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Operating Systems SCO Increase disk size on OS side on the fly Post 302984980 by goldenboy on Thursday 3rd of November 2016 10:14:23 AM
Old 11-03-2016
Entire case started with project for p2v migration of old SCO machines. One of the machines had entire directory tar'ed and then we had to deploy virtual one. OVF eventually was deployed, but after comparison of disk setup of Physical with Virtual I though that root partition should be extended, as physical one had 2GB of space more. That's why the question in that thread. Eventually I'v noticed that Physical one has only 4GB of space used so Virtual machine is fine, I just needed another partition, and that was easy task.

Then, having virtual machine deployed i started restoring backed up tar files and restoring them on virtual as it is. I was prepared for some configs to be modified (/etc/fstab, etc.). But it turned out that partition table got messed up, so I tried and tried. Eventually I'v got to the point I described, I've noticed that actually all important things are in /opt/{K,P}, so I've first tar'ed those directories on virtual machine, restored physical machine tars, and overwritten what I previously tared on virtual one. And that allowed me to boot the machine without one error during boot procedure. But I don't know if that's proper way to migrate (for sure not) and if all services that supposed to start started (I a assume no errors means something).

Maybe you already know better procedure for doing such migration in diy way, without use of enterprise software. If teams that will test it tell me that I doeasn't work as it should I'll start reading documentation for Backup/RestoreEDGE and other software that was posted here.

Still thanks for all help, and If you have more suggestions I will be glad to read them.

Last edited by goldenboy; 11-03-2016 at 11:16 AM.. Reason: typos
 

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QUOTAON(8)						      System Manager's Manual							QUOTAON(8)

NAME
quotaon, quotaoff - turn filesystem quotas on and off SYNOPSIS
quotaon [-v] filesystem ... quotaon [-v] -a quotaoff [-v] filesystem ... quotaoff [-v] -a DESCRIPTION
Quotaon announces to the system that disk quotas should be enabled on one or more filesystems. Quotaoff announces to the system that the specified filesystems should have any disk quotas diskquotas turned off. The filesystems specified must have entries in /etc/fstab and be mounted. Quotaon expects each filesystem to have a quota file named quotas located at the root of the associated file system. These defaults may be overridden in /etc/fstab. Available options: -a If the -a flag is supplied in place of any filesystem names, quotaon/quotaoff will enable/disable all the filesystems indi- cated in /etc/fstab to be read-write with disk quotas. -v Causes quotaon and quotaoff to print a message for each filesystem where quotas are turned on or off. FILES
quotas at the filesystem root with user quotas /etc/fstab filesystem table SEE ALSO
quota(1), setquota(2), fstab(5), edquota(8), quotacheck(8), repquota(8) HISTORY
The quotaon command appeared in 4.2BSD. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution January 21, 1996 QUOTAON(8)
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