Moving an Ubuntu Server installation to a new partition scheme

My previous post covered how to clone an Ubuntu Server installation to a new drive. That method covered cloning between identical drives and identical partition schemes. However, I have grown out of space on one of the file servers which have the following layout:

   Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/sda1   *        2048  2146435071  1073216512   83  Linux
/dev/sda2      2146435072  2147483647      524288    5  Extended
/dev/sda5      2146437120  2147479551      521216   82  Linux swap

The issue now is that if increase the size of the drive, I can not grow the filesystem since the swap is at the end of the disk. Fine, I figured I could remove the swap, grow the sda1 partition and then add the swap at the end again. I booted up the VM to a Live CD, launched GParted and tried the operation. This failed with the following output:

resize2fs: /dev/sda: The combination of flex_bg and 
!resize_inode features is not supported by resize2fs

After some searching and new attempts with a stand alone Gparted Live CD I still got the same results. Therefor, I figured I could try to copy the installation to a completely new partition layout.

Process

Setup the new filesystem

Add the new (destination) drive and the old (source) drive to the VM and boot it to a Live CD, preferable with the same version as the source OS. Setup the new drive as you like it to be. Here is the layout of my new (sda) and old drive (sdb):

   Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/sda1            2048     8390655     4194304   82  Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sda2         8390656  4294965247  2143287296   83  Linux
   Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
/dev/sdb1   *        2048  2145386495  1072692224   83  Linux
/dev/sdb2      2145388542  2147481599     1046529    5  Extended
/dev/sdb5      2145388544  2147481599     1046528   82  Linux swap / Solaris

Copy the installation to the new partition

For this I use the following rsync command:

$ sudo rsync -ahvxP /mnt/old/* /mnt/new/

Time to wait…

Fix fstab on the new drive

Identify the UUIDs of the partition:

$ ll /dev/disk/by-uuid/

5de1...9831 -> ../../sda1
f038...185d -> ../../sda2

Remember, we changed the partition layout so make sure you pick the right ones. In this example, sda1 is swap and sda2 is the ext4 filesystem.
Change the UUID in fstab:

$ sudo nano /mnt/new/etc/fstab

Look for the following lines and change the old UUIDs to the new ones. Once again, the comments in the file is from initial installation, do not get confused of them.

# / was on /dev/sda1 during installation
UUID=f038...158d / ext4 discard,errors=remount-ro 0 1

# swap was on /dev/sda5 during installation
UUID=5de1...5831 none swap sw 0 0

Save (CTRL+O) and exit (CTRL+X) nano.

Setup GRUB on the new drive

This is the same process as in the previous post, only the mount points are slightly different this time:

$ sudo mount --bind /dev /mnt/new/dev
$ sudo mount --bind /dev/pts /mnt/new/dev/pts
$ sudo mount --bind /proc /mnt/new/proc
$ sudo mount --bind /sys /mnt/new/sys
$ sudo chroot /mnt/new

With the help of chroot, the grub tools will operate on the virtual drive rather than the live session. Run the following commands to re-/install the boot loader again.

# grub-install /dev/sda
# grub-install --recheck /dev/sda
# update-grub

Lets exit the chroot and unmount the directories:

# exit
$ sudo umount /mnt/new/dev/pts
$ sudo umount /mnt/new/dev
$ sudo umount /mnt/new/proc
$ sudo umount /mnt/new/sys
$ sudo umount /mnt/new

Cleanup and finalizing

Everything should be done now to boot into the OS with the new drive. Shutdown the VM, remove the old virtual drive from the VM and remove the virtual Live CD. Fire up the VM in a console and verify that it is booting correctly.

As a friendly reminder – now that the VM has been removed and re-added to the inventory it is removed from the list of automatically started virtual machines. If you use it, head over to the host configuration – Software – Virtual Machine

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