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Nov 15, 2009

Create LVM parttion

   1. Login with root user ID a      
   2. Using the whole primary hard disk for LVM partition:
    
    fdisk /dev/hda

     At the Linux fdisk command prompt

    1. press n to create a new disk partition,
    2. press p to create a primary disk partition,
    3. press 1 to denote it as 1st disk partition,
    4. press ENTER twice to accept the default of 1st and last cylinder – to convert the whole                   secondary hard disk to a single disk partition,
    5. press t (will automatically select the only partition – partition 1) to change the default Linux              partition type (0×83) to LVM partition type (0×8e),
    6. press L to list all the currently supported partition type,
    7. press 8e (as per the L listing) to change partition 1 to 8e, i.e. Linux LVM partition type,
    8. press p to display the secondary hard disk partition setup. Please take note that the first                 partition is denoted as /dev/hdb1 in Linux,
    9. press w to write the partition table and exit fdisk upon completion.

      
   3. Next, this LVM command will create a LVM physical volume (PV) on a regular hard disk or            partition:
      pvcreate /dev/hda1
      
   4. Now, another LVM command to create a LVM volume group (VG) called vg0 with a physical          Extent size (PE size) of 16MB:
      vgcreate -s 16M vg0 /dev/hdb1

       Be properly planning ahead of PE size before creating a volume group with vgcreate -s option!
      
   5. Create a 400MB logical volume (LV) called lvol0 on volume group vg0:
        lvcreate -L 400M -n lvol0 vg0

        This lvcreate command will create a softlink /dev/vg0/lvol0 point to a correspondence block              device file called /dev/mapper/vg0-lvol0.
      
    6. The Linux LVM setup is almost done. Now is the time to format logical volume lvol0 to                     create      a Red Hat Linux supported file system, i.e. EXT3 file    system, with 1%                            reserved block count:
             mkfs -t ext3 -m 1 -v /dev/vg0/lvol0
      
   7.    Create a mount point before mounting the new EXT3 file system:
          mkdir /mnt/vfs
      
   8.    The last step of this LVM tutorial – mount the new EXT3 file system created on logical                   volume  lvol0 of LVM to /mnt/vfs mount point:
          mount -t ext3 /dev/vg0/lvol0 /mnt/vfs


        To confirm the LVM setup has been completed successfully, the df -h command should display         these similar message:
        / dev/mapper/vg0-lvol0 388M 11M 374M 3% /mnt/vfs

        Some of the useful LVM commands reference:

        vgdisplay vg0

        To check or display volume group setting, such as physical size (PE Size), volume group name         (VG name), maximum logical volumes (Max LV), maximum physical volume (Max PV), etc.
    
        pvscan

      To check or list all physical volumes (PV) created for volume group (VG) in the current system.
    
      vgextend

        To dynamically adding more physical volume (PV), i.e. through new hard disk or disk partition,         to    an existing volume group (VG) in online mode. You’ll have to manually execute                         vgextend    after pvcreate command that create LVM physical volume (PV).


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