A I had done the first part throught gparted there were only two commands
left for running:

lvextend -L +1G /dev/mapper/j0003--vg-root
resize2fs /dev/mapper/j0003--vg-root

Thank you.


2016-11-19 14:15 GMT+01:00 Dan Ritter <d...@randomstring.org>:

> On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 11:28:57AM +0100, Jorge Expósito wrote:
> > I've extended the virtual drive on VMware from 7 Gb to 8 Gb.
> > Rebooted my guest Debian with Gparted and extended the drive with the 1
> > extra Gb successfuly.
> > Rebooting again and starting my virtualized Debian I make a  fdisk -l and
> > it seems that the extra Gb is actually there.
> >
> > Device     Boot  Start      End  Sectors  Size Id Type
> > /dev/sda1  *      2048   499711   497664  243M 83 Linux
> > /dev/sda2       501758 16777215 16275458  7,8G  5 Extended
> > /dev/sda5       501760 16777215 16275456  7,8G 8e Linux LVM
>
> These are the underlying partitions...
>
> > But if I run df -h it seems that it is not.
> >
> > S.ficheros     Tamaño Usados  Disp Uso% Montado en
> > /dev/dm-0        6,3G   4,8G  1,1G  82% /
> > udev              10M      0   10M   0% /dev
> > tmpfs            202M   5,6M  196M   3% /run
> > tmpfs            504M   4,0K  504M   1% /dev/shm
> > tmpfs            5,0M      0  5,0M   0% /run/lock
> > tmpfs            504M      0  504M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
> > /dev/sda1        236M    32M  192M  15% /boot
>
> and these are the filesystems built inside those partitions.
>
> > What's the problem?
>
> The next step is to resize the filesystem to fill the partition.
>
> Each filesystem type has a specific tool to do that; for
> ext2/3/4, the tool is resize2fs. Some filesystem types are not
> resizable.
>
> Use `mount` to figure out what filesystem types are in use.
>
> -dsr-
>



-- 
-- Jorge --

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