Hi I had a recovery problem with LVM before : I failed. I got no real help from this mailing list. I finaly succeed to start the disk for a short term on another machine and I will never use LVM before to see succeful recovery process. Nobody at redhat take care about such problem........ In the future take ext2, ext3, reiserfs and you will have plenty good recovcery solutions. Sorry to not be able to help you more. Good luke. Best regards Andre Legendre --- mymail mymail <internetbizmail@yahoo.com> wrote: > > > Michael Loftis <mloftis@wgops.com> wrote: > LVM is not a filesystem, it's a block device layer. > If you're > running/using LVM on the existing system it's vgscan > and vgchange on > startup should have activated all the old LVs/VGs > and mapped them to > /dev/VGNAME/LVNAME -- those are the devices you > mount. > Thanks. > > I realise this. But the disk I'm trying to mount is > built the same way as the new disk I've built. So > the both have a VolGroup00. What I would like to do > is to either understand how I can change the volume > group info so it will become a distinct volume > group, and then I can 'import' this into my new > environment, or how I can get into the block system > so I can access the filesystem structure it embeds. > > This is where I'm struggling. I would like to create > a VolGroup01 device file, rename the volume group > within the physical volume, and then mount that. Is > it possible to 'hack' the old drive like this? > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam > protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com > _______________________________________________ > linux-lvm mailing list > linux-lvm@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm > read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/ _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/