LVCREATE(8) | System Manager's Manual | LVCREATE(8) |
lvcreate - Create a logical volume
lvcreate option_args position_args
[ option_args ]
[ position_args ]
-a|--activate y|n|ay
--addtag Tag
--alloc
contiguous|cling|cling_by_tags|normal|anywhere|inherit
-A|--autobackup y|n
-H|--cache
--cachemetadataformat auto|1|2
--cachemode writethrough|writeback|passthrough
--cachepolicy String
--cachepool LV
--cachesettings String
-c|--chunksize Size[k|UNIT]
--commandprofile String
--compression y|n
--config String
-C|--contiguous y|n
-d|--debug
--deduplication y|n
--discards passdown|nopassdown|ignore
--driverloaded y|n
--errorwhenfull y|n
-l|--extents Number[PERCENT]
-h|--help
-K|--ignoreactivationskip
--ignoremonitoring
--lockopt String
--longhelp
-j|--major Number
--[raid]maxrecoveryrate Size[k|UNIT]
--metadataprofile String
--minor Number
--[raid]minrecoveryrate Size[k|UNIT]
--mirrorlog core|disk
-m|--mirrors Number
--monitor y|n
-n|--name String
--nolocking
--nosync
--noudevsync
-p|--permission rw|r
-M|--persistent y|n
--poolmetadatasize Size[m|UNIT]
--poolmetadataspare y|n
--profile String
-q|--quiet
-r|--readahead auto|none|Number
-R|--regionsize Size[m|UNIT]
--reportformat basic|json
-k|--setactivationskip y|n
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
-s|--snapshot
-i|--stripes Number
-I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT]
-t|--test
-T|--thin
--thinpool LV
--type
linear|striped|snapshot|mirror|raid|thin|cache|thin-pool|cache-pool
--vdo
--vdopool LV
-v|--verbose
--version
-V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
-W|--wipesignatures y|n
-y|--yes
-Z|--zero y|n
lvcreate creates a new LV in a VG. For standard LVs, this requires allocating logical extents from the VG's free physical extents. If there is not enough free space, the VG can be extended with other PVs (vgextend(8)), or existing LVs can be reduced or removed (lvremove(8), lvreduce(8).)
To control which PVs a new LV will use, specify one or more PVs as position args at the end of the command line. lvcreate will allocate physical extents only from the specified PVs.
lvcreate can also create snapshots of existing LVs, e.g. for backup purposes. The data in a new snapshot LV represents the content of the original LV from the time the snapshot was created.
RAID LVs can be created by specifying an LV type when creating the LV (see lvmraid(7)). Different RAID levels require different numbers of unique PVs be available in the VG for allocation.
Thin pools (for thin provisioning) and cache pools (for caching) are represented by special LVs with types thin-pool and cache-pool (see lvmthin(7) and lvmcache(7)). The pool LVs are not usable as standard block devices, but the LV names act as references to the pools.
Thin LVs are thinly provisioned from a thin pool, and are created with a virtual size rather than a physical size. A cache LV is the combination of a standard LV with a cache pool, used to cache active portions of the LV to improve performance.
In the usage section below, --size Size can be replaced with --extents Number. See descriptions in the options section.
In the usage section below, --name is omitted from the required options, even though it is typically used. When the name is not specified, a new LV name is generated with the "lvol" prefix and a unique numeric suffix.
