-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:42
-msgid "virt-resize - Resize a virtual machine disk"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:46
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" virt-resize [--resize /dev/sdaN=[+/-]<size>[%]]\n"
-" [--expand /dev/sdaN] [--shrink /dev/sdaN]\n"
-" [--ignore /dev/sdaN] [--delete /dev/sdaN] [...] indisk outdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:52
-msgid ""
-"Virt-resize is a tool which can resize a virtual machine disk, making it "
-"larger or smaller overall, and resizing or deleting any partitions contained "
-"within."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:56
-msgid ""
-"Virt-resize B<cannot> resize disk images in-place. Virt-resize B<should "
-"not> be used on live virtual machines - for consistent results, shut the "
-"virtual machine down before resizing it."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:60
-msgid ""
-"If you are not familiar with the associated tools: L<virt-filesystems(1)> "
-"and L<virt-df(1)>, we recommend you go and read those manual pages first."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:66
-msgid ""
-"Copy C<olddisk> to C<newdisk>, extending one of the guest's partitions to "
-"fill the extra 5GB of space."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:69
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" truncate -r olddisk newdisk; truncate -s +5G newdisk\n"
-" virt-filesystems --long -h --all -a olddisk\n"
-" # Note \"/dev/sda2\" is a partition inside the \"olddisk\" file.\n"
-" virt-resize --expand /dev/sda2 olddisk newdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:74
-msgid ""
-"As above, but make the /boot partition 200MB bigger, while giving the "
-"remaining space to /dev/sda2:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:77
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" virt-resize --resize /dev/sda1=+200M --expand /dev/sda2 olddisk newdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:79
-msgid "As above, but the output format will be uncompressed qcow2:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:81
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" qemu-img create -f qcow2 newdisk.qcow2 15G\n"
-" virt-resize --expand /dev/sda2 olddisk newdisk.qcow2\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head1
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:84
-msgid "DETAILED USAGE"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:86
-msgid "EXPANDING A VIRTUAL MACHINE DISK"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:90
-msgid "1. Shut down the virtual machine"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:92
-msgid "2. Locate input disk image"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:94
-msgid ""
-"Locate the input disk image (ie. the file or device on the host containing "
-"the guest's disk). If the guest is managed by libvirt, you can use C<virsh "
-"dumpxml> like this to find the disk image name:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:98
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virsh dumpxml guestname | xpath /domain/devices/disk/source\n"
-" Found 1 nodes:\n"
-" -- NODE --\n"
-" <source dev=\"/dev/vg/lv_guest\" />\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:103
-msgid "3. Look at current sizing"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:105
-msgid "Use L<virt-filesystems(1)> to display the current partitions and sizes:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:108
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virt-filesystems --long --parts --blkdevs -h -a /dev/vg/lv_guest\n"
-" Name Type Size Parent\n"
-" /dev/sda1 partition 101M /dev/sda\n"
-" /dev/sda2 partition 7.9G /dev/sda\n"
-" /dev/sda device 8.0G -\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:114
-msgid ""
-"(This example is a virtual machine with an 8 GB disk which we would like to "
-"expand up to 10 GB)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:117
-msgid "4. Create output disk"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:119
-msgid ""
-"Virt-resize cannot do in-place disk modifications. You have to have space "
-"to store the resized output disk."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:122
-msgid "To store the resized disk image in a file, create a file of a suitable size:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:125
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # rm -f outdisk\n"
-" # truncate -s 10G outdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:128
-msgid "Or use L<lvcreate(1)> to create a logical volume:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:130
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # lvcreate -L 10G -n lv_name vg_name\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:132
-msgid "Or use L<virsh(1)> vol-create-as to create a libvirt storage volume:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:134
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virsh pool-list\n"
-" # virsh vol-create-as poolname newvol 10G\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:137
-msgid "5. Resize"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:139
-msgid ""
-"virt-resize takes two mandatory parameters, the input disk (eg. device or "
-"file) and the output disk. The output disk is the one created in the "
-"previous step."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:143
