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xfs_growfs(8)		    System Manager's Manual		 xfs_growfs(8)

NAME
       xfs_growfs, xfs_info - expand an	XFS filesystem

SYNOPSIS
       xfs_growfs  [  -dilnrx  ] [ -D size ] [ -e rtextsize ] [	-L size	] [ -m
       maxpct ]	[ -t mtab ] [ -R size ]	mount-point
       xfs_growfs -V

       xfs_info	[ -t mtab ] mount-point
       xfs_info	-V

DESCRIPTION
       xfs_growfs expands an existing XFS filesystem (see xfs(5)).  The	mount-
       point argument is the pathname of the directory where the filesystem is
       mounted.	The filesystem must be mounted to  be  grown  (see  mount(8)).
       The  existing contents of the filesystem	are undisturbed, and the added
       space becomes available for additional file storage.

       xfs_info	is equivalent to invoking xfs_growfs with the -n  option  (see
       discussion below).

OPTIONS
       -d | -D size
	      Specifies	 that  the  data  section  of the filesystem should be
	      grown. If	the -D size option is given, the data section is grown
	      to that size, otherwise the data section is grown	to the largest
	      size possible with the -d	 option.  The  size  is	 expressed  in
	      filesystem blocks.

       -e     Allows the real-time extent size to be specified.	In mkfs.xfs(8)
	      this is specified	with -r	extsize=nnnn.

       -i     The  new	log  is	 an  internal  log  (inside the	data section).
	      [NOTE: This option is not	implemented]

       -l | -L size
	      Specifies	that the log  section  of  the	filesystem  should  be
	      grown, shrunk, or	moved. If the -L size option is	given, the log
	      section is changed to be that size, if possible. The size	is ex-
	      pressed  in filesystem blocks.  The size of an internal log must
	      be smaller than the size of an allocation	group (this  value  is
	      printed at mkfs(8) time).	If neither -i nor -x is	given with -l,
	      the  log	continues to be	internal or external as	it was before.
	      [NOTE: These options are not implemented]

       -m     Specify a	new value for the maximum percentage of	space  in  the
	      filesystem  that can be allocated	as inodes. In mkfs.xfs(8) this
	      is specified with	-i maxpct=nn.

       -n     Specifies	that no	change to the filesystem is to be  made.   The
	      filesystem  geometry  is	printed, and argument checking is per-
	      formed, but no growth occurs.  See output	examples below.

       -r | -R size
	      Specifies	that the real-time section of the filesystem should be
	      grown. If	the -R size option is given, the real-time section  is
	      grown  to	that size, otherwise the real-time section is grown to
	      the largest size possible	with the -r option. The	 size  is  ex-
	      pressed  in  filesystem blocks.  The filesystem does not need to
	      have contained a real-time section before	the xfs_growfs	opera-
	      tion.

       -t     Specifies	an alternate mount table file (default is /proc/mounts
	      if  it  exists, else /etc/mtab).	This is	used when working with
	      filesystems mounted without writing to /etc/mtab file - refer to
	      mount(8) for further details.

       -V     Prints the version number	and exits. The mount-point argument is
	      not required with	-V.

       xfs_growfs is most often	used in	conjunction with logical volumes  (see
       md(4)  and lvm(8) on Linux).  However, it can also be used on a regular
       disk partition, for example if a	partition has been enlarged while  re-
       taining the same	starting block.

PRACTICAL USE
       Filesystems  normally  occupy all of the	space on the device where they
       reside. In order	to grow	a filesystem, it is necessary to provide added
       space for it to occupy. Therefore there must be at least	one spare  new
       disk  partition	available.  Adding the space is	often done through the
       use of a	logical	volume manager.

EXAMPLES
       Understanding xfs_info output.

       Suppose one has the following "xfs_info /dev/sda" output:

	 meta-data=/dev/sda	 isize=256    agcount=32, agsize=16777184 blks
		  =		 sectsz=512   attr=2
	 data	  =		 bsize=4096   blocks=536869888,	imaxpct=5
		  =		 sunit=32     swidth=128 blks
	 naming	  =version 2	 bsize=4096
	 log	  =internal	 bsize=4096   blocks=32768, version=2
		  =		 sectsz=512   sunit=32 blks, lazy-count=1
	 realtime =none		 extsz=524288 blocks=0,	rtextents=0

       Here, the data section of the output  indicates	"bsize=4096",  meaning
       the  data  block	 size for this filesystem is 4096 bytes.  This section
       also shows "sunit=32 swidth=128 blks", which means the stripe  unit  is
       32*4096	bytes =	128 kibibytes and the stripe width is 128*4096 bytes =
       512 kibibytes.  A single	stripe of this filesystem  therefore  consists
       of four stripe units (128 blocks	/ 32 blocks per	unit).

SEE ALSO
       mkfs.xfs(8), md(4), lvm(8), mount(8).

								 xfs_growfs(8)

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