Create an LV that returns VDO when used.
lvcreate --type vdo -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a linear LV.
lvcreate -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
VG
Create a striped LV (infers --type striped).
lvcreate -i|--stripes Number
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a raid1 or mirror LV (infers --type raid1|mirror).
lvcreate -m|--mirrors Number
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a raid LV (a specific raid level must be used, e.g. raid1).
lvcreate --type raid -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a raid10 LV.
lvcreate -m|--mirrors Number -i|--stripes Number
Create a COW snapshot LV of an origin LV.
lvcreate -s|--snapshot
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] LV
Create a thin pool.
lvcreate --type thin-pool
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a cache pool.
lvcreate --type cache-pool
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a thin LV in a thin pool (infers --type thin).
lvcreate -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
--thinpool LV_thinpool VG
Create a thin LV that is a snapshot of an existing thin LV
(infers --type thin).
lvcreate -s|--snapshot LV_thin
Create a thin LV that is a snapshot of an external origin LV.
lvcreate --type thin --thinpool
LV_thinpool LV
Create a thin LV, first creating a thin pool for it,
where the new thin pool is named by the --thinpool arg.
lvcreate --type thin -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
Create a cache LV, first creating a new origin LV,
then combining it with the existing cache pool named
by the --cachepool arg.
lvcreate --type cache -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Common options for command:
Common options for lvm:
-a|--activate y|n|ay
Controls the active state of the new LV. y makes the LV active, or
available. New LVs are made active by default. n makes the LV
inactive, or unavailable, only when possible. In some cases, creating an LV
requires it to be active. For example, COW snapshots of an active origin LV
can only be created in the active state (this does not apply to thin
snapshots). The --zero option normally requires the LV to be active. If
autoactivation ay is used, the LV is only activated if it matches an
item in lvm.conf activation/auto_activation_volume_list. ay implies
--zero n and --wipesignatures n. See lvmlockd(8) for more information
about activation options for shared VGs.
--addtag Tag
Adds a tag to a PV, VG or LV. This option can be repeated to add multiple tags
at once. See lvm(8) for information about tags.
--alloc
contiguous|cling|cling_by_tags|normal|anywhere|inherit
Determines the allocation policy when a command needs to allocate Physical
Extents (PEs) from the VG. Each VG and LV has an allocation policy which can
be changed with vgchange/lvchange, or overriden on the command line.
normal applies common sense rules such as not placing parallel
stripes on the same PV. inherit applies the VG policy to an LV.
contiguous requires new PEs be placed adjacent to existing PEs.
cling places new PEs on the same PV as existing PEs in the same
stripe of the LV. If there are sufficient PEs for an allocation, but normal
does not use them, anywhere will use them even if it reduces
performance, e.g. by placing two stripes on the same PV. Optional positional
PV args on the command line can also be used to limit which PVs the command
will use for allocation. See lvm(8) for more information about
allocation.
-A|--autobackup y|n
Specifies if metadata should be backed up automatically after a change.
Enabling this is strongly advised! See vgcfgbackup(8) for more
information.
-H|--cache
Specifies the command is handling a cache LV or cache pool. See --type cache
and --type cache-pool. See lvmcache(7) for more information about LVM
caching.
--cachemetadataformat auto|1|2
Specifies the cache metadata format used by cache target.
--cachemode
writethrough|writeback|passthrough
Specifies when writes to a cache LV should be considered complete.
writeback considers a write complete as soon as it is stored in the
cache pool. writethough considers a write complete only when it has
been stored in both the cache pool and on the origin LV. While writethrough
may be slower for writes, it is more resilient if something should happen to
a device associated with the cache pool LV. With passthrough, all
reads are served from the origin LV (all reads miss the cache) and all
writes are forwarded to the origin LV; additionally, write hits cause cache
block invalidates. See lvmcache(7) for more information.
--cachepolicy String
Specifies the cache policy for a cache LV. See lvmcache(7) for more
information.
--cachepool LV
The name of a cache pool LV.
--cachesettings String
Specifies tunable values for a cache LV in "Key = Value" form.
Repeat this option to specify multiple values. (The default values should
usually be adequate.) The special string value default switches
settings back to their default kernel values and removes them from the list
of settings stored in LVM metadata. See lvmcache(7) for more
information.