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virt-resize indisk outdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:145
-msgid ""
-"This command just copies disk image C<indisk> to disk image C<outdisk> "
-"I<without> resizing or changing any existing partitions. If C<outdisk> is "
-"larger, then an extra, empty partition is created at the end of the disk "
-"covering the extra space. If C<outdisk> is smaller, then it will give an "
-"error."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:151
-msgid ""
-"More realistically you'd want to expand existing partitions in the disk "
-"image by passing extra options (for the full list see the L</OPTIONS> "
-"section below)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:155
-msgid ""
-"L</--expand> is the most useful option. It expands the named partition "
-"within the disk to fill any extra space:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:158
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virt-resize --expand /dev/sda2 indisk outdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:160
-msgid ""
-"(In this case, an extra partition is I<not> created at the end of the disk, "
-"because there will be no unused space)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:163
-msgid ""
-"L</--resize> is the other commonly used option. The following would "
-"increase the size of /dev/sda1 by 200M, and expand /dev/sda2 to fill the "
-"rest of the available space:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:167
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virt-resize --resize /dev/sda1=+200M --expand /dev/sda2 \\\n"
-" indisk outdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:170
-msgid ""
-"If the expanded partition in the image contains a filesystem or LVM PV, then "
-"if virt-resize knows how, it will resize the contents, the equivalent of "
-"calling a command such as L<pvresize(8)>, L<resize2fs(8)> or "
-"L<ntfsresize(8)>. However virt-resize does not know how to resize some "
-"filesystems, so you would have to online resize them after booting the "
-"guest."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:177
-msgid "Other options are covered below."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:179
-msgid "6. Test"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:181
-msgid "Thoroughly test the new disk image I<before> discarding the old one."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:183
-msgid "If you are using libvirt, edit the XML to point at the new disk:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:185
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virsh edit guestname\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:187
-msgid ""
-"Change E<lt>source ...E<gt>, see "
-"L<http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsDisks>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:190
-msgid "Then start up the domain with the new, resized disk:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:192
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" # virsh start guestname\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:194
-msgid ""
-"and check that it still works. See also the L</NOTES> section below for "
-"additional information."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:197
-msgid "7. Resize LVs etc inside the guest"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:199
-msgid "(This can also be done offline using L<guestfish(1)>)"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:201
-msgid ""
-"Once the guest has booted you should see the new space available, at least "
-"for filesystems that virt-resize knows how to resize, and for PVs. The user "
-"may need to resize LVs inside PVs, and also resize filesystem types that "
-"virt-resize does not know how to expand."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:208
-msgid "SHRINKING A VIRTUAL MACHINE DISK"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:210
-msgid ""
-"Shrinking is somewhat more complex than expanding, and only an overview is "
-"given here."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:213
-msgid ""
-"Firstly virt-resize will not attempt to shrink any partition content (PVs, "
-"filesystems). The user has to shrink content before passing the disk image "
-"to virt-resize, and virt-resize will check that the content has been shrunk "
-"properly."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:218
-msgid "(Shrinking can also be done offline using L<guestfish(1)>)"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:220
-msgid ""
-"After shrinking PVs and filesystems, shut down the guest, and proceed with "
-"steps 3 and 4 above to allocate a new disk image."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:223
-msgid "Then run virt-resize with any of the C<--shrink> and/or C<--resize> options."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:226
-msgid "IGNORING OR DELETING PARTITIONS"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:228
-msgid ""
-"virt-resize also gives a convenient way to ignore or delete partitions when "
-"copying from the input disk to the output disk. Ignoring a partition speeds "
-"up the copy where you don't care about the existing contents of a "
-"partition. Deleting a partition removes it completely, but note that it "
-"also renumbers any partitions after the one which is deleted, which can "
