Reputation: 1369
So in AWS, we have two EC2 EBS volumes, and they are both attached to the same EC2 instance.
If I look at the details for the volumes in AWS, I see this:
Let's call this one "Volume A":
"VolumeId": "vol-0e173xxxad8",
"Device": "/dev/sda1",
"InstanceId": "i-01a15xxx66a",
"State": "attached",
And let's call this one "Volume B":
"VolumeId": "vol-07ebxxx09e",
"Device": "/dev/sdb",
"InstanceId": "i-01a15xxx66a",
"State": "attached",
But on the instance itself, when I run these commands, the devices have completely different names...
ubuntu@ip-xxx-xx-xx-xxx:/$ df -hT
Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev devtmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /dev
tmpfs tmpfs 13G 752K 13G 1% /run
/dev/nvme1n1p1 ext4 7.7G 3.1G 4.7G 40% /
tmpfs tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /dev/shm
tmpfs tmpfs 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
tmpfs tmpfs 63G 0 63G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/loop0 squashfs 29M 29M 0 100% /snap/amazon-ssm-agent/2012
/dev/loop1 squashfs 29M 29M 0 100% /snap/amazon-ssm-agent/2896
/dev/loop2 squashfs 56M 56M 0 100% /snap/core18/1885
/dev/loop3 squashfs 98M 98M 0 100% /snap/core/9993
/dev/loop4 squashfs 97M 97M 0 100% /snap/core/9804
tmpfs tmpfs 13G 0 13G 0% /run/user/1000
ubuntu@ip-xxx-xx-xx-xxx:/$ lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
loop0 7:0 0 28.1M 1 loop /snap/amazon-ssm-agent/2012
loop1 7:1 0 28.2M 1 loop /snap/amazon-ssm-agent/2896
loop2 7:2 0 55.3M 1 loop /snap/core18/1885
loop3 7:3 0 97.1M 1 loop /snap/core/9993
loop4 7:4 0 96.6M 1 loop /snap/core/9804
nvme0n1 259:0 0 1000G 0 disk
nvme1n1 259:1 0 1000G 0 disk
└─nvme1n1p1 259:2 0 8G 0 part /
So what confuses me here is the devices are named completely differently in AWS than on the instance itself. Which volume is "/dev/nvme1n1p1"? How can I be sure? Where can I look to see these values actually map together somehow?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 3019
Reputation: 17655
EBS volumes are exposed as NVMe block devices on instances built on the Nitro System.
The device names are /dev/nvme0n1
, /dev/nvme1n1
, and so on.
So just imagine in your case /dev/nvme0n1
being equivalent to /dev/sda
and e.g. /dev/nvme0n1p2 (which is your / root partition) being equivalent to something like /dev/sda2.
run below command to know volume id of your nvme1n1p1
sudo /sbin/ebsnvme-id /dev/nvme1n1
in your case may be
[ec2-user ~]$ sudo /sbin/ebsnvme-id /dev/nvme1n1p1
output -
Volume ID: vol-01324f611e2463981
/dev/sdf
Upvotes: 3