[ale] mint 13 vm running out of storage space

Ron Frazier (ALE) atllinuxenthinfo at techstarship.com
Sun Oct 13 19:25:33 EDT 2013


Hi Mike T,

Thanks for the tips and info.  It seems there is a never ending chain of things to learn about hdd's and storage.  I haven't had a chance to play with LVM's.  It's one of many things on my ttd list.  I might be able to use the procedure you mentioned in the future.

In case I end up resizing the existing file system, can you or someone remind me of which file to edit to control how the file systems get initialized and mounted during boot.  I'll probably need to deactivate the swap and possibly change the device id if I create another virtual drive.  I cannot remember the name for that, but it's the long string of digits that identify a partition.

Sincerely,

Ron



"Michael B. Trausch" <mbt at naunetcorp.com> wrote:

>On 10/13/2013 06:15 PM, Ron Frazier (ALE) wrote:
>> The host computer intentionally doesn't have java on it for security
>reasons.  So I cannot run eclipse that way.
>
>There is no reason to do that.  That said, if that's what you want to
>do, the performance hit is all yours.  :-)
>
>> I was about to get it working, then I ran into this disk space
>problem.  The emulator won't boot.  I have about 4 hours invested in
>configuring this vm, so the redoing it route represents a substantial
>degree of pain.  I may try to delete the swap space and annex some of
>that digital real estate.
>
>It is a good idea to install "full-featured" VMs with a minimum of 25
>GB
>of space, all on a single / partition, and as I mentioned in my
>previous
>email, on top of LVM.  This gives you a great deal of flexibility
>should
>you need to grow later---in fact, it's one of the major reasons behind
>the existence of LVM.
>
>> You would think you could just click a button in virtualbox and
>change the hard drive limits.
>
>This is difficult for a number of reasons.
>
>When an operating system is installed on a hard disk---physical or
>virtual---it comes with partition tables and partitions on it.  For
>BIOS
>partitions, the partition table exists at the beginning of the disk. 
>For GPT-formatted disks, which should be used by modern systems, there
>are *two* copies of the partition table---one at the beginning of the
>disk and one at the end of the disk.
>
>Because this is a virtual *HDD* and *HDD*s cannot be resized, well,
>that's a reasonable limitation.
>
>What it boils down to is that you add disk space to a VM the same way
>you do to a real host:  Add a second drive and append it to your setup
>(if you're using LVM), or create a second drive and move the data over
>to it (hopefully putting LVM on that so that you have the ability to
>grow later).
>
>    --- Mike
>
>-- 
>Naunet Corporation Logo 	Michael B. Trausch
>
>President, *Naunet Corporation*
>? (678) 287-0693 x130 or (855) NAUNET-1 x130
>FAX: (678) 783-7843
>
>
>
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--

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Ron Frazier
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