On 2 Apr 2008, at 06:23, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
This is reason 1 of many that LVM should always be used.
lol!
Stroller.
--
gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
On Wednesday 02 April 2008, fei huang wrote:
> I think this probably only works in the case that the raw free space
> is phyically located beside the specified partition, imagine there
> are sda1, sda2 in sequence, when new space available, resize only
> possible to sda2, and with a disk with 4 pri
On Wed, Apr 2, 2008 at 2:13 AM, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Tuesday 01 April 2008, fei huang wrote:
> > thank you for the reply, actually I've heard about this solution, and
> > tried to use resize2fs to expand my filesystem (ext3), the problem is
> > I didn't know how to use it,
On Tuesday 01 April 2008, fei huang wrote:
> thank you for the reply, actually I've heard about this solution, and
> tried to use resize2fs to expand my filesystem (ext3), the problem is
> I didn't know how to use it, what does the "new size" parameter mean?
> the additional size or the new complet
On Tue, Apr 1, 2008 at 9:30 PM, William Kenworthy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> You have extended the partition, but the file system inside still ends
> at the old boundary. You will need to resize it - reiserfs can do it (I
> know because I do this a couple of times a year :), so I presume that
>
You have extended the partition, but the file system inside still ends
at the old boundary. You will need to resize it - reiserfs can do it (I
know because I do this a couple of times a year :), so I presume that
other, lesser file systems can also do it.
:)
BillK
On Tue, 2008-04-01 at 21:23 +0
I've got a mini gentoo in vmware for coding, and the "/" becomes full, I
used vmware-vdiskmanager and expaned the virutal disk with no problem,
however, the VM is totally unware of the new free space, neither "fdisk" nor
"parted", I've got no idea about this, almost all articles googled are
a
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