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The following procedure is applicable to All-in-One DPOD appliance mode installation only. In non-appliance installations, the operating system and file system configuration is under the responsibility of the customer, so the following procedure can only be used as an example, since the actual existing file system configuration might not match the one created in the appliance mode installation. For details about the Store space in a Cell environment, see Setup a Cell Environment. |
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DPOD's Big Data Store is located on a dedicated mount point. Occasionally, the disk space allocated for the Store needs to be increased. Reasons for that include an increase in TPS, or a requirement to retain history for longer periods of time. Follow the steps below to increase the Store space.
It is possible to extend Note: You may choose between extending the existing data disk (option 1), or add an adding additional one disks (option 2). Choose the option below that is suitable for your environment.
Option 1: Extending the Existing Data Disk
Note: fdisk utility supports disks up to 2TB each. To increase the Store space above 2TB, add
Since DPOD uses fdisk utility for creating partitions in the data disk during installation, it only supports extending the existing data disk (option 1) up to 2TB. However, additional disks (option 2) instead of extending a single data disk.can be larger than 2TB.
Option 1: Extending the Existing Data Disk
Extending the Disk in a Physical Server
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Verify the current size of mount point /data:
Code Block language bash theme RDark df -h /data
The system output should resemble the following:
Verify the new disk size:
Code Block language bash theme RDark fdisk -l | grep /dev/sdc
The system output should resemble the following:
Use fdisk to create a new partition for the new size:
Code Block language bash theme RDark fdisk /dev/sdc
- Press p to print the partition table to identify the number of partitions:
If this is the first time the disk is extended, you should only see sdc1. If this is a subsequent extension - you will see additional sdcX listed (e.g. sdc2 for the second extension). - Press n to create a new primary partition.
- Press p for primary.
- When the system prompts for a partition number, enter the next number depending on the output of the partition table print.
If this is the first extension and you see only one row of output - enter 2. If this is the second disk extension then the partition number will be 3, and so on. - Press Enter twice
- Press t to change the system's partition ID.
- Press 2 to select the newly created partition (Remember: if this is a subsequent disk extension - the number will be 3 or higher).
- Type 8e to change the Hex Code of the partition for Linux LVM.
Press w to write the changes to the partition table.
Note The following warning is valid, the system reboot will fix the issue:
“WARNING: Re-reading the partition table failed with error 16: Device or resource busy. The kernel still uses the old table. The new table will be used at the next reboot or after you run partprobe(8) or kpartx(8)”
- Press p to print the partition table to identify the number of partitions:
Reboot the system:
Code Block language bash theme RDark reboot
When the system is available again, ensure the new partition is available:
Code Block language bash theme RDark fdisk -l | grep /dev/sdc
The system output should resemble the following (note the new sdcX added):
- Stop the application by running app-util.sh and selecting option 2 (stop all).
Create a new LVM Physical Volume (PV)Configure the new partition:
Note If the new partition is not sdc2, substitute sdc2 for the right qualifier in all the following commands
Code Block language bash theme RDark pvcreate /dev/sdc2
Extend the LVM Volume Group (VG):
Code Block language bash theme RDark vgextend vg_data /dev/sdc2
Extend the LVM Logical Volume (LV):
Code Block language bash theme RDark lvextend -l +100%FREE /dev/vg_data/lv_data
Identify the /data file system type (for CentOS 7.2+ based appliances the type is xfs):
Code Block language bash theme RDark cat /etc/fstab | grep /data
The system output should resemble the following:
Resize the file system. Select the correct command below for your file system type:
Code Block language bash theme RDark title For ext4 resize2fs /dev/vg_data/lv_data
Code Block language bash theme RDark title For xfs xfs_growfs /dev/vg_data/lv_data
The system output should resemble the following:
Display the new size of the /data mount point:
Code Block language bash theme RDark df -h /data
Update the Store configuration file
(see below:
Code Block language bash theme RDark /app/scripts/update_store_allocation.sh -l 4
- Start all services using app-util.sh and selecting option 1 (start all).
Option 2: Adding an Additional Data Disk
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Verify the current size of the /data mount point:
Code Block language bash theme RDark df -h /data
The system output should resemble the following:
Verify Identify the new disk size:
Code Block language bash theme RDark fdisklsblk -l[ |Note: grep /dev/sdd
The system output should resemble the following:
Use fdisk to create a new partition for the new size:
Code Block language bash theme RDark fdisk /dev/sdd
- Press p to print the partition table and ensure there are no existing partitions.
- Press n to create a new primary partition.
- Press p for primary.
- Press 1 for the partition number
- Press Enter twice
- Press t to change the system's partition ID.
- Type 8e to change the Hex Code of the partition for Linux LVM. Press w to write the changes to the partition table.
When the system is available again, ensure the new partition is created:
Code Block language bash theme RDark fdisk -l | grep /dev/sdd
The system output should resemble the following:
Example output below is filtered to show only sdd disk information, but should include many more entries of sda, sdb and sdc disks ] NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT sdd 8:32 0 200G 0 disk
Stop the application by running app-util.sh and selecting option 2 (stop all)
Create a new LVM Physical Volume (PV):Execute the following commands. Replace the name of data disk if it is different in your environment.
Code Block language bash theme RDark pvcreate -ff /dev/sdd1
Extend the LVM Volume Group (VG):
Code Block language bash theme RDark sdd vgextend vg_data /dev/sdd1
Extend the LVM logical volume (LV):
Code Block language bash theme RDark sdd lvextend -l +100%FREE /dev/vg_data/lv_data
Identify the /data file system type (for CentOS 7.2+ based appliances the type is xfs):
Code Block language bash theme RDark cat /etc/fstab | grep /data
The system output should resemble the following:
Resize the file system. Select the correct command below for your file system type:
Code Block language bash theme RDark title For ext4 resize2fs /dev/vg_data/lv_data
Code Block language bash theme RDark title For xfs xfs_growfs /dev/vg_data/lv_data
The system output should resemble the following:Display the new size of the /data mount point:
Code Block language bash theme RDark df -h /data
The system output should resemble the following:
Execute the following script to update Update
the Store configuration file (see below).
Reboot the system:
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reboot |
Update the Store Configuration File
the Store configuration file
with the new file system size:
Code Block language bash theme RDark /app/scripts/update_store_allocation.sh -l
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- Start the application by running
- all services using app-util.sh and selecting option 1 (start all).