On Wed, 23 Jan 2008, Jim Secan wrote: > The issue is trying to mount a drive that was the primary internal HD for > a system with a failed motherboard. The disk was built using FC3, and has > a a /boot partition and one under LVM control. When I try to mount this > disk as a USB drive from a CentOS system, I can't mount the LVM-controlled > partition because it has the same LVM volume/group name as the disk in the > CentOS system. ... > 2. Rename the volume on the USB HD. This requires me to power down the > CentOS system, open the box, disconnect the internal HD, boot to the > installation CD in rescue mode, use lvm commands to rename the USB HD, and > then put everything back together again. This sounds overly complicated, > but necessary. > > So, have I understood all this correctly? Are these the only two ways in > which this problem can be surmounted, and if so which is the safest. I'm > thinking that I want to rename the internal HD to something other than the > default setting anyway, but I really don't like the idea that I might miss > changing the name in some important file or script that will bite me > later. 3. Plug the USB HD into any available system with a different/no internal VG name and rename. Stick a LiveCD into one of your LTSP thin clients for instance. 4. Rename the USB HD using the UUID: # vgrename -v [VGUUID] newvgname From the man page: "vgrename Zvlifi-Ep3t-e0Ng-U42h-o0ye-KHu1-nl7Ns4 VolGroup00_tmp" changes the name of the Volume Group with UUID Zvlifi-Ep3t-e0Ng-U42h-o0ye-KHu1-nl7Ns4 to "VolGroup00_tmp". -- Stuart D. Gathman <stuart@bmsi.com> Business Management Systems Inc. Phone: 703 591-0911 Fax: 703 591-6154 "Confutatis maledictis, flammis acribus addictis" - background song for a Microsoft sponsored "Where do you want to go from here?" commercial. _______________________________________________ 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/