LVM Administrator's Guide
LVM Administrator's Guide
G G
Next
Table of Contents Introduction 1. About This Guide 2. Audience 3. Software Versions 4. Related Documentation 5. Document Conventions 1. The LVM Logical Volume Manager 1.1. Logical Volumes 1.2. LVM Architecture Overview 1.3. Running LVM in a Cluster 1.4. Document Overview 2. LVM Components
2.1. Physical Volumes 2.1.1. LVM Physical Volume Layout 2.1.2. Multiple Partitions on a Disk 2.2. Volume Groups 2.3. LVM Logical Volumes 2.3.1. Linear Volumes 2.3.2. Striped Logical Volumes 2.3.3. Mirrored Logical Volumes 2.3.4. Snapshot Volumes 3. LVM Administration Overview 3.1. Creating LVM Volumes in a Cluster 3.2. Logical Volume Creation Overview 3.3. Growing a File System on a Logical Volume 3.4. Logical Volume Backup 3.5. Logging 4. LVM Administration with CLI Commands 4.1. Using CLI Commands 4.2. Physical Volume Administration 4.2.1. Creating Physical Volumes 4.2.2. Displaying Physical Volumes 4.2.3. Preventing Allocation on a Physical Volume 4.2.4. Resizing a Physical Volume 4.2.5. Removing Physical Volumes 4.3. Volume Group Administration 4.3.1. Creating Volume Groups 4.3.2. Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group 4.3.3. Displaying Volume Groups 4.3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File 4.3.5. Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group 4.3.6. Changing the Parameters of a Volume Group 4.3.7. Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups 4.3.8. Removing Volume Groups 4.3.9. Splitting a Volume Group 4.3.10. Combining Volume Groups 4.3.11. Backing Up Volume Group Metadata 4.3.12. Renaming a Volume Group
4.3.13. Moving a Volume Group to Another System 4.3.14. Recreating a Volume Group Directory 4.4. Logical Volume Administration 4.4.1. Creating Logical Volumes 4.4.2. Persistent Device Numbers 4.4.3. Resizing Logical Volumes 4.4.4. Changing the Parameters of a Logical Volume Group 4.4.5. Renaming Logical Volumes 4.4.6. Removing Logical Volumes 4.4.7. Displaying Logical Volumes 4.4.8. Growing Logical Volumes 4.4.9. Extending a Striped Volume 4.4.10. Shrinking Logical Volumes 4.5. Creating Snapshot Volumes 4.6. Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters 4.7. Online Data Relocation 4.8. Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nodes in a Cluster 4.9. Customized Reporting for LVM 4.9.1. Format Control 4.9.2. Object Selection 4.9.3. Sorting LVM Reports 4.9.4. Specifying Units 5. LVM Configuration Examples 5.1. Creating an LVM Logical Volume on Three Disks 5.1.1. Creating the Physical Volumes 5.1.2. Creating the Volume Group 5.1.3. Creating the Logical Volume 5.1.4. Creating the File System 5.2. Creating a Striped Logical Volume 5.2.1. Creating the Physical Volumes 5.2.2. Creating the Volume Group 5.2.3. Creating the Logical Volume 5.2.4. Creating the File System 5.3. Splitting a Volume Group 5.3.1. Determining Free Space 5.3.2. Moving the Data
5.3.3. Splitting the Volume Group 5.3.4. Creating the New Logical Volume 5.3.5. Making a File System and Mounting the New Logical Volume 5.3.6. Activating and Mounting the Original Logical Volume 5.4. Removing a Disk from a Logical Volume 5.4.1. Moving Extents to Existing Physical Volumes 5.4.2. Moving Extents to a New Disk 6. LVM Troubleshooting 6.1. Troubleshooting Diagnostics 6.2. Displaying Information on Failed Devices 6.3. Recovering from LVM Mirror Failure 6.4. Recovering Physical Volume Metadata 6.5. Replacing a Missing Physical Volume 6.6. Removing Lost Physical Volumes from a Volume Group 6.7. Insufficient Free Extents for a Logical Volume 7. LVM Administration with the LVM GUI A. The Device Mapper B. The LVM Configuration Files B.1. The LVM Configuration Files B.2. Sample lvm.conf File C. LVM Object Tags C.1. Adding and Removing Object Tags C.2. Host Tags C.3. Controlling Activation with Tags D. LVM Volume Group Metadata D.1. The Physical Volume Label D.2. Metadata Contents D.3. Sample Metadata Index
G G
NextIntroduction
Introduction
G G
Introduction
G G G G
G G
2. Audience
G G
2. Audience
This book is intended to be used by system administrators managing systems running the Linux operating system. It requires familiarity with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and GFS file system administration.
G G G G
3. Software Versions
G G
3. Software Versions
Software Description RHEL5 GFS refers to RHEL5 and higher refers to GFS for RHEL5 and higher
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/Related_Documentation-CLVM.html
G G
4. Related Documentation
For more information about using Red Hat Enterprise Linux, refer to the following resources:
G
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Installation Guide Provides information regarding installation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5. Red Hat Enterprise Linux Deployment Guide Provides information regarding the deployment, configuration and administration of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
For more information about Red Hat Cluster Suite for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5, refer to the following resources:
G
Red Hat Cluster Suite Overview Provides a high level overview of the Red Hat Cluster Suite. Configuring and Managing a Red Hat Cluster Provides information about installing, configuring and managing Red Hat Cluster components. Global File System: Configuration and Administration Provides information about installing, configuring, and maintaining Red Hat GFS (Red Hat Global File System). Using GNBD with Global File System Provides an overview on using Global Network Block Device (GNBD) with Red Hat GFS. Linux Virtual Server Administration Provides information on configuring highperformance systems and services with the Linux Virtual Server (LVS). Red Hat Cluster Suite Release Notes Provides information about the current release of Red Hat Cluster Suite. Prev3. Software Versions Up Home
G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/Related_Documentation-CLVM.html
5. Document Conventions
G G
5. Document Conventions
Certain words in this manual are represented in different fonts, styles, and weights. This highlighting indicates that the word is part of a specific category. The categories include the following: Courier font Courier font represents commands, file names and paths, and prompts . When shown as below, it indicates computer output: Desktop Mail bold Courier font Bold Courier font represents text that you are to type, such as: service jonas start If you have to run a command as root, the root prompt (#) precedes the command: # gconftool-2 about.html backupfiles logs mail paulwesterberg.png reports
italic Courier font Italic Courier font represents a variable, such as an installation directory: install_dir/bin/ bold font Bold font represents application programs and text found on a graphical interface.
5. Document Conventions
When shown like this: OK , it indicates a button on a graphical application interface. Additionally, the manual uses different strategies to draw your attention to pieces of information. In order of how critical the information is to you, these items are marked as follows:
Note
A note is typically information that you need to understand the behavior of the system.
Tip
A tip is typically an alternative way of performing a task.
Important
Important information is necessary, but possibly unexpected, such as a configuration change that will not persist after a reboot.
Caution
A caution indicates an act that would violate your support agreement, such as recompiling the kernel.
Warning
A warning indicates potential data loss, as may happen when tuning hardware for maximum performance.
G G G G
Prev4. Related Documentation Up Home NextChapter 1. The LVM Logical Volume Manager
G G
G G
Flexible capacity When using logical volumes, file systems can extend across multiple disks, since you can aggregate disks and partitions into a single logical volume.
Resizeable storage pools You can extend logical volumes or reduce logical volumes in size with simple software commands, without reformatting and repartitioning the underlying disk devices.
Online data relocation To deploy newer, faster, or more resilient storage subsystems, you can move data will your system is active. Data can be rearranged on disks while the disks are in use. For example, you can empty a hot-swappable disk before removing it.
Convenient device naming Logical storage volumes can be managed in user-defined groups, which you can name according to your convenience.
Disk striping You can create a logical volume that stripes data across two or more disks. This can dramatically increase throughput.
Mirroring volumes Logical volumes provide a convenient way to configure a mirror for your data.
Volume Snapshots Using logical volumes, you can take device snapshots for consistent backups or to test the effect of changes without affecting the real data.
The implementation of these features in LVM is described in the remainder of this document.
G G G G
PrevChapter 1. The LVM Logical Volume Manager Up Home Next1.2. LVM Architecture Overview
G G
flexible capacity more efficient metadata storage better recovery format new ASCII metadata format atomic changes to metadata redundant copies of metadata
LVM2 is backwards compatible with LVM1, with the exception of snapshot and cluster support. You can convert a volume group from LVM1 format to LVM2 format with the vgconvert command. For information on converting LVM metadata format, see the vgconvert(8) man page. The underlying physical storage unit of an LVM logical volume is a block device such as a partition or whole disk. This device is initialized as an LVM physical volume (PV). To create an LVM logical volume, the physical volumes are combined into a volume group (VG). This creates a pool of disk space out of which LVM logical volumes (LVs) can be allocated. This process is analogous to the way in which disks are divided into partitions. A logical volume is used by file systems and applications (such as databases). Figure 1.1, LVM Logical Volume Components shows the components of a simple LVM logical volume:
G G G G
G G
CLVM Overview
[D] Figure 1.2. CLVM Overview Logical volumes created with CLVM on shared storage are visible to all computers that have access to the shared storage. CLVM allows a user to configure logical volumes on shared storage by locking access to physical storage while a logical volume is being configured. CLVM uses the locking services provided by the high availability symmetric infrastructure.
Note
CLVM requires changes to the lvm.conf file for cluster-wide locking. For information on configuring the lvm.conf file to support CLVM, see Section 3.1, Creating LVM Volumes in a Cluster. You configure LVM volumes for use in a cluster with the standard set of LVM commands or the LVM graphical user interface, as described in Chapter 4, LVM Administration with CLI Commands
and Chapter 7, LVM Administration with the LVM GUI. For information on installing LVM in a Red Hat Cluster, see Configuring and Managing a Red Hat Cluster.
G G G G
G G
Chapter 2, LVM Components describes the components that make up an LVM logical volume.
Chapter 3, LVM Administration Overview provides an overview of the basic steps you perform to configure LVM logical volumes, whether you are using the LVM Command Line Interface (CLI) commands or the LVM Graphical User Interface (GUI).
Chapter 4, LVM Administration with CLI Commands summarizes the individual administrative tasks you can perform with the LVM CLI commands to create and maintain logical volumes.