-c|--chunksize Size[k|UNIT]
The size of chunks in a snapshot, cache pool or thin pool. For snapshots, the
value must be a power of 2 between 4KiB and 512KiB and the default value is
4. For a cache pool the value must be between 32KiB and 1GiB and the default
value is 64. For a thin pool the value must be between 64KiB and 1GiB and
the default value starts with 64 and scales up to fit the pool metadata size
within 128MiB, if the pool metadata size is not specified. The value must be
a multiple of 64KiB. See lvmthin(7) and lvmcache(7) for more
information.
--commandprofile String
The command profile to use for command configuration. See lvm.conf(5)
for more information about profiles.
--compression y|n
Controls whether compression is enabled or disable for VDO volume. See
lvmvdo(7) for more information about VDO usage.
--config String
Config settings for the command. These override lvm.conf settings. The String
arg uses the same format as lvm.conf, or may use section/field syntax. See
lvm.conf(5) for more information about config.
-C|--contiguous y|n
Sets or resets the contiguous allocation policy for LVs. Default is no
contiguous allocation based on a next free principle. It is only possible to
change a non-contiguous allocation policy to contiguous if all of the
allocated physical extents in the LV are already contiguous.
-d|--debug ...
Set debug level. Repeat from 1 to 6 times to increase the detail of messages
sent to the log file and/or syslog (if configured).
--deduplication y|n
Controls whether deduplication is enabled or disable for VDO volume. See
lvmvdo(7) for more information about VDO usage.
--discards
passdown|nopassdown|ignore
Specifies how the device-mapper thin pool layer in the kernel should handle
discards. ignore causes the thin pool to ignore discards.
nopassdown causes the thin pool to process discards itself to allow
reuse of unneeded extents in the thin pool. passdown causes the thin
pool to process discards itself (like nopassdown) and pass the discards to
the underlying device. See lvmthin(7) for more information.
--driverloaded y|n
If set to no, the command will not attempt to use device-mapper. For testing
and debugging.
--errorwhenfull y|n
Specifies thin pool behavior when data space is exhausted. When yes,
device-mapper will immediately return an error when a thin pool is full and
an I/O request requires space. When no, device-mapper will queue these I/O
requests for a period of time to allow the thin pool to be extended. Errors
are returned if no space is available after the timeout. (Also see
dm-thin-pool kernel module option no_space_timeout.) See lvmthin(7)
for more information.
-l|--extents Number[PERCENT]
Specifies the size of the new LV in logical extents. The --size and --extents
options are alternate methods of specifying size. The total number of
physical extents used will be greater when redundant data is needed for RAID
levels. An alternate syntax allows the size to be determined indirectly as a
percentage of the size of a related VG, LV, or set of PVs. The suffix
%VG denotes the total size of the VG, the suffix %FREE the
remaining free space in the VG, and the suffix %PVS the free space in
the specified PVs. For a snapshot, the size can be expressed as a percentage
of the total size of the origin LV with the suffix %ORIGIN
(100%ORIGIN provides space for the whole origin). When expressed as a
percentage, the size defines an upper limit for the number of logical
extents in the new LV. The precise number of logical extents in the new LV
is not determined until the command has completed.
-h|--help
Display help text.
-K|--ignoreactivationskip
Ignore the "activation skip" LV flag during activation to allow LVs
with the flag set to be activated.
--ignoremonitoring
Do not interact with dmeventd unless --monitor is specified. Do not use this
if dmeventd is already monitoring a device.
--lockopt String
Used to pass options for special cases to lvmlockd. See lvmlockd(8) for
more information.
--longhelp
Display long help text.
-j|--major Number
Sets the major number of an LV block device.
--[raid]maxrecoveryrate Size[k|UNIT]
Sets the maximum recovery rate for a RAID LV. The rate value is an amount of
data per second for each device in the array. Setting the rate to 0 means it
will be unbounded. See lvmraid(7) for more information.
--metadataprofile String
The metadata profile to use for command configuration. See lvm.conf(5)
for more information about profiles.
--minor Number
Sets the minor number of an LV block device.
