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Operating Systems AIX Trouble removing Physical Disk from Volume Group Post 303026981 by rbatte1 on Thursday 6th of December 2018 08:29:35 AM
Old 12-06-2018
First, before anything else, backup your data and make sure it is recoverable in a usable way.
Two tested copies at least.


Looking at this part ....
Code:
#  lspv -l hdisk1
hdisk1:
LV NAME               LPs     PPs     DISTRIBUTION          MOUNT POINT
clodba                719     719     40..223..222..223..11 N/A
# lspv -l hdisk2
hdisk2:
LV NAME               LPs     PPs     DISTRIBUTION          MOUNT POINT
clodba                720     721     00..144..223..223..131 N/A

.... suggests the logical volume is mirrored (as suggested) but you must have (at least) one LP that map to PPs that are both on hdisk2. That's a bit of a problem to the point that it's probably not worth mirroring. Lose hdisk2 and you lose logical volume integrity, the filesystem and data. It may be recoverable as far as the filesystem goes, but the data loss is unpredictable.

You may be able to turn on relocation with a chlv or a chvg -b ....command and force the re-sync. What does the full output of lslv -m clodba give you? Sadly it will be quite long given the number of LPs. You will probably see that copy 1 is entirely on hdisk1 except for one PP. You might manage to force the removal of the PPs from hdisk1 with rmlvcopy clodba 1 hdisk1 and if that works, you will have hdisk1 empty (check lspv -l hdisk1) and hdisk2 should be reduced to just 720 PPs in use.

For the future I would consider setting the volume group mirror pool strictness (is that the -M flag?) to force PPs for each LP to be on separate PVs and even to keep LV copies from being mixed across volumes. Personally, I'm more anorak than that and force the creation/extention to use the PPs I set, but that's just me.


Does that help?
Robin
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LVREDUCE(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       LVREDUCE(8)

NAME
lvreduce - reduce the size of a logical volume SYNOPSIS
lvreduce [-A|--autobackup {y|n}] [-d|--debug] [-h|--help] [-t|--test] [-v|--verbose] [--version] [-f|--force] [--noudevsync] {-l|--extents [-]LogicalExtentsNumber[%{VG|LV|FREE|ORIGIN}] | [-L|--size [-]LogicalVolumeSize[bBsSkKmMgGtTpPeE]} [-n|--nofsck] [-r|--resizefs] Logi- calVolume{Name|Path} DESCRIPTION
lvreduce allows you to reduce the size of a logical volume. Be careful when reducing a logical volume's size, because data in the reduced part is lost!!! You should therefore ensure that any filesystem on the volume is resized before running lvreduce so that the extents that are to be removed are not in use. Shrinking snapshot logical volumes (see lvcreate(8) for information to create snapshots) is supported as well. But to change the number of copies in a mirrored logical volume use lvconvert(8). Sizes will be rounded if necessary - for example, the volume size must be an exact number of extents and the size of a striped segment must be a multiple of the number of stripes. OPTIONS
See lvm(8) for common options. -f, --force Force size reduction without prompting even when it may cause data loss. --noudevsync Disable udev synchronisation. The process will not wait for notification from udev. It will continue irrespective of any possible udev processing in the background. You should only use this if udev is not running or has rules that ignore the devices LVM2 cre- ates. -l, --extents [-]LogicalExtentsNumber[%{VG|LV|FREE|ORIGIN}] Reduce or set the logical volume size in units of logical extents. With the - sign the value will be subtracted from the logical volume's actual size and without it the value will be taken as an absolute size. The number can also be expressed as a percentage of the total space in the Volume Group with the suffix %VG, relative to the existing size of the Logical Volume with the suffix %LV, as a percentage of the remaining free space in the Volume Group with the suffix %FREE, or (for a snapshot) as a percentage of the total space in the Origin Logical Volume with the suffix %ORIGIN. The resulting value for the substraction is rounded downward, for the absolute size it is rounded upward. -L, --size [-]LogicalVolumeSize[bBsSkKmMgGtTpPeE] Reduce or set the logical volume size in units of megabytes. A size suffix of k for kilobyte, m for megabyte, g for gigabytes, t for terabytes, p for petabytes or e for exabytes is optional. With the - sign the value will be subtracted from the logical vol- ume's actual size and without it it will be taken as an absolute size. -n, --nofsck Do not perform fsck before resizing filesystem when filesystem requires it. You may need to use --force to proceed with this option. -r, --resizefs Resize underlying filesystem together with the logical volume using fsadm(8). EXAMPLES
Reduce the size of logical volume lvol1 in volume group vg00 by 3 logical extents: lvreduce -l -3 vg00/lvol1 SEE ALSO
fsadm(8), lvchange(8), lvconvert(8), lvcreate(8), lvextend(8), lvm(8), lvresize(8), vgreduce(8) Sistina Software UK LVM TOOLS 2.02.95(2) (2012-03-06) LVREDUCE(8)
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