Unmounting partitions
Unmounting partitions on used disks
To unmount a partition on a "Non ADDM Disk", log in to the appliance command line as the tideway user.
Check the mounted partitions. Enter:
[tideway@appliance01 ~]$ df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/sda7 965M 273M 643M 30% / /dev/sda1 99M 17M 78M 18% /boot /dev/sda6 1.5G 35M 1.4G 3% /home /dev/sda5 1.9G 36M 1.8G 2% /tmp /dev/sda8 38G 30G 6.7G 82% /usr /dev/sda3 2.4G 617M 1.7G 27% /var /dev/sdb2 1.9G 36M 1.8G 2% /mnt/old /dev/sdc2 1.2G 37M 1.1G 4% /mnt/addm/data tmpfs 1.5G 0 1.5G 0% /dev/shm [tideway@appliance01 ~]$
In this example
/dev/sdb2
is mounted on/mnt/old
./dev/sdb2
shows as a "Non ADDM Disk" in the disk configuration utility. It must be unmounted before it can be configured using the disk configuration utility where it is displayed as "New Disk".Unmount the
/mnt/old
partition. Enter:[tideway@appliance01 ~]$ sudo umount /mnt/old [tideway@appliance01 ~]$
The
/mnt/old
partition is unmounted.Check for enabled swap partitions. Enter:
[tideway@appliance01 ~]$ /sbin/swapon -s Filename Type Size Used Priority /dev/sda2 partition 4192956 0 -1 /dev/sdb1 partition 2928700 0 -2 [tideway@appliance01 ~]$
In this example
/dev/sdb1
is an enabled swap partition.Disable the
/dev/sdb1
swap partition. Enter:[tideway@appliance01 ~]$ sudo /sbin/swapoff /dev/sdb1 [tideway@appliance01 ~]$
This has an immediate effect on system resources.
Comments
Log in or register to comment.