Manpages - vgchange.8
Table of Contents
NAME
vgchange — Change volume group attributes
SYNOPSIS
vgchange option_args position_args
[ option_args ]
[ position_args ]
-a*|–activate* y*|*n*|*ay
–activationmode partial*|*degraded*|*complete
–addtag Tag
–alloc
contiguous*|*cling*|*cling_by_tags*|*normal*|*anywhere*|*inherit
-A*|–autobackup* y*|*n
–commandprofile String
–config String
-d*|–debug*
–deltag Tag
–detachprofile
–devices PV
–devicesfile String
–driverloaded y*|*n
-f*|–force*
-h*|–help*
-K*|–ignoreactivationskip*
–ignorelockingfailure
–ignoremonitoring
–journal String
–lockopt String
–lockstart
–lockstop
–locktype sanlock*|*dlm*|*none
-l*|–logicalvolume* Number
–longhelp
-p*|–maxphysicalvolumes* Number
–metadataprofile String
–monitor y*|*n
–nohints
–nolocking
–noudevsync
-P*|–partial*
-s*|–physicalextentsize* Size[m|UNIT]
–poll y*|*n
–profile String
–pvmetadatacopies 0*|*1*|*2
-q*|–quiet*
–readonly
–refresh
–reportformat basic*|*json
-x*|–resizeable* y*|*n
-S*|–select* String
–setautoactivation y*|*n
–sysinit
–systemid String
-t*|–test*
-u*|–uuid*
-v*|–verbose*
–version
--[*vg*]*metadatacopies* all*|*unmanaged*|/Number/
*-y*|–yes*
DESCRIPTION
vgchange changes VG attributes, changes LV activation in the kernel, and includes other utilities for VG maintenance.
USAGE
Change a general VG attribute.
For options listed in parentheses, any one is
required, after which the others are optional.
vgchange
( -l*|–logicalvolume* Number
-p*|–maxphysicalvolumes* Number
-u*|–uuid*
-s*|–physicalextentsize* Size[m|UNIT]
-x*|–resizeable* y*|*n
–addtag Tag
–deltag Tag
–alloccontiguous*|*cling*|*cling_by_tags*|*normal*|*anywhere*|*inherit
–pvmetadatacopies 0*|*1*|*2
--[*vg*]*metadatacopies* all*|*unmanaged*|/Number/
*–profile String
–detachprofile
–metadataprofile String
–setautoactivation y*|*n )
[ -A*|–autobackup* y*|*n ]
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ -f*|–force* ]
[ –poll y*|*n ]
[ –ignoremonitoring ]
[ –noudevsync ]
[ –reportformat basic*|*json ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Start or stop monitoring LVs from dmeventd.
vgchange –monitor y*|*n
[ -A*|–autobackup* y*|*n ]
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ -f*|–force* ]
[ –sysinit ]
[ –ignorelockingfailure ]
[ –poll y*|*n ]
[ –ignoremonitoring ]
[ –noudevsync ]
[ –reportformat basic*|*json ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Start or stop processing LV conversions.
vgchange –poll y*|*n
[ -A*|–autobackup* y*|*n ]
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ -f*|–force* ]
[ –ignorelockingfailure ]
[ –ignoremonitoring ]
[ –noudevsync ]
[ –reportformat basic*|*json ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Activate or deactivate LVs.
vgchange -a*|–activate* y*|*n*|*ay
[ -K*|–ignoreactivationskip* ]
[ -P*|–partial* ]
[ -A*|–autobackup* y*|*n ]
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ -f*|–force* ]
[ –activationmode partial*|*degraded*|*complete ]
[ –sysinit ]
[ –readonly ]
[ –ignorelockingfailure ]
[ –monitor y*|*n ]
[ –poll y*|*n ]
[ –ignoremonitoring ]
[ –noudevsync ]
[ –reportformat basic*|*json ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Reactivate LVs using the latest metadata.
vgchange –refresh
[ -A*|–autobackup* y*|*n ]
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ -f*|–force* ]
[ –sysinit ]
[ –ignorelockingfailure ]
[ –poll y*|*n ]
[ –ignoremonitoring ]
[ –noudevsync ]
[ –reportformat basic*|*json ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Change the system ID of a VG.