--[raid]minrecoveryrate Size[k|UNIT]
Sets the minimum recovery rate for a RAID LV. The rate value is an amount of
data per second for each device in the array. Setting the rate to 0 means it
will be unbounded. See lvmraid(7) for more information.
--mirrorlog core|disk
Specifies the type of mirror log for LVs with the "mirror" type
(does not apply to the "raid1" type.) disk is a persistent
log and requires a small amount of storage space, usually on a separate
device from the data being mirrored. core is not persistent; the log
is kept only in memory. In this case, the mirror must be synchronized (by
copying LV data from the first device to others) each time the LV is
activated, e.g. after reboot. mirrored is a persistent log that is
itself mirrored, but should be avoided. Instead, use the raid1 type for log
redundancy.
-m|--mirrors Number
Specifies the number of mirror images in addition to the original LV image,
e.g. --mirrors 1 means there are two images of the data, the original and
one mirror image. Optional positional PV args on the command line can
specify the devices the images should be placed on. There are two mirroring
implementations: "raid1" and "mirror". These are the
names of the corresponding LV types, or "segment types". Use the
--type option to specify which to use (raid1 is default, and mirror is
legacy) Use lvm.conf global/mirror_segtype_default and
global/raid10_segtype_default to configure the default types. See the
--nosync option for avoiding initial image synchronization. See
lvmraid(7) for more information.
--monitor y|n
Start (yes) or stop (no) monitoring an LV with dmeventd. dmeventd monitors
kernel events for an LV, and performs automated maintenance for the LV in
reponse to specific events. See dmeventd(8) for more information.
-n|--name String
Specifies the name of a new LV. When unspecified, a default name of
"lvol#" is generated, where # is a number generated by LVM.
--nolocking
Disable locking.
--nosync
Causes the creation of mirror, raid1, raid4, raid5 and raid10 to skip the
initial synchronization. In case of mirror, raid1 and raid10, any data
written afterwards will be mirrored, but the original contents will not be
copied. In case of raid4 and raid5, no parity blocks will be written, though
any data written afterwards will cause parity blocks to be stored. This is
useful for skipping a potentially long and resource intensive initial sync
of an empty mirror/raid1/raid4/raid5 and raid10 LV. This option is not valid
for raid6, because raid6 relies on proper parity (P and Q Syndromes) being
created during initial synchronization in order to reconstruct proper user
date in case of device failures. raid0 and raid0_meta do not provide any
data copies or parity support and thus do not support initial
synchronization.
--noudevsync
Disables udev synchronisation. The process will not wait for notification from
udev. It will continue irrespective of any possible udev processing in the
background. Only use this if udev is not running or has rules that ignore
the devices LVM creates.
-p|--permission rw|r
Set access permission to read only r or read and write rw.
-M|--persistent y|n
When yes, makes the specified minor number persistent.
--poolmetadatasize Size[m|UNIT]
Specifies the size of the new pool metadata LV.
--poolmetadataspare y|n
Enable or disable the automatic creation and management of a spare pool
metadata LV in the VG. A spare metadata LV is reserved space that can be
used when repairing a pool.
--profile String
An alias for --commandprofile or --metadataprofile, depending on the
command.
-q|--quiet ...
Suppress output and log messages. Overrides --debug and --verbose. Repeat once
to also suppress any prompts with answer 'no'.
-r|--readahead
auto|none|Number
Sets read ahead sector count of an LV. auto is the default which allows
the kernel to choose a suitable value automatically. none is
equivalent to zero.
-R|--regionsize Size[m|UNIT]
Size of each raid or mirror synchronization region. lvm.conf
activation/raid_region_size can be used to configure a default.
--reportformat basic|json
Overrides current output format for reports which is defined globally by the
report/output_format setting in lvm.conf. basic is the original
format with columns and rows. If there is more than one report per command,
each report is prefixed with the report name for identification. json
produces report output in JSON format. See lvmreport(7) for more
information.
