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* [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size?
@ 2002-07-08 16:08 Ben Snyder
  2002-07-08 16:13 ` Theo Van Dinter
  2002-07-08 16:16 ` Randy Dees
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Ben Snyder @ 2002-07-08 16:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-lvm

I'm a linux-lvm newbie (some limited use of IBM's LVM in AIX), and some 
use of Veritas in Solaris.  So I'm doing some testing, hoping to find 
out that lvm will serve my needs and that of my employer.

I've done all of my fdisks to change partition type (0x8e), vgscans, 
pvcreates, vgcreates, lvcreates, mke2fs on the lv etc, (used nice 
generic names for my testing, like vg and lv), mounted it up and get the 
following:


mount /dev/vg/lv /test
df -h /test
Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/spheravg/spheralv
                              59G   20k   56G   0% /test


WTF?!?!  Where'd that 3G go?  Does LVM mess with things so that the OS 
cant read volumes correctly?  Or is there another issue that I might be 
running into?

Thanks in advance for feedback/assistance/HELP.

Also, on another note, how difficult is it going to be for me to add 
another ~63G to this LV from another physical device?  The whole reason 
we're looking at LVM is mainly to perform this function (one HYUGE 
filesystem over multiple devices).

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size?
  2002-07-08 16:08 [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size? Ben Snyder
@ 2002-07-08 16:13 ` Theo Van Dinter
  2002-07-08 16:58   ` Kirby C. Bohling
  2002-07-08 16:16 ` Randy Dees
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Theo Van Dinter @ 2002-07-08 16:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-lvm

On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 04:59:17PM -0400, Ben Snyder wrote:
> Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/spheravg/spheralv
>                              59G   20k   56G   0% /test
> 
> 
> WTF?!?!  Where'd that 3G go?  Does LVM mess with things so that the OS 
> cant read volumes correctly?  Or is there another issue that I might be 
> running into?

This isn't a LVM question, it's a filesystem question....  Specifically:

$ man mke2fs
...
       -m reserved-blocks-percentage
              Specify the percentage of the filesystem blocks reserved for the super-user.
              This value defaults to 5%.
...

So 5% of 59GB is ~3GB.  59-3 = 56GB available.

As you can tell, 5% is huge.  For non-root/OS filesystems, I almost
always set that to 0.  Look at tune2fs to see how to do that without
recreating the FS.

-- 
Randomly Generated Tagline:
Real theology is always rather shocking to people who already
 think they know what they think.  I'm still shocked myself.  :-)
              -- Larry Wall in <199708261932.MAA05218@wall.org>

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size?
  2002-07-08 16:08 [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size? Ben Snyder
  2002-07-08 16:13 ` Theo Van Dinter
@ 2002-07-08 16:16 ` Randy Dees
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Randy Dees @ 2002-07-08 16:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-lvm

3G = approx 5% of 59G filesystem, or the reserved blocks on a standard
ext2fs filesystem.

They're right there where you expect to find them if you use a unix
filesystem.



<quote who="Ben Snyder">
> I'm a linux-lvm newbie (some limited use of IBM's LVM in AIX), and some
> use of Veritas in Solaris.  So I'm doing some testing, hoping to find
> out that lvm will serve my needs and that of my employer.
>
> I've done all of my fdisks to change partition type (0x8e), vgscans,
> pvcreates, vgcreates, lvcreates, mke2fs on the lv etc, (used nice
> generic names for my testing, like vg and lv), mounted it up and get the
>  following:
>
>
> mount /dev/vg/lv /test
> df -h /test
> Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/spheravg/spheralv
>                               59G   20k   56G   0% /test
>
>
> WTF?!?!  Where'd that 3G go?  Does LVM mess with things so that the OS
> cant read volumes correctly?  Or is there another issue that I might be
> running into?
>
> Thanks in advance for feedback/assistance/HELP.
>
> Also, on another note, how difficult is it going to be for me to add
> another ~63G to this LV from another physical device?  The whole reason
> we're looking at LVM is mainly to perform this function (one HYUGE
> filesystem over multiple devices).
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> linux-lvm mailing list
> linux-lvm@sistina.com
> http://lists.sistina.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm
> read the LVM HOW-TO at http://www.sistina.com/lvm/Pages/howto.html

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size?
  2002-07-08 16:13 ` Theo Van Dinter
@ 2002-07-08 16:58   ` Kirby C. Bohling
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Kirby C. Bohling @ 2002-07-08 16:58 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-lvm

	My only advice is that you might want to reserve a small number of blocks 
for root on the filesystem, read up on -r for tune2fs.  The percentage 
as nearly as I can tell is only in integers.

	If you are using ext3 (which isn't a bad idea for a filesystem this 
large), I've used ReiserFS on filesystems this big.  The journal will 
take up something between 1024 Blocks and 10240 blocks depends on how 
you set it up, which can use up an additional 400M.  Read up on the -J 
option to tune2fs.  This can be reset after the filesystem is configured.

	If you're going to all that trouble, you should consider how many files 
you might put on the filesystem, and adjust the number of inodes to be 
reasonable.  Look at -i and -N for ext2/3 (this can only be done at 
filesystem creation time).  df -i will report on inodes.

	Finally, adding more space to the filesystem:

pvcreate /dev/device
vgextend VolGroupName /dev/device
lvextend --size +60G LogicalVolumePath

	Then depending on the filesystem you have to resize it.  To do that on 
ext2/3, you have to unmount the filesystem.  For reiserFS, you can do it 
online.

	If all you really wanted was a huge filesystem of a known (fixed) size, 
and you aren't planning on adding any drives, the md tools and software 
RAID will do the job (either linear append or RAID 0).  They aren't 
nearly as flexible, and aren't half as cool in my opinion, but they do 
get it done.

	It can save you a lot of trouble w/ LVM to not use it.  LVM if you need 
it is a godsend, if you don't I wouldn't bother with it, it's can be a 
hassle.  I play with it, so I get used to it.  It has caused problems in 
the past on my personal boxes.  I haven't had catastrophic stuff happen 
to me, and the guys here appear to work miracles on data recovery.  So, 
I wouldn't be paranoid about my data, but downtime is a problem for me, 
so I skip all the features I can do without on my production machines at 
work.

	Thanks,
		Kirby


	

Theo Van Dinter wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 08, 2002 at 04:59:17PM -0400, Ben Snyder wrote:
> 
>>Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
>>/dev/spheravg/spheralv
>>                             59G   20k   56G   0% /test
>>
>>
>>WTF?!?!  Where'd that 3G go?  Does LVM mess with things so that the OS 
>>cant read volumes correctly?  Or is there another issue that I might be 
>>running into?
> 
> 
> This isn't a LVM question, it's a filesystem question....  Specifically:
> 
> $ man mke2fs
> ...
>        -m reserved-blocks-percentage
>               Specify the percentage of the filesystem blocks reserved for the super-user.
>               This value defaults to 5%.
> ...
> 
> So 5% of 59GB is ~3GB.  59-3 = 56GB available.
> 
> As you can tell, 5% is huge.  For non-root/OS filesystems, I almost
> always set that to 0.  Look at tune2fs to see how to do that without
> recreating the FS.
> 

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2002-07-08 16:58 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2002-07-08 16:08 [linux-lvm] df reporting incorrect size? Ben Snyder
2002-07-08 16:13 ` Theo Van Dinter
2002-07-08 16:58   ` Kirby C. Bohling
2002-07-08 16:16 ` Randy Dees

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