2008-04-22 12:28:10 -0400, Charles Marcus: [...] >> So to sum up, the "snapshot" volume you are creating is a >> "virtual" volume that is a front end to both the snapshot >> storage volume ("COW") and the original real volume ("real"). >> >> Hope this clarifies a bit, > > Thanks for trying, but no, that just made my head hurt... > > ;) > > Seriously... if the snapshot volume that I'm creating is a front end to > BOTH, when I back it up, I guess LVM just 'knows' that I mean to backup the > 'original'? > > Is there a graphical outline of how this works? I seem to do better with > visualizations... [...] I can try another wording. Your snapshot device is a *virtual* device. And if you do a cat /dev/vg/snapshot, you'll get 100GB worth of data which will be exactly the same as you would have gotten if you had done a cat /dev/vg/original at the time you did the snapshot. To make that virtual snapshot work, LVM uses internally another this time real device, which you don't access directly. You can do a cat /dev/mapper/vg-snapshot-cow, you'll get 5 GB of data, but that data will be useless to you, it's in a special format recognised by the device-mapper used to store only the blocks that were changed in your original device since the snapshot. The "dmsetup status" or "lvdisplay" commands should be able to tell you how much of the COW volume has already been allocated to store the "modifications". When all the space there has been used, the virtual device will stop working altogether. is that better? Stephane _______________________________________________ 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/