Difference between revisions of "Adding a new drive from the command line"

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* <code>sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/'''sdb1'''</code>
* <code>sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/'''sdb1'''</code>
<span style="color: rgb(132, 63, 161);" >'''A Little Note:''' You can actually format the whole drive without partitioning it.</span>
<span style="color: rgb(132, 63, 161);" >'''A Little Note:''' You can actually format the whole drive without partitioning it.</span>
= Label the drive =


= Mount the drive =
= Mount the drive =

Revision as of 11:53, 7 April 2023

Proven on:
Logo Debian.png
11 (bullseye) (This includes LMDE5, Proxmox, OMV...)
A little note about typographic conventions you'll see here

Connect the drive

Either plug the drive into the machine with the power off or hot-swap it in if possible...

(Yes...  Adding a new drive to an ESXi or Proxmox VM is just like hot-swapping.)

Determine the device

  • sudo fdisk -l
fdisk -l example

fdisk is a dialog-driven program for creation and manipulation of partition tables.

  • man fdisk
    • for details...

You'll see a fair bit of output.

  • Blocks starting with Disk /dev/sd_: indicate drives and provide details about them.
  • Blocks starting with Device Boot Start... indicate partitions on those drives.
  • In the case of an unformatted new drive, you'll see a Disk block that's not followed by a Device block. Make note of it's name (/dev/sd_)
  • In our example, it's /dev/sdb

If your drive is previously used

  • sudo fdisk /dev/sdb
    • g
      • To create a new empty GPT partition table
    • w
      • To write the partition table to the drive.

Partition the drive

For now, we'll just make the new drive one partition.

Fdisk example 1.png
  • sudo fdisk /dev/sdb
    • n
      • To create a new partition
    • p
      • To make it a primary partition
    • Hit Enter
      • 3 times to pick the default values.
    • w
      • To write the partition table to the drive.

Format the drive

Of course, the drive needs to be formatted before you can use it.

Mkfs example 0.png

We'll go with Ext4 for now.

  • sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb1

A Little Note: You can actually format the whole drive without partitioning it.

Label the drive

Mount the drive

Create a mount point for the drive:

  • sudo mkdir /MOUNTPOINT

& mount it for use:

  • sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /MOUNTPOINT

Make the mounting automatic

  • sudo vi /etc/fstab

& add the line:

/dev/sdb1      /MOUNTPOINT      ext4   defaults      0      0

Some Links