Chapter 5, LVM Configuration Examples provides a variety of LVM configuration examples. Chapter 6, LVM Troubleshooting provide instructions for troubleshooting a variety of LVM issues.
Chapter 7, LVM Administration with the LVM GUI summarizes the operating of the LVM GUI.
Appendix A, The Device Mapper describes the Device Mapper that LVM uses to map logical and physical volumes.
Appendix B, The LVM Configuration Files describes the LVM configuration files. Appendix C, LVM Object Tags describes LVM object tags and host tags. Appendix D, LVM Volume Group Metadata describes LVM volume group metadata, and includes a sample copy of metadata for an LVM volume group.
G G
G G
G G
Note
In the Linux kernel (and throughout this document), sectors are considered to be 512 bytes in size.
G G
Administrative convenience It is easier to keep track of the hardware in a system if each real disk only appears once. This becomes particularly true if a disk fails. In addition, multiple physical volumes on a single disk may cause a kernel warning about unknown partition types at boot-up.
Striping performance LVM can not tell that two physical volumes are on the same physical disk. If you create a striped logical volume when two physical volumes are on the same physical disk, the stripes could be on different partitions on the same disk. This would result in a decrease in performance rather than an increase.
Although it it is not recommended, there may be specific circumstances when you will need to divide a disk into separate LVM physical volumes. For example, on a system with few disks it may be necessary to move data around partitions when you are migrating an existing system to LVM volumes. Additionally, if you have a very large disk and want to have more than one volume group for administrative purposes then it is necessary to partition the disk. If you do have a disk with more than one partition and both of those partitions are in the same volume group, take care to specify which partitions are to be included in a logical volume when creating striped volumes.
G G G G
G G
G G
G G
Extent Mapping
[D] Figure 2.2. Extent Mapping The physical volumes that make up a logical volume do not have to be the same size. Figure 2.3, Linear Volume with Unequal Physical Volumes shows volume group VG1 with a physical extent size of 4MB. This volume group includes 2 physical volumes named PV1 and PV2. The physical volumes are divided into 4MB units, since that is the extent size. In this example, PV1 is 100 extents in size (400MB) and PV2 is 200 extents in size (800MB). You can create a linear volume any size between 1 and 300 extents (4MB to 1200MB). In this example, the linear volume named LV1 is 300 extents in size.
of physical extents. Figure 2.4, Multiple Logical Volumes shows the same volume group as in Figure 2.3, Linear Volume with Unequal Physical Volumes, but in this case two logical volumes have been carved out of the volume group: LV1, which is 250 extents in size (1000MB) and LV2 which is 50 extents in size (200MB).
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/striped_volumes.html
G G
the first stripe of data is written to PV1 the second stripe of data is written to PV2 the third stripe of data is written to PV3 the fourth stripe of data is written to PV1
In a striped logical volume, the size of the stripe cannnot exceed the size of an extent.
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/striped_volumes.html
example, if you have a two-way stripe that uses up an entire volume group, adding a single physical volume to the volume group will not enable you to extend the stripe. Instead, you must add at least two physical volumes to the volume group. For more information on extending a striped volume, see Section 4.4.9, Extending a Striped Volume. Prev2.3.1. Linear Volumes Up Home Next2.3.3. Mirrored Logical Volumes
G G G G
G G
Note
Mirrored logical volumes are not currently supported in a cluster. For information on creating and modifying mirrors, see Section 4.4.1.3, Creating Mirrored Volumes. Prev2.3.2. Striped Logical Volumes
G G G
G G
Note
LVM snapshots are not supported across the nodes in a cluster. Because a snapshot copies only the data areas that change after the snapshot is created, the snapshot feature requires a minimal amount of storage. For example, with a rarely updated origin, 3-5 % of the origin's capacity is sufficient to maintain the snapshot.
Note
Snapshot copies of a file system are virtual copies, not actual media backup for a file system. Snapshots do not provide a substitute for a backup procedure. If a snapshot runs full, the snapshot is dropped. This is to be sure that there is enough space for the origin file system. You should regularly monitor the size of the snapshot. Snapshots are fully resizeable, however, so if you have the storage capacity you can increase the size of the snapshot volume to prevent it from getting dropped. Conversely, if you find that the snapshot volume is larger than you need, you can reduce the size of the volume to free up space that is needed by other logical volumes. When you create a snapshot file system, full read and write access to the origin stays possible. If a chunk on a snapshot is changed, that chunk is marked and never gets copied from the original volume. There are several uses for the snapshot feature:
Most typically, a snapshot is taken when you need to perform a backup on a logical volume without halting the live system that is continuously updating the data. You can execute the fsck command on a snapshot file system to check the file system integrity and determine whether the original file system requires file system repair.
Because the snapshot is read/write, you can test applications against production data by taking a snapshot and running tests against the snapshot, leaving the real data untouched. You can create volumes for use with the Xen virtual machine monitor. You can use the snapshot feature to create a disk image, snapshot it, and modify the snapshot for a particular domU instance. You can then create another snapshot and modify it for another domU instance. Since the only storage used is chunks that were changed on the origin or snapshot, the majority of the volume is shared. Prev2.3.3. Mirrored Logical Volumes Up Home NextChapter 3. LVM Administration Overview
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LVM_administration.html
G G
G G G G
G G
PrevChapter 3. LVM Administration Overview Up Home Next3.2. Logical Volume Creation Overview
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/creation_overview.html
G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/creation_overview.html
G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/fsgrow_overview.html
G G
Prev3.2. Logical Volume Creation Overview Up Home Next3.4. Logical Volume Backup
G G
G G G G
3.5. Logging
G G
3.5. Logging
All message output passes through a logging module with independent choices of logging levels for:
G
The logging levels are set in the /etc/lvm/lvm.conf file, which is described in Appendix B, The LVM Configuration Files. Prev3.4. Logical Volume Backup Up Home NextChapter 4. LVM Administration with CLI Commands
G G G G
G G
G G
Creating logical volume lvol0 Creating volume group backup "/etc/lvm/backup/new_vg" (seqno 5). Found volume group "new_vg" Creating new_vg-lvol0 Loading new_vg-lvol0 table Resuming new_vg-lvol0 (253:2) Clearing start of logical volume "lvol0" Creating volume group backup "/etc/lvm/backup/new_vg" (seqno 5). Logical volume "lvol0" created You could also have used the -vv, -vvv or the -vvvv argument to display increasingly more details about the command execution. The -vvvv argument provides the maximum amount of information at this time. The following example shows only the first few lines of output for the lvcreate command with the -vvvv argument specified. # lvcreate -vvvv -L 50MB new_vg #lvmcmdline.c:913 Processing: lvcreate -vvvv -L 50MB new_vg #lvmcmdline.c:916 O_DIRECT will be used #config/config.c:864 Setting global/locking_type to 1 #locking/locking.c:138 File-based locking selected. #config/config.c:841 Setting global/locking_dir to /var/lock/lvm #activate/activate.c:358 Getting target version for linear #ioctl/libdm-iface.c:1569 dm version OF [16384] #ioctl/libdm-iface.c:1569 dm versions OF [16384] #activate/activate.c:358 Getting target version for striped #ioctl/libdm-iface.c:1569 dm versions OF [16384] #config/config.c:864 Setting activation/mirror_region_size to 512 ... You can display help for any of the LVM CLI commands with the --help argument of the command. commandname --help To display the man page for a command, execute the man command: man commandname The man lvm command provides general online information about LVM.
All LVM objects are referenced internally by a UUID, which is assigned when you create the object. This can be useful in a situation where you remove a physical volume called /dev/sdf which is part of a volume group and, when you plug it back in, you find that it is now /dev/sdk. LVM will still find the physical volume because it identifies the physical volume by its UUID and not its device name. For information on specifying the UUID of a physical volume when creating a physical volume, see see Section 6.4, Recovering Physical Volume Metadata. PrevChapter 4. LVM Administration with CLI Commands Up Home Next4.2. Physical Volume Administration
G G G G
G G
G G
command, as shown in the following example. # lvmdiskscan /dev/ram0 [ /dev/sda [ /dev/root [ /dev/ram [ /dev/sda1 [ /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 [ /dev/ram2 [ /dev/new_vg/lvol0 [ /dev/ram3 [ /dev/pkl_new_vg/sparkie_lv [ /dev/ram4 [ /dev/ram5 [ /dev/ram6 [ /dev/ram7 [ /dev/ram8 [ /dev/ram9 [ /dev/ram10 [ /dev/ram11 [ /dev/ram12 [ /dev/ram13 [ /dev/ram14 [ /dev/ram15 [ /dev/sdb [ /dev/sdb1 [ /dev/sdc [ /dev/sdc1 [ /dev/sdd [ /dev/sdd1 [ 7 disks 17 partitions 0 LVM physical volume whole disks 4 LVM physical volumes
16.00 MB] 17.15 GB] 13.69 GB] 16.00 MB] 17.14 GB] LVM physical volume 512.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 52.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 7.14 GB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 MB] 16.00 16.00 16.00 17.15 17.14 17.15 17.14 17.15 17.14 MB] MB] MB] GB] GB] LVM physical volume GB] GB] LVM physical volume GB] GB] LVM physical volume
G G G G
G G
You can define a filter in the lvm.conf so that this command will avoid scanning specific physical volumes. For information on using filters to control which devices are scanned, see Section 4.6, Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters. Prev4.2.1. Creating Physical Volumes Up Home Next4.2.3. Preventing Allocation on a Physical Volume
G G G G
G G
G G
Prev4.2.3. Preventing Allocation on a Physical Volume Up Home Next4.2.5. Removing Physical Volumes
G G
G G G G
G G
G G
need to specify unusual or nonstandard extent allocation. LVM volume groups and underlying logical volumes are included in the device special file directory tree in the /dev directory with the following layout: /dev/vg/lv/ For example, if you create two volume groups myvg1 and myvg2, each with three logical volumes named lvo1, lvo2, and lvo3, this create six device special files: /dev/myvg1/lv01 /dev/myvg1/lv02 /dev/myvg1/lv03 /dev/myvg2/lv01 /dev/myvg2/lv02 /dev/myvg2/lv03 The maximum device size with LVM is 8 Exabytes on 64-bit CPUs.
