Sounds to me like it's been done in a proper way, excluding the amount of filesystems.

But, the idea is so that you can just easily add space/filesystems where you need it when you need it. Rather then waste everything on one space.

So if you feel that you need more space, think about, should i create a new filesystem?
Do you see a possible need that the data you need to fit on that filesystem might need optimisations? A different filesystem? To be easily moved etc.

At any rate, you should not, never, no, just give it the "maximum" because you can.

- - -

So, my vote, create new filesystem, give it the estimated required amount of disk you feel is needed. Nothing more.


On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 9:34 AM, Eyal Edri <eedri@redhat.com> wrote:
i see current space is very limited:

Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00
                      9.9G  1.2G  8.2G  13% /
tmpfs                 7.8G     0  7.8G   0% /dev/shm
/dev/sda1             122M   43M   73M  38% /boot
/dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol01
                      9.9G  202M  9.2G   3% /var/log


should we expand the volume group now to it's maximum size for /var/lib/jenkins ($JENKINS_HOME)?

looks like it has over 250GB:

[eedri@alterway01 ~]$ sudo vgs
  VG         #PV #LV #SN Attr   VSize   VFree
  VolGroup00   1   3   0 wz--n- 278.62g 256.62g


eyal.
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/Alexander Rydekull