This is a text-only version of the following page on https://raymii.org: --- Title : KVM add disk image or swap image to virtual machine with virsh Author : Remy van Elst Date : 23-02-2014 URL : https://raymii.org/s/tutorials/KVM_add_disk_image_or_swap_image_to_virtual_machine_with_virsh.html Format : Markdown/HTML --- This tutorial shows you how to create and add a disk image to a KVM vm using virsh. This is useful when you for example want to expand the disk space of your virtual machine when it is using LVM, or if you want to add a swap disk to a virtual machine. Note that you can also create a swap file instead of a disk, however, this is an example for adding the disk.

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Read this tutorial to [learn how to set up a proper KVM hypervisor host: https://raymii.org/s/tutorials/KVM _with_ bonding _and_ VLAN _tagging_ setup _on_ Ubuntu_12.04.html][2] ### Requirements * Host running KVM and virsh * Virtual Machine to add disk to This was tested on a KVM hypervisor host running Ubuntu 12.04 LTS and a Ubuntu 13.10 virtual machine. The KVM hypervisor uses virsh for management. The example vm is named `example-vm` in virsh (domain). ### Create and attach the disk image Execute these steps on the KVM hypervisor host. cd to the folder where you store your disk images: cd /var/lib/libvirt/images/ Create the new disk image: qemu-img create -f raw example-vm-swap.img 1G We use `qemu-img` to `create` a new `raw` disk image with a size of 1 GB. Attach the disk to the example virtual machine using virsh: virsh attach-disk example-vm --source /var/lib/libvirt/images/example-vm-swap.img --target vdb --persistent We use `virsh` to attach the disk image `/var/lib/libvirt/images/example-vm- swap` as a `virtio` (`/dev/vdb`) disk to the domain (vm) `example-vm`. The `--persistent` option updates the domain xml file with an element for the newly attached disk. Note that if you already have a `/dev/vdb` disk you need to change `vdb` to a free device like `vdc` or `vdd`. ### Formatting the disk Execute these steps in your virtual machine. Reboot it so that the kernel sees the new disk: reboot Partition the drive with `cfdisk`. For our example we use filesystem type 82 (linux/linux swap): cfdisk /dev/vdb Format the disk as swap: mkswap /dev/vdb1 Or format it as ext4: mkfs.ext4 /dev/vdb1 Make the swap active: swapon /dev/vdb1 Or mount the partition: mkdir /mnt/new-disk mount /dev/vdb1 /mnt/new-disk Add to /etc/fstab for reboot persistence: /dev/vdb1 swap swap defaults 0 0 Or for the ext4 disk: /dev/vdb1 /mnt/new-disk ext4 defaults 0 0 That's it. You've now created, attached, formatted and mounted a new disk in your VM. ### Sources * [qemu-img man page][3] * [virsh-attach doc page][4] [1]: https://www.digitalocean.com/?refcode=7435ae6b8212 [2]: https://raymii.org/s/tutorials/KVM_with_bonding_and_VLAN_tagging_setup_on_Ubuntu_12.04.html [3]: http://linux.die.net/man/1/qemu-img [4]: http://builder.virt-tools.org/artifacts/libvirt-virshcmdref/html/sect-attach-disk.html --- License: All the text on this website is free as in freedom unless stated otherwise. This means you can use it in any way you want, you can copy it, change it the way you like and republish it, as long as you release the (modified) content under the same license to give others the same freedoms you've got and place my name and a link to this site with the article as source. This site uses Google Analytics for statistics and Google Adwords for advertisements. You are tracked and Google knows everything about you. Use an adblocker like ublock-origin if you don't want it. All the code on this website is licensed under the GNU GPL v3 license unless already licensed under a license which does not allows this form of licensing or if another license is stated on that page / in that software: This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . Just to be clear, the information on this website is for meant for educational purposes and you use it at your own risk. I do not take responsibility if you screw something up. Use common sense, do not 'rm -rf /' as root for example. If you have any questions then do not hesitate to contact me. See https://raymii.org/s/static/About.html for details.