Expanding Capacity for an In-use EVS Disk
Scenarios
This section describes how to expand the capacity of an In-use EVS disk on the management console. The In-use status indicates that the disk has been attached to a server. You do not need to detach the disk when expanding an In-use disk.
Constraints
- Disk capacity can be expanded, but cannot be reduced.
- When expanding an In-use disk, the server attached with this disk must be in the Running or Stopped state.
- A shared disk in the In-use state cannot be expanded. To expand such a disk, you must detach it from all its servers, wait until its status changes to Available, and then expand its capacity. For more information, see Expanding Capacity for an Available EVS Disk.
- Only some server OSs support capacity expansion of In-use disks. For servers without such support, detach the disk and then expand its capacity. Otherwise, you may need to stop and then start the server after the expansion to make the additional space available.
    Perform the following operations to check whether your server OS supports capacity expansion of In-use disks: - Check your server image. Both public images and private images listed on the console support the capacity expansion of In-use disks.
      How to view: Log in to the management console. In the navigation pane on the left, click  and choose Compute > Image Management Service. On the Public Images tab, view the images of the ECS image type. and choose Compute > Image Management Service. On the Public Images tab, view the images of the ECS image type.
- If your server OS does not appear in the image list, check whether it is included in Table 1.
      If yes, you can expand the disk. Otherwise, you must detach the disk and then expand its capacity. For details, see Expanding Capacity for an Available EVS Disk. 
 Table 1 OSs that support the capacity expansion of In-use disks OS Version CentOS 8 8.0 64-bit or later CentOS 7 7.2 64-bit or later CentOS 6 6.5 64-bit or later Debian 8.5.0 64-bit or later Fedora 24 64-bit or later SUSE 12 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 64-bit or later SUSE 11 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP4 64-bit OpenSUSE 42.1 64-bit or later Oracle Linux Server release 7 7.2 64-bit or later Oracle Linux Server release 6 6.7 64-bit or later Ubuntu Server 14.04 64-bit or later Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 7.3 64-bit Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 6.8 64-bit EulerOS 2.2 64-bit or later Windows Server 2016 Windows Server 2016 R2 Enterprise 64-bit Windows Server 2012 Windows Server 2012 R2 Standard 64-bit Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise 64-bit 
- Check your server image. Both public images and private images listed on the console support the capacity expansion of In-use disks.
      
Procedure
- Log in to the management console.
- Under Storage, click Elastic Volume Service.
    
    The disk list page is displayed. 
- Choose a way to expand the disk by determining whether you want to check server information first.
    
    - If yes, perform the following procedure:
- If no, perform the following procedure:
      - In the disk list, locate the row that contains the target disk and click Expand Capacity in the Operation column.
        The expansion page is displayed. 
 
- In the disk list, locate the row that contains the target disk and click Expand Capacity in the Operation column.
        
 
- Set the New Capacity parameter and click Next.
- On the Details page, check the disk details.
    
    - Click Submit to start the expansion.
- Click Previous to change the settings.
 After the configuration is submitted, go back to the disk list page. 
- In the disk list, view the capacity of the target disk.
    
    When the disk status changes from Expanding to In-use and the disk capacity increases, the expansion has succeeded. 
- Log in to the server and extend the partition and file system after the disk has been expanded on the console, because previous steps only enlarge the disk space.
    
    The operations vary depending on the server OS. - In Windows, see Extending Disk Partitions and File Systems (Windows Server 2008).
- In Linux, see Partition and File System Extension Preparations (Linux).
 
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