[12:06] <BluesKaj> Hi all
[17:24] <charles_> Hello
[17:24] <charles_> I have a problem and I don't know what to do about it
[17:26] <charles_> I used Clonezilla to clone an NVMe (500GB) drive to a NVMe (2TB) drive.  When it finished, the new drive boots but its the same size as the original drive (500GB).  I used Partition Manager to expand the partition, which completed, but it still shows the smaller size.
[17:26] <charles_> What am I doing wrong?
[17:27] <charles_> The unallocated space is used up, but the drive is still 500GB?
[17:28] <charles_> The partition type: lvm2 pv
 Is the new nvk drivers,mesa drives available in kubuntu 24.04 beta release?
[17:52] <hateball> charles_: sounds like you've expanded the physical volume, but not the logical volume
[17:54] <hateball> I am not sure what GUI tools there are available to do this... if any
[18:00] <hateball> I am trying and failing to find any official documentation/how-to but this is a pretty good writeup on how to extend your LVM setup https://4sysops.com/archives/extending-lvm-space-in-ubuntu/
[18:01] <charles_> hateball: how do I expand the logical volume?
[18:06] <tomreyn> charles_: i'd day you need yet to grow the LVM2 physical volume, using pvresize.
[18:08] <charles_> pvresize?  I've got KDE, so I've tried expanding the volume with Partition Manager which showes the partition at 2TB
[18:08] <tomreyn> and once that is done, you may want to add more LVs, or resize (grow) an existing LV, using lvresize (using the parameter it provides to also resize the file system it contains).
[18:08] <charles_> So maybe I need to resize the partition and then the volume?
[18:08] <charles_> hm
[18:08] <tomreyn> just like hateball, i do not know whether kde provides graphical utilities for manipulating LVM2 metadata
[18:09] <charles_> OK, I appreciate your input!
[18:09] <charles_> I'll chase the LVM2 size for a bit
[18:10] <tomreyn> you'd need to 1. resize the partition (which effectively means deleting and recreating the partition / rewriting the partition table), 2. resize the LVM2 physical volume on this partition, 3. resize the LV containing your / or /home file system, as well as the filesystem.
[18:11] <tomreyn> i'm assuming a common, installer created, partition layout.
[18:11] <tomreyn> based on what you describe, step 1 is already done.
[19:17] <mike_> hello
[19:18] <bprompt> jello