You didn't mention any particulars, so this may or may not be helpful. Many distributions default to creating partitions using lvs. If the "df" command shows you devices with names like /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 they are using lvs. With lvs, you can dynamically expand a partition. If it looks like your machine is using lvs, check the output of the pvs, vgs, and lvs commands. If you are using lvs, and add a new disk to the system (likely /dev/sdb), then something like this (modified to suit your system): pvcreate /dev/sdb vgextend VolGroup00 /dev/sdb lvextend --size=+50G /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 and depending on your filesystem, something like resize2fs /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 or xfs_growfs / But - with the low price of disks these days, if you have room for two disks, it's often best to get two larger disks and mirror them. Hope that helps - cheers John On Sat, 2016/04/09 11:51:58AM -0400, phiscock@ee.ryerson.ca <phiscock@ee.ryerson.ca> wrote: | The time is coming when I will have to increase my hard drive storage. I | could backup, replace the current drive with something larger, and then | copy the backup to the new, larger drive. | | Or I could add a second SATA drive. Is it possible to configure that | second drive so that it seamlessly appears as an increase of size of the | first drive? | | Peter | | | -- | Peter Hiscocks | Syscomp Electronic Design Limited, Toronto | http://www.syscompdesign.com | USB Oscilloscope and Waveform Generator | 647-839-0325 | | --- | Talk Mailing List | talk@gtalug.org | https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk