* [linux-lvm] lvm partition on lv
@ 2006-08-08 1:17 Randall Smith
2006-08-08 10:34 ` Markus Laire
2006-08-14 4:42 ` Randall Smith
0 siblings, 2 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Randall Smith @ 2006-08-08 1:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-lvm
Warning: This may be insane.
I like the flexibility of LVM and try to use it wherever it's feasible.
In this case, I'd like a Xen guest OS to have control over it's LV's.
The method I usually see for using LVM with Xen is to create an LV and
a filesystem on it. I would like to instead create an LV and partition
it with an LVM partition and maybe other partition types. Just to test
this I did the following:
1. lvcreate -L 100M -name test vg1
2. cfdisk /dev/vg1/test
3. create LVM partition on entire device
4. pvcreate /dev/vg1/test
5. vgcreate vg2 /dev/vg1/test
6. vgchange -ay /dev/vg2
7. lvcreate -L 50M -n testlv vg2
8. mkfs.ext3 /dev/vg2/testlv
9. mkdir /mnt/test
10. mount /dev/vg2/testlv /mnt/test
And it worked! Cool!
Let's say on /dev/vg1/test I had one LVM partition and one ext3
partition. How can I access those separate partitions since it's only
one device (/dev/vg1/test)? Normally, a partitioned block device
(/dev/hda) would show up like /dev/hda1, dev/hda2, etc.
In the example above, I'm partitioning the LV and using the partition on
the same system, which is useless. What I will be doing is giving the
disk image /dev/vg1/test to a Xen guest so it can have it's own VG and
LVs. Are there potential problems I should look out for and/or tweaking
I should do to make this work optimally?
Randall
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] lvm partition on lv
2006-08-08 1:17 [linux-lvm] lvm partition on lv Randall Smith
@ 2006-08-08 10:34 ` Markus Laire
2006-08-08 10:40 ` Markus Laire
2006-08-14 4:42 ` Randall Smith
1 sibling, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Markus Laire @ 2006-08-08 10:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: LVM general discussion and development
On 8/8/06, Randall Smith <randall@tnr.cc> wrote:
> Let's say on /dev/vg1/test I had one LVM partition and one ext3
> partition. How can I access those separate partitions since it's only
> one device (/dev/vg1/test)? Normally, a partitioned block device
> (/dev/hda) would show up like /dev/hda1, dev/hda2, etc.
With loop-device, you can use only part of the block-device as new
block-device (See options -o and -s in man:losetup)
So if you know the positions where the partitions start, and their
lengths (both in bytes), you could do something like this: (I havn't
tested this, so there might be some errors in these commands. But the
basic idea should work)
# make LVM partition available at /dev/loop1
losetup -o $lvm_start -s $lvm_size /dev/loop1 /dev/vg1/test
mkdir /mnt/test
# Mount ext3-partition at /mnt/test using loop-device
mount -t ext3 -o offset=$ext3_start,sizelimit=$ext3_length
/dev/vg1/test /mnt/test
--
Markus Laire
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [linux-lvm] lvm partition on lv
2006-08-08 10:34 ` Markus Laire
@ 2006-08-08 10:40 ` Markus Laire
2006-08-08 14:27 ` [linux-lvm] " Randall Smith
0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Markus Laire @ 2006-08-08 10:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: LVM general discussion and development
On 8/8/06, Markus Laire <malaire@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 8/8/06, Randall Smith <randall@tnr.cc> wrote:
> > Let's say on /dev/vg1/test I had one LVM partition and one ext3
> > partition. How can I access those separate partitions since it's only
> > one device (/dev/vg1/test)? Normally, a partitioned block device
> > (/dev/hda) would show up like /dev/hda1, dev/hda2, etc.
>
> With loop-device, you can use only part of the block-device as new
> block-device (See options -o and -s in man:losetup)
>
> So if you know the positions where the partitions start, and their
> lengths (both in bytes), you could do something like this: (I havn't
> tested this, so there might be some errors in these commands. But the
> basic idea should work)
>
> # make LVM partition available at /dev/loop1
> losetup -o $lvm_start -s $lvm_size /dev/loop1 /dev/vg1/test
> mkdir /mnt/test
> # Mount ext3-partition at /mnt/test using loop-device
> mount -t ext3 -o offset=$ext3_start,sizelimit=$ext3_length
> /dev/vg1/test /mnt/test
Well, last command is missing at least "loop" option - i.e. it should be
mount -t ext3 -o loop,offset=$ext3_start,sizelimit=$ext3_length
/dev/vg1/test /mnt/test
or you could use these instead
losetup -o $ext3_start -s $ext3_length /dev/loop2 /dev/vg1/test
mount -t ext3 /dev/loop2 /mnt/test
I hope I didn't make other mistakes...
