From: Andrew Clausen <clausen@gnu.org>
To: Andreas Dilger <adilger@turbolinux.com>
Cc: parted@gnu.org, Linux LVM mailing list <linux-lvm@msede.com>
Subject: Re: [linux-lvm] LVM, partitions, RAID, and the Grand Scheme of ThingsTM
Date: Tue, 12 Sep 2000 05:21:46 +1100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <39BD22BA.5243D566@gnu.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: 200009112113.e8BLDSj27926@webber.adilger.net
Andreas Dilger wrote:
> When using LVM its not important to be able to move the beginning of
> the filesystem, since you can always change the physical LE locations
> without changing the filesystem itself.
True.
> What _is_ interesting, if you live in an LVM-centric world, is being
> able to move the start of the filesystem a small amount into the
> partition (after shrinking the end) so that you can turn the partition
> into an PV/LV. After such a conversion, you could do any normal LVM
> handling of the LV/filesystem (e.g. shrink, grow, migrate).
Yep :-)
> It may just be easy enough to write a generic tool to shift the partition
> contents X blocks via copying (after using an fs-specific tool to shrink
> the end of the fs), and then handle the creation of the PV header,
> and adding an LV of the appropriate size that covers the whole partition.
> This is only really useful if you don't have enough space to duplicate
> the whole partition. Otherwise, you are just as well off creating a new
> LV of the appropriate size, doing a raw copy of the filesystem to the new
> LV, and deleting the old partition and/or turning it into a PV.
This is VERY slow (need to read & write the entire file system), and is
dangerous (requires journaling to prevent corruption on power failure,
or other interruptions). Also: you may copy, at most, X bytes at a
time,
where X is the distance you move the start - unless you use an
intermediate copy area. Either way (journaling, or intermediate
copying),
you're doing LOTS of seeks (if you're working with one disk) - which is
where IO gets really expensive.
We can do much better :-)
I'll hopefully implement move-the-start for ext2 when I go to Brazil
(late Nov to late Feb)
> > So, having /sbin/resize.* isn't as elegant as it looks. Were
> > you suggesting have resize.* deal with partition table stuff?
>
> Not at all. The resize.* programs are filesystem specific, and only
> resize from the end of the partition. I suppose that they could be
> generalized to accept an additional parameter (at the end) to give
> the new start of the partition, e.g. "resize.ext2 /dev/hda1 [size] [start]"
"/dev/hda1" is not as simple as it seems. It provides a linear address
space from the start of the old partition, to the end of the old
partition. Where partition is defined by the kernel, BTW. So, a
resizer
can use that linear address space the kernel provides. If that is a bad
idea (which it is for move-the-start, and is somewhat dubious for
growth)
- then it must create it's own address space. i.e. it must understand
partition tables.
Andrew Clausen
prev parent reply other threads:[~2000-09-11 18:21 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2000-09-06 6:08 [linux-lvm] LVM, partitions, RAID, and the Grand Scheme of Things TM Andrew Clausen
2000-09-07 0:53 ` Andreas Dilger
2000-09-09 13:38 ` Andrew Clausen
2000-09-11 21:13 ` Andreas Dilger
2000-09-11 18:21 ` Andrew Clausen [this message]
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