vgchange –systemid String VG
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
—
Start the lockspace of a shared VG in lvmlockd.
vgchange –lockstart
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Stop the lockspace of a shared VG in lvmlockd.
vgchange –lockstop
[ -S*|–select* String ]
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
[ VG/|/Tag/|/Select … ]
—
Change the lock type for a shared VG.
vgchange –locktype sanlock*|*dlm*|*none VG
[ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
—
Common options for lvm:
[ -d*|–debug* ]
[ -h*|–help* ]
[ -q*|–quiet* ]
[ -t*|–test* ]
[ -v*|–verbose* ]
[ -y*|–yes* ]
[ –commandprofile String ]
[ –config String ]
[ –devices PV ]
[ –devicesfile String ]
[ –driverloaded y*|*n ]
[ –journal String ]
[ –lockopt String ]
[ –longhelp ]
[ –nohints ]
[ –nolocking ]
[ –profile String ]
[ –version ]
OPTIONS
-a*|–activate* y*|*n*|*ay
Change the active state of LVs. An active LV can be used through a block
device, allowing data on the LV to be accessed. y makes LVs active, or
available. n makes LVs inactive, or unavailable. The block device for
the LV is added or removed from the system using device-mapper in the
kernel. A symbolic link /dev/VGName/LVName pointing to the device node
is also added/removed. All software and scripts should access the device
through the symbolic link and present this as the name of the device.
The location and name of the underlying device node may depend on the
distribution, configuration (e.g. udev), or release version. ay
specifies autoactivation, which is used by system-generated activation
commands. By default, LVs are autoactivated. An autoactivation property
can be set on a VG or LV to disable autoactivation, see
–setautoactivation y|n in vgchange, lvchange, vgcreate, and lvcreate.
Display the property with vgs or lvs “-o autoactivation”. The
*lvm.conf*(5) auto_activation_volume_list includes names of VGs or LVs
that should be autoactivated, and anything not listed is not
autoactivated. When auto_activation_volume_list is undefined (the
default), it has no effect. If auto_activation_volume_list is defined
and empty, no LVs are autoactivated. Items included by
auto_activation_volume_list will not be autoactivated if the
autoactivation property has been disabled. See lvmlockd*(8) for more
information about activation options *ey and sy for shared VGs.
–activationmode partial*|*degraded*|*complete
Determines if LV activation is allowed when PVs are missing, e.g.
because of a device failure. complete only allows LVs with no missing
PVs to be activated, and is the most restrictive mode. degraded allows
RAID LVs with missing PVs to be activated. (This does not include the
“mirror” type, see “raid1” instead.) partial allows any LV with
missing PVs to be activated, and should only be used for recovery or
repair. For default, see *lvm.conf*(5) activation_mode. See *lvmraid*(7)
for more information.
–addtag Tag
Adds a tag to a PV, VG or LV. This option can be repeated to add
multiple tags at once. See *lvm*(8) for information about tags.
–alloc
contiguous*|*cling*|*cling_by_tags*|*normal*|*anywhere*|*inherit
Determines the allocation policy when a command needs to allocate
Physical Extents (PEs) from the VG. Each VG and LV has an allocation
policy which can be changed with vgchange/lvchange, or overridden on the
command line. normal applies common sense rules such as not placing
parallel stripes on the same PV. inherit applies the VG policy to an
LV. contiguous requires new PEs be placed adjacent to existing PEs.
cling places new PEs on the same PV as existing PEs in the same stripe
of the LV. If there are sufficient PEs for an allocation, but normal
does not use them, anywhere will use them even if it reduces
performance, e.g. by placing two stripes on the same PV. Optional
positional PV args on the command line can also be used to limit which
PVs the command will use for allocation. See *lvm*(8) for more
information about allocation.
-A*|–autobackup* y*|*n
Specifies if metadata should be backed up automatically after a change.
Enabling this is strongly advised! See *vgcfgbackup*(8) for more
information.
–commandprofile String
The command profile to use for command configuration. See *lvm.conf*(5)
for more information about profiles.
–config String
Config settings for the command. These override *lvm.conf*(5) settings.
The String arg uses the same format as *lvm.conf*(5), or may use
section/field syntax. See *lvm.conf*(5) for more information about
config.
-d*|–debug* …
Set debug level. Repeat from 1 to 6 times to increase the detail of
messages sent to the log file and/or syslog (if configured).
–deltag Tag
Deletes a tag from a PV, VG or LV. This option can be repeated to delete
multiple tags at once. See *lvm*(8) for information about tags.
–detachprofile
Detaches a metadata profile from a VG or LV. See *lvm.conf*(5) for more
information about profiles.
–devices PV
Devices that the command can use. This option can be repeated or accepts
a comma separated list of devices. This overrides the devices file.
–devicesfile String
A file listing devices that LVM should use. The file must exist in
etc/lvm/devices and is managed with the lvmdevices*(8) command.
This overrides the *lvm.conf*(5) *devices/devicesfile and
devices/use_devicesfile settings.
–driverloaded y*|*n
If set to no, the command will not attempt to use device-mapper. For
testing and debugging.
-f*|–force* …
Override various checks, confirmations and protections. Use with extreme
caution.
-h*|–help*
Display help text.
-K*|–ignoreactivationskip*
Ignore the “activation skip” LV flag during activation to allow LVs with
the flag set to be activated.
–ignorelockingfailure
Allows a command to continue with read-only metadata operations after
locking failures.
–ignoremonitoring
Do not interact with dmeventd unless –monitor is specified. Do not use
this if dmeventd is already monitoring a device.
–journal String
Record information in the systemd journal. This information is in
addition to information enabled by the lvm.conf log/journal setting.
command: record information about the command. output: record the
default command output. debug: record full command debugging.
–lockopt String
Used to pass options for special cases to lvmlockd. See *lvmlockd*(8)
for more information.
–lockstart
Start the lockspace of a shared VG in lvmlockd. lvmlockd locks becomes
available for the VG, allowing LVM to use the VG. See *lvmlockd*(8) for
more information.
–lockstop
Stop the lockspace of a shared VG in lvmlockd. lvmlockd locks become
unavailable for the VG, preventing LVM from using the VG. See
*lvmlockd*(8) for more information.
–locktype sanlock*|*dlm*|*none
Change the VG lock type to or from a shared lock type used with
lvmlockd. See *lvmlockd*(8) for more information.
-l*|–logicalvolume* Number
Sets the maximum number of LVs allowed in a VG.
–longhelp
Display long help text.
-p*|–maxphysicalvolumes* Number
Sets the maximum number of PVs that can belong to the VG. The value 0
removes any limitation. For large numbers of PVs, also see options
–pvmetadatacopies, and –vgmetadatacopies for improving performance.
–metadataprofile String
The metadata profile to use for command configuration. See *lvm.conf*(5)
for more information about profiles.
–monitor y*|*n
Start (yes) or stop (no) monitoring an LV with dmeventd. dmeventd
monitors kernel events for an LV, and performs automated maintenance for
the LV in reponse to specific events. See *dmeventd*(8) for more
information.
–nohints
Do not use the hints file to locate devices for PVs. A command may read
more devices to find PVs when hints are not used. The command will still
perform standard hint file invalidation where appropriate.
–nolocking
Disable locking.
–noudevsync
Disables udev synchronisation. The process will not wait for
notification from udev. It will continue irrespective of any possible
udev processing in the background. Only use this if udev is not running
or has rules that ignore the devices LVM creates.
-P*|–partial*
Commands will do their best to activate LVs with missing PV extents.
Missing extents may be replaced with error or zero segments according to
the missing_stripe_filler setting. Metadata may not be changed with this
option.
-s*|–physicalextentsize* Size[m|UNIT]
Sets the physical extent size of PVs in the VG. The value must be either
a power of 2 of at least 1 sector (where the sector size is the largest
sector size of the PVs currently used in the VG), or at least 128KiB.
Once this value has been set, it is difficult to change without
recreating the VG, unless no extents need moving. Before increasing the
physical extent size, you might need to use lvresize, pvresize and/or
pvmove so that everything fits. For example, every contiguous range of
extents used in a LV must start and end on an extent boundary.
–poll y*|*n
When yes, start the background transformation of an LV. An incomplete
transformation, e.g. pvmove or lvconvert interrupted by reboot or crash,
can be restarted from the last checkpoint with –poll y. When no,
background transformation of an LV will not occur, and the
transformation will not complete. It may not be appropriate to
immediately poll an LV after activation, in which case –poll n can be
used to defer polling until a later –poll y command.
–profile String
An alias for –commandprofile or –metadataprofile, depending on the
command.
–pvmetadatacopies 0*|*1*|*2
The number of metadata areas to set aside on a PV for storing VG
metadata. When 2, one copy of the VG metadata is stored at the front of
the PV and a second copy is stored at the end. When 1, one copy of the
VG metadata is stored at the front of the PV. When 0, no copies of the
VG metadata are stored on the given PV. This may be useful in VGs
containing many PVs (this places limitations on the ability to use
vgsplit later.)
-q*|–quiet* …
Suppress output and log messages. Overrides –debug and –verbose.
Repeat once to also suppress any prompts with answer ’no’.
–readonly
Run the command in a special read-only mode which will read on-disk
metadata without needing to take any locks. This can be used to peek
inside metadata used by a virtual machine image while the virtual
machine is running. No attempt will be made to communicate with the
device-mapper kernel driver, so this option is unable to report whether
or not LVs are actually in use.
–refresh
If the LV is active, reload its metadata. This is not necessary in
normal operation, but may be useful if something has gone wrong, or if
some form of manual LV sharing is being used.
–reportformat basic*|*json
Overrides current output format for reports which is defined globally by
the report/output_format setting in lvm.conf*(5). *basic is the
original format with columns and rows. If there is more than one report
per command, each report is prefixed with the report name for
identification. json produces report output in JSON format. See
*lvmreport*(7) for more information.
-x*|–resizeable* y*|*n
Enables or disables the addition or removal of PVs to/from a VG (by
vgextend/vgreduce).
-S*|–select* String
Select objects for processing and reporting based on specified criteria.
The criteria syntax is described by –select help and *lvmreport*(7).
For reporting commands, one row is displayed for each object matching
the criteria. See –options help for selectable object fields. Rows
can be displayed with an additional “selected” field (-o selected)
showing 1 if the row matches the selection and 0 otherwise. For
non-reporting commands which process LVM entities, the selection is used
to choose items to process.
–setautoactivation y*|*n
Set the autoactivation property on a VG or LV. Display the property with
vgs or lvs “-o autoactivation”. When the autoactivation property is
disabled, the VG or LV will not be activated by a command doing
autoactivation (vgchange, lvchange, or pvscan using -aay.) If
autoactivation is disabled on a VG, no LVs will be autoactivated in that
VG, and the LV autoactivation property has no effect. If autoactivation
is enabled on a VG, autoactivation can be disabled for individual LVs.
–sysinit
Indicates that vgchange/lvchange is being invoked from early system
initialisation scripts (e.g. rc.sysinit or an initrd), before writable
filesystems are available. As such, some functionality needs to be
disabled and this option acts as a shortcut which selects an appropriate
set of options. Currently, this is equivalent to using
–ignorelockingfailure, –ignoremonitoring, –poll n, and setting env
var LVM_SUPPRESS_LOCKING_FAILURE_MESSAGES. vgchange/lvchange skip
autoactivation, and defer to pvscan autoactivation.
–systemid String
Changes the system ID of the VG. Using this option requires caution
because the VG may become foreign to the host running the command,
leaving the host unable to access it. See *lvmsystemid*(7) for more
information.
-t*|–test*
Run in test mode. Commands will not update metadata. This is implemented
by disabling all metadata writing but nevertheless returning success to
the calling function. This may lead to unusual error messages in
multi-stage operations if a tool relies on reading back metadata it
believes has changed but hasn’t.
-u*|–uuid*
Generate new random UUID for specified VGs.
-v*|–verbose* …
Set verbose level. Repeat from 1 to 4 times to increase the detail of
messages sent to stdout and stderr.
–version
Display version information.
--[*vg*]*metadatacopies* *all*|*unmanaged*|/Number/
Number of copies of the VG metadata that are kept. VG metadata is kept
in VG metadata areas on PVs in the VG, i.e. reserved space at the start
and/or end of the PVs. Keeping a copy of the VG metadata on every PV can
reduce performance in VGs containing a large number of PVs. When this
number is set to a non-zero value, LVM will automatically choose PVs on
which to store metadata, using the metadataignore flags on PVs to
achieve the specified number. The number can also be replaced with
special string values: unmanaged causes LVM to not automatically
manage the PV metadataignore flags. all causes LVM to first clear the
metadataignore flags on all PVs, and then to become unmanaged.
-y*|–yes*
Do not prompt for confirmation interactively but always assume the
answer yes. Use with extreme caution. (For automatic no, see -qq.)
VARIABLES
- VG
- Volume Group name. See *lvm*(8) for valid names.
- Tag
- Tag name. See *lvm*(8) for information about tag names and using tags in place of a VG, LV or PV.
- Select
- Select indicates that a required positional parameter can be omitted if the –select option is used. No arg appears in this position.
- String
- See the option description for information about the string content.
- Size[UNIT]
- Size is an input number that accepts an optional unit. Input units are always treated as base two values, regardless of capitalization, e.g. ’k’ and ’K’ both refer to 1024. The default input unit is specified by letter, followed by |UNIT. UNIT represents other possible input units: b*|*B is bytes, s*|*S is sectors of 512 bytes, k*|*K is KiB, m*|*M is MiB, g*|*G is GiB, t*|*T is TiB, p*|*P is PiB, e*|*E is EiB. (This should not be confused with the output control –units, where capital letters mean multiple of 1000.)
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
See *lvm*(8) for information about environment variables used by lvm. For example, LVM_VG_NAME can generally be substituted for a required VG parameter.
NOTES
If vgchange recognizes COW snapshot LVs that were dropped because they ran out of space, it displays a message informing the administrator that the snapshots should be removed.
EXAMPLES
Activate all LVs in all VGs on all existing devices.
vgchange -a y
Change the maximum number of LVs for an inactive VG.
vgchange -l 128 vg00
SEE ALSO
*lvm*(8), *lvm.conf*(5), *lvmconfig*(8), *lvmdevices*(8),
*pvchange*(8), *pvck*(8), *pvcreate*(8), *pvdisplay*(8), *pvmove*(8), *pvremove*(8), *pvresize*(8), *pvs*(8), *pvscan*(8),
*vgcfgbackup*(8), *vgcfgrestore*(8), *vgchange*(8), *vgck*(8), *vgcreate*(8), *vgconvert*(8), *vgdisplay*(8), *vgexport*(8), *vgextend*(8), *vgimport*(8), *vgimportclone*(8), *vgimportdevices*(8), *vgmerge*(8), *vgmknodes*(8), *vgreduce*(8), *vgremove*(8), *vgrename*(8), *vgs*(8), *vgscan*(8), *vgsplit*(8),
*lvcreate*(8), *lvchange*(8), *lvconvert*(8), *lvdisplay*(8), *lvextend*(8), *lvreduce*(8), *lvremove*(8), *lvrename*(8), *lvresize*(8), *lvs*(8), *lvscan*(8),
*lvm-fullreport*(8), *lvm-lvpoll*(8), *lvm2-activation-generator*(8), *blkdeactivate*(8), *lvmdump*(8),
*dmeventd*(8), *lvmpolld*(8), *lvmlockd*(8), *lvmlockctl*(8), *cmirrord*(8), *lvmdbusd*(8), *fsadm*(8),
*lvmsystemid*(7), *lvmreport*(7), *lvmraid*(7), *lvmthin*(7), *lvmcache*(7)