-k|--setactivationskip y|n
Persistently sets (yes) or clears (no) the "activation skip" flag on
an LV. An LV with this flag set is not activated unless the
--ignoreactivationskip option is used by the activation command. This flag
is set by default on new thin snapshot LVs. The flag is not applied to
deactivation. The current value of the flag is indicated in the lvs lv_attr
bits.
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Specifies the size of the new LV. The --size and --extents options are
alternate methods of specifying size. The total number of physical extents
used will be greater when redundant data is needed for RAID levels.
-s|--snapshot
Create a snapshot. Snapshots provide a "frozen image" of an origin
LV. The snapshot LV can be used, e.g. for backups, while the origin LV
continues to be used. This option can create a COW (copy on write) snapshot,
or a thin snapshot (in a thin pool.) Thin snapshots are created when the
origin is a thin LV and the size option is NOT specified. Thin snapshots
share the same blocks in the thin pool, and do not allocate new space from
the VG. Thin snapshots are created with the "activation skip"
flag, see --setactivationskip. A thin snapshot of a non-thin "external
origin" LV is created when a thin pool is specified. Unprovisioned
blocks in the thin snapshot LV are read from the external origin LV. The
external origin LV must be read-only. See lvmthin(7) for more
information about LVM thin provisioning. COW snapshots are created when a
size is specified. The size is allocated from space in the VG, and is the
amount of space that can be used for saving COW blocks as writes occur to
the origin or snapshot. The size chosen should depend upon the amount of
writes that are expected; often 20% of the origin LV is enough. If COW space
runs low, it can be extended with lvextend (shrinking is also allowed with
lvreduce.) A small amount of the COW snapshot LV size is used to track COW
block locations, so the full size is not available for COW data blocks. Use
lvs to check how much space is used, and see --monitor to to automatically
extend the size to avoid running out of space.
-i|--stripes Number
Specifies the number of stripes in a striped LV. This is the number of PVs
(devices) that a striped LV is spread across. Data that appears sequential
in the LV is spread across multiple devices in units of the stripe size (see
--stripesize). This does not change existing allocated space, but only
applies to space being allocated by the command. When creating a RAID 4/5/6
LV, this number does not include the extra devices that are required for
parity. The largest number depends on the RAID type (raid0: 64, raid10: 32,
raid4/5: 63, raid6: 62), and when unspecified, the default depends on the
RAID type (raid0: 2, raid10: 2, raid4/5: 3, raid6: 5.) To stripe a new raid
LV across all PVs by default, see lvm.conf
allocation/raid_stripe_all_devices.
-I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT]
The amount of data that is written to one device before moving to the next in
a striped LV.
-t|--test
Run in test mode. Commands will not update metadata. This is implemented by
disabling all metadata writing but nevertheless returning success to the
calling function. This may lead to unusual error messages in multi-stage
operations if a tool relies on reading back metadata it believes has changed
but hasn't.
-T|--thin
Specifies the command is handling a thin LV or thin pool. See --type thin,
--type thin-pool, and --virtualsize. See lvmthin(7) for more
information about LVM thin provisioning.
--thinpool LV
The name of a thin pool LV.
--type
linear|striped|snapshot|mirror|raid|thin|cache|thin-pool|cache-pool
The LV type, also known as "segment type" or "segtype".
See usage descriptions for the specific ways to use these types. For more
information about redundancy and performance (raid<N>,
mirror, striped, linear) see lvmraid(7). For
thin provisioning (thin, thin-pool) see lvmthin(7). For
performance caching (cache, cache-pool) see
lvmcache(7). For copy-on-write snapshots (snapshot) see usage
definitions. Several commands omit an explicit type option because the type
is inferred from other options or shortcuts (e.g. --stripes, --mirrors,
--snapshot, --virtualsize, --thin, --cache). Use inferred types with care
because it can lead to unexpected results.
--vdo
Specifies the command is handling VDO LV. See --type vdo. See lvmvdo(7)
for more information about VDO usage.
--vdopool LV
The name of a VDO pool LV. See lvmvdo(7) for more information about VDO
usage.