G G G G
Prev4.3. Volume Group Administration Up Home Next4.3.2. Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group
G G
G G G G
G G
Cur PV Act PV VG Size PE Size Total PE Alloc PE / Size Free PE / Size VG UUID
G G G G
Prev4.3.2. Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group Up Home Next4.3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build ...
4.3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File
4.3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File Prev Next
G G
4.3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File
The vgscan command scans all supported disk devices in the system looking for LVM physical volumes and volume groups. This builds the LVM cache in the /etc/lvm/.cache file, which maintains a listing of current LVM devices. LVM runs the vgscan command automatically at system startup and at other times during LVM operation, such as when you execute a vgcreate command or when LVM detects an inconsistency. You may need to run the vgscan command manually when you change your hardware configuration, causing new devices to be visible to the system that were not present at system bootup. This may be necessary, for example, when you add new disks to the system on a SAN or hotplug a new disk that has been labeled as a physical volume. You can define a filter in the lvm.conf file to restrict the scan to avoid specific devices. For information on using filters to control which devices are scanned, see Section 4.6, Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters. The following example shows the output of a vgscan command. # vgscan Reading all physical volumes. This may take a while... Found volume group "new_vg" using metadata type lvm2 Found volume group "officevg" using metadata type lvm2 Prev4.3.3. Displaying Volume Groups Up Home Next4.3.5. Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Gr...
G G G G
G G
G G G G
Prev4.3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build ... Up Home Next4.3.6. Changing the Parameters of a Volume Group
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/VG_remove.html
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/VG_backup.html
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/VG_move.html
G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/VG_move.html
4. When the disks are plugged into the new system, use the vgimport command to import the volume group, making it accessible to the new system. 5. Activate the volume group with the -a y argument of the vgchange command. 6. Mount the file system to make it available for use.
G G G G
Prev4.3.12. Renaming a Volume Group Up Home Next4.3.14. Recreating a Volume Group Directory
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/vg_recreate.html
G G
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV.html
G G
Prev4.3.14. Recreating a Volume Group Directory Up Home Next4.4.1. Creating Logical Volumes
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_create.html
G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_create.html
the logical volume. The following command creates a logical volume called mylv that uses 60% of the total space in volume group testvol. lvcreate -l 60%VG -n mylv testvg You can also use the -l argument of the lvcreate command to specify the percentage of the remaining free space in a volume group as the size of the logical volume. The following command creates a logical volume called yourlv that uses all of the unallocated space in the volume group testvol. lvcreate -l 100%FREE -n yourlv testvg You can use -l argument of the lvcreate command to create a logical volume that uses the entire volume group. Another way to create a logical volume that uses the entire volume group is to use the vgdisplay command to find the "Total PE" size and to use those results as input to the the lvcreate command. The following commands create a logical volume called mylv that fills the volume group named testvg. # vgdisplay testvg | grep "Total PE" Total PE 10230 # lvcreate -l 10230 testvg -n mylv The underlying physical volumes used to create a logical volume can be important if the physical volume needs to be removed, so you may need to consider this possibility when you create the logical volume. For information on removing a physical volume from a volume group, see Section 4.3.5, Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group. To create a logical volume to be allocated from a specific physical volume in the volume group, specify the physical volume or volumes at the end at the lvcreate command line. The following command creates a logical volume named testlv in volume group testvg allocated from the physical volume /dev/sdg1, lvcreate -L 1500 -ntestlv testvg /dev/sdg1 You can specify which extents of a physical volume are to be used for a logical volume. The following example creates a linear logical volume out of extents 0 through 25 of physical volume /dev/sda1 and extents 50 through 125 of physical volume /dev/sdb1 in volume group testvg.
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_create.html
lvcreate -l 100 -n testlv testvg /dev/sda1:0-25 /dev/sdb1:50-125 The following example creates a linear logical volume out of extents 0 through 25 of physical volume /dev/sda1 and then continues laying out the logical volume at extent 100. lvcreate -l 100 -n testlv testvg /dev/sda1:0-25:100The default policy for how the extents of a logical volume are allocated is inherit, which applies the same policy as for the volume group. These policies can be changed using the lvchange command. For information on allocation policies, see Section 4.3.1, Creating Volume Groups.
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_create.html
50 of /dev/sda1 and sectors 50-100 of /dev/sdb1. # lvcreate -l 100 -i2 -nstripelv testvg /dev/sda1:0-50 /dev/sdb1:50-100 Using default stripesize 64.00 KB Logical volume "stripelv" created
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_create.html
physical extents included in the list that are already allocated will get ignored. The following command creates a mirrored logical volume with a single mirror. The volume is 500 megabytes in size, it is named mirrorlv, and it is carved out of volume group vg0. The first leg of the mirror is on device /dev/sda1, the second leg of the mirror is on device /dev/sdb1, and the mirror log is on /dev/sdc1. lvcreate -L 500M -m1 -n mirrorlv vg0 /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 The following command creates a mirrored logical volume with a single mirror. The volume is 500 megabytes in size, it is named mirrorlv, and it is carved out of volume group vg0. The first leg of the mirror is on extents 0 through 499 of device /dev/sda1, the second leg of the mirror is on extents 0 through 499 of device /dev/sdb1, and the mirror log starts on extent 0 of device /dev/sdc1. These are 1MB extents. If any of the specified extents have already been allocated, they will be ignored. lvcreate -L 500M -m1 -n mirrorlv vg0 /dev/sda1:0-499 /dev/sdb1:0-499 /dev/sdc1:0
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_create.html
lvconvert -m0 vg00/lvol1 Prev4.4. Logical Volume Administration Up Home Next4.4.2. Persistent Device Numbers
G G G G
G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/resize_volumes.html
G G
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/LV_change.html
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G
G G G G
G G
After you have extended the logical volume it is necessary to increase the file system size to match. By default, most file system resizing tools will increase the size of the file system to be the size of the underlying logical volume so you do not need to worry about specifying the same size for each of the two commands.
G G G G
G G
VSize
VFree
You can create a stripe using the entire amount of space in the volume group. # lvcreate -n stripe1 -L 271.31G -i 2 vg Using default stripesize 64.00 KB Rounding up size to full physical extent 271.31 GB Logical volume "stripe1" created # lvs -a -o +devices LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% stripe1 vg -wi-a- 271.31G
Devices /dev/sda1(0),/dev/sdb1(0)
Note that the volume group now has no more free space. # vgs VG vg #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree 2 1 0 wz--n- 271.31G 0
The following command adds another physical volume to the volume group, which then has 135G of additional space. # vgextend vg /dev/sdc1 Volume group "vg" successfully extended # vgs
VG vg
At this point you cannot extend the striped logical volume to the full size of the volume group, because two underlying devices are needed in order to stripe the data. # lvextend vg/stripe1 -L 406G Using stripesize of last segment 64.00 KB Extending logical volume stripe1 to 406.00 GB Insufficient suitable allocatable extents for logical volume stripe1: 34480 more required To extend the striped logical volume, add another physical volume and then extend the logical volume. In this example, having added two physical volumes to the volume group we can extend the logical volume 5A to the full size of the volume group. # vgextend vg /dev/sdd1 Volume group "vg" successfully extended # vgs VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree vg 4 1 0 wz--n- 542.62G 271.31G # lvextend vg/stripe1 -L 542G Using stripesize of last segment 64.00 KB Extending logical volume stripe1 to 542.00 GB Logical volume stripe1 successfully resized If you do not have enough underlying physical devices to extend the striped logical volume, it is possible to extend the volume anyway if it does not matter that the extension is not striped, which may result in uneven performance. When adding space to the logical volume, the default operation is to use the same striping paramgers of the last segment of the existing logical volume, but you can override those parameters. The following example extends the existing striped logical volume to use the remaining free space after the initial lvextend command fails. # lvextend vg/stripe1 -L 406G Using stripesize of last segment 64.00 KB Extending logical volume stripe1 to 406.00 GB Insufficient suitable allocatable extents for logical volume stripe1: 34480 more required # lvextend -iL -l+100%FREE vg/stripe1 Prev4.4.8. Growing Logical Volumes Up Home
G G G
G G
The lvs command, by default, displays the origin volume and the current percentage of the snapshot volume being used for each snapshot volume. The following example shows the default output for the lvs command for a system that includes the logical volume /dev/new_vg/lvol0, for which a snapshot volume /dev/new_vg/newvgsnap has been created. # lvs LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% Move Log Copy% lvol0 new_vg owi-a- 52.00M newvgsnap1 new_vg swi-a- 8.00M lvol0 0.20
Note
Because the snapshot increases in size as the origin volume changes, it is important to monitor the percentage of the snapshot volume regularly with the lvs command to be sure it does not fill. A snapshot that is 100% full is lost completely, as write to unchanged parts of the originin would be unable to succeed without corrupting the snapshot.
G G G G
Prev4.4.10. Shrinking Logical Volumes Up Home Next4.6. Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters
G G
The following filter adds just partition 8 on the first IDE drive and removes all other block devices: filter = [ "a|^/dev/hda8$|", "r/.*/" ] For more information on the lvm.conf file, see Appendix B, The LVM Configuration Files and the lvm.conf(5) man page. Prev4.5. Creating Snapshot Volumes Up Home Next4.7. Online Data Relocation
G G G G
G G
Prev4.6. Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters Up Home Next4.8. Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nod...
