When installing Debian, or a derivative OS such as crunchbang, you may have opted to separate out your partitions/logical volumes to manage your disk space more finely.

I opted to do this.  My partitions were set up thus:

$ sudo lvs 

 LV     VG   Attr     LSize   
 home   t420 -wi-ao-- 438.10g 
 root   t420 -wi-ao-- 332.00m 
 swap_1 t420 -wi-ao-- 15.50g     <-- way too big!
 tmp    t420 -wi-ao-- 369.00m    <-- way too small!
 usr    t420 -wi-ao-- 8.38g 
 var    t420 -wi-ao-- 2.79g

This was not working for me.  Doing backups using the easy backintime was proving difficult, as backintime relied on more /tmp space than I had.

As I rarely touched swap space, I figured that 15.5G was probably a bit large for my needs.  Thankfully, nabbing swap space and reusing it for the filesystem is easy as pie – and all achieved with no downtime.

Here’s the sequence I typed into a terminal.  First, turn off swap:

$ sudo swapoff -a

Then resize the swap volume:

$ sudo lvresize -L 8GB /dev/t420/swap_1

Now re-format the swap partition before using it again:

$ sudo mkswap /dev/t420/swap_1

Then turn swap availability back on:

$ sudo swapon -a

And finally, resize the /tmp partition on-the-fly:

$ sudo lvextend -L +1G -r -v /dev/t420/tmp

Because the LVM tools have semi-awareness with respect to filesystems, the resizing of /tmp (using the -r switch) was achieved on-line – no need to log out, reboot or anything else.  The verbose (-v) switch allowed me to see everything that was happening.

The new partition sizing is:

 LV     VG   Attr     LSize 
 home   t420 -wi-ao-- 438.10g 
 root   t420 -wi-ao-- 332.00m 
 swap_1 t420 -wi-ao-- 8.00g 
 tmp    t420 -wi-ao-- 1.37g 
 usr    t420 -wi-ao-- 8.38g 
 var    t420 -wi-ao-- 2.79g

I also have 6.5G spare on the hard drive now, in case it’s needed by another logical volume.

LVM rocks for easy filesystem management!  Try it out!

 

2 thoughts on “Resizing a LVM partition on-the-fly in CrunchBang / Debian

Have your say!

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)