($lvm_size and $ext3_length both means the size of the partition in
bytes - I should've used 'size' or 'length' for both for consistency)
--
Markus Laire
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* [linux-lvm] Re: lvm partition on lv
2006-08-08 10:40 ` Markus Laire
@ 2006-08-08 14:27 ` Randall Smith
0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Randall Smith @ 2006-08-08 14:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-lvm
Markus Laire wrote:
> On 8/8/06, Markus Laire <malaire@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On 8/8/06, Randall Smith <randall@tnr.cc> wrote:
>> > Let's say on /dev/vg1/test I had one LVM partition and one ext3
>> > partition. How can I access those separate partitions since it's only
>> > one device (/dev/vg1/test)? Normally, a partitioned block device
>> > (/dev/hda) would show up like /dev/hda1, dev/hda2, etc.
>>
>> With loop-device, you can use only part of the block-device as new
>> block-device (See options -o and -s in man:losetup)
>>
>> So if you know the positions where the partitions start, and their
>> lengths (both in bytes), you could do something like this: (I havn't
>> tested this, so there might be some errors in these commands. But the
>> basic idea should work)
>>
>> # make LVM partition available at /dev/loop1
>> losetup -o $lvm_start -s $lvm_size /dev/loop1 /dev/vg1/test
>> mkdir /mnt/test
>> # Mount ext3-partition at /mnt/test using loop-device
>> mount -t ext3 -o offset=$ext3_start,sizelimit=$ext3_length
>> /dev/vg1/test /mnt/test
>
>
> Well, last command is missing at least "loop" option - i.e. it should be
>
> mount -t ext3 -o loop,offset=$ext3_start,sizelimit=$ext3_length
> /dev/vg1/test /mnt/test
>
> or you could use these instead
> losetup -o $ext3_start -s $ext3_length /dev/loop2 /dev/vg1/test
> mount -t ext3 /dev/loop2 /mnt/test
>
> I hope I didn't make other mistakes...
>
> ($lvm_size and $ext3_length both means the size of the partition in
> bytes - I should've used 'size' or 'length' for both for consistency)
>
Thanks. That's perfect.
Working with Unix is so much fun. It always seems that anything is
possible as long as I'm willing to learn something new.
Randall
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* [linux-lvm] Re: lvm partition on lv
2006-08-08 1:17 [linux-lvm] lvm partition on lv Randall Smith
2006-08-08 10:34 ` Markus Laire
@ 2006-08-14 4:42 ` Randall Smith
1 sibling, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread
From: Randall Smith @ 2006-08-14 4:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-lvm
Randall Smith wrote:
> Warning: This may be insane.
>
> I like the flexibility of LVM and try to use it wherever it's feasible.
> In this case, I'd like a Xen guest OS to have control over it's LV's.
> The method I usually see for using LVM with Xen is to create an LV and
> a filesystem on it. I would like to instead create an LV and partition
> it with an LVM partition and maybe other partition types. Just to test
> this I did the following:
>
> 1. lvcreate -L 100M -name test vg1
> 2. cfdisk /dev/vg1/test
> 3. create LVM partition on entire device
> 4. pvcreate /dev/vg1/test
> 5. vgcreate vg2 /dev/vg1/test
> 6. vgchange -ay /dev/vg2
> 7. lvcreate -L 50M -n testlv vg2
> 8. mkfs.ext3 /dev/vg2/testlv
> 9. mkdir /mnt/test
> 10. mount /dev/vg2/testlv /mnt/test
>
> And it worked! Cool!
>
> Let's say on /dev/vg1/test I had one LVM partition and one ext3
> partition. How can I access those separate partitions since it's only
> one device (/dev/vg1/test)? Normally, a partitioned block device
> (/dev/hda) would show up like /dev/hda1, dev/hda2, etc.
>
> In the example above, I'm partitioning the LV and using the partition on
> the same system, which is useless. What I will be doing is giving the
> disk image /dev/vg1/test to a Xen guest so it can have it's own VG and
> LVs. Are there potential problems I should look out for and/or tweaking
> I should do to make this work optimally?
>
/dev/vg1/test is used as a disk for the Xen guest OS. The guest then
recognizes vg2 on /dev/vg1/test. By default, the host will also
recognize and activate vg2. Is there a problem with this and should I
somehow configure the host not to activate vg2? I know this may be
confusing, but it's very useful. I actually have it working now with
several LVs on vg2. So I've got PV->VG->LV->PV->VG-(LVs).
Randall
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
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2006-08-08 1:17 [linux-lvm] lvm partition on lv Randall Smith
2006-08-08 10:34 ` Markus Laire
2006-08-08 10:40 ` Markus Laire
2006-08-08 14:27 ` [linux-lvm] " Randall Smith
2006-08-14 4:42 ` Randall Smith
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