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From: David Robinson <zxvdr.au@gmail.com>
To: LVM general discussion and development <linux-lvm@redhat.com>
Subject: Re: [linux-lvm] LVM on a fake disk
Date: Tue, 29 May 2007 17:36:30 +1000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <465BD7FE.7080501@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <465BD163.4010904@cesca.es>

Jordi Prats wrote:
> Hi all,
> How can I define voluem groups and logical volumes using a disk image on 
> a file that will be the root filesystem of another machine (not the one 
> that is defining them)?

The link below provides some details which may help. You can use losetup 
to associate a loop device with a regular file, then treat it as you 
would to a normal block device.

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Docs/Fedora7VirtQuickStart#head-498c8bbe74fd334cf63a4f1f918be74c726238dd

ie:

# create a sparse file to use as the block device in the guest
dd if=/dev/zero of=disk1.img seek=8096 bs=1M count=0

# setup a loopback device
losetup /dev/loop0 disk1.img

/dev/loop0 can now be used like a normal block device. If you partition 
the device thou it's slightly different - you need to use kpartx to make 
the partitions usable.

ie:

# create a partition table on the device (/boot cannot be on an LVM volume)
fdisk /dev/loop0

# make the partitions visible (they will appear as /dev/mapper/loop0pX, 
where X is a partition number)
kpartx -a /dev/loop0

# then you can use LVM on the devices
pvcreate /dev/mapper/loop0p1

The LVM's point of view there is nothing special that needs to be done 
other than scanning for the volume groups (vgscan) and 
activating/deactivating them (vgchange -ay <vg>/ vgchange -an <vg>).

Dave

  reply	other threads:[~2007-05-29  7:36 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2007-05-29  7:08 [linux-lvm] LVM on a fake disk Jordi Prats
2007-05-29  7:36 ` David Robinson [this message]
2007-05-29 20:40   ` Jordi Prats

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