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тАО11-21-2007 05:13 AM
тАО11-21-2007 05:13 AM
I have used LVM's in HP unix and am very famillair with it, but this is the first time I am using RHEL Linux ES4. I have a blade with 2 146gb disks. I want to set up the LV's as we do in HP Unix.[ /dev/vg00/lvol1, etc] Then I want to have a vg01 with lvol1 lvol2. I want to create a file systems and then mount it.How do I do this and can anyone provide me with the required steps. Please do not refer me to some manual. I am just brand new to Linux.
Thanking you
Faizer
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО11-21-2007 05:25 AM
тАО11-21-2007 05:25 AM
Re: LVM in Linux
vgcreate /dev/sda datavg
lvcreate -L
mkfs -t ext3 /dev/datavg/datalv
tune2fs -c 0 -i 0 -m 0 /dev/datavg/datalv
Modify /etc/fstab.
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тАО11-21-2007 08:06 AM
тАО11-21-2007 08:06 AM
Re: LVM in Linux
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тАО11-21-2007 08:16 AM
тАО11-21-2007 08:16 AM
Re: LVM in Linux
If you're doing a kickstart, you can set the LVM stuff up in your kickstart without any issue.
If it's an already installed system, then basically what Ivan said :)
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тАО11-21-2007 11:34 PM
тАО11-21-2007 11:34 PM
Solutiondisk devices in Linux are /dev/sdXY (where X is from a to z,Y from 1 to ...) and not like /dev/dsk/cXtYdZ. fdisk -l will show you all your disks/partitions.
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тАО11-22-2007 12:45 AM
тАО11-22-2007 12:45 AM
Re: LVM in Linux
For ext3 it is, because the information needed to maintain FS integrity is in the journal.