From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Message-Id: <200307080853.h688rNvG021378@ruby.ridersoft.net> From: lvm@ruby.ridersoft.net Subject: Re: [linux-lvm] telling LVM it's not hda8 anymore but now it's hda7 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="bound1057654403" Sender: linux-lvm-admin@sistina.com Errors-To: linux-lvm-admin@sistina.com Reply-To: linux-lvm@sistina.com List-Help: List-Post: List-Subscribe: , List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: Date: Tue Jul 8 08:06:02 2003 List-Id: To: linux-lvm@sistina.com This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --bound1057654403 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-MIME-Autoconverted: from 8bit to quoted-printable by ruby.ridersoft.net id h688rNam021379 I am not sure I understand excactly what your problem is, but wouldn't sc= anning with the lvm tools solve your problem ? vgscan and pvscan should find your lvm volumes, and you can activate them= once you've found them right ? best regards Mark "Martin Milner" wrote .. > I am such a noob. I deleted a partition. I had /dev/hda8 in an lvm volu= me > but i deleted a lower partition then rebooted. Now i got a kernel panic > because my /dev/hda9 (my / ) had gone. Running fdisk and fixing the > partition table nicely made my old /dev/hda9 to /dev/hda8 (and my hda8 > was now hda7). After some > fumbling around with grub i got it to boot again and most of my install= ation > is running again. Except for my LVM stuff >=20 > I need to tell LVM that there no longer is a /dev/hda8, that it is now > /dev/hda7. Without losing my data. >=20 > Anyone?=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF= =FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=FF=E5=8A{=B1=FE[=E6=99=A8=A5=8Ax%=8A= =CBe=8A{=B1=FE[=E6=FE=C8=AC=B6)=DA=FD=CA&=86=DBi=FF=FF=E5=8A=CBl=FE=C8=AC= =B6)=DA=FD=CA&=FEf=A2=96f=A7=FEX=AC=B6)=DF=A3=F9b=9E=EC=FF=96=F9=ABy=A7m=85= =E2=D50s=96=FD3=9A=B6=1Bm=A7=FF=FF=B6Wi=FE=8A=E0=FCs=96L=EF=CBT=CF=C79d=CE --bound1057654403--