G G
G G G G
G G
A summary of command arguments you can use to control the format of the generated report. A list of the fields you can select for each LVM object. A summary of command arguments you can use to sort the generated report. Instructions for specifying the units of the report output. Prev4.8. Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nod... Up Home Next4.9.1. Format Control
G G G G
G G
You can change what fields are displayed to something other than the default by using the -o argument. For example, the following output is the default display for the pvs command (which displays information about physcial volumes). # pvs PV /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1
VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.14G new_vg lvm2 anew_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.09G 17.14G 17.14G
The following command displays only the physical volume name and size. # pvs -o pv_name,pv_size PV PSize /dev/sdb1 17.14G /dev/sdc1 17.14G /dev/sdd1 17.14G You can append a field to the output with the plus sign (+), which is used in combination with the -o argument. The following example displays the UUID of the physical volume in addition to the default fields. # pvs -o +pv_uuid PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree PV UUID /dev/sdb1 new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.14G onFF2w-1fLC-ughJ-D9eB-M7iv-6XqA-dqGeXY /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1 new_vg lvm2 anew_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.09G Joqlch-yWSj-kuEn-IdwM-01S9-XO8M-mcpsVe 17.14G 17.14G yvfvZK-Cf31-j75k-dECm-0RZ3-0dGW-tUqkCS
Adding the -v argument to a command includes some extra fields. For example, the pvs -v command will display the DevSize and PV UUID fields in addition to the default fields. # pvs -v Scanning PV /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1
for physical volume names VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree DevSize PV UUID new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.14G 17.14G onFF2w-1fLC-ughJ-D9eB-M7iv-6XqA-dqGeXY new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.09G 17.14G Joqlch-yWSj-kuEn-IdwM-01S9-XO8M-mcpsVe new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.14G 17.14G yvfvZK-Cf31-j75k-dECm-0RZ3-0dGW-tUqkCS
The --noheadings argument suppresses the headings line. This can be useful for writing scripts. The following example uses the --noheadings argument in combination with the pv_name argument, which will generate a list of all physical volumes. # pvs --noheadings -o pv_name /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1 The --separator separator argument uses separator to separate each field. This can be useful in a script if you are running a grep command on the output. The following example separates the default output fields of the pvs command with an equals sign (=). # pvs --separator = PV=VG=Fmt=Attr=PSize=PFree /dev/sdb1=new_vg=lvm2=a-=17.14G=17.14G /dev/sdc1=new_vg=lvm2=a-=17.14G=17.09G /dev/sdd1=new_vg=lvm2=a-=17.14G=17.14G To keep the fields aligned when using the separator argument, use the separator argument in conjunction with the --aligned argument. # pvs --separator = --aligned PV =VG =Fmt =Attr=PSize =PFree /dev/sdb1 =new_vg=lvm2=a- =17.14G=17.14G /dev/sdc1 =new_vg=lvm2=a- =17.14G=17.09G /dev/sdd1 =new_vg=lvm2=a=17.14G=17.14G
You can use the -P argument of the lvs or vgs command to display information about a failed volume that would otherwise not appear in the output. For information on the output this argument yields, see Section 6.2, Displaying Information on Failed Devices. For a full listing of display arguments, see the pvs(8), vgs(8) and lvs(8) man pages. Volume group fields can be mixed with either physical volume (and physical volume segment) fields or with logical volume (and logical volume segment) fields, but physical volume and logical volume fields cannot be mixed. For example, the following command will display one line of output for each physical volume. # vgs -o +pv_name VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree new_vg 3 1 0 wz--n- 51.42G 51.37G new_vg 3 1 0 wz--n- 51.42G 51.37G new_vg 3 1 0 wz--n- 51.42G 51.37G Prev4.9. Customized Reporting for LVM
G G
pv_pe_alloc_count Alloc pv_pe_count pvseg_size pvseg_start pv_size pv_tags pv_used pv_uuid PE SSize Start PSize
PV Tags LVM tags attached to the physical volume Used The amount of space currently used on the physical volume
The pvs command displays the following fields by default: pv_name, vg_name, pv_fmt, pv_attr, pv_size, pv_free. The display is sorted by pv_name. # pvs PV /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1
VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.14G new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.09G new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.13G
Using the -v argument with the pvs command adds the following fields to the default display: dev_size, pv_uuid. # pvs -v Scanning PV /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1 for physical volume names VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree DevSize PV UUID new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.14G 17.14G onFF2w-1fLC-ughJ-D9eB-M7iv-6XqA-dqGeXY new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.09G 17.14G Joqlch-yWSj-kuEn-IdwM-01S9-XO8M-mcpsVe new_vg lvm2 a17.14G 17.13G 17.14G yvfvZK-Cf31-j75k-dECm-0RZ3-0dGW-tUqkCS
You can use the --segments argument of the pvs command to display information about each physical volume segment. A segment is a group of extents. A segment view can be useful if you want to see whether your logical volume is fragmented. The pvs --segments command displays the following fields by default: pv_name, vg_name, pv_fmt, pv_attr, pv_size, pv_free, pvseg_start, pvseg_size. The display is sorted by pv_name and pvseg_size within the physical volume. # pvs --segments PV VG /dev/hda2 /dev/hda2 /dev/hda2 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1 /dev/sde1 /dev/sdf1 /dev/sdg1
Fmt
Attr PSize
PFree
Start SSize 0 1172 1188 0 26 50 76 100 126 150 172 0 0 0 0 0 0 1172 16 1 26 24 26 24 26 24 22 4217 4389 4389 4389 4389 4389 4389
VolGroup00 lvm2 aVolGroup00 lvm2 aVolGroup00 lvm2 avg lvm2 avg vg vg vg vg vg vg vg vg vg vg vg vg lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 aaaaaaaaaa-
37.16G 32.00M 37.16G 32.00M 37.16G 32.00M 17.14G 16.75G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G 16.75G 16.75G 16.75G 16.75G 16.75G 16.75G 16.75G 17.14G 17.14G 17.14G
You can use the pvs -a command to see devices detected by LVM that have not been initialized as LVM physical volumes. # pvs -a PV /dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01
VG
Fmt
Attr PSize -0
PFree 0
/dev/new_vg/lvol0 /dev/ram /dev/ram0 /dev/ram2 /dev/ram3 /dev/ram4 /dev/ram5 /dev/ram6 /dev/root /dev/sda /dev/sdb /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd /dev/sdd1
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
vg_extent_count #Ext vg_extent_size vg_fmt vg_free vg_free_count vg_name vg_seqno vg_size vg_sysid vg_tags vg_uuid Ext Fmt VFree Free VG Seq VSize SYS ID
VG Tags LVM tags attached to the volume group VG UUID The UUID of the volume group
The vgs command displays the following fields by default: vg_name, pv_count, lv_count, snap_count, vg_attr, vg_size, vg_free. The display is sorted by vg_name. # vgs VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree new_vg 3 1 1 wz--n- 51.42G 51.36G Using the -v argument with the vgs command adds the following fields to the default display: vg_extent_size, vg_uuid. # vgs -v Finding all volume groups Finding volume group "new_vg" VG Attr Ext #PV #LV #SN VSize VFree VG UUID new_vg wz--n- 4.00M 3 1 1 51.42G 51.36G jxQJ0a-ZKk0-OpMO-0118-nlwO-wwqd-fD5D32
devices
lv_attr
lv_tags lv_uuid mirror_log modules move_pv origin regionsize region_size seg_count seg_size seg_start seg_tags segtype snap_percent stripes stripesize stripe_size
LV Tags
LV UUID The UUID of the logical volume. Log Modules Move Origin Region #Seg SSize Start Device on which the mirror log resides Corresponding kernel device-mapper target necessary to use this logical volume Source physical volume of a temporary logical volume created with the pvmove command The origin device of a snapshot volume The unit size of a mirrored logical volume The number of segments in the logical volume The size of the segments in the logical volume Offset of the segment in the logical volume
Seg Tags LVM tags attached to the segments of the logical volume Type Snap% #Str Stripe The segment type of a logical volume (for example: mirror, striped, linear) Current percentage of a snapshot volume that is in use Number of stripes or mirrors in a logical volume Unit size of the stripe in a striped logical volume
Table 4.3. lvs Display Fields The lvs command displays the following fields by default: lv_name, vg_name, lv_attr, lv_size, origin, snap_percent, move_pv, mirror_log, copy_percent. The default display is sorted by vg_name and lv_name within the volume group. # lvs LV
VG
Attr
LSize
Using the -v argauament with the lvs command adds the following fields to the default display: seg_count, lv_major, lv_minor, lv_kernel_major, lv_kernel_minor, lv_uuid. # lvs -v Finding all logical volumes LV VG #Seg Attr LSize lvol0 new_vg 1 owi-a- 52.00M OjsI-LT03-nHLC-y8XW-EhCl78 newvgsnap1 new_vg 1 swi-a- 8.00M o79k-20h2-ZGF0-qCJm-CfbsIx
Maj Min KMaj KMin Origin Snap% -1 -1 -1 253 -1 253 3 5 lvol0 0.20
Move Copy%
You can use the --segments argument of the lvs command to display information with default columns that emphasize the segment information. When you use the segments argument, the seg prefix is optional. The lvs --segments command displays the following fields by default: lv_name, vg_name, lv_attr, stripes, segtype, seg_size. The default display is sorted by vg_name, lv_name within the volume group, and seg_start within the logical volume. If the logical
volumes were fragmented, the output from this command would show that. # lvs --segments LV LogVol00 LogVol01 lv lv lv lv VG VolGroup00 VolGroup00 vg vg vg vg Attr #Str Type SSize -wi-ao 1 linear 36.62G -wi-ao 1 linear 512.00M -wi-a1 linear 104.00M -wi-a-wi-a-wi-a1 linear 104.00M 1 linear 104.00M 1 linear 88.00M
Using the -v argument with the lvs --segments command adds the following fields to the default display: seg_start, stripesize, chunksize. # lvs -v --segments Finding all logical volumes LV VG Attr Start SSize lvol0 new_vg owi-anewvgsnap1 new_vg swi-a0 0 52.00M 8.00M
The following example shows the default output of the lvs command on a system with one logical volume configured, followed by the default output of the lvs command with the segments argument specified. # lvs LV
VG
Attr
LSize
Origin Snap%
lvol0 new_vg -wi-a- 52.00M # lvs --segments LV VG Attr #Str Type SSize lvol0 new_vg -wi-a1 linear 52.00M Prev4.9.1. Format Control Up Home Next4.9.3. Sorting LVM Reports
G G G G
G G
To display a reverse sort, precede a field you specify after the -O argument with the - character. # pvs -o pv_name,pv_size,pv_free -O -pv_free PV PSize PFree /dev/sdd1 17.14G 17.14G /dev/sdb1 17.14G 17.14G /dev/sdc1 17.14G 17.09G Prev4.9.2. Object Selection Up Home Next4.9.4. Specifying Units
G G G G
G G
Attr -aaa-
By default, units are displayed in powers of 2 (multiples of 1024). You can specify that units be displayed in multiples of 1000 by capitalizing the unit specification (B, K, M, G, T, H). The following command displays the output as a multiple of 1024, the default behavior. # pvs PV /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1
Attr aaa-
The following command displays the output as a multiple of 1000. # pvs --units G PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree /dev/sdb1 new_vg lvm2 a18.40G 18.40G
/dev/sdc1 /dev/sdd1
You can also specify (s)ectors (defined as 512 bytes) or custom units. The following example displays the output of the pvs command as a number of sectors. # pvs --units s PV VG /dev/sdb1 new_vg /dev/sdc1 new_vg /dev/sdd1 new_vg
