LVM: Reduce an existing Logical Volume / Filesystem

LVM: Reduce an existing Logical Volume / Filesystem

# Tested on RHEL 5, 6 & 7

# *** It is not possible to reduce an xfs filesystem so this recipe is valid only for
#     ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystems.

# *** As of February 2016, new implementation of LVM didn't permit reducing a RAID volume:
#     "Unable to reduce RAID LV - operation not implemented."

# Just in case, I recommended to backup up all important data before reducing
a F.S.

MNTPT=/testmntpt
SIZE=128M               # Final size, in Mbytes. Without "M" to specify size in Bytes.

VG=`mount | awk '{if ( $3 == "'$MNTPT'" ) print$1}' | cut -f4 -d'/' | cut -f1 -d '-'`
LV=`mount | awk '{if ( $3 == "'$MNTPT'" ) print$1}' | cut -f4 -d'/' | cut -f2 -d '-'`



df -h $MNTPT
   Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
   /dev/mapper/testvg-testlv
                         788M   17M  731M   3% /testmntpt

lvs | grep $LV
   testlv   testvg mwi-aom-- 800.00m                     testlv_mlog   100.00


umount $MNTPT

# First, we check the file system. 'e2fsck' is used to check the ext2/ext3/ext4 family of
# file systems. '-f' option force checking even if the file system seems clean. This step
# is mandatory.

e2fsck -f /dev/$VG/$LV
   e2fsck 1.39 (29-May-2006)
   Pass 1: Checking inodes, blocks, and sizes
   Pass 2: Checking directory structure
   Pass 3: Checking directory connectivity
   Pass 4: Checking reference counts
   Pass 5: Checking group summary information
   /dev/testvg/testlv: 11/102592 files (9.1% non-contiguous), 7532/204800 blocks

# Then, we reduce the size of the filesystem

resize2fs -p /dev/$VG/$LV $SIZE
   resize2fs 1.39 (29-May-2006)
   Resizing the filesystem on /dev/testvg/testlv to 32768 (4k) blocks.
   Begin pass 3 (max = 7)
   Scanning inode table          XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
   The filesystem on /dev/testvg/testlv is now 32768 blocks long.


# And finally, we reduce the size of the logical volume

lvreduce -L $SIZE /dev/$VG/$LV
     WARNING: Reducing active logical volume to 128.00 MB
     THIS MAY DESTROY YOUR DATA (filesystem etc.)
   Do you really want to reduce testlv? [y/n]: y
     Reducing logical volume testlv to 128.00 MB
     Logical volume testlv successfully resized




lvs | grep $LV
  testlv   testvg mwi-ao 128.00M
                     testlv_mlog   100.00


mount  /dev/$VG/$LV  $MNTPT


df -h $MNTPT
Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/testvg-testlv
                      127M   17M  104M  14% /testmntpt
0 (0)
Article Rating (No Votes)
Rate this article
Attachments
There are no attachments for this article.
Comments
There are no comments for this article. Be the first to post a comment.
Full Name
Email Address
Security Code Security Code
Related Articles RSS Feed
BIND for the Small LAN
Viewed 3551 times since Sun, May 20, 2018
HowTo: Create CSR using OpenSSL Without Prompt (Non-Interactive)
Viewed 14275 times since Mon, Feb 18, 2019
Fake A Hollywood Hacker Screen in Linux Terminal linux FUN
Viewed 6444 times since Thu, Apr 18, 2019
VMWare tools free
Viewed 9201 times since Mon, Jul 16, 2018
How to accurately determine when the system was booted
Viewed 2434 times since Wed, Oct 3, 2018
tcpdump usage examples
Viewed 2437 times since Fri, Jul 27, 2018
RHEL: Adding a boot entry to GRUB/GRUB2 configuration
Viewed 4859 times since Sun, May 27, 2018
Top 10 darmowych i publicznych serwerów DNS
Viewed 2490 times since Tue, May 22, 2018
Easily Find Bugs In Shell Scripts With ShellCheck
Viewed 3450 times since Thu, Apr 18, 2019
12 Linux Rsync Options in Linux Explained
Viewed 12192 times since Wed, Oct 31, 2018