LVCHANGE(8) | System Manager's Manual | LVCHANGE(8) |
lvchange - Change the attributes of logical volume(s)
lvchange option_args position_args
[ option_args ]
-a|--activate y|n|ay
--activationmode partial|degraded|complete
--addtag Tag
--alloc
contiguous|cling|cling_by_tags|normal|anywhere|inherit
-A|--autobackup y|n
--cachemode writethrough|writeback|passthrough
--cachepolicy String
--cachesettings String
--commandprofile String
--compression y|n
--config String
-C|--contiguous y|n
-d|--debug
--deduplication y|n
--deltag Tag
--detachprofile
--discards passdown|nopassdown|ignore
--driverloaded y|n
--errorwhenfull y|n
-f|--force
-h|--help
-K|--ignoreactivationskip
--ignorelockingfailure
--ignoremonitoring
--lockopt String
--longhelp
-j|--major Number
--[raid]maxrecoveryrate Size[k|UNIT]
--metadataprofile String
--minor Number
--[raid]minrecoveryrate Size[k|UNIT]
--monitor y|n
--nolocking
--noudevsync
-P|--partial
-p|--permission rw|r
-M|--persistent y|n
--poll y|n
--profile String
-q|--quiet
-r|--readahead auto|none|Number
--readonly
--rebuild PV
--refresh
--reportformat basic|json
--resync
-S|--select String
-k|--setactivationskip y|n
--[raid]syncaction check|repair
--sysinit
-t|--test
-v|--verbose
--version
--[raid]writebehind Number
--[raid]writemostly PV[:t|n|y]
-y|--yes
-Z|--zero y|n
lvchange changes LV attributes in the VG, changes LV activation in the kernel, and includes other utilities for LV maintenance.
Change a general LV attribute.
For options listed in parentheses, any one is
required, after which the others are optional.
lvchange
Resyncronize a mirror or raid LV.
Use to reset 'R' attribute on a not initially synchronized LV.
lvchange --resync
VG|LV_mirror_raid|Tag|Select ...
Resynchronize or check a raid LV.
lvchange --syncaction check|repair
VG|LV_raid|Tag|Select ...
Reconstruct data on specific PVs of a raid LV.
lvchange --rebuild PV
VG|LV_raid|Tag|Select ...
Activate or deactivate an LV.
lvchange -a|--activate
y|n|ay VG|LV|Tag|Select ...
Reactivate an LV using the latest metadata.
lvchange --refresh
VG|LV|Tag|Select ...
Start or stop monitoring an LV from dmeventd.
lvchange --monitor y|n
VG|LV|Tag|Select ...
Start or stop processing an LV conversion.
lvchange --poll y|n
VG|LV|Tag|Select ...
Make the minor device number persistent for an LV.
lvchange -M|--persistent y
--minor Number LV
Common options for command:
Common options for lvm:
-a|--activate y|n|ay
Change the active state of LVs. An active LV can be used through a block
device, allowing data on the LV to be accessed. y makes LVs active,
or available. n makes LVs inactive, or unavailable. The block device
for the LV is added or removed from the system using device-mapper in the
kernel. A symbolic link /dev/VGName/LVName pointing to the device node is
also added/removed. All software and scripts should access the device
through the symbolic link and present this as the name of the device. The
location and name of the underlying device node may depend on the
distribution, configuration (e.g. udev), or release version. ay
specifies autoactivation, in which case an LV is activated only if it
matches an item in lvm.conf activation/auto_activation_volume_list. If the
list is not set, all LVs are considered to match, and if if the list is set
but empty, no LVs match. Autoactivation should be used during system boot to
make it possible to select which LVs should be automatically activated by
the system. See lvmlockd(8) for more information about activation
options ey and sy for shared VGs.
--activationmode
partial|degraded|complete
Determines if LV activation is allowed when PVs are missing, e.g. because of a
device failure. complete only allows LVs with no missing PVs to be
activated, and is the most restrictive mode. degraded allows RAID LVs
with missing PVs to be activated. (This does not include the
"mirror" type, see "raid1" instead.) partial
allows any LV with missing PVs to be activated, and should only be used for
recovery or repair. For default, see lvm.conf/activation_mode. See
lvmraid(7) for more information.
--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.
--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.
--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.
--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.
--deltag Tag
Deletes a tag from a PV, VG or LV. This option can be repeated to delete
multiple tags at once. See lvm(8) for information about tags.
--detachprofile
Detaches a metadata profile from a VG or LV. See lvm.conf(5) for more
information about profiles.
--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.
-f|--force ...
Override various checks, confirmations and protections. Use with extreme
caution.
-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.
