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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Can a Loopback Filesystem be Partitioned? Post 95472 by deckard on Wednesday 11th of January 2006 01:09:29 PM
Old 01-11-2006
Can a Loopback Filesystem be Partitioned?

I have a disk image file created for use with the Linux version of the QEMU emulator. It's partitioned. I opened it with fdisk and the partitions show up with some extra messages about physical/logical endings:


Code:
Disk knoppix.img: 0 MB, 0 bytes
16 heads, 63 sectors/track, 0 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 1008 * 512 = 516096 bytes

      Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
knoppix.img1   *           1        8074     4069264+  83  Linux
Partition 1 has different physical/logical endings:
     phys=(1023, 15, 63) logical=(8073, 15, 63)
knoppix.img2            8075        8322      124992   82  Linux swap / Solaris
Partition 2 has different physical/logical beginnings (non-Linux?):
     phys=(1023, 15, 63) logical=(8074, 0, 1)
Partition 2 has different physical/logical endings:
     phys=(1023, 15, 63) logical=(8321, 15, 63)

I noticed that the filename of the image file becomes "knoppix.img1" for the first partition and "knoppix.img2" for the second partition. So... is there a way to mount this outside of QEMU? I tried appending the 1 and 2 to the filename but I just get a "no such directory or file" message. Any ideas? Or am I just sunk?
 

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LVDISPLAY(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      LVDISPLAY(8)

NAME
lvdisplay - display attributes of a logical volume SYNOPSIS
lvdisplay [-c|--colon] [-d|--debug] [-D|--disk] [-h|--help] [-v[v]|--verbose] LogicalVolumePath [LogicalVolumePath...] DESCRIPTION
lvdisplay allows you to see the attributes of a logical volume like size, read/write status, snapshot information etc. OPTIONS -c, --colon Generate colon seperated output for easier parsing in scripts or programs. The values are: * logical volume name * volume group name * logical volume access * logical volume status * internal logical volume number * open count of logical volume * logical volume size in kilobytes * current logical extents associated to logical volume * allocated logical extents of logical volume * allocation policy of logical volume * read ahead sectors of logical volume * major device number of logical volume * minor device number of logical volume -d, --debug Enables additional debugging output (if compiled with DEBUG). -D, --disk Show attributes of the volume group descriptor array on disk(s). Without this switch they are derived from kernel space. Useful, if the volume group isn't active. -h, --help Print a usage message on standard output and exit successfully. -v, --verbose Display the mapping of logical extents to physical volumes and physical extents. -vv, --verbose --verbose Like -v with verbose runtime information. Examples "lvdisplay -v /dev/vg00/lvol2" shows attributes of that logical volume and its mapping of logical to physical extents. In case snapshot logical volumes have been created for this original logical volume, this command shows a list of all snapshot logical volumes and their status (active or inactive) as well. "lvdisplay /dev/vg00/snapshot" shows the attributes of this snapshot logical volume and also which original logical volume it is associated with. DIAGNOSTICS
lvdisplay returns an exit code of 0 for success or > 0 for error: 1 no logical volume name(s) on command line 95 driver/module not in kernel 96 invalid I/O protocol version 97 error locking logical volume manager 98 invalid lvmtab (run vgscan(8)) 99 invalid command line ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
LVM_VG_NAME The default Volume Group Name to use. Setting this variable enables you to enter just the Logical Volume Name rather than its com- plete path. See also lvm(8), lvcreate(8), lvscan(8), lvmsadc(8), lvmsar(8) AUTHOR
Heinz Mauelshagen <Linux-LVM@Sistina.com> Heinz Mauelshagen LVM TOOLS LVDISPLAY(8)
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