This article describes a basic logic behind a Linux logical volume manager by showing real examples of configuration and usage. Although Debian Linux will be used for this tutorial, you can also apply the same command line syntax with other Linux distributions such as Red Hat, Mandriva, SuSe Linux and others
I have got 2 hard disks of 2GB size each –
# fdisk -l 2>/dev/null | grep '/dev/sd[a-b]'
Disk /dev/sda: 2147 MB, 2147483648 bytes
Disk /dev/sdb: 2147 MB, 2147483648 bytes
The following steps will show you how to create logical volumes on these hard disks.
To initialize the disks to be used as a physical volume, you use pvcreate
# pvcreate /dev/sda
Writing physical volume data to disk "/dev/sda"
Physical volume "/dev/sda" successfully created
# pvcreate /dev/sdb
Writing physical volume data to disk "/dev/sdb"
Physical volume "/dev/sdb" successfully created
To create a volume group, you run the vgcreate
as follows.
# vgcreate vg_sda /dev/sda
Volume group "vg_sda" successfully created
# vgcreate vg_sdb /dev/sdb
Volume group "vg_sdb" successfully created
This creates a volume group descriptor at the start of each disk.
create a logical volume of size 400 MB -L 400
lvcreate -L 400 -n vol01 vg_sda Step 5: Create File system on logical volumes
The logical volume is almost ready to use. All you need to do is to create a filesystem.:
# mkfs.ext3 -m 0 /dev/vg_sda/vol01 Step 6: Edit /etc/fstab Add an entry for your newly created logical volume into /etc/fstab
/dev/vg_sda/vol01 /home/logvol ext3 defaults 0 2
Before you mount do not forget to create a mount point.
# mkdir /home/logvol
After creating/adding it in in fstab file, you may need to run the command 'mount -a' in shell.