Setting up an LVM filesystem is quite easy assuming you have the right tools installed and a recent kernel. LVM has a lot of advantages, most notably the ability to take snapshots of the current filesystem – this is why LVM is often used in live database environments.
Assuming a Debian Lenny machine, get the relevant packages. Some may already be installed: apt-get install lvm2 dmsetup mdadm
In this example, we will assuming that /dev/sda is your boot drive, and that you want to leave it out of your LVM array, but include /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc. Both /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc should be of equal sizes.
Firstly, using fdisk, remove any existing partitions with ‘d’, on /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc, and create one new partition to span the drive. Change the partition type to ‘8e’ which is the LVM type.
Now prepare your physical disk for LVM with the ‘pvcreate’ tool:
pvcreate /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1
Note that you can reverse this with pvremove. You can also use pvdisplay now to display information on all physical volumes.
Oh – you do realie that you can use /dev/mdX just as easily to create LVM on your RAID devices?
Now, we need to create a ‘volume group’: vgcreate myvg /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdc1
Tags: dd, ext3, kernel, Linux, lvcreate, lvdisplay, lvm, lvremove, mkfs, mount, pvcreate, pvdisplay, pvremove, resize, tar, vgcreate, vgdisplay, vgremove, xen
Shrinking or expanding an ext3 partition is easy but is not without it’s risks. Before starting, you NEED to take a backup of your data. There’s a strong possibility that it will all disappear and your filesystem will become permenantly broken, as with any disk or filesystem procedure.
Please note:
ns3:~# df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/sda1 9.4G 6.8G 2.2G 77% / tmpfs 443M 0 443M 0% /lib/init/rw udev 10M 92K 10M 1% /dev tmpfs 443M 0 443M 0% /dev/shm /dev/sdb1 20G 9.8G 9.0G 52% /email
In my example, I’m going to resize /dev/sdb1 which is my /email partition. /dev/sdb1 is a partition residing on device /dev/sdb