Attr aaa-
The following example displays the output of the pvs command in units of 4 megabytes. # pvs --units 4m PV VG /dev/sdb1 new_vg /dev/sdc1 new_vg /dev/sdd1 new_vg
Attr aaa-
G G G G
G G
Prev4.9.4. Specifying Units Up Home Next5.1. Creating an LVM Logical Volume on Three Disks
G G
G G G G
G G
Caution
This command destroys any data on /dev/sda1, /dev/sdb1, and /dev/sdc1. [root@tng3-1 ~]# pvcreate /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 Physical volume "/dev/sda1" successfully created Physical volume "/dev/sdb1" successfully created Physical volume "/dev/sdc1" successfully created Prev5.1. Creating an LVM Logical Volume on Three Disks Up Home Next5.1.2. Creating the Volume Group
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
Prev5.1.3. Creating the Logical Volume Up Home Next5.2. Creating a Striped Logical Volume
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/stripe_create_ex.html
G G
G G G G
G G
Caution
This command destroys any data on /dev/sda1, /dev/sdb1, and /dev/sdc1. [root@tng3-1 ~]# pvcreate /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 Physical volume "/dev/sda1" successfully created Physical volume "/dev/sdb1" successfully created Physical volume "/dev/sdc1" successfully created Prev5.2. Creating a Striped Logical Volume Up Home Next5.2.2. Creating the Volume Group
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
This will destroy any data on /dev/striped_vol_group/striped_logical_volume. Are you sure you want to proceed? [y/n] y Device: Blocksize: Filesystem Size: Journals: Resource Groups: Locking Protocol: Lock Table: Syncing... All Done The following commands mount the logical volume and report the file system disk space usage. [root@tng3-1 ~]# mount /dev/striped_vol_group/striped_logical_volume /mnt [root@tng3-1 ~]# df Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/VolGroup00-LogVol00 13902624 1656776 11528232 13% / /dev/hda1 101086 10787 85080 12% /boot tmpfs 127880 0 127880 /dev/striped_vol_group/striped_logical_volume 1969936 20 1969916 0% /dev/shm 1% /mnt /dev/striped_vol_group/striped_logical_volume 4096 492484 1 8 lock_nolock
G G G G
Prev5.2.3. Creating the Logical Volume Up Home Next5.3. Splitting a Volume Group
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
After moving the data, you can see that all of the space on /dev/sdc1 is free. [root@tng3-1 ~]# pvscan PV /dev/sda1 VG myvg PV /dev/sdb1 VG myvg PV /dev/sdc1 VG myvg Total: 3 [51.45 GB] / in
[17.15 GB / 0 free] [17.15 GB / 10.80 GB free] [17.15 GB / 17.15 GB free] 3 [51.45 GB] / in no VG: 0 [0
G G G G
Prev5.3.1. Determining Free Space Up Home Next5.3.3. Splitting the Volume Group
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
5.3.5. Making a File System and Mounting the New Logical Volume
5.3.5. Making a File System and Mounting the New Logical Volume Prev Next
G G
5.3.5. Making a File System and Mounting the New Logical Volume
You can make a file system on the new logical volume and mount it. [root@tng3-1 ~]# gfs_mkfs -plock_nolock -j 1 /dev/yourvg/yourlv This will destroy any data on /dev/yourvg/yourlv. Are you sure you want to proceed? [y/n] y Device: Blocksize: Filesystem Size: Journals: Resource Groups: Locking Protocol: Lock Table: Syncing... All Done [root@tng3-1 ~]# mount /dev/yourvg/yourlv /mnt Prev5.3.4. Creating the New Logical Volume Up Home Next5.3.6. Activating and Mounting the Original Logic... /dev/yourvg/yourlv 4096 1277816 1 20 lock_nolock
G G G G
5.3.6. Activating and Mounting the Original Logical Volume Prev Next
G G
G G G G
G G
Prev5.3.6. Activating and Mounting the Original Logic... Up Home Next5.4.1. Moving Extents to Existing Physical Volumes
G G
PFree Used 12.15G 5.00G 12.15G 5.00G 12.15G 5.00G 2.15G 15.00G
We want to move the extents off of /dev/sdb1 so that we can remove it from the volume group. If there are enough free extents on the other physical volumes in the volume group, you can execute the pvmove command on the device you want to remove with no other options and the extents will be distributed to the other devices. [root@tng3-1 /dev/sdb1: ... /dev/sdb1: ... /dev/sdb1: ~]# pvmove /dev/sdb1 Moved: 2.0% Moved: 79.2% Moved: 100.0%
After the pvmove command has finished executing, the distribution of extents is as follows: [root@tng3-1]# pvs -o+pv_used PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree Used /dev/sda1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 7.15G 10.00G /dev/sdb1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 17.15G 0 /dev/sdc1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 12.15G 5.00G /dev/sdd1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 2.15G 15.00G
Use the vgreduce command to remove the physical volume /dev/sdb1 from the volume group. [root@tng3-1 ~]# vgreduce myvg /dev/sdb1 Removed "/dev/sdb1" from volume group "myvg" [root@tng3-1 ~]# pvs PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree /dev/sda1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 7.15G /dev/sdb1 lvm2 -17.15G 17.15G /dev/sdc1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 12.15G /dev/sdd1 myvg lvm2 a17.15G 2.15G The disk can now be physically removed or allocated to other users.
G G G G
Prev5.4. Removing a Disk from a Logical Volume Up Home Next5.4.2. Moving Extents to a New Disk
G G
[root@tng3-1]# pvs PV VG /dev/sda1 myvg /dev/sdb1 myvg /dev/sdc1 myvg /dev/sdd1 myvg
5.4.2.4. Removing the Old Physical Volume from the Volume Group
After you have moved the data off /dev/sdb1, you can remove it from the volume group. [root@tng3-1 ~]# vgreduce myvg /dev/sdb1 Removed "/dev/sdb1" from volume group "myvg" You can now reallocate the disk to another volume group or remove the disk from the system.
G G G G
Prev5.4.1. Moving Extents to Existing Physical Volumes Up Home NextChapter 6. LVM Troubleshooting
G G
G G
Use the -v, -vv, -vvv, or -vvvv argument of any command for increasingly verbose levels of output.
If the problem is related to the logical volume activation, set 'activation = 1' in the 'log' section of the configuration file and run the command with the -vvvv argument. After you have finished examining this output be sure to reset this parameter to 0, to avoid possible problems with the machine locking during low memory situations.
Run the lvmdump command, which provides and information dump for diagnostic purposes. For information, see the lvmdump(8) man page. Execute the lvs -v, pvs -a or dmsetup info -c command for additional system information.
Examine the last backup of the metadata in the /etc/lvm/backup file and archived versions in the /etc/lvm/archive file. Check the current configuration information by running the lvm dumpconfig command. Check the .cache file in the /etc/lvm directory for a record of which devices have physical volumes on them.
G G G G
G G
The following examples show the output of the pvs and lvs commands with the -P argument specified when a leg of a mirrored logical volume has failed. root@link-08 ~]# vgs -a -o +devices -P Partial mode. Incomplete volume groups will be activated read-only. VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree Devices corey 4 4 0 rz-pnc 1.58T 1.34T my_mirror_mimage_0(0),my_mirror_mimage_1(0) corey 4 4 0 rz-pnc 1.58T 1.34T /dev/sdd1(0) corey 4 4 0 rz-pnc 1.58T 1.34T unknown device(0) corey 4 4 0 rz-pnc 1.58T 1.34T /dev/sdb1(0)
[root@link-08 ~]# lvs -a -o +devices -P Partial mode. Incomplete volume groups will be activated read-only. LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% Move Log Copy% my_mirror corey mwi-a- 120.00G my_mirror_mlog 1.95 my_mirror_mimage_0(0),my_mirror_mimage_1(0) [my_mirror_mimage_0] corey iwi-ao 120.00G device(0) [my_mirror_mimage_1] corey iwi-ao 120.00G [my_mirror_mlog] corey lwi-ao 4.00M Prev6.1. Troubleshooting Diagnostics Up Home Next6.3. Recovering from LVM Mirror Failure
Devices
G G G G
G G
The following commands creates the volume group vg and the mirrored volume groupfs. [root@link-08 ~]# vgcreate vg /dev/sd[abcdefgh][12] Volume group "vg" successfully created [root@link-08 ~]# lvcreate -L 750M -n groupfs -m 1 vg /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 Rounding up size to full physical extent 752.00 MB Logical volume "groupfs" created You can use the lvs command to verify the layout of the mirrored volume and the underlying devices for the mirror leg and the mirror log. Note that in the first example the mirror is not yet completely synced; you should wait until the Copy% field displays 100.00 before continuing. [root@link-08 ~]# lvs -a -o +devices
LV
VG
Attr
LSize
Origin Snap%
Move Log
Copy% Devices
groupfs vg mwi-a- 752.00M groupfs_mimage_0(0),groupfs_mimage_1(0) [groupfs_mimage_0] vg [groupfs_mimage_1] vg [groupfs_mlog] vg iwi-ao 752.00M iwi-ao 752.00M lwi-ao 4.00M
[root@link-08 ~]# lvs -a -o +devices LV groupfs VG vg Attr LSize Origin Snap% mwi-a- 752.00M iwi-ao 752.00M iwi-ao 752.00M lwi-ao 4.00M i Move Log Copy% Devices groupfs_mlog 100.00 /dev/sda1(0) /dev/sdb1(0) /dev/sdc1(0)
In this example, the primary leg of the mirror /dev/sda1 fails. Any write activity to the mirrored volume causes LVM to detect the failed mirror. When this occurs, LVM converts the mirror into a single linear volume. In this case, to trigger the conversion, we execute a dd command [root@link-08 ~]# dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/vg/groupfs count=10 10+0 records in 10+0 records out You can use the lvs command to verify that the device is now a linear device. Because of the failed disk, I/O errors occur. [root@link-08 ~]# lvs -a -o +devices /dev/sda1: read failed after 0 of 2048 at 0: Input/output error /dev/sda2: read failed after 0 of 2048 at 0: Input/output error LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% Move Log Copy% Devices groupfs vg -wi-a- 752.00M /dev/sdb1(0) At this point you should still be able to use the logical volume, but there will be no mirror redundancy. To rebuild the mirrored volume, you replace the broken drive and recreate the physical volume. If you use the same disk rather than replacing it with a new one, you will see "inconsistent" warnings when you run the pvcreate command. [root@link-08 ~]# pvcreate /dev/sda[12] Physical volume "/dev/sda1" successfully created Physical volume "/dev/sda2" successfully created [root@link-08 ~]# pvscan PV /dev/sdb1 VG vg PV /dev/sdb2 VG vg PV /dev/sdc1 VG vg PV /dev/sdc2 VG vg PV /dev/sdd1 VG vg
GB GB GB GB GB
/ / / / /
GB GB GB GB GB
PV /dev/sdd2 PV /dev/sde1 PV /dev/sde2 PV /dev/sdf1 PV /dev/sdf2 PV /dev/sdg1 PV /dev/sdg2 PV /dev/sdh1 PV /dev/sdh2 PV /dev/sda1
VG vg VG vg VG vg VG vg VG vg VG vg VG vg VG vg VG vg
lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [603.94 GB]
PV /dev/sda2 lvm2 [603.94 GB] Total: 16 [2.11 TB] / in use: 14 [949.65 GB] / in no VG: 2 [1.18 TB] Next you extend the original volume group with the new physical volume. [root@link-08 ~]# vgextend vg /dev/sda[12] Volume group "vg" successfully extended [root@link-08 ~]# pvscan PV /dev/sdb1 PV /dev/sdb2 PV /dev/sdc1 PV PV PV PV PV PV /dev/sdc2 /dev/sdd1 /dev/sdd2 /dev/sde1 /dev/sde2 /dev/sdf1 VG vg VG vg VG vg VG VG VG VG VG VG vg vg vg vg vg vg lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.10 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 lvm2 [67.83 [67.83 [67.83 [67.83 [67.83 [67.83 GB GB GB GB GB GB / / / / / / 67.83 67.83 67.83 67.83 67.83 67.83 GB GB GB GB GB GB free] free] free] free] free] free]
PV /dev/sdf2 VG vg lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] PV /dev/sdg1 VG vg lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] PV /dev/sdg2 VG vg lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] PV /dev/sdh1 VG vg lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] PV /dev/sdh2 VG vg lvm2 [67.83 GB / 67.83 GB free] PV /dev/sda1 VG vg lvm2 [603.93 GB / 603.93 GB free] PV /dev/sda2 VG vg lvm2 [603.93 GB / 603.93 GB free] Total: 16 [2.11 TB] / in use: 16 [2.11 TB] / in no VG: 0 [0 Convert the linear volume back to its original mirrored state.
[root@link-08 ~]# lvconvert -m 1 /dev/vg/groupfs /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1 Logical volume mirror converted. You can use the lvs command to verify that the mirror is restored. [root@link-08 ~]# lvs -a -o +devices LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% groupfs vg mwi-a- 752.00M groupfs_mimage_0(0),groupfs_mimage_1(0)
G G G G
Prev6.2. Displaying Information on Failed Devices Up Home Next6.4. Recovering Physical Volume Metadata
G G
Caution
You should not attempt this procedure with a working LVM logical volume. You will lose your data if you specify the incorrect UUID. The following example shows the sort of output you may see if the metadata area is missing or corrupted. [root@link-07 backup]# lvs -a -o +devices Couldn't find device with uuid 'FmGRh3-zhok-iVI8-7qTD-S5BI-MAEN-NYM5Sk'. Couldn't find all physical volumes for volume group VG. Couldn't find device with uuid 'FmGRh3-zhok-iVI8-7qTD-S5BI-MAEN-NYM5Sk'. Couldn't find all physical volumes for volume group VG. ... You may be able to find the UUID for the physical volume that was overwritten by looking in the /etc/lvm/archive directory. Look in the file VolumeGroupName_xxxx.vg for the last known valid archived LVM metadata for that volume group. Alternately, you may find that deactivating the volume and setting the partial (-P) argument will enable you to find the UUID of the missing corrupted physical volume. [root@link-07 backup]# vgchange -an --partial Partial mode. Incomplete volume groups will be activated read-only. Couldn't find device with uuid 'FmGRh3-zhok-iVI8-7qTD-S5BI-MAEN-NYM5Sk'. Couldn't find device with uuid 'FmGRh3-zhok-iVI8-7qTD-S5BI-MAEN-NYM5Sk'. ... Use the --uuid and --restorefile arguments of the pvcreate command to restore the physical volume. The following example labels the /dev/sdh1 device as a physical volume with the UUID indicated above, FmGRh3-zhokiVI8-7qTD-S5BI-MAEN-NYM5Sk. This command restores the physical volume label with the metadata information contained in VG_00050.vg, the most recent good archived metatdata for volume group . The restorefile argument instructs the pvcreate command to make the new physical volume compatible with the old one on the volume group, ensuring that the the new metadata will not be placed where the old physical volume contained data (which could happen, for example, if the original pvcreate command had used the command line arguments that
control metadata placement, or it the physical volume was originally created using a different version of the software that used different defaults). The pvcreate command overwrites only the LVM metadata areas and does not affect the existing data areas. [root@link-07 backup]# pvcreate --uuid "FmGRh3-zhok-iVI8-7qTD-S5BI-MAEN-NYM5Sk" --restorefile /etc/lvm/archive/VG_00050.vg /dev/sdh1 Physical volume "/dev/sdh1" successfully created You can then use the vgcfgrestore command to restore the volume group's metadata. [root@link-07 backup]# vgcfgrestore VG Restored volume group VG You can now display the logical volumes. [root@link-07 backup]# lvs -a -o +devices LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% stripe VG -wi--- 300.00G stripe VG -wi--- 300.00G
The following commands activate the volumes and display the active volumes. [root@link-07 backup]# lvchange -ay /dev/VG/stripe [root@link-07 backup]# lvs -a -o +devices LV VG stripe VG stripe VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% -wi-a- 300.00G -wi-a- 300.00G Move Log Copy% Devices /dev/sdh1 (0),/dev/sda1(0) /dev/sdh1 (34728),/dev/sdb1(0)
If the on-disk LVM metadata takes as least as much space as what overrode it, this command can recover the physical volume. If what overrode the metadata went past the metadata area, the data on the volume may have been affected. You might be able to use the fsck command to recover that data. Prev6.3. Recovering from LVM Mirror Failure Up Home Next6.5. Replacing a Missing Physical Volume
G G G G
G G
Prev6.4. Recovering Physical Volume Metadata Up Home Next6.6. Removing Lost Physical Volumes from a Volume...
6.6. Removing Lost Physical Volumes from a Volume Group Prev Next
G G
Prev6.5. Replacing a Missing Physical Volume Up Home Next6.7. Insufficient Free Extents for a Logical Volu...
G G
8780 / 34.30 GB
Alternately, you can use the vg_free_count and vg_extent_count arguments of the vgs command to display the free extents and the total number of extents. [root@tng3-1 ~]# vgs -o +vg_free_count,vg_extent_count VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree Free #Ext testvg 2 0 0 wz--n- 34.30G 34.30G 8780 8780 With 8780 free physical extents, you can run the following command, using the lower-case l argument to use extents instead of bytes: # lvcreate -l8780 -n testlv testvg This uses all the free extents in the volume group. # vgs -o +vg_free_count,vg_extent_count VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree Free #Ext testvg 2 1 0 wz--n- 34.30G 0 0 8780
Alternately, you can extend the logical volume to use a percentage of the remaining free space in the volume group by using the -l argument of the lvcreate command. For information, see Section 4.4.1.1, Creating Linear Volumes. Prev6.6. Removing Lost Physical Volumes from a Volume... Up Home NextChapter 7. LVM Administration with the LVM GUI
G G G G
G G
Prev6.7. Insufficient Free Extents for a Logical Volu... Up Home NextAppendix A. The Device Mapper
G G
PrevChapter 7. LVM Administration with the LVM GUI Up Home NextAppendix B. The LVM Configuration Files
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
PrevAppendix B. The LVM Configuration Files Up Home NextB.2. Sample lvm.conf File
G G
# This section allows you to configure which block devices should # be used by the LVM system. devices { # Where do you want your volume groups to appear ? dir = "/dev" # An array of directories that contain the device nodes you wish # to use with LVM2. scan = [ "/dev" ] # # # # # # # A filter that tells LVM2 to only use a restricted set of devices. The filter consists of an array of regular expressions. These expressions can be delimited by a character of your choice, and prefixed with either an 'a' (for accept) or 'r' (for reject). The first expression found to match a device name determines if the device will be accepted or rejected (ignored). Devices that don't match any patterns are accepted.
# Be careful if there there are symbolic links or multiple filesystem # entries for the same device as each name is checked separately against # the list of patterns. The effect is that if any name matches any 'a'
# pattern, the device is accepted; otherwise if any name matches any 'r' # pattern it is rejected; otherwise it is accepted. # Don't have more than one filter line active at once: only one gets used. # Run vgscan after you change this parameter to ensure that # the cache file gets regenerated (see below). # If it doesn't do what you expect, check the output of 'vgscan -vvvv'.
# By default we accept every block device: # Steel Toe installed filter -- use this line while running tests filter = [ "r/hda/", "r/disk/", "a/.*/" ] # Steel Toe installed filter -- use this line when installing new kernels #filter = [ "r/disk/", "a/.*/" ] # Exclude the cdrom drive # filter = [ "r|/dev/cdrom|" ] # When testing I like to work with just loopback devices: # filter = [ "a/loop/", "r/.*/" ] # Or maybe all loops and ide drives except hdc: # filter =[ "a|loop|", "r|/dev/hdc|", "a|/dev/ide|", "r|.*|" ] # Use anchors if you want to be really specific # filter = [ "a|^/dev/hda8$|", "r/.*/" ] # The results of the filtering are cached on disk to avoid # rescanning dud devices (which can take a very long time).
By
# default this cache file is hidden in the /etc/lvm directory. # It is safe to delete this file: the tools regenerate it. cache = "/etc/lvm/.cache" # You can turn off writing this cache file by setting this to 0. write_cache_state = 1 # Advanced settings. # List of pairs of additional acceptable block device types found # in /proc/devices with maximum (non-zero) number of partitions. # types = [ "fd", 16 ] # If sysfs is mounted (2.6 kernels) restrict device scanning to # the block devices it believes are valid. # 1 enables; 0 disables.