-v|--verbose ...
Set verbose level. Repeat from 1 to 4 times to increase the detail of messages
sent to stdout and stderr.
--version
Display version information.
-V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
The virtual size of a new thin LV. See lvmthin(7) for more information
about LVM thin provisioning. Using virtual size (-V) and actual size (-L)
together creates a sparse LV. lvm.conf global/sparse_segtype_default
determines the default segment type used to create a sparse LV. Anything
written to a sparse LV will be returned when reading from it. Reading from
other areas of the LV will return blocks of zeros. When using a snapshot to
create a sparse LV, a hidden virtual device is created using the zero
target, and the LV has the suffix _vorigin. Snapshots are less efficient
than thin provisioning when creating large sparse LVs (GiB).
-W|--wipesignatures y|n
Controls detection and subsequent wiping of signatures on new LVs. There is a
prompt for each signature detected to confirm its wiping (unless --yes is
used to override confirmations.) When not specified, signatures are wiped
whenever zeroing is done (see --zero). This behaviour can be configured with
lvm.conf allocation/wipe_signatures_when_zeroing_new_lvs. If blkid wiping is
used (lvm.conf allocation/use_blkid_wiping) and LVM is compiled with blkid
wiping support, then the blkid(8) library is used to detect the signatures
(use blkid -k to list the signatures that are recognized). Otherwise, native
LVM code is used to detect signatures (only MD RAID, swap and LUKS
signatures are detected in this case.) The LV is not wiped if the read only
flag is set.
-y|--yes
Do not prompt for confirmation interactively but always assume the answer yes.
Use with extreme caution. (For automatic no, see -qq.)
-Z|--zero y|n
Controls zeroing of the first 4KiB of data in the new LV. Default is y.
Snapshot COW volumes are always zeroed. LV is not zeroed if the read only
flag is set. Warning: trying to mount an unzeroed LV can cause the system to
hang.
VG
Volume Group name. See lvm(8) for valid names. For lvcreate, the
required VG positional arg may be omitted when the VG name is included in
another option, e.g. --name VG/LV.
LV
Logical Volume name. See lvm(8) for valid names. An LV positional arg
generally includes the VG name and LV name, e.g. VG/LV. LV followed by
_<type> indicates that an LV of the given type is required. (raid
represents raid<N> type)
PV
Physical Volume name, a device path under /dev. For commands managing physical
extents, a PV positional arg generally accepts a suffix indicating a range
(or multiple ranges) of physical extents (PEs). When the first PE is
omitted, it defaults to the start of the device, and when the last PE is
omitted it defaults to end. Start and end range (inclusive):
PV[:PE-PE]... Start and length range
(counting from 0): PV[:PE+PE]...
String
See the option description for information about the string content.
Size[UNIT]
Size is an input number that accepts an optional unit. Input units are always
treated as base two values, regardless of capitalization, e.g. 'k' and 'K'
both refer to 1024. The default input unit is specified by letter, followed
by |UNIT. UNIT represents other possible input units:
bBsSkKmMgGtTpPeE. b|B is bytes, s|S is sectors of 512 bytes, k|K is
kilobytes, m|M is megabytes, g|G is gigabytes, t|T is terabytes, p|P is
petabytes, e|E is exabytes. (This should not be confused with the output
control --units, where capital letters mean multiple of 1000.)
See lvm(8) for information about environment variables used by lvm. For example, LVM_VG_NAME can generally be substituted for a required VG parameter.
Alternate command forms, advanced command usage, and listing of all valid syntax for completeness.
