Installation guide
Table Of Contents
- LVM Administrator's Guide
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. The LVM Logical Volume Manager
- Chapter 2. LVM Components
- Chapter 3. LVM Administration Overview
- Chapter 4. LVM Administration with CLI Commands
- 1. Using CLI Commands
- 2. Physical Volume Administration
- 3. Volume Group Administration
- 3.1. Creating Volume Groups
- 3.2. Adding Physical Volumes to a Volume Group
- 3.3. Displaying Volume Groups
- 3.4. Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File
- 3.5. Removing Physical Volumes from a Volume Group
- 3.6. Changing the Parameters of a Volume Group
- 3.7. Activating and Deactivating Volume Groups
- 3.8. Removing Volume Groups
- 3.9. Splitting a Volume Group
- 3.10. Combining Volume Groups
- 3.11. Backing Up Volume Group Metadata
- 3.12. Renaming a Volume Group
- 3.13. Moving a Volume Group to Another System
- 3.14. Recreating a Volume Group Directory
- 4. Logical Volume Administration
- 4.1. Creating Logical Volumes
- 4.2. Persistent Device Numbers
- 4.3. Resizing Logical Volumes
- 4.4. Changing the Parameters of a Logical Volume Group
- 4.5. Renaming Logical Volumes
- 4.6. Removing Logical Volumes
- 4.7. Displaying Logical Volumes
- 4.8. Growing Logical Volumes
- 4.9. Extending a Striped Volume
- 4.10. Shrinking Logical Volumes
- 5. Creating Snapshot Volumes
- 6. Controlling LVM Device Scans with Filters
- 7. Online Data Relocation
- 8. Activating Logical Volumes on Individual Nodes in a Cluster
- 9. Customized Reporting for LVM
- Chapter 5. LVM Configuration Examples
- Chapter 6. LVM Troubleshooting
- Chapter 7. LVM Administration with the LVM GUI
- Appendix A. The Device Mapper
- Appendix B. The LVM Configuration Files
- Appendix C. LVM Object Tags
- Appendix D. LVM Volume Group Metadata
- Index

striped volumes.
2. Volume Groups
Physical volumes are combined into volume groups (VGs). This creates a pool of disk space out
of which logical volumes can be allocated.
Within a volume group, the disk space available for allocation is divided into units of a fixed-size
called extents. An extent is the smallest unit of space that can be allocated, Within a physical
volume, extents are referred to as physical extents.
A logical volume is allocated into logical extents of the same size as the physical extents. The
extent size is thus the same for all logical volumes in the volume group. The volume group
maps the logical extents to physical extents.
3. LVM Logical Volumes
In LVM, a volume group is divided up into logical volumes. There are three types of LVM logical
volumes: linear volumes, striped volumes, and mirrored volumes. These are described in the
following sections.
3.1. Linear Volumes
A linear volume aggregates multiple physical volumes into one logical volume. For example, if
you have two 60GB disks, you can create a 120GB logical volume. The physical storage is con-
catenated.
Creating a linear volume assigns a range of physical extents to an area of a logical volume in
order. For example, as shown in Figure 2.2, “Extent Mapping” logical extents 1 to 99 could map
to one physical volume and logical extents 100 to 198 could map to a second physical volume.
From the point of view of the application, there is one device that is 198 extents in size.
2. Volume Groups
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