-"leave some guests unbootable."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:235
-msgid "QCOW2 AND NON-SPARSE RAW FORMATS"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:237
-msgid ""
-"If the input disk is in qcow2 format, then you may prefer that the output is "
-"in qcow2 format as well. Alternately, virt-resize can convert the format on "
-"the fly. The output format is simply determined by the format of the empty "
-"output container that you provide. Thus to create qcow2 output, use:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:243
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" qemu-img create [-c] -f qcow2 outdisk [size]\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:245
-msgid "instead of the truncate command (use C<-c> for a compressed disk)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:247
-msgid "Similarly, to get non-sparse raw output use:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:249
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" fallocate -l size outdisk\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:251
-msgid ""
-"(on older systems that don't have the L<fallocate(1)> command use C<dd "
-"if=/dev/zero of=outdisk bs=1M count=..>)"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:264
-msgid "Display help."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:278
-msgid "B<--resize part=size>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:280
-msgid ""
-"Resize the named partition (expanding or shrinking it) so that it has the "
-"given size."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:283
-msgid ""
-"C<size> can be expressed as an absolute number followed by b/K/M/G/T/P/E to "
-"mean bytes, Kilobytes, Megabytes, Gigabytes, Terabytes, Petabytes or "
-"Exabytes; or as a percentage of the current size; or as a relative number or "
-"percentage. For example:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:288
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda2=10G\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:290
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda4=90%\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:292
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda2=+1G\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:294
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda2=-200M\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:296
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda1=+128K\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:298
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda1=+10%\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:300
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" --resize /dev/sda1=-10%\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:302
-msgid ""
-"You can increase the size of any partition. Virt-resize will expand the "
-"direct content of the partition if it knows how (see C<--expand> below)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:306
-msgid ""
-"You can only I<decrease> the size of partitions that contain filesystems or "
-"PVs which have already been shrunk. Virt-resize will check this has been "
-"done before proceeding, or else will print an error (see also "
-"C<--resize-force>)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:311 ../tools/virt-resize.pl:403 ../tools/virt-resize.pl:420
-msgid "You can give this option multiple times."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:317
-msgid "B<--resize-force part=size>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:319
-msgid ""
-"This is the same as C<--resize> except that it will let you decrease the "
-"size of any partition. Generally this means you will lose any data which "
-"was at the end of the partition you shrink, but you may not care about that "
-"(eg. if shrinking an unused partition, or if you can easily recreate it such "
-"as a swap partition)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:325
-msgid "See also the C<--ignore> option."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:331
-msgid "B<--expand part>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:333
-msgid ""
-"Expand the named partition so it uses up all extra space (space left over "
-"after any other resize changes that you request have been done)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:336
-msgid ""
-"If virt-resize knows how, it will expand the direct content of the "
-"partition. For example, if the partition is an LVM PV, it will expand the "
-"PV to fit (like calling L<pvresize(8)>). Virt-resize leaves any other "
-"content it doesn't know about alone."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:341
-msgid "Currently virt-resize can resize:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:347
-msgid ""
-"ext2, ext3 and ext4 filesystems when they are contained directly inside a "
-"partition."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:352
-msgid ""
-"NTFS filesystems contained directly in a partition, if libguestfs was "
-"compiled with support for NTFS."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:355
-msgid ""
-"The filesystem must have been shut down consistently last time it was used. "
-"Additionally, L<ntfsresize(8)> marks the resized filesystem as requiring a "
-"consistency check, so at the first boot after resizing Windows will check "
-"the disk."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:362
-msgid ""
