I am trying to use nut on a Centos 5.0 system. On this system "/" is a 1.4 Tb LVM volume composed of two 700Gb partitions (striped). Nut is set up completely except for the final modification to the /etc/init.d/halt script. So far I have made this change: < command=/sbin/halt < if [ -f /var/run/killpower -a -r /etc/ups/upsmon.conf -a -f /etc/sysconfig/ups ] ; then < /usr/local/ups/sbin/upsdrvctl shutdown --- > if [ "$command" = /sbin/halt -a -r /etc/ups/upsmon.conf -a -f /etc/killpower -a -f /etc/sysconfig/ups ] ; then > . /etc/sysconfig/ups > if [ "$SERVER" = "yes" -a "$MODEL" = "upsdrvctl" ] ; then > /sbin/upsdrvctl shutdown > elif [ "$SERVER" = "yes" -a "$MODEL" != "NONE" -a -n "$MODEL" -a -n "$DEVICE" ] ; then > $MODEL $OPTIONS_HALT -k $DEVICE > fi However, I'm worried that this might corrupt the LVM metadata. The "upsdrvctl shutdown" is equivalent to pulling the server's power cord out. Because of this, elsewhere in the nut documentation it suggested doing mdadm --readonly <device> before the upsdrvctl shutdown. However, I do not believe that the present system is using mdadm. Is a similar command necessary for lvm? Or will the lvm volume have been remounted readonly "automagically" by this section of the halt script, which precedes the above changes by a couple of lines? # Remount read only anything that's left mounted. # echo $"Remounting remaining filesystems readonly" mount | awk '{ print $3 }' | while read line; do fstab-decode mount -n -o ro,remount $line done It is important that the logical volume is shut down nicely on a power failure event, since it takes a very long time to fsck it, and that should not be needed when power is restored from a controlled UPS initiated shutdown. Additionally, swap is also a logical volume, so it might need special attention too. In a normal shutdown the upsdrvctl is never called and the halt proceeds to: -------------------- # First, try kexec. If that fails, fall back to rebooting the old way. [ -n "$kexec_command" ] && $kexec_command -e >& /dev/null HALTARGS="-d" [ -f /poweroff -o ! -f /halt ] && HALTARGS="$HALTARGS -p" exec $command $HALTARGS --------------------------- Is anything in there required for the lvm to be seen as clean on the next boot??? Thanks, David Mathog mathog@caltech.edu Manager, Sequence Analysis Facility, Biology Division, Caltech _______________________________________________ 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/