LVM2-2.03.11

Introduction to LVM2

The LVM2 package is a set of tools that manage logical partitions. It allows spanning of file systems across multiple physical disks and disk partitions and provides for dynamic growing or shrinking of logical partitions, mirroring and low storage footprint snapshots.

This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-10.1 platform.

Package Information

LVM2 Dependencies

Required

libaio-0.3.112

Optional

mdadm-4.1, reiserfsprogs-3.6.27, Valgrind-3.17.0, Which-2.21, xfsprogs-5.11.0 (all five may be used, but are not required, for tests), thin-provisioning-tools, and vdo

User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/lvm2

Kernel Configuration

Enable the following options in the kernel configuration and recompile the kernel:

[Note]

Note

There are several other Device Mapper options in the kernel beyond those listed below. In order to get reasonable results if running the regression tests, all must be enabled either internally or as a module. The tests will all time out if Magic SysRq key is not enabled.

Device Drivers --->
  [*] Multiple devices driver support (RAID and LVM) ---> [CONFIG_MD]
    <*/M>   Device mapper support                         [CONFIG_BLK_DEV_DM]
    <*/M>   Crypt target support                          [CONFIG_DM_CRYPT]
    <*/M>   Snapshot target                               [CONFIG_DM_SNAPSHOT]
    <*/M>   Thin provisioning target                      [CONFIG_DM_THIN_PROVISIONING]
    <*/M>   Mirror target                                 [CONFIG_DM_MIRROR]
Kernel hacking --->
  Generic Kernel Debugging Instruments --->
    [*] Magic SysRq key                                   [CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ]

Installation of LVM2

Install LVM2 by running the following commands:

SAVEPATH=$PATH                  &&
PATH=$PATH:/sbin:/usr/sbin      &&
./configure --prefix=/usr       \
            --exec-prefix=      \
            --enable-cmdlib     \
            --enable-pkgconfig  \
            --enable-udev_sync  &&
make                            &&
PATH=$SAVEPATH                  &&
unset SAVEPATH

The tests use udev for logical volume synchronization, so the LVM udev rules and some utilities need to be installed before running the tests. If you are installing LVM2 for the first time, and do not want to install the full package before running the tests, the minimal set of utilities can be installed by running the following instructions as the root user:

make -C tools install_tools_dynamic &&
make -C udev  install                 &&
make -C libdm install

To test the results, issue, as the root user:

make S=shell/thin-flags.sh check_local

The S=... option allows to skip tests. The shell/thin-flags.sh test has been reported to freeze the computer. Other targets are available and can be listed with make -C test help. The test timings are very dependent on the speed of the disk(s), and on the number of enabled kernel options.

The tests do not implement the expected fail possibility, and a small number of test failures is expected by upstream. More failures may happen because some kernel options are missing. For example, the lack of the dm-delay device mapper target may explain some failures. Some tests are flagged warned if thin-provisioning-tools are not installed. A workaround is to add the following flags to configure:

     --with-thin-check=    \
     --with-thin-dump=     \
     --with-thin-repair=   \
     --with-thin-restore=  \
     --with-cache-check=   \
     --with-cache-dump=    \
     --with-cache-repair=  \
     --with-cache-restore= \

Some tests may hang. They can be removed if necessary, for example: rm test/shell/lvconvert-raid-reshape.sh. The tests generate a lot of kernel messages, which may clutter your terminal. You can disable them by issuing dmesg -D before running the tests (do not forget to issue dmesg -E when tests are done).

[Note]

Note

The checks create device nodes in the /tmp directory. The tests will fail if /tmp is mounted with the nodev option.

Now, as the root user:

make install

Command Explanations

PATH=$PATH:/sbin:/usr/sbin: The path must contain /sbin and /usr/sbin for proper system tool detection by the configure script. This instruction ensures that PATH is properly set even if you build as an unprivileged user.

--enable-cmdlib: This switch enables building of the shared command library. It is required when building the event daemon.

--enable-pkgconfig: This switch enables installation of pkg-config support files.

--enable-udev_sync: This switch enables synchronisation with Udev processing.

--enable-dmeventd: This switch enables building of the Device Mapper event daemon.

Contents

Installed Programs: blkdeactivate, dmeventd (optional), dmsetup, fsadm, lvm, and lvmdump. There are also numerous symbolic links to lvm that implement specific functionalities
Installed Libraries: libdevmapper.so and liblvm2cmd.so; optional: libdevmapper-event.so, libdevmapper-event-lvm2.so, libdevmapper-event-lvm2mirror.so, libdevmapper-event-lvm2raid.so, libdevmapper-event-lvm2snapshot.so, and libdevmapper-event-lvm2thin.so
Installed Directories: /etc/lvm and /lib/device-mapper (optional)

Short Descriptions

blkdeactivate

is a utility to deactivate block devices

dmeventd

(optional) is the Device Mapper event daemon

dmsetup

is a low level logical volume management tool

fsadm

is a utility used to resize or check filesystem on a device

lvm

provides the command-line tools for LVM2. Commands are implemented via sympolic links to this program to manage physical devices (pv*), volume groups (vg*) and logical volumes (lv*)

lvmdump

is a tool used to dump various information concerning LVM2

vgimportclone

is used to import a duplicated VG (e.g. hardware snapshot)

libdevmapper.so

contains the Device Mapper API functions

Last updated on 2021-02-20 00:13:48 -0600