-"LVM PVs (physical volumes). virt-resize does not usually resize anything "
-"inside the PV, but see the C<--LV-expand> option. The user could also "
-"resize LVs as desired after boot."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:368 ../tools/virt-resize.pl:390
-msgid "Note that you cannot use C<--expand> and C<--shrink> together."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:374
-msgid "B<--shrink part>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:376
-msgid ""
-"Shrink the named partition until the overall disk image fits in the "
-"destination. The named partition B<must> contain a filesystem or PV which "
-"has already been shrunk using another tool (eg. L<guestfish(1)> or other "
-"online tools). Virt-resize will check this and give an error if it has not "
-"been done."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:382
-msgid ""
-"The amount by which the overall disk must be shrunk (after carrying out all "
-"other operations requested by the user) is called the \"deficit\". For "
-"example, a straight copy (assume no other operations) from a 5GB disk image "
-"to a 4GB disk image results in a 1GB deficit. In this case, virt-resize "
-"would give an error unless the user specified a partition to shrink and that "
-"partition had more than a gigabyte of free space."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:396
-msgid "B<--ignore part>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:398
-msgid ""
-"Ignore the named partition. Effectively this means the partition is "
-"allocated on the destination disk, but the content is not copied across from "
-"the source disk. The content of the partition will be blank (all zero "
-"bytes)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:409
-msgid "B<--delete part>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:411
-msgid ""
-"Delete the named partition. It would be more accurate to describe this as "
-"\"don't copy it over\", since virt-resize doesn't do in-place changes and "
-"the original disk image is left intact."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:415
-msgid ""
-"Note that when you delete a partition, then anything contained in the "
-"partition is also deleted. Furthermore, this causes any partitions that "
-"come after to be I<renumbered>, which can easily make your guest unbootable."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:426
-msgid "B<--LV-expand logvol>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:428
-msgid ""
-"This takes the logical volume and, as a final step, expands it to fill all "
-"the space available in its volume group. A typical usage, assuming a Linux "
-"guest with a single PV C</dev/sda2> and a root device called "
-"C</dev/vg_guest/lv_root> would be:"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:433
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" virt-resize indisk outdisk \\\n"
-" --expand /dev/sda2 --LV-expand /dev/vg_guest/lv_root\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:436
-msgid ""
-"This would first expand the partition (and PV), and then expand the root "
-"device to fill the extra space in the PV."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:439
-msgid ""
-"The contents of the LV are also resized if virt-resize knows how to do "
-"that. You can stop virt-resize from trying to expand the content by using "
-"the option C<--no-expand-content>."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:443
-msgid "Use L<virt-filesystems(1)> to list the filesystems in the guest."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:446
-msgid ""
-"You can give this option multiple times, I<but> it doesn't make sense to do "
-"this unless the logical volumes you specify are all in different volume "
-"groups."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:454
-msgid "B<--no-copy-boot-loader>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:456
-msgid ""
-"By default, virt-resize copies over some sectors at the start of the disk "
-"(up to the beginning of the first partition). Commonly these sectors "
-"contain the Master Boot Record (MBR) and the boot loader, and are required "
-"in order for the guest to boot correctly."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:461
-msgid ""
-"If you specify this flag, then this initial copy is not done. You may need "
-"to reinstall the boot loader in this case."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:469
-msgid "B<--no-extra-partition>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:471
-msgid ""
-"By default, virt-resize creates an extra partition if there is any extra, "
-"unused space after all resizing has happened. Use this option to prevent "
-"the extra partition from being created. If you do this then the extra space "
-"will be inaccessible until you run fdisk, parted, or some other partitioning "
-"tool in the guest."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:477
-msgid ""
-"Note that if the surplus space is smaller than 10 MB, no extra partition "
-"will be created."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:484
-msgid "B<--no-expand-content>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:486
-msgid ""
-"By default, virt-resize will try to expand the direct contents of "
-"partitions, if it knows how (see C<--expand> option above)."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:489
-msgid ""
-"If you give the C<--no-expand-content> option then virt-resize will not "