Create an LV that returns errors when used.
lvcreate --type error -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create an VDO LV with VDO pool.
lvcreate --vdo -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create an VDO LV using existing VDO pool.
lvcreate --vdopool LV
-V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create an LV that returns zeros when read.
lvcreate --type zero -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a linear LV.
lvcreate --type linear
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a striped LV (also see lvcreate --stripes).
lvcreate --type striped
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a mirror LV (also see --type raid1).
lvcreate --type mirror
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a COW snapshot LV of an origin LV
(also see --snapshot).
lvcreate --type snapshot
-L|--size Size[m|UNIT] LV
Create a sparse COW snapshot LV of a virtual origin LV
(also see --snapshot).
lvcreate --type snapshot -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Create a sparse COW snapshot LV of a virtual origin LV.
lvcreate -s|--snapshot -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin pool (infers --type thin-pool).
lvcreate -T|--thin -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a thin pool named by the --thinpool arg
(infers --type thin-pool).
lvcreate -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
--thinpool LV_new VG
Create a cache pool named by the --cachepool arg
(variant, uses --cachepool in place of --name).
lvcreate --type cache-pool -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin LV in a thin pool.
lvcreate --type thin -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin LV in a thin pool named in the first arg
(variant, also see --thinpool for naming pool).
lvcreate --type thin
-V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT] LV_thinpool
Create a thin LV in the thin pool named in the first arg
(variant, infers --type thin, also see --thinpool for
naming pool.)
lvcreate -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
LV_thinpool
Create a thin LV that is a snapshot of an existing thin LV.
lvcreate --type thin LV_thin
Create a thin LV that is a snapshot of an existing thin LV
(infers --type thin).
lvcreate -T|--thin LV_thin
Create a thin LV that is a snapshot of an external origin LV
(infers --type thin).
lvcreate -s|--snapshot --thinpool
LV_thinpool LV
Create a thin LV, first creating a thin pool for it,
where the new thin pool is named by the --thinpool arg
(variant, infers --type thin).
lvcreate -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT] -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin LV, first creating a thin pool for it,
where the new thin pool is named by the --thinpool arg
(variant, infers --type thin).
lvcreate -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT] -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin LV, first creating a thin pool for it,
where the new thin pool is named in the first arg,
or the new thin pool name is generated when the first
arg is a VG name.
lvcreate --type thin -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin LV, first creating a thin pool for it,
where the new thin pool is named in the first arg,
or the new thin pool name is generated when the first
arg is a VG name (variant, infers --type thin).
lvcreate -T|--thin -V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT]
Create a thin LV, first creating a thin pool for it
(infers --type thin).
Create a sparse snapshot of a virtual origin LV
(infers --type snapshot).
Chooses --type thin or --type snapshot according to
config setting sparse_segtype_default.
lvcreate -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
-V|--virtualsize Size[m|UNIT] VG
Create a cache LV, first creating a new origin LV,
then combining it with the existing cache pool named
by the --cachepool arg (variant, infers --type cache).
lvcreate -L|--size Size[m|UNIT]
--cachepool LV_cachepool VG
Create a cache LV, first creating a new origin LV,
then combining it with the existing cache pool named
in the first arg (variant, also use --cachepool).
lvcreate --type cache -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] LV_cachepool
When LV is a cache pool, create a cache LV,
first creating a new origin LV, then combining it with
the existing cache pool named in the first arg
(variant, infers --type cache, also use --cachepool).
When LV is not a cache pool, convert the specified LV
to type cache after creating a new cache pool LV to use
(use lvconvert).
lvcreate -H|--cache -L|--size
Size[m|UNIT] LV
Create a striped LV with 3 stripes, a stripe size of 8KiB and a
size of 100MiB. The LV name is chosen by lvcreate.
lvcreate -i 3 -I 8 -L 100m vg00
Create a raid1 LV with two images, and a useable size of 500 MiB.
This operation requires two devices, one for each mirror image. RAID
metadata (superblock and bitmap) is also included on the two devices.
lvcreate --type raid1 -m1 -L 500m -n mylv vg00
Create a mirror LV with two images, and a useable size of 500 MiB.
This operation requires three devices: two for mirror images and one for a
disk log.
lvcreate --type mirror -m1 -L 500m -n mylv vg00
Create a mirror LV with 2 images, and a useable size of 500 MiB.
