On Wed, 28 Mar 2012 11:20:25 -0400
Allan Gottlieb <gottl...@nyu.edu> wrote:

> On Tue, Mar 27 2012, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> 
> > All you need is a decent amount of free disk space as you will
> > shuffle things around just like in that 15 pieces game.
> 
> This sounds encouraging.  My disk is less than half full so space is
> not an issue.
> 
> > Assuming / is the first (or second) partition on a disk:
> 
> Question. For me, / is actually /dev/sda5 (sda4 is the extended
> partition, the three in front are one dell's special, and two for
> windows, the latter only used when contacting dell for diagnostics).
> But I think this difference is not material.
> 
> > Measure how much data is on the file system.
> > Measure how much data is on the /usr file system.
> 
> Right
> 
> > Move partitions after / on the disk out of the way creating enough
> > free space to contain current / and /usr.
> 
> Question.  /dev/sda7 is LVM and that is used for /usr, /local, et al.
> How do I move an LVM partition?  I could make plain partitions and
> just copy /usr, /opt, et al., each to a separate partition.  Is that
> the way?
> 
> > Enlarge / partition, enlarge the file system on it, copy contents
> > of /usr there.
> 
> / is ext3, which I believe can be extended live.  Or do you recommend
> using a gentoo install CD (or equivalent)?
> 
> > Arrange the rest of your disk the way you want it (either with or
> > without LVM, both are easy enough to do).
> > Move the rest of your data back to it's final destination.
> > Delete any last remnants of the old /usr partition.
> 
> This part seems straight forward and not scary since I still would
> have the newly created and copied /usr, /opt, et al. partitions in
> case something goes wrong.
> 
> So the result would be
> 
> / (including /usr) on one partition (not LVM)
> /local, /opt et al.,  each as separate LVs on my recreated LVM
> partition
> 
> I believe this is one of the configurations others have adopted,
> which I consider a plus.  The other favored configuration is to keep
> the current partition scheme and use an initramfs via genkernel,
> dracut, or Neil's "in kernel config" soln.
> 
> I would suspect there are second order improvements such as moving
> /usr/portage and /usr/src to LVM with symlinks left behind in /usr,
> but I am now just concerned to see if I have the basic plan correct.
> Have I?

What you describe sounds ok, but I'd still hesitate to give a definite
answer without a little more data.

If you send over the output of 

df -h
du -shx for each partition you have
fdisk -l
pvdisplay
vgdisplay
lvdisplay

I'll be happy to go over the numbers and offer an opinion.

-- 
Alan McKinnnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com


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