On Fri, 2006-11-10 at 09:27 -0600, Jonathan E Brassow wrote: > I can't imagine putting LVM on a USB drive... Are you sure LVM is even > involved here? > > You can type 'mount' or 'df' at the command prompt. That will tell you > how the usbdisk is mounted. If it is mounted from /dev/sda1 - then > there is no LVM in the mix. > > brassow Jonathan, Thanks for your reply. I didn't know that an USB disk couldn't be used for logical volumes as pvcreate and lvcreate did not complain. However, when I now do a lvscan it gives me: _______________________________________ [root@laguna ~]# lvscan Couldn't find device with uuid 'G6vIxd-bp54-0zd0-PKzf-WI31-xPmr-qoeFAT'. Couldn't find all physical volumes for volume group VolGroup00. Couldn't find device with uuid 'G6vIxd-bp54-0zd0-PKzf-WI31-xPmr-qoeFAT'. Couldn't find all physical volumes for volume group VolGroup00. Volume group "VolGroup00" not found ACTIVE '/dev/VolGroup01/LogVol00' [9.75 GB] inherit ACTIVE '/dev/VolGroup01/LogVol02' [9.75 GB] inherit ACTIVE '/dev/VolGroup01/LogVol03' [4.88 GB] inherit ACTIVE '/dev/VolGroup01/LogVol04' [9.75 GB] inherit ACTIVE '/dev/VolGroup01/LogVol05' [9.75 GB] inherit ACTIVE '/dev/VolGroup01/LogVol01' [9.75 GB] inherit _________________________________________________________________ As VolGroup00 is on the USB disk which I just had connected. df gives: _____________________________________ /dev/mapper/VolGroup01-LogVol00 9903432 1035860 8356392 12% / /dev/hda1 99043 25640 68289 28% /boot tmpfs 512492 0 512492 0% /dev/shm /dev/mapper/VolGroup01-LogVol02 9903432 1789628 7602624 20% /home /dev/mapper/VolGroup01-LogVol03 4951688 4137648 558452 89% /usr /dev/mapper/VolGroup01-LogVol04 9903432 342224 9050028 4% /usr/local /dev/mapper/VolGroup01-LogVol05 9903432 761312 8630940 9% /var /dev/sda1 240362656 38037368 190115488 17% /media/disk ___________________________________________________ and fdisk says: _____________________________________________________ The number of cylinders for this disk is set to 30400. There is nothing wrong with that, but this is larger than 1024, and could in certain setups cause problems with: 1) software that runs at boot time (e.g., old versions of LILO) 2) booting and partitioning software from other OSs (e.g., DOS FDISK, OS/2 FDISK) Warning: invalid flag 0x0000 of partition table 4 will be corrected by w(rite) Command (m for help): p Disk /dev/sda1: 250.0 GB, 250056705024 bytes 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 30400 cylinders Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System Command (m for help): q ______________________________________ So I'm at a loss how this is possible. The disk can be reached but neither lvm nor fdisk can tell me what's on the disk, Can you perhaps shine some light on it? (sorry for the long mail). Joep _______________________________________________ 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/