similar to: safest way to grow a LV under VMware ESXi5.5

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 10000 matches similar to: "safest way to grow a LV under VMware ESXi5.5"

2015 Oct 30
3
safest way to grow a LV under VMware ESXi5.5
On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 12:57 PM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: > Boris Epstein wrote: > > Hello all, > > > > In your view, what is the most reliable and safe way to increase an LV > > housing the root filesystem of a Centos 6 VM. I am thinking either > growing > > the virtual HD virtual device, or creating a new device and adding it as > a > > PV
2015 Oct 30
0
safest way to grow a LV under VMware ESXi5.5
Boris Epstein wrote: > On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 12:57 PM, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: > >> Boris Epstein wrote: > > >> > In your view, what is the most reliable and safe way to increase an LV >> > housing the root filesystem of a Centos 6 VM. I am thinking either >> > growing the virtual HD virtual device, or creating a new device and >>
2015 Oct 30
0
safest way to grow a LV under VMware ESXi5.5
Boris Epstein wrote: > Hello all, > > In your view, what is the most reliable and safe way to increase an LV > housing the root filesystem of a Centos 6 VM. I am thinking either growing > the virtual HD virtual device, or creating a new device and adding it as a > PV to the VM, or perhaps migrating the whole FS to a new virtual disk. > > Any input on how best to proceed
2015 Nov 03
1
safest way to grow a LV under VMware ESXi5.5
> > > Ok, that *is* small. I'd worry about a logfile suddenly growing massively, > and freezing your system. (Yes, it has happened here, and then there was > the time a summer student ran something, wouldn't be back until Monday... > and got a 20G logfile, which blew out the NFS-mounted home directory fs, > on which a number of other people resided... including *me*,
2015 Nov 04
2
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
It should work fine. What esxi version you are using? Eero 4.11.2015 6.27 ip. "Boris Epstein" <borepstein at gmail.com> kirjoitti: > > > > > > > > was the controller you added the virtual disk to an IDE or scsi > controller? > > > > -- > > public gpg key id: 1362BA1A > > > > _______________________________________________
2015 Aug 25
3
a peculiar LVM failure on CentOS 6 run as a VMware 5.5 guest
Hello listmates, I have encountered a rather peculiar situation. We have a Centos 6 VM (64 bit) running on a VMware vSphere 5.5 server. It was running just fine until one day I decided to reboot it and it just would not boot up. Effectively, dracut failed to initialize the LVM, much like under the scenario described here:
2015 Nov 04
2
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
Hello Julius, Thanks - but it doesn't seem to work. I installed sg3_utils and ran #scsi-rescan but that seemed to have done nothing for some reason. Cheers, Boris. On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 10:12 AM, Tnjulius <tnjulius at gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Boris, > Just rescan the scsi host. > #scsi-rescan #if you have sg3_utils package > #lsscsi > Or > #echo "- - -"
2015 Nov 04
4
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
Hello all, Is there a way to recognize a hot-plugged disk (i.e., to get the system to recognize it and build the appropriate /dev/sd* device for the new device) without a reboot? Thanks. Boris.
2015 Nov 04
3
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
On 11/04/2015 11:05 AM, Boris Epstein wrote: > On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 11:03 AM, Jonathan Billings <billings at negate.org> > wrote: > >> On Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 05:39:59PM +0200, Eero Volotinen wrote: >>> I think, this is possible with scsi disks >>> >>> >> http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/vmware-add-a-new-hard-disk-without-rebooting-guest.html
2015 Nov 06
1
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 8:23 AM, Tris Hoar <trishoar at bgfl.org> wrote: > On 04/11/2015 20:59, John R Pierce wrote: > >> On 11/4/2015 12:52 PM, Boris Epstein wrote: >> >>> I don't get this for some reason... not even sure why. ESXi's default >>> behaviour seems to be to allow hotplug, that does not seem to be >>> deactivated. I am just
2015 Nov 04
2
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
On 11/4/2015 12:52 PM, Boris Epstein wrote: > I don't get this for some reason... not even sure why. ESXi's default > behaviour seems to be to allow hotplug, that does not seem to be > deactivated. I am just not sure. Wonder if this could be the Centos 7 vs 6 > - perhaps that is what I ought to test for. what virtual SCSI controller type are you using for these VM's? Mine
2010 Jan 06
16
8-15 TB storage: any recommendations?
Hello everyone, This is not directly related to CentOS but still: we are trying to set up some storage servers to run under Linux - most likely CentOS. The storage volume would be in the range specified: 8-15 TB. Any recommendations as far as hardware? Thanks. Boris. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL:
2015 Nov 04
1
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
On 11/04/2015 10:27 AM, Mauricio Tavares wrote: > On Wed, Nov 4, 2015 at 10:22 AM, Boris Epstein <borepstein at gmail.com> wrote: >> Hello Julius, >> >> Thanks - but it doesn't seem to work. >> >> I installed sg3_utils and ran >> #scsi-rescan >> >> but that seemed to have done nothing for some reason. >> > Dumb question:
2015 Nov 04
2
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
Boris Epstein wrote: >> >> My turn for a dumb question: from not paying a lot of attention to this >> thread, the answer isn't clear to me: has the *host* recognized the >> disk? If not, the guest's not going to see it. > > IMO your question is not dumb at all. Unfortunately, I don't have an > answer to it. > > All I know is, you reboot the VM and
2015 Nov 04
2
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
Boris Epstein wrote: > Hello Julius, > > Thanks - but it doesn't seem to work. > > I installed sg3_utils and ran > #scsi-rescan > > but that seemed to have done nothing for some reason. > My turn for a dumb question: from not paying a lot of attention to this thread, the answer isn't clear to me: has the *host* recognized the disk? If not, the guest's not
2015 Mar 27
7
headless VirtualBox on Centos
Hello listmates, I am wondering if there is a set of scripts/utilities for automatically starting and running headless (no X11) VM's using VirtualBox omn a CentOS 6 server. VNC/RDP access to the VM's would be fine. Any help much appreciated. Cheers, Boris.
2015 Nov 04
2
getting a CentOS6 VM on VMware ESXi platform to recognize a new disk device
On Wed, Nov 04, 2015 at 05:39:59PM +0200, Eero Volotinen wrote: > I think, this is possible with scsi disks > > http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/vmware-add-a-new-hard-disk-without-rebooting-guest.html While I believe that this URL has technically correct advice, it's basically doing a subset of the commands in the scsi-rescan script in the sg3_utils package. I wonder if you need to be
2015 Jan 24
3
VLAN issue
Do you need the whole configuration? On the switch end, we have the relevant VLAN (VLAN 48) with the assigned IP address of 192.168.48.101 and the range of ports (Gi1/0/1 - Gi1/0/8) assigned to that VLAN. Seems - and acts - like a legitimate setup and works fine, except for this particular instance. Thanks. Boris. On Fri, Jan 23, 2015 at 8:54 PM, Dennis Jacobfeuerborn < dennisml at
2012 Sep 28
4
load balancer recommendation
Hello all, If I were looking for a load balancer to run on a Linux - specifically, CentOS - machine - what would you recommend? Thanks. Boris.
2013 Jan 19
7
load balancer recommendations
Hello all, The question is not necessarily CentOS-specific - but there are lots of bright people on here, and - quite possibly - the final implementation will be on CentOS hence I figured I'd ask it here. Here is the situation. I need to configure a Linux-based network load balancer (NLB) solution. The idea is this. Let us say I have a public facing load balancer machine with an public IP