Programming/Linux/Working with AWS instances
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Revision as of 22:34, 14 December 2023 by Admin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "=Elastic storage= Once you have changed the size of a volume using AWS's elastic storage, the changes won't be immediately reflected in <pre> df -h </pre> New volumes should be formatted to be accessible. Resized existing volumes should also be modified (resized) from inside the operating systems. A detailed discussion of these aspects can be found in * [|Making an Amazon EBS volume available for use on Linux] * [|Extending a Linux file system after resizing a volume]...")
Elastic storage
Once you have changed the size of a volume using AWS's elastic storage, the changes won't be immediately reflected in
df -h
New volumes should be formatted to be accessible. Resized existing volumes should also be modified (resized) from inside the operating systems. A detailed discussion of these aspects can be found in
- [|Making an Amazon EBS volume available for use on Linux]
- [|Extending a Linux file system after resizing a volume]
However, as a quick solution, run the following two commands, in the given order, after resizing a volume:
sudo growpart /dev/xvda 1 sudo resize2fs /dev/xvda1
The volume size changes should then be reflected in
df -h