This operation requires 2 devices because the log is in memory.
lvcreate --type mirror -m1 --mirrorlog core -L 500m -n mylv vg00
Create a copy-on-write snapshot of an LV:
lvcreate --snapshot --size 100m --name mysnap vg00/mylv
Create a copy-on-write snapshot with a size sufficient for
overwriting 20% of the size of the original LV.
lvcreate -s -l 20%ORIGIN -n mysnap vg00/mylv
Create a sparse LV with 1TiB of virtual space, and actual space
just under 100MiB.
lvcreate --snapshot --virtualsize 1t --size 100m --name mylv vg00
Create a linear LV with a usable size of 64MiB on specific
physical extents.
lvcreate -L 64m -n mylv vg00 /dev/sda:0-7 /dev/sdb:0-7
Create a RAID5 LV with a usable size of 5GiB, 3 stripes, a stripe
size of 64KiB, using a total of 4 devices (including one for parity).
lvcreate --type raid5 -L 5G -i 3 -I 64 -n mylv vg00
Create a RAID5 LV using all of the free space in the VG and
spanning all the PVs in the VG (note that the command will fail if there are
more than 8 PVs in the VG, in which case -i 7 must be used to get to
the current maximum of 8 devices including parity for RaidLVs).
lvcreate --config allocation/raid_stripe_all_devices=1
Create RAID10 LV with a usable size of 5GiB, using 2 stripes, each
on a two-image mirror. (Note that the -i and -m arguments
behave differently: -i specifies the total number of stripes, but
-m specifies the number of images in addition to the first image).
lvcreate --type raid10 -L 5G -i 2 -m 1 -n mylv vg00
Create a 1TiB thin LV, first creating a new thin pool for it,
where the thin pool has 100MiB of space, uses 2 stripes, has a 64KiB stripe
size, and 256KiB chunk size.
lvcreate --type thin --name mylv --thinpool mypool
Create a thin snapshot of a thin LV (the size option must not be
used, otherwise a copy-on-write snapshot would be created).
lvcreate --snapshot --name mysnap vg00/thinvol
Create a thin snapshot of the read-only inactive LV named
"origin" which becomes an external origin for the thin snapshot
LV.
lvcreate --snapshot --name mysnap --thinpool mypool vg00/origin
Create a cache pool from a fast physical device. The cache pool
can then be used to cache an LV.
lvcreate --type cache-pool -L 1G -n my_cpool vg00 /dev/fast1
Create a cache LV, first creating a new origin LV on a slow
physical device, then combining the new origin LV with an existing cache
pool.
lvcreate --type cache --cachepool my_cpool
lvm(8) lvm.conf(5) lvmconfig(8)
pvchange(8) pvck(8) pvcreate(8) pvdisplay(8) pvmove(8) pvremove(8) pvresize(8) pvs(8) pvscan(8)
vgcfgbackup(8) vgcfgrestore(8) vgchange(8) vgck(8) vgcreate(8) vgconvert(8) vgdisplay(8) vgexport(8) vgextend(8) vgimport(8) vgimportclone(8) vgmerge(8) vgmknodes(8) vgreduce(8) vgremove(8) vgrename(8) vgs(8) vgscan(8) vgsplit(8)
lvcreate(8) lvchange(8) lvconvert(8) lvdisplay(8) lvextend(8) lvreduce(8) lvremove(8) lvrename(8) lvresize(8) lvs(8) lvscan(8)
lvm-fullreport(8) lvm-lvpoll(8) lvm2-activation-generator(8) blkdeactivate(8) lvmdump(8)
dmeventd(8) lvmpolld(8) lvmlockd(8) lvmlockctl(8) cmirrord(8) lvmdbusd(8)
lvmsystemid(7) lvmreport(7) lvmraid(7) lvmthin(7) lvmcache(7)
LVM TOOLS 2.03.02(2) (2018-12-18) | Red Hat, Inc. |