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL...l/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/lvmconf_file.html (2 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:02 AM]
sysfs_scan = 1 # By default, LVM2 will ignore devices used as components of # software RAID (md) devices by looking for md superblocks. # 1 enables; 0 disables. md_component_detection = 1 } # This section that allows you to configure the nature of the # information that LVM2 reports. log { # Controls the messages sent to stdout or stderr. # There are three levels of verbosity, 3 being the most verbose. verbose = 0 # Should we send log messages through syslog? # 1 is yes; 0 is no. syslog = 1 # Should we log error and debug messages to a file? # By default there is no log file. #file = "/var/log/lvm2.log" # Should we overwrite the log file each time the program is run? # By default we append. overwrite = 0 # What level of log messages should we send to the log file and/or syslog? # There are 6 syslog-like log levels currently in use - 2 to 7 inclusive. # 7 is the most verbose (LOG_DEBUG). level = 0 # Format of output messages # Whether or not (1 or 0) to indent messages according to their severity indent = 1 # Whether or not (1 or 0) to display the command name on each line output command_names = 0 # A prefix to use before the message text (but after the command name, # if selected). Default is two spaces, so you can see/grep the severity # of each message. prefix = " "
# To make the messages look similar to the original LVM tools use: # # # indent = 0 command_names = 1 prefix = " -- "
# Set this if you want log messages during activation. # Don't use this in low memory situations (can deadlock). # activation = 0 } # Configuration of metadata backups and archiving. In LVM2 when we # talk about a 'backup' we mean making a copy of the metadata for the # *current* system. The 'archive' contains old metadata configurations. # Backups are stored in a human readable text format. backup { # Should we maintain a backup of the current metadata configuration ? # Use 1 for Yes; 0 for No. # Think very hard before turning this off! backup = 1 # Where shall we keep it ? # Remember to back up this directory regularly! backup_dir = "/etc/lvm/backup" # Should we maintain an archive of old metadata configurations. # Use 1 for Yes; 0 for No. # On by default. Think very hard before turning this off. archive = 1 # Where should archived files go ? # Remember to back up this directory regularly! archive_dir = "/etc/lvm/archive" # What is the minimum number of archive files you wish to keep ? retain_min = 10 # What is the minimum time you wish to keep an archive file for ? retain_days = 30 } # Settings for the running LVM2 in shell (readline) mode. shell {
# Miscellaneous global LVM2 settings global { library_dir = "/usr/lib" # The file creation mask for any files and directories created. # Interpreted as octal if the first digit is zero. umask = 077 # Allow other users to read the files #umask = 022 # Enabling test mode means that no changes to the on disk metadata # will be made. Equivalent to having the -t option on every # command. Defaults to off. test = 0 # Whether or not to communicate with the kernel device-mapper. # Set to 0 if you want to use the tools to manipulate LVM metadata # without activating any logical volumes. # If the device-mapper kernel driver is not present in your kernel # setting this to 0 should suppress the error messages. activation = 1 # # # # # # # # # # # # # If we can't communicate with device-mapper, should we try running the LVM1 tools? This option only applies to 2.4 kernels and is provided to help you switch between device-mapper kernels and LVM1 kernels. The LVM1 tools need to be installed with .lvm1 suffices e.g. vgscan.lvm1 and they will stop working after you start using the new lvm2 on-disk metadata format. The default value is set when the tools are built. fallback_to_lvm1 = 0 The default metadata format that commands should use - "lvm1" or "lvm2". The command line override is -M1 or -M2. Defaults to "lvm1" if compiled in, else "lvm2". format = "lvm1"
proc = "/proc" # Type of locking to use. Defaults to local file-based locking (1). # Turn locking off by setting to 0 (dangerous: risks metadata corruption # if LVM2 commands get run concurrently). # Type 2 uses the external shared library locking_library. # Type 3 uses built-in clustered locking. locking_type = 1 # If using external locking (type 2) and initialisation fails, # with this set to 1 an attempt will be made to use the built-in # clustered locking. # If you are using a customised locking_library you should set this to 0. fallback_to_clustered_locking = 1 # If an attempt to initialise type 2 or type 3 locking failed, perhaps # because cluster components such as clvmd are not running, with this set # to 1 an attempt will be made to use local file-based locking (type 1). # If this succeeds, only commands against local volume groups will proceed. # Volume Groups marked as clustered will be ignored. fallback_to_local_locking = 1 # Local non-LV directory that holds file-based locks while commands are # in progress. A directory like /tmp that may get wiped on reboot is OK. locking_dir = "/var/lock/lvm" # Other entries can go here to allow you to load shared libraries # e.g. if support for LVM1 metadata was compiled as a shared library use # format_libraries = "liblvm2format1.so" # Full pathnames can be given. # Search this directory first for shared libraries. # library_dir = "/lib" # The external locking library to load if locking_type is set to 2. # locking_library = "liblvm2clusterlock.so" } activation { # Device used in place of missing stripes if activating incomplete volume. # For now, you need to set this up yourself first (e.g. with 'dmsetup') # For example, you could make it return I/O errors using the 'error' # target or make it return zeros. missing_stripe_filler = "/dev/ioerror"
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL...l/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/lvmconf_file.html (6 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:02 AM]
# How much stack (in KB) to reserve for use while devices suspended reserved_stack = 256 # How much memory (in KB) to reserve for use while devices suspended reserved_memory = 8192 # Nice value used while devices suspended process_priority = -18 # If volume_list is defined, each LV is only activated if there is a # match against the list. # "vgname" and "vgname/lvname" are matched exactly. # "@tag" matches any tag set in the LV or VG. # "@*" matches if any tag defined on the host is also set in the LV or VG # # volume_list = [ "vg1", "vg2/lvol1", "@tag1", "@*" ] # Size (in KB) of each copy operation when mirroring mirror_region_size = 512 # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # 'mirror_image_fault_policy' and 'mirror_log_fault_policy' define how a device failure affecting a mirror is handled. A mirror is composed of mirror images (copies) and a log. A disk log ensures that a mirror does not need to be re-synced (all copies made the same) every time a machine reboots or crashes. In the event of a failure, the specified policy will be used to determine what happens: "remove" - Simply remove the faulty device and run without it. If the log device fails, the mirror would convert to using an in-memory log. This means the mirror will not remember its sync status across crashes/reboots and the entire mirror will be re-synced. If a mirror image fails, the mirror will convert to a non-mirrored device if there is only one remaining good copy. "allocate" - Remove the faulty device and try to allocate space on a new device to be a replacement for the failed device. Using this policy for the log is fast and maintains the ability to remember sync state through crashes/reboots.
# # # # #
Using this policy for a mirror device is slow, as it requires the mirror to resynchronize the devices, but it will preserve the mirror characteristic of the device. This policy acts like "remove" if no suitable device and space can be allocated for the replacement.
# Currently this is not implemented properly and behaves # similarly to: # # "allocate_anywhere" - Operates like "allocate", but it does not # require that the new space being allocated be on a # device is not part of the mirror. For a log device # failure, this could mean that the log is allocated on # the same device as a mirror device. For a mirror # device, this could mean that the mirror device is # allocated on the same device as another mirror device. # This policy would not be wise for mirror devices # because it would break the redundant nature of the # mirror. This policy acts like "remove" if no suitable # device and space can be allocated for the replacement. mirror_log_fault_policy = "allocate" mirror_device_fault_policy = "remove" }
#################### # Advanced section # #################### # Metadata settings # # metadata { # Default number of copies of metadata to hold on each PV. 0, 1 or 2. # You might want to override it from the command line with 0 # when running pvcreate on new PVs which are to be added to large VGs. # pvmetadatacopies = 1 # Approximate default size of on-disk metadata areas in sectors. # You should increase this if you have large volume groups or # you want to retain a large on-disk history of your metadata changes. # pvmetadatasize = 255
# List of directories holding live copies of text format metadata. # These directories must not be on logical volumes! # It's possible to use LVM2 with a couple of directories here, # preferably on different (non-LV) filesystems, and with no other # on-disk metadata (pvmetadatacopies = 0). Or this can be in # # # # # # # addition to on-disk metadata areas. The feature was originally added to simplify testing and is not supported under low memory situations - the machine could lock up. Never edit any files in these directories by hand unless you you are absolutely sure you know what you are doing! Use the supplied toolset to make changes (e.g. vgcfgrestore).
# dirs = [ "/etc/lvm/metadata", "/mnt/disk2/lvm/metadata2" ] #} # Event daemon # # dmeventd { # mirror_library is the library used when monitoring a mirror device. # # "libdevmapper-event-lvm2mirror.so" attempts to recover from failures. # It removes failed devices from a volume group and reconfigures a # mirror as necessary. # # mirror_library = "libdevmapper-event-lvm2mirror.so" #} PrevB.1. The LVM Configuration Files Up Home NextAppendix C. LVM Object Tags
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
G G
G G G G
PrevC.1. Adding and Removing Object Tags Up Home NextC.3. Controlling Activation with Tags
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/tag_activation.html
G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/lvm_metadata.html
G G
PrevC.3. Controlling Activation with Tags Up Home NextD.1. The Physical Volume Label
G G
Physical volume UUID Size of block device in bytes NULL-terminated list of data area locations NULL-terminated lists of metadata area locations
Metadata locations are stored as offset and size (in bytes). There is room in the label for about 15 locations, but the LVM tools currently use 3: a single data area plus up to two metadata areas.
