Updated on 2025-08-04 GMT+08:00

Extending the Volume Group by Adding an EVS Disk

Scenarios

If the space of an LVM volume group no longer meets your needs, you can extend the volume group by adding new EVS disks, creating physical volumes, and adding the physical volumes to the volume group.

Figure 1 Example of extending a volume group

Procedure

  1. Create an EVS disk and attach it.

    1. Sign in to the EVS console.
    2. Click Buy Disk and create a disk.

      For details, see Purchasing an EVS Disk.

    3. In the disk list, locate the new disk and click Attach in the Operation column.
    4. On the displayed page, select the target ECS and select a device name from the drop-down list. Ensure that the EVS disk and ECS reside in the same AZ.

      Return to the disk list page. The status of the disk is Attaching, indicating that the disk is being attached to the ECS. When the disk status changes to In-use, the disk is successfully attached.

  2. Log in to the ECS as user root.
  3. Query the volume group size.

    vgdisplay

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    [root@ecs-lvmtest ~]# vgdisplay
      --- Volume group ---
      VG Name               vgdata
      System ID
      Format                lvm2
      Metadata Areas        2
      Metadata Sequence No  3
      VG Access             read/write
      VG Status             resizable
      MAX LV                0
      Cur LV                1
      Open LV               1
      Max PV                0
      Cur PV                2
      Act PV                2
      VG Size               19.99 GiB
      PE Size               4.00 MiB
      Total PE              5118
      Alloc PE / Size       4864 / 19.00 GiB
      Free  PE / Size       254 / 1016.00 MiB
      VG UUID               NLkZV7-hYYE-0w66-tnlt-Y6jL-Ik7S-76w4P6

    In the command output, the VG Size value indicates the volume group size, which is 19.99 GiB.

  4. Check and take note of the device names.

    fdisk -l | grep /dev/vd | grep -v vda

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    [root@ecs-lvmtest ~]# fdisk -l | grep /dev/vd | grep -v vda
    Disk /dev/vdb: 10.7 GB, 10737418240 bytes, 20971520 sectors
    Disk /dev/vdc: 10.7 GB, 10737418240 bytes, 20971520 sectors
    Disk /dev/vdd: 10.7 GB, 10737418240 bytes, 20971520 sectors

    In the command output, the new EVS disk has been attached to the ECS, and the device name is /dev/vdd.

  5. Create a physical volume using the new EVS disk.

    pvcreate <disk-device-name>

    Example command:

    pvcreate /dev/vdd

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    [root@ecs-lvmtest ~]# pvcreate /dev/vdd
      Physical volume "/dev/vdd" successfully created.

  6. Extend the volume group by adding the physical volume to the volume group.

    vgextend <volume-group-name> <physical-volume-name>

    Example command:

    vgextend vgdata /dev/vdd

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    [root@ecs-lvmtest ~]# vgextend vgdata /dev/vdd
      Volume group "vgdata" successfully extended

  7. Query details of the volume group.

    vgdisplay

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    [root@ecs-lvmtest ~]# vgdisplay
      --- Volume group ---
      VG Name               vgdata
      System ID
      Format                lvm2
      Metadata Areas        3
      Metadata Sequence No  4
      VG Access             read/write
      VG Status             resizable
      MAX LV                0
      Cur LV                1
      Open LV               1
      Max PV                0
      Cur PV                3
      Act PV                3
      VG Size               <29.99 GiB
      PE Size               4.00 MiB
      Total PE              7677
      Alloc PE / Size       4864 / 19.00 GiB
      Free  PE / Size       2813 / <10.99 GiB
      VG UUID               NLkZV7-hYYE-0w66-tnlt-Y6jL-Ik7S-76w4P6

    In the command output, the volume group size (VG Size) has increased by 10 GB.