01-11-2013
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Having first encountered LVM in HP-UX and now experimenting with it in Redhat and Gentoo, I am wondering, when is it actually good practice to use LVM? Obviously LVM doesn't work for boot partitions, so that question is a pretty easy answer: Not for /boot in Linux.
While trying to figure out... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: deckard
1 Replies
2. Red Hat
Hi All,
I created an lvm filesystem with a name with dash in the middle, like xxx-yyy (note, that it's only one dash).
I was able to create it smoothly with this instructions.
lvcreate -L 1G uservg -n xxx-yyy
ls /dev/uservg/xxx-yyy (check)
mkfs.ext3 /dev/uservg/xxx-yyy
mount... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: itik
1 Replies
3. AIX
Hi.
can anyone define about VGDA,VGSA,and quorum in aix.. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sumathi.k
1 Replies
4. HP-UX
Hi,
I'm new to HP-UX.
I have LVM on /var with 92Gig. I would like to reduce it to create another LVM for Oracle client with 800 meg or so. How to do it. I'm running 11.iv3
Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: lamoul
4 Replies
5. AIX
i have os 5.1 and i do mirror with hdisk0 and hdisk1 on rootvg
at the end i get error in mail that:
At least one partition mirror is broken please call sysadmin
hd5 boot 1 2 2 closed/stale N/A
the other fs seems ok and sync
what to do about the hd5??? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: amitt74
4 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
i have two files as
file1:
1
2
3
file2:
a
b
c
and the output should be:
file3:
1~a
2~b
3~c (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mlpathir
1 Replies
7. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support
Hi all,
I've created some logical volumes on a non-production server. I was supposed to make the new LV's similar to another LV already on the server. Supposed to be the similar to lvol5
I did everything right except one thing as somebody mentioned. I would like to figure out what I did... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: zixzix01
6 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Guys,
I m using redhat 6, I have installed root partition as non-LVM .
Is there any way i can convert it to LVM? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pinga123
1 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hi
I am getting the following error while executing any command related to LVM -
# vgs
vgs: symbol lookup error: vgs: undefined symbol: pvcreate
Can any one please advise how to get rid of this problem?
Thanks (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: atanubanerji
6 Replies
10. AIX
Hello,
I need some help, it is slightly urgent so any help is appreciated.
We were doing a data migration, during a migratepv command, our SAN ran out of quota space and locked all of the filesystems, now I'm left with a few errors and am not able to do migratepv again.
/:migratepv... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: BG_JrAdmin
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
vgrestore
vgrestore(1M) vgrestore(1M)
NAME
vgrestore - restore a VxVM disk group back to an LVM volume group
SYNOPSIS
/etc/vx/bin/vgrestore vg_name
DESCRIPTION
The vgrestore command restores a Logical Volume Manager (LVM) volume group that was previously converted to a VxVM disk group by the vxvm-
convert utility.
ARGUMENTS
vg_name
Specifies the name of a volume group that was converted to a VxVM disk group by the vxvmconvert utility.
EXIT CODES
vgrestore exits with one of the following values:
0 Successful completion.
>0 Failure; an error occurred.
WARNINGS
vgrestore functions only on VxVM disk groups that were converted from LVM volume groups by the vxvmconvert command.
It is a good idea to back up user data before running vgrestore, and restore it after the vgrestore completes, as vgrestore can only
restore a logical volume back to the state it was in before conversion to VxVM. If data changed on the volume while it was a VxVM volume,
the changes won't be reflected on the volume after being restored to LVM.
As part of the original conversion process, applications that once referenced the now-converted LVM volume's path names may have changed to
reference VxVM volume special device file names. Alternatively, special device file path names originally representing the now-converted
LVM volumes may have changed to symbolic links pointing to the VxVM volume path names. Be sure to undo these actions when restoring back
to LVM.
Do not use vgrestore unless you are certain that you want to restore LVM volume groups. After vgrestore this is run, the VxVM disks will
no longer exist.
EXAMPLES
To restore the LVM volume group vg03 that was converted by vxvmconvert to the VxVM disk group dg03, enter:
vgcfgrestore vg03
SEE ALSO
vxvmconvert(1M)
Veritas Volume Manager Migration Guide
VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vgrestore(1M)