To increase disk size, first we need to see disk status;
df -h
If it’s a VM, make sure VM has allocated enough space before performing next actions.
Here’s the list of steps for a simple scenario where you have two partitions, /dev/sda1
is an ext4 partition the OS is booted from and /dev/sdb2
is swap. For this exercise we want to remove the swap partition an extend /dev/sda1
to the whole disk.
- As always, make sure you have a backup of your data – since we’re going to modify the partition table there’s a chance to lose all your data if you make a typo, for example.
- Run
sudo fdisk /dev/sda
- use
p
to list the partitions. Make note of the start cylinder of/dev/sda1
- use
d
to delete first the swap partition (2
) and then the/dev/sda1
partition. This is very scary but is actually harmless as the data is not written to the disk until you write the changes to the disk. - use
n
to create a new primary partition. Make sure its start cylinder is exactly the same as the old/dev/sda1
used to have. For the end cylinder agree with the default choice, which is to make the partition to span the whole disk. - use
a
to toggle the bootable flag on the new/dev/sda1
- review your changes, make a deep breath and use
w
to write the new partition table to disk. You’ll get a message telling that the kernel couldn’t re-read the partition table because the device is busy, but that’s ok.
- use
- Reboot with
sudo reboot
. When the system boots, you’ll have a smaller filesystem living inside a larger partition. - The next magic command is
resize2fs
. Runsudo resize2fs /dev/sda1
– this form will default to making the filesystem to take all available space on the partition.
That’s it, we’ve just resized a partition on which Ubuntu is installed, without booting from an external drive.
https://askubuntu.com/questions/116351/increase-partition-size-on-which-ubuntu-is-installed
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