@cms-dev # df -h | grep /pcard04 /dev/dsk/c4t60A9800043346C35636F2D6D4F354743d0s0 5.2G 4.0G 1.0G 80% /pcard04 then... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: q8devilish
1 Replies

8. Red Hat

Creating filesystem on new LUN

I'm new to linux and need information on how do I create a filesytem on a dedicated on LUN for RHEL 4 and 5? I want the filesystem to be a ext3 ---------- Post updated at 10:00 AM ---------- Previous update was at 08:56 AM ---------- Found the answer. This thread can be closed. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: soupbone38
1 Replies

9. Solaris

Resizing the Root Filesystem

Is it possible to increase the root filesystem size without reboot ?? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gowthamakanthan
4 Replies

10. AIX

Resize Lun

Good afternoon! Help with a solution I have AIX 7.1 works through vios I expanded Lun that it is necessary to make that aix saw this change and to expand the section lvm Sorry for my English (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: iformats
1 Replies
BIOCTL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						 BIOCTL(8)

NAME
bioctl -- RAID management interface SYNOPSIS
bioctl device command [arg [...]] DESCRIPTION
RAID device drivers which support management functionality can register their services with the bio(4) driver. bioctl then can be used to manage the RAID controller's properties. COMMANDS
The following commands are supported: show [disks | volumes] Without any argument by default bioctl will show information about all volumes and the logical disks used on them. If disks is specified, only information about physical disks will be shown. If volumes is specified, only information about the volumes will be shown. alarm [disable | enable | silence | test] Control the RAID card's alarm functionality, if supported. By default if no argument is specified, its current state will be shown. Optionally the disable, enable, silence, or test arguments may be specified to enable, disable, silence, or test the RAID card's alarm. blink start channel:target.lun | stop channel:target.lun Instruct the device at channel:target.lun to start or cease blinking, if there's ses(4) support in the enclosure. hotspare add channel:target.lun | remove channel:target.lun Create or remove a hot-spare drive at location channel:target.lun. passthru add DISKID channel:target.lun | remove channel:target.lun Create or remove a pass-through device. The DISKID argument specifies the disk that will be used for the new device, and it will be created at the location channel:target.lun. NOTE: Removing a pass-through device that has a mounted filesys- tem will lead to undefined behaviour. check start VOLID | stop VOLID Start or stop consistency volume check in the volume with index VOLID. NOTE: Not many RAID controllers support this fea- ture. create volume VOLID DISKIDs [SIZE] STRIPE RAID_LEVEL channel:target.lun Create a volume at index VOLID. The DISKIDs argument will specify the first and last disk, i.e.: 0-3 will use the disks 0, 1, 2, and 3. The SIZE argument is optional and may be specified if not all available disk space is wanted (also dependent of the RAID_LEVEL). The volume will have a stripe size defined in the STRIPE argument and it will be located at channel:target.lun. remove volume VOLID channel:target.lun Remove a volume at index VOLID and located at channel:target.lun. NOTE: Removing a RAID volume that has a mounted filesystem will lead to undefined behaviour. EXAMPLES
The following command, executed from the command line, shows the status of the volumes and its logical disks on the RAID controller: $ bioctl arcmsr0 show Volume Status Size Device/Label RAID Level Stripe ================================================================= 0 Building 468G sd0 ARC-1210-VOL#00 RAID 6 128KB 0% done 0:0 Online 234G 0:0.0 noencl <WDC WD2500YS-01SHB1 20.06C06> 0:1 Online 234G 0:1.0 noencl <WDC WD2500YS-01SHB1 20.06C06> 0:2 Online 234G 0:2.0 noencl <WDC WD2500YS-01SHB1 20.06C06> 0:3 Online 234G 0:3.0 noencl <WDC WD2500YS-01SHB1 20.06C06> To create a RAID 5 volume on the SCSI 0:15.0 location on the disks 0, 1, 2, and 3, with stripe size of 64Kb on the first volume ID, using all available free space on the disks: $ bioctl arcmsr0 create volume 0 0-3 64 5 0:15.0 To remove the volume 0 previously created at the SCSI 0:15.0 location: $ bioctl arcmsr0 remove volume 0 0:15.0 SEE ALSO
arcmsr(4), bio(4), cac(4), ciss(4), mfi(4) HISTORY
The bioctl command first appeared in OpenBSD 3.8, it was rewritten for NetBSD 5.0. AUTHORS
The bioctl interface was written by Marco Peereboom <marco@openbsd.org> and was rewritten with multiple features by Juan Romero Pardines <xtraeme@NetBSD.org>. BSD
March 16, 2008 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:04 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy