Re: N00b Question: Logical Volume without a Logical Volume Group ?

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Dan White wrote:
Is a logical volume group necessary before one can start making mountable partitions ?

I'm trying to work with a SAN.  We were allocated a 10Gb LUN to "play" with. Another admin created a logical volume on the LUN and then made a single partition out of the logical volume.  The flow I am familiar with from Red Hat's GUI is to first make a logical volume group, then make partitions in the group that I can adjust in size as necessary.

Are both workflows valid ?


It would have been possible to just build a filesystem directly on the disk, to do a single partition with all the space, I would never do the first thing as it is possible for other sysadmins easily make the mistake of thinking the disk was blank, (particularly if it is not mounted all the time). The second one is fine however the problem is if you ever with to change to size of the partition, it is possible but it is hard work.

Personally even with LVM I would still write a partition table the disk, this helps show the disk as being used to other system administrators, however there would be one partition on it of type 8e, and on that I would create a PV (physical volume), this PV can then be used to create a VG (Volume group) or be added to an exisiting one, when i create VGs I normally use an ext size of arround 128m->256m to keep down the number of disk fragments managed by the kernel. From that VG I can create an LV (Logical Volume) Personally I would never allocate the whole space in a volume group to an LV, even the volume group was just being used to join disks together to make one huge filesystem, I try to keep by 5% of the disk space this will allow the use of snapshots which are create for keeping things consistent when backups are done.

As other posters have said, LVM always making changes to disk space much easier, try the following with a partion table along...

Shrink 10g filesystem to 2g
Create another 2g filesystem
Expand first filesystem back to 8g
And another 10g peice of disk and add the space to the first filesystem.

James

_______________________________________________
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/


[Index of Archives]     [Gluster Users]     [Kernel Development]     [Linux Clusters]     [Device Mapper]     [Security]     [Bugtraq]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]

  Powered by Linux