-"attempt this."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:496
-msgid "B<-d> | B<--debug>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:504
-msgid "B<-n> | B<--dryrun>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:506
-msgid "Print a summary of what would be done, but don't do anything."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:512
-msgid "B<-q> | B<--quiet>"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:514
-msgid "Don't print the summary."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:522
-msgid ""
-"Specify the format of the input disk image. If this flag is not given then "
-"it is auto-detected from the image itself."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:528
-msgid ""
-"Note that this option I<does not> affect the output format. See L</QCOW2 "
-"AND NON-SPARSE RAW FORMATS>."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =item
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:535
-msgid "B<--output-format> raw"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:537
-msgid ""
-"Specify the format of the output disk image. If this flag is not given then "
-"it is auto-detected from the image itself."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:543
-msgid ""
-"Note that you still need to create the output disk with the right format. "
-"See L</QCOW2 AND NON-SPARSE RAW FORMATS>."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head1
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1425
-msgid "NOTES"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1427
-msgid "\"Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.\""
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1429
-msgid ""
-"Virt-resize aligns partitions to multiples of 64 sectors. Usually this "
-"means the partitions will not be aligned to the ancient CHS geometry. "
-"However CHS geometry is meaningless for disks manufactured since the early "
-"1990s, and doubly so for virtual hard drives. Alignment of partitions to "
-"cylinders is not required by any modern operating system."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1436
-msgid "RESIZING WINDOWS VIRTUAL MACHINES"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1438
-msgid ""
-"In Windows Vista and later versions, Microsoft switched to using a separate "
-"boot partition. In these VMs, typically C</dev/sda1> is the boot partition "
-"and C</dev/sda2> is the main (C:) drive. We have not had any luck resizing "
-"the boot partition. Doing so seems to break the guest completely. However "
-"expanding the second partition (ie. C: drive) should work."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1445
-msgid ""
-"Windows may initiate a lengthy \"chkdsk\" on first boot after a resize, if "
-"NTFS partitions have been expanded. This is just a safety check and (unless "
-"it find errors) is nothing to worry about."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head2
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1449
-msgid "GUEST BOOT STUCK AT \"GRUB\""
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1451
-msgid ""
-"If a Linux guest does not boot after resizing, and the boot is stuck after "
-"printing C<GRUB> on the console, try reinstalling grub. This sometimes "
-"happens on older (RHEL 5-era) guests, for reasons we don't fully understand, "
-"although we think is to do with partition alignment."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: verbatim
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1456
-#, no-wrap
-msgid ""
-" guestfish -i -a newdisk\n"
-" ><fs> cat /boot/grub/device.map\n"
-" # check the contents of this file are sensible or\n"
-" # edit the file if necessary\n"
-" ><fs> grub-install / /dev/vda\n"
-" ><fs> exit\n"
-"\n"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1463
-msgid ""
-"For more flexible guest reconfiguration, including if you need to specify "
-"other parameters to grub-install, use L<virt-rescue(1)>."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: =head1
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1466
-msgid "ALTERNATIVE TOOLS"
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1468
-msgid ""
-"There are several proprietary tools for resizing partitions. We won't "
-"mention any here."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1471
-msgid ""
-"L<parted(8)> and its graphical shell gparted can do some types of resizing "
-"operations on disk images. They can resize and move partitions, but I don't "
-"think they can do anything with the contents, and they certainly don't "
-"understand LVM."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1476
-msgid ""
-"L<guestfish(1)> can do everything that virt-resize can do and a lot more, "
-"but at a much lower level. You will probably end up hand-calculating sector "
-"offsets, which is something that virt-resize was designed to avoid. If you "
-"want to see the guestfish-equivalent commands that virt-resize runs, use the "
-"C<--debug> flag."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock
-#: ../tools/virt-resize.pl:1491
-msgid ""
-"L<virt-filesystems(1)>, L<virt-df(1)>, L<guestfs(3)>, L<guestfish(1)>, "
-"L<lvm(8)>, L<pvresize(8)>, L<lvresize(8)>, L<resize2fs(8)>, "
-"L<ntfsresize(8)>, L<virsh(1)>, L<parted(8)>, L<truncate(1)>, "
-"L<fallocate(1)>, L<grub(8)>, L<grub-install(8)>, L<virt-rescue(1)>, "
-"L<Sys::Guestfs(3)>, L<http://libguestfs.org/>."
-msgstr ""
-
-#. type: textblock