-- Dave Newman <newman@uci.edu> on 05/01/02 15:26:51 -0700 > Hi -- > > I just installed lvm on three 160 GB IDE hard drives, giving me a singe 480 > GB partition. Not possible. You have combined the storage from 3 Phyiscal Volumes ("PV") into a single Volume Group ("VG"). After this point you can create Logical Volumes ("LV") w/in the VG. Whether you loose data when a VG croaks depends on whether your LV's are spread across multiple VG's. This is often done either for the increased space or to improve performance (by striping the LV in kernel-page sized chunks). If your filesystem is striped and any disk it's on croaks then you will loose whatever data is on the dead disk [until it's restored from the backup that you obviously intend to make if you're dealing with have a TB of data]. If you have multiple LV's and they are all kept on a single drive then only the LV's on the one PV will have to be restored. I'd suggest if you're dealing with this much data that a RAID system would be worth it. RAID5 isn't all that expensive to install (one more drive in this case) and can save you many, many hours restoring data. In this case you'd want a RAID5 w/ 4k stripe (4 x 1K chunk) (4k is standard page size for linux ext[23], change this number to match whatever file system page you really use). The RAID will combine the disks into a single unit for you, so the VG will use a single PV. LVM is still useful here for managing the individual LV's (e.g., growing them as time goes along). It would also be useful to have LVM in the case where your physical storage has to grow. Just add another RAID5 setup, add it to the VG and expand onto it. -- Steven Lembark 2930 W. Palmer Workhorse Computing Chicago, IL 60647 +1 800 762 1582 _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@sistina.com http://lists.sistina.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://www.sistina.com/lvm/Pages/howto.html