Thank you, that's it! virsh vol-list storage VM1 /dev/storage/VM1.img VM2 /dev/storage/VM2.img VM3 /dev/storage/VM3.img [dead] VM4 /dev/storage/VM4.img [dead] A last stupid question (I don't want to make a big mistake ...): Is virsh vol-delete VM3 virsh vol-delete VM4 the right command to get rid of the offending ones? Am 14.05.2020 um 19:10 schrieb Alvin Starr:> > virsh pool-list > you will get something like: > Name State Autostart > ----------------------------------------------- > default active yes > gnome-boxes active no > windows-openstack-image active yes > > then run virsh vol-list <your volume name> > > and you should be able to see the volumes that are still defined. > > > On 5/14/20 1:01 PM, Lothar Schilling wrote: >> virsh list --all >> >> 15 VM1 running >> 16 VM2 running >> >> ps ax | grep virt >> >> 14281 ? Sl 1170:30 /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm -name VM1 [...] >> 14384 ? Sl 376:45 /usr/libexec/qemu-kvm -name VM2 [...] >> >> Am 14.05.2020 um 17:45 schrieb Alvin Starr: >> >>> List your storage pool to insure that they have been deleted from >>> the pool. >>> If they are not there anymore then check to make sure nothing is >>> running that would have the VM images open. >>> >>> On 5/14/20 11:01 AM, Lothar Schilling wrote: >>>> Hi everybody, >>>> >>>> we have a Centos 6 host with libvirtd 0.10.2. It's holding a >>>> storage pool of about 3.5 TB with 4 VMs. I decided to rearrange >>>> them, so I destroyed and undefined two of them. But now I am not >>>> able to install a new one because virsh gives me an "not enough >>>> space left". Those two undefined VMs still linger around somehow >>>> occupying a lot of that storage. How can I get rid of them? >>>> >>>> Name: storage >>>> UUID: 8b25e085-38d8-5a09-f80f-a29150f25d42 >>>> Status: laufend >>>> Persistent: yes >>>> Automatischer Start: yes >>>> Kapazität: 3,54 TiB >>>> Zuordnung: 3,39 TiB >>>> Verfügbar: 155,27 GiB >>>> >>>> Thank you very much >>>> >>>> Lothar Schilling >> >> >