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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Safe way to shrink lvm vg_*-lv_swap partition and reclaim freed space on Linux? Post 303039335 by MadeInGermany on Tuesday 1st of October 2019 06:12:47 AM
Old 10-01-2019
Releasing a certain logical disk is easy: just swapoff it (that can take some time if swap is in use - the swapped blocks need to be shuffled into RAM).
Then you can lvresize it.
Then swapon -v it - it will see the new size.

To grow (and shrink) a filesystem, lvresize --resizefs --size ... seems to be most easy (but I have never used it).
Code:
man lvresize

and the --resizefs option points to
Code:
man fsadm

 

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

NAME
pvresize - resize a disk or partition in use by LVM2 SYNOPSIS
pvresize [-d|--debug] [-h|--help] [-t|--test] [-v|--verbose] [--version] [--setphysicalvolumesize size] PhysicalVolume [PhysicalVolume...] DESCRIPTION
pvresize resizes PhysicalVolume which may already be in a volume group and have active logical volumes allocated on it. OPTIONS
See lvm(8) for common options. --setphysicalvolumesize size Overrides the automatically-detected size of the PV. Use with care, or prior to reducing the physical size of the device. EXAMPLES
Expand the PV on /dev/sda1 after enlarging the partition with fdisk: pvresize /dev/sda1 Shrink the PV on /dev/sda1 prior to shrinking the partition with fdisk (ensure that the PV size is appropriate for your intended new parti- tion size): pvresize --setphysicalvolumesize 40G /dev/sda1 RESTRICTIONS
pvresize will refuse to shrink PhysicalVolume if it has allocated extents after where its new end would be. In the future, it should relo- cate these elsewhere in the volume group if there is sufficient free space, like pvmove does. pvresize won't currently work correctly on LVM1 volumes or PVs with extra metadata areas. SEE ALSO
lvm(8), pvmove(8), lvresize(8), fdisk(8) Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.105(2)-RHEL7 (2014-03-26) PVRESIZE(8)
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