Removing Swap Space
Sometimes it can be prudent to reduce swap space after installation. For example, say you downgraded the amount of RAM in your system from 1 GB to 512 MB, but there is 2 GB of swap space still assigned. It might be advantageous to reduce the amount of swap space to 1 GB, since the larger 2 GB could be wasting disk space.
You have three options: remove an entire LVM2 logical volume used for swap, remove a swap file, or reduce swap space on an existing LVM2 logical volume.
To reduce an LVM2 swap logical volume (assuming The swap logical volume cannot be in use (no system locks or processes on the volume). The easiest way to achieve this is to boot your system in rescue mode. Refer to the Community Enterprise Linux Installation Guide for instructions on booting into rescue mode. When prompted to mount the file system, select Skip.
To remove a swap volume group (assuming To remove a swap file:
Reducing Swap on an LVM2 Logical Volume
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
is the volume you want to reduce):
swapoff -v /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
lvm lvreduce /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 -L -512M
mkswap /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
swapon -va
cat /proc/swaps
free
Removing an LVM2 Logical Volume for Swap
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
is the swap volume you want to remove):
swapoff -v /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
lvm lvremove /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02
/etc/fstab
file:
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol02 swap swap defaults 0 0
cat /proc/swaps
free
Removing a Swap File
/swapfile
is the swap file):swapoff -v /swapfile
/etc/fstab
file.
rm /swapfile