I recently added a new hard drive to my home system. I decided to use it to create an all-new bootable 'jessie' system. I created a partition table that I thought would be flexible: /dev/sdb1 / (root) {7G} /dev/sdb2 /swap {4GB} /dev/sdb3 /oldjunk {1G} /dev/sdb4 extended {remainder} /dev/sdb5 LVM {one large volume}
Most of the partitions- /usr, /home, /var, ... were in LVM2. What I've learned since then is that /usr seems to have special status, and probably shouldn't be part of LVM as certain tasks early in the boot process can't seem to access the interior of LVM. I've moved 'oldjunk' into the LVM, and want to expand this partition to become the new /usr. I've shrunk the LVM, but the freed space is all at the far end of the LVM. I have been unable to move it towards the end of the disk space, so I can expand /dev/sdb3. gparted, resize2fs, pvmove,... (running from a CDROM-based rescue disk) have all failed. Is there some method that I've overlooked? TIA! -Frank -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/m829cv$kfq$1...@dont-email.me