From: Zdenek Kabelac <zdenek.kabelac@gmail.com>
To: Alexander Lyakas <alex.bolshoy@gmail.com>
Cc: LVM general discussion and development <linux-lvm@redhat.com>
Subject: Re: [linux-lvm] initializing a PV, which was part of an old VG
Date: Wed, 05 Oct 2011 21:30:13 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4E8CB045.7090103@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAGRgLy4AHJV9yFncX--aoSXbNg40LMJHtCqwMk=Y-L5RPe_dcQ@mail.gmail.com>
Dne 5.10.2011 17:20, Alexander Lyakas napsal(a):
> Hello Zdenek,
>
> I am frequently hitting issues when trying to create a new VG on a PV
> that had existing VG. (This PV is usually an MD raid0 or raid1
> device). I am wondering what is the correct procedure to completely
> wipe out any remains of LVM signatures from a PV, and initialize the
> PV afresh?
>
util-linux comes with wipefs - to wipe fs & raid signatures
pvremove should wipe label of LVM device - so it should not be recognized as PV.
You may try to use blkid to see how is the device recognized.
> Here is what I do: for each new VG, I use a new GUID as part of its
> name, to avoid VG name conflicts.
>
> To try to handle the old VG, the VG creation code first calls
> lvm_vg_name_from_device(pv_name). If it founds a VG there and succeeds
> to open it, it goes over its LVs, and tries to deactivate them and
> then removes them. Finally, the code removes the old VG itself. In
> some cases, however, the code fails to open the old VG, so it
> proceeds.
>
removal of VG doesn't wipe PV headers
> Next thing I call pvcreate (fork/exec) to initialize the PV (I always
> use --force twice). After this is completed, I do lvm_scan(), because
Using -ff is probably a problem here - it's supposed to only used in case you
really need it - it's not a 'nice' option.
So first vgremove the VG which occupies your PVs - then pvremove should work
without -ff.
> - pvcreate(/dev/md2) output:
> STDOUT:
> Physical volume "/dev/md2" successfully created
> STDERR:
> Couldn't find device with uuid NCtRLE-1ffs-GLaH-MYNS-d1hk-ikAt-7dbhm0.
> Writing physical volume data to disk "/dev/md2"
>
> After lvm_scan(),lvm_vg_create(pool_9644BCB5D4704164976DBD85E471EAAA),
> lvm_vg_extend(), lvm_vg_write(), the syslog shows:
>
> Wiping cache of LVM-capable devices
> get_pv_from_vg_by_id: vg_read_internal failed to read VG
> pool_74C7247AE06F4B7DAC557D9A1842EEBD
> Adding physical volume '/dev/md2' to volume group
> 'pool_9644BCB5D4704164976DBD85E471EAAA'
> Creating directory "/etc/lvm/archive"
> Archiving volume group "pool_9644BCB5D4704164976DBD85E471EAAA"
> metadata (seqno 0).
>
> While pool_74C7247AE06F4B7DAC557D9A1842EEBD is yet some other old VG.
> At this point the VG seems to be created ok. But later, when I try to
> create first LV, syslog shows:
>
> Wiping cache of LVM-capable devices
> Couldn't find device with uuid NCtRLE-1ffs-GLaH-MYNS-d1hk-ikAt-7dbhm0.
> Couldn't find device with uuid NCtRLE-1ffs-GLaH-MYNS-d1hk-ikAt-7dbhm0.
> There are 1 physical volumes missing.
> Cannot change VG pool_9644BCB5D4704164976DBD85E471EAAA while PVs are missing.
> Consider vgreduce --removemissing.
Have you pvremove-d all PV devices ?
Zdenek
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-10-05 19:30 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-10-05 15:20 [linux-lvm] initializing a PV, which was part of an old VG Alexander Lyakas
2011-10-05 19:30 ` Zdenek Kabelac [this message]
2011-10-06 8:47 ` Alexander Lyakas
2011-10-06 13:11 ` Stuart D. Gathman
2011-10-09 19:47 ` Alexander Lyakas
2011-10-10 13:20 ` Stuart D. Gathman
2011-10-05 19:34 ` Stuart D. Gathman
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