On Mon, Mar 24, 2014 at 03:18:17PM +0000, Bonno Bloksma wrote: > Hi, > > I need to deploy a Debian virtual machine which will host an apache website > with a pictures database. That database will grow of course. ;-) > My idea is to have a VM with 2 disks. > Disk1 (8GB) > Has a 300MB primary partition, mountpoint /boot > Remaining disk space als LVM to be divided into 2GB /, 2GB swap and remaining > 3+GB /var, > Disk 2 is a 1TB (thin provisioned) disk all of which will be assigned as a > LVM partition with a logical volume /var/www > > Supposedly I can now easily grow /var/www when I need more space. Right? > Just to make sure I have things right...... > When I need more than the 1TB data I can extend the disk in my VMware > hypervisor to 1,5TB. Have Debian do a rescan of the disk (for instance via a > reboot of the machine) > After that I do a pvcreate on the new free diskspace, then add it to the > vgroup that holds the data and then add that data to the logical volume > holding /var/www > Right? > Of am I missing something? Is there a better / easier way? > Would adding another 1TB disk to the VM and adding that to the vgroup be a > better scenario? That imitates the "physical word scenario" where people add > an extra physical disk to a machine. Plenty of examples for that on the net. > I'm not sure which would be better, adding a new disk or extending the existing disk. But I figured I'd recommend the use of system-config-lvm -- it makes lvm operations pretty easy.
-Rob
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