--ignorelockingfailure
Allows a command to continue with read-only metadata operations after locking
failures.
--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.
--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.
--nolocking
Disable locking.
--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|--partial
Commands will do their best to activate LVs with missing PV extents. Missing
extents may be replaced with error or zero segments according to the
lvm.conf missing_stripe_filler setting. Metadata may not be changed with
this option.
-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.
--poll y|n
When yes, start the background transformation of an LV. An incomplete
transformation, e.g. pvmove or lvconvert interrupted by reboot or crash, can
be restarted from the last checkpoint with --poll y. When no, background
transformation of an LV will not occur, and the transformation will not
complete. It may not be appropriate to immediately poll an LV after
activation, in which case --poll n can be used to defer polling until a
later --poll y command.
--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.
--readonly
Run the command in a special read-only mode which will read on-disk metadata
without needing to take any locks. This can be used to peek inside metadata
used by a virtual machine image while the virtual machine is running. No
attempt will be made to communicate with the device-mapper kernel driver, so
this option is unable to report whether or not LVs are actually in use.
--rebuild PV
Selects a PV to rebuild in a raid LV. Multiple PVs can be rebuilt by repeating
this option. Use this option in place of --resync or --syncaction repair
when the PVs with corrupted data are known, and their data should be
reconstructed rather than reconstructing default (rotating) data. See
lvmraid(7) for more information.
--refresh
If the LV is active, reload its metadata. This is not necessary in normal
operation, but may be useful if something has gone wrong, or if some form of
manual LV sharing is being used.
--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.
--resync
Initiates mirror synchronization. Synchronization generally happens
automatically, but this option forces it to run. Also see --rebuild to
synchronize a specific PV. During synchronization, data is read from the
primary mirror device and copied to the others. This can take considerable
time, during which the LV is without a complete redundant copy of the data.
See lvmraid(7) for more information.
-S|--select String
Select objects for processing and reporting based on specified criteria. The
criteria syntax is described by --select help and
lvmreport(7). For reporting commands, one row is displayed for each
object matching the criteria. See --options help for selectable
object fields. Rows can be displayed with an additional "selected"
field (-o selected) showing 1 if the row matches the selection and 0
otherwise. For non-reporting commands which process LVM entities, the
selection is used to choose items to process.
-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.
--[raid]syncaction check|repair
Initiate different types of RAID synchronization. This causes the RAID LV to
read all data and parity blocks in the array and check for discrepancies
(mismatches between mirrors or incorrect parity values). check will
count but not correct discrepancies. repair will correct
discrepancies. See lvs for reporting discrepancies found or repaired.
--sysinit
Indicates that vgchange/lvchange is being invoked from early system
initialisation scripts (e.g. rc.sysinit or an initrd), before writable
filesystems are available. As such, some functionality needs to be disabled
and this option acts as a shortcut which selects an appropriate set of
options. Currently, this is equivalent to using --ignorelockingfailure,
--ignoremonitoring, --poll n, and setting env var
LVM_SUPPRESS_LOCKING_FAILURE_MESSAGES. vgchange/lvchange skip
autoactivation, and defer to pvscan autoactivation.
-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.
-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.
--[raid]writebehind Number
The maximum number of outstanding writes that are allowed to devices in a
RAID1 LV that is marked write-mostly. Once this value is exceeded, writes
become synchronous (i.e. all writes to the constituent devices must complete
before the array signals the write has completed). Setting the value to zero
clears the preference and allows the system to choose the value
arbitrarily.
--[raid]writemostly
PV[:t|n|y]
Mark a device in a RAID1 LV as write-mostly. All reads to these drives will be
avoided unless absolutely necessary. This keeps the number of I/Os to the
drive to a minimum. The default behavior is to set the write-mostly
attribute for the specified PV. It is also possible to remove the
write-mostly flag by adding the suffix :n at the end of the PV name,
or to toggle the value with the suffix :t. Repeat this option to
change the attribute on multiple PVs.
-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
Set zeroing mode for thin pool. Note: already provisioned blocks from pool in
non-zero mode are not cleared in unwritten parts when setting --zero y.
VG
Volume Group name. See lvm(8) for valid names.
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)
Tag
Tag name. See lvm(8) for information about tag names and using tags in
place of a VG, LV or PV.
Select
Select indicates that a required positional parameter can be omitted if the
--select option is used. No arg appears in this position.
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
KiB, m|M is MiB, g|G is GiB, t|T is TiB, p|P is PiB, e|E is EiB. (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.
Change LV permission to read-only:
lvchange -pr vg00/lvol1
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 2.03.11(2) (2021-01-08) | Red Hat, Inc. |