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/metadata_contents.html
G G
Information about how and when it was created Information about the volume group:
Name and unique id A version number which is incremented whenever the metadata gets updated Any properties: Read/Write? Resizeable? Any administrative limit on the number of physical volumes and logical volumes it may contain The extent size (in units of sectors which are defined as 512 bytes) An unordered list of physical volumes making up the volume group, each with:
H
Its UUID, used to determine the block device containing it Any properties, such as whether the physical volume is allocatable The offset to the start of the first extent within the physical volume (in sectors) The number of extents
An ordered list of logical volume segments. For each segment the metadata
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/metadata_contents.html
includes a mapping applied to an ordered list of physical volume segments or logical volume segments
G G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/meta_example.html
G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/meta_example.html
# 17.1491 Gigabytes
id = "hGlUwi-zsBg-39FF-do88-pHxY-8XA2-9WKIiA" device = "/dev/sdd" # Hint only status = ["ALLOCATABLE"] dev_size = 35964301 # 17.1491 Gigabytes pe_start = 384 pe_count = 4390 # 17.1484 Gigabytes } } logical_volumes { mylv { id = "GhUYSF-qVM3-rzQo-a6D2-o0aV-LQet-Ur9OF9" status = ["READ", "WRITE", "VISIBLE"] segment_count = 2 segment1 { start_extent = 0 extent_count = 1280 type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 stripes = [ "pv0", 0 ] } segment2 { start_extent = 1280 extent_count = 1280 type = "striped" stripe_count = 1 stripes = [ "pv1", 0 ] } } } } PrevD.2. Metadata Contents Up Home NextIndex
# 5 Gigabytes
# linear
# 5 Gigabytes
# linear
G G G G
Index
Index Prev
G G
Index
A
activating logical volumes individual nodes, Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nodes in a Cluster activating volume groups, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups individual nodes, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups local node only, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups administrative procedures, LVM Administration Overview allocation policy, Creating Volume Groups preventing, Preventing Allocation on a Physical Volume archive file, Logical Volume Backup, Backing Up Volume Group Metadata
B
backup file, Logical Volume Backup metadata, Logical Volume Backup, Backing Up Volume Group Metadata backup file, Backing Up Volume Group Metadata block device scanning, Scanning for Block Devices
C
cache file building, Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File cluster environment, Running LVM in a Cluster, Creating LVM Volumes in a Cluster CLVM
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/ix01.html (1 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:07 AM]
Index
definition, Running LVM in a Cluster clvmd daemon, Running LVM in a Cluster command line units, Using CLI Commands configuration examples, LVM Configuration Examples creating logical volume, Creating Logical Volumes logical volume, example, Creating an LVM Logical Volume on Three Disks LVM volumes in a cluster, Creating LVM Volumes in a Cluster physical volumes, Creating Physical Volumes striped logical volume, example, Creating a Striped Logical Volume volume groups, Creating Volume Groups creating LVM volumes overview, Logical Volume Creation Overview
D
data relocation, online, Online Data Relocation deactivating volume groups, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups exclusive on one node, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups local node only, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups device numbers major, Persistent Device Numbers minor, Persistent Device Numbers persistent, Persistent Device Numbers device path names, Using CLI Commands device scan filters, Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters device size, maximum, Creating Volume Groups device special file directory, Creating Volume Groups display sorting output, Sorting LVM Reports displaying logical volumes, Displaying Logical Volumes, The lvs Command physical volumes, Displaying Physical Volumes, The pvs Command volume groups, Displaying Volume Groups, The vgs Command
Index
E
extent allocation, Creating Volume Groups definition, Volume Groups, Creating Volume Groups
F
failed devices displaying, Displaying Information on Failed Devices file system growing on a logical volume, Growing a File System on a Logical Volume filters, Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters
G
growing file system logical volume, Growing a File System on a Logical Volume
H
help display, Using CLI Commands
I
initializing partitions, Initializing Physical Volumes physical volumes, Initializing Physical Volumes Insufficient Free Extents message, Insufficient Free Extents for a Logical Volume
L
linear logical volume converting to mirrored, Changing Mirrored Volume Configuration
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/ix01.html (3 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:07 AM]
Index
creation, Creating Linear Volumes definition, Linear Volumes logging, Logging logical volume administration, general, Logical Volume Administration changing parameters, Changing the Parameters of a Logical Volume Group creation, Creating Logical Volumes creation example, Creating an LVM Logical Volume on Three Disks definition, Logical Volumes, LVM Logical Volumes displaying, Displaying Logical Volumes, Customized Reporting for LVM, The lvs Command exclusive access, Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nodes in a Cluster extending, Growing Logical Volumes growing, Growing Logical Volumes linear, Creating Linear Volumes local access, Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nodes in a Cluster lvs display arguments, The lvs Command mirrored, Creating Mirrored Volumes reducing, Shrinking Logical Volumes removing, Removing Logical Volumes renaming, Renaming Logical Volumes resizing, Resizing Logical Volumes shrinking, Shrinking Logical Volumes snapshot, Creating Snapshot Volumes striped, Creating Striped Volumes lvchange command, Changing the Parameters of a Logical Volume Group lvconvert command, Changing Mirrored Volume Configuration lvcreate command, Creating Logical Volumes lvdisplay command, Displaying Logical Volumes lvextend command, Growing Logical Volumes LVM architecture overview, LVM Architecture Overview clustered, Running LVM in a Cluster components, LVM Architecture Overview, LVM Components custom report format, Customized Reporting for LVM directory structure, Creating Volume Groups help, Using CLI Commands history, LVM Architecture Overview
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/ix01.html (4 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:07 AM]
Index
label, Physical Volumes logging, Logging logical volume administration, Logical Volume Administration physical volume administration, Physical Volume Administration physical volume, definition, Physical Volumes volume group, definition, Volume Groups LVM1, LVM Architecture Overview LVM2, LVM Architecture Overview lvmdiskscan command, Scanning for Block Devices lvreduce command, Resizing Logical Volumes, Shrinking Logical Volumes lvremove command, Removing Logical Volumes lvrename command, Renaming Logical Volumes lvs command, Customized Reporting for LVM, The lvs Command display arguments, The lvs Command lvscan command, Displaying Logical Volumes
M
man page display, Using CLI Commands metadata backup, Logical Volume Backup, Backing Up Volume Group Metadata recovery, Recovering Physical Volume Metadata mirrored logical volume converting to linear, Changing Mirrored Volume Configuration creation, Creating Mirrored Volumes definition, Mirrored Logical Volumes failure recovery, Recovering from LVM Mirror Failure reconfiguration, Changing Mirrored Volume Configuration
O
online data relocation, Online Data Relocation
P
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/ix01.html (5 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:07 AM]
Index
partition type, setting, Setting the Partition Type partitions multiple, Multiple Partitions on a Disk path names, Using CLI Commands persistent device numbers, Persistent Device Numbers physical extent preventing allocation, Preventing Allocation on a Physical Volume physical volume adding to a volume group, Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group administration, general, Physical Volume Administration creating, Creating Physical Volumes definition, Physical Volumes display, The pvs Command displaying, Displaying Physical Volumes, Customized Reporting for LVM illustration, LVM Physical Volume Layout initializing, Initializing Physical Volumes layout, LVM Physical Volume Layout pvs display arguments, The pvs Command recovery, Replacing a Missing Physical Volume removing, Removing Physical Volumes removing from volume group, Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group removing lost volume, Removing Lost Physical Volumes from a Volume Group resizing, Resizing a Physical Volume pvdisplay command, Displaying Physical Volumes pvmove command, Online Data Relocation pvremove command, Removing Physical Volumes pvresize command, Resizing a Physical Volume pvs command, Customized Reporting for LVM display arguments, The pvs Command pvscan command, Displaying Physical Volumes
R
removing disk from a logical volume, Removing a Disk from a Logical Volume
Index
logical volume, Removing Logical Volumes physical volumes, Removing Physical Volumes renaming logical volume, Renaming Logical Volumes volume group, Renaming a Volume Group report format, LVM devices, Customized Reporting for LVM resizing logical volume, Resizing Logical Volumes physical volume, Resizing a Physical Volume
S
scanning block devices, Scanning for Block Devices scanning devices, filters, Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters snapshot logical volume creation, Creating Snapshot Volumes snapshot volume definition, Snapshot Volumes striped logical volume creation, Creating Striped Volumes creation example, Creating a Striped Logical Volume definition, Striped Logical Volumes extending, Extending a Striped Volume growing, Extending a Striped Volume
T
troubleshooting, LVM Troubleshooting
U
units, command line, Using CLI Commands
Index
V
verbose output, Using CLI Commands vgcfbackup command, Backing Up Volume Group Metadata vgcfrestore command, Backing Up Volume Group Metadata vgchange command, Changing the Parameters of a Volume Group vgcreate command, Creating Volume Groups vgdisplay command, Displaying Volume Groups vgexport command, Moving a Volume Group to Another System vgextend command, Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group vgimport command, Moving a Volume Group to Another System vgmerge command, Combining Volume Groups vgmknodes command, Recreating a Volume Group Directory vgreduce command, Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group vgrename command, Renaming a Volume Group vgs command, Customized Reporting for LVM display arguments, The vgs Command vgscan command, Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File vgsplit command, Splitting a Volume Group volume group activating, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups administration, general, Volume Group Administration changing parameters, Changing the Parameters of a Volume Group combining, Combining Volume Groups creating, Creating Volume Groups deactivating, Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups definition, Volume Groups displaying, Displaying Volume Groups, Customized Reporting for LVM, The vgs Command extending, Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group growing, Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group merging, Combining Volume Groups moving between systems, Moving a Volume Group to Another System reducing, Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group removing, Removing Volume Groups renaming, Renaming a Volume Group shrinking, Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group splitting, Splitting a Volume Group
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/ix01.html (8 of 9) [8/2/2007 3:52:07 AM]
Index
example procedure, Splitting a Volume Group vgs display arguments, The vgs Command PrevD.3. Sample Metadata Up Home
G G G
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-5-manual/Cluster_Logical_Volume_Manager/ld-id3069171.html
Long Description
Long Description
Long Description
Long Description
Long Description
Long Description
Long Description
Legal Notice
1801 Varsity Drive Raleigh, NC 27606-2072 USA Phone: +1 919 754 3700 Phone: 888 733 4281 Fax: +1 919 754 3701 PO Box 13588 Research Triangle Park, NC 27709 USA Documentation-Deployment Copyright 2007 by Red Hat, Inc. This material may be distributed only subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Open Publication License, V1.0 or later (the latest version is presently available at http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/). Distribution of substantively modified versions of this document is prohibited without the explicit permission of the copyright holder. Distribution of the work or derivative of the work in any standard (paper) book form for commercial purposes is prohibited unless prior permission is obtained from the copyright holder. Red Hat and the Red Hat "Shadow Man" logo are registered trademarks of Red Hat, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All other trademarks referenced herein are the property of their respective owners. The GPG fingerprint of the [email protected] key is: CA 20 86 86 2B D6 9D FC 65 F6 EC C4 21 91 80 CD DB 42 A6 0E