I did not see a method to cleanup the partitions. I had at one time used ccleaner for cleaning cache,Ĭookies, temporary files etc. I don't remember it having options to clean the partitions either hidden or labeled. If there is a way to see what is in the partitions and delete duplicate or unneeded files I would be interested in doing that as that may solve several partition sizing problems. There is a possible second partition sizing problem with the EFI partition. He thought the EFI partition size should be increased to fix the disappearing UEFI A HP technician ran though some diskpart switches and labeled one volume. It seems that there are three possible solutions:ġ) find a method to remove unneeded data/files from the partitionsĢ) back up all of the files and perform a third clean installģ) find a method to expand the partitions and preserve/secure all of the files (none are backed up) It seems so unusual to have these partition sizing issues in less than 30 days after a clean install. The filling of this partition was likely due to installing language, font or uefi files or folders. Rather than expand the size of the partition there were two solutions to remove files and increase the size of the needed space. This added the Y: drive letter to get to the system partitionģ) type: taskkill /im explorer.exe /f then click: enter This is for GPT partitions: explorer methodġ) click menu method for administrative or type win + x, a, alt yĢ) type: mountvol y: /s then click: enter Available: 6 MBĬommand line method or file explorer method: remove UEFI, or language, or font files Logs after the panther command displayed: Required: 15 MB. This should restart explorer in administrator mode.This article helps us to add a new disk to LVM ( Logical Volume Manager), the very best advantage of LVM over normal disk partitions is its support for “dynamic partitions” you can create and resize (expand or shrink) LVM volumes dynamically as we needed. There is no limit of the physical disk boundary in LVM logical volumes, so you can create a large LVM volume that spans across multiple smaller physical disks. If you want to add new disks to an existing LVM volume to expand its size, you can easily do it, and below is the procedure on how to do – Configuration This flexibility partitioning allows you to manage storage space more efficiently as disk usage change from time to time. I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes We needed to login as root user and, run fdisk to check whether the new disks which is attached are detected by Linux on your system. In the above command, we found 3 disks (/dev/sda, /dev/sdb, /dev/sdc). LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Meta% Move Log Cpy%Sync Convert The 1st disk (/dev/sda) is used by LVM, which shows partitions, while the other two (/dev/sdb and /dev/sdc) are not added to LVM, and do not have any partition on the disks.Ĭheck the availability of LVM volume groups and logical volumes with the ‘lvs’ command. In the example, one volume group (“lv”) exists, and two logical volumes (“root” and “swap”) are created in this volume group.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |