VERITAS Volume Manager 3.1 Migration Guide

Converting LVM to VxVM
Converting Unused LVM Physical Volumes to VxVM Disks
Chapter 224
Converting Unused LVM Physical Volumes to
VxVM Disks
LVM disks which are not part of any volume group, and contain no user
data, are simply cleaned up, so that there are no LVM disk headers.Then
the disks are given over to VxVM through the normal means of
initializing disks.
CAUTION Exercise caution while using this procedure to give disks over to VxVM.
You must be absolutely certain that the disks are not in use in any LVM
configuration. If there is any user data on these disks, it will be lost
during conversion.
Removing LVM Disk Information
To remove LVM disk information from the disks use the following
command:
# pvremove
disk_name
The pvremove will not allow the removal of disk headers which indicate
a Volume Group membership for the disk. If the disk fails pvremove for
this reason, you should first make certain that the group membership
information is stale. Do this by using pvdisplay:
# pvdisplay
disk_name
If pvdisplay finds no valid group information associated with the disk,
you can overwrite the LVM headers using pvcreate:
# pvcreate
disk_name
CAUTION If
disk_name
is an alternate path to a disk that does not appear in the
lvmtab file for this system, or is a disk that is in use on another system,
but not imported onto this system, then do not pvcreate -f the disk.
Doing so will destroy the LVM headers. You can use pvcreate without
the -f option safely, as it will only succeed if the disk is not listed in