Update Workflows/Linux/Expand XFS Filesystem.md
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@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ w <ENTER> # (10)
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1. The first command needs you to enter the disk identifier. In most cases, this will likely be the first disk, such as `/dev/sda`. You do not need to indicate a partition number in this step, as you will be asked for one in a later step after identifying all of the partitions on this disk in the next command.
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1. The first command needs you to enter the disk identifier. In most cases, this will likely be the first disk, such as `/dev/sda`. You do not need to indicate a partition number in this step, as you will be asked for one in a later step after identifying all of the partitions on this disk in the next command.
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2. This will list all of the partitions on the disk.
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2. This will list all of the partitions on the disk.
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3. This will ask you for a partition number to delete. Generally this is the last partition number listed. In the example below, you would type `4` then press <ENTER> to schedule the deletion of the partition.
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3. This will ask you for a partition number to delete. Generally this is the last partition number listed. In the example below, you would type `4` then press ++ENTER++ to schedule the deletion of the partition.
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```
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```
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Command (? for help): p
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Command (? for help): p
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Disk /dev/sda: 2147483648 sectors, 1024.0 GiB
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Disk /dev/sda: 2147483648 sectors, 1024.0 GiB
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@ -57,10 +57,10 @@ w <ENTER> # (10)
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`First sector (34-2147483614, default = 19826688) or {+-}size{KMGTP}: 19826688`
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`First sector (34-2147483614, default = 19826688) or {+-}size{KMGTP}: 19826688`
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8. We just want to leave this as the default. In my example, it would look like this:
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8. We just want to leave this as the default. In my example, it would look like this:
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`Last sector (19826688-2147483614, default = 2147483614) or {+-}size{KMGTP}: 2147483614`
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`Last sector (19826688-2147483614, default = 2147483614) or {+-}size{KMGTP}: 2147483614`
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9. Just leave this as-is and press ENTER without entering any values. Assuming you are using XFS, as this guide was written for, the default "Linux Filesystem" is what you want for XFS.
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9. Just leave this as-is and press ++ENTER++ without entering any values. Assuming you are using XFS, as this guide was written for, the default "Linux Filesystem" is what you want for XFS.
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10. This will write the changes to the partition table making them reality instead of just staging the changes.
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10. This will write the changes to the partition table making them reality instead of just staging the changes.
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!!! warning "Point of No Return"
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!!! warning "Point of No Return"
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When you press `w <ENTER>` the changes will be written to disk, meaning there is no turning back unless you have full GuestVM backups with something like Veeam Backup & Replication. Be certain the first and last sector values are correctly configured before proceeding.
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When you press `w` then ++ENTER++ the changes will be written to disk, meaning there is no turning back unless you have full GuestVM backups with something like Veeam Backup & Replication. Be certain the first and last sector values are correctly configured before proceeding.
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## Detect the New Partition Sizes
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## Detect the New Partition Sizes
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At this point, the operating system wont detect the changes without a reboot, so we are going to force the operating system to detect them immediately with the following commands to avoid a reboot.
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At this point, the operating system wont detect the changes without a reboot, so we are going to force the operating system to detect them immediately with the following commands to avoid a reboot.
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