11-23-2016
1. chlv -u 18
2. chlv -x 75000
3. extendlv
4. chfs
The problem is, that you have upper bound = 16 in your LV configuration. It means your LV can be maximum on 16 physical volumes. It seems, that the disks, used by the LV, already full and either you must free up some space on these physical volumes by moving other logical volumes, or you change the LV configuration and allow it to span on the whole 18 physical volumes, you have in your volume group.
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LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
vgreduce
VGREDUCE(8) System Manager's Manual VGREDUCE(8)
NAME
vgreduce - reduce a volume group
SYNOPSIS
vgreduce [-a|--all] [-A|--autobackup y|n] [-d|--debug] [-h|-?|--help] [--removemissing] [-t|--test] [-v|--verbose] VolumeGroupName [Physi-
calVolumePath...]
DESCRIPTION
vgreduce allows you to remove one or more unused physical volumes from a volume group.
OPTIONS
See lvm for common options.
-a, --all
Removes all empty physical volumes if none are given on command line.
--removemissing
Removes all missing physical volumes from the volume group, if there are no logical volumes allocated on those. This resumes normal
operation of the volume group (new logical volumes may again be created, changed and so on).
If this is not possible (there are logical volumes referencing the missing physical volumes) and you cannot or do not want to remove
them manually, you can run this option with --force to have vgreduce remove any partial LVs.
Any logical volumes and dependent snapshots that were partly on the missing disks get removed completely. This includes those parts
that lie on disks that are still present.
If your logical volumes spanned several disks including the ones that are lost, you might want to try to salvage data first by acti-
vating your logical volumes with --partial as described in lvm (8).
SEE ALSO
lvm(8), vgextend(8)
Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.44-cvs (02-17-09) VGREDUCE(8)