lvcreate(8)


NAME

   lvcreate - create a logical volume in an existing volume group

SYNOPSIS

   lvcreate [-a|--activate [a][e|l|s]{y|n}] [--addtag Tag] [--alloc
   AllocationPolicy] [-A|--autobackup {y|n}] [-H|--cache] [--cachemode
   {passthrough|writeback|writethrough}] [--cachepolicy Policy]
   [--cachepool CachePoolLogicalVolume] [--cachesettings Key=Value]
   [-c|--chunksize ChunkSize] [--commandprofile ProfileName]
   [-C|--contiguous {y|n}] [-d|--debug] [--discards
   {ignore|nopassdown|passdown}] [--errorwhenfull {y|n}] [{-l|--extents
   LogicalExtentsNumber[%{FREE|PVS|VG}] | -L|--size LogicalVolumeSize}
   [-i|--stripes Stripes [-I|--stripesize StripeSize]]] [-h|-?|--help]
   [-K|--ignoreactivationskip] [--ignoremonitoring] [--minor Minor
   [-j|--major Major]] [--metadataprofile ProfileName] [-m|--mirrors
   Mirrors [--corelog|--mirrorlog {disk|core|mirrored}] [--nosync]
   [-R|--regionsize MirrorLogRegionSize]] [--monitor {y|n}] [-n|--name
   LogicalVolume] [--noudevsync] [-p|--permission {r|rw}] [-M|--persistent
   {y|n}] [--poolmetadatasize MetadataVolumeSize] [--poolmetadataspare
   {y|n}] [--[raid]maxrecoveryrate Rate] [--[raid]minrecoveryrate Rate]
   [-r|--readahead {ReadAheadSectors|auto|none}] [--reportformat
   {basic|json}] [-k|--setactivationskip {y|n}] [-s|--snapshot]
   [-V|--virtualsize VirtualSize] [-t|--test] [-T|--thin] [--thinpool
   ThinPoolLogicalVolume] [--type SegmentType] [-v|--verbose]
   [-W|--wipesignatures {y|n}] [-Z|--zero {y|n}] [VolumeGroup |
   {ExternalOrigin|Origin|Pool}LogicalVolume
   [PhysicalVolumePath[:PE[-PE]]...]]

   lvcreate [-l|--extents LogicalExtentsNumber[%{FREE|ORIGIN|PVS|VG}] |
   -L|--size LogicalVolumeSize] [-c|--chunksize ChunkSize]
   [--commandprofile ProfileName] [--noudevsync] [--ignoremonitoring]
   [--metadataprofile ProfileName] [--monitor {y|n}] [-n|--name
   SnapshotLogicalVolumeName] [--reportformat {basic|json}]
   -s|--snapshot|-H|--cache {[VolumeGroup/]OriginalLogicalVolume
   [-V|--virtualsize VirtualSize]}

DESCRIPTION

   lvcreate   creates  a  new  logical  volume  in  a  volume  group  (see
   vgcreate(8), vgchange(8)) by allocating logical extents from  the  free
   physical  extent  pool  of  that volume group.  If there are not enough
   free physical extents then  the  volume  group  can  be  extended  (see
   vgextend(8))  with  other  physical  volumes  or  by  reducing existing
   logical volumes of this volume group in size (see lvreduce(8)).  If you
   specify  one  or  more  PhysicalVolumes, allocation of physical extents
   will be restricted to these volumes.
   The second form supports the creation of snapshot logical volumes which
   keep the contents of the original logical volume for backup purposes.

OPTIONS

   See lvm(8) for common options.

   -a|--activate [a][l|e|s]{y|n}
          Controls  the  availability of the Logical Volumes for immediate
          use after the command finishes running.  By default, new Logical
          Volumes are activated (-ay).  If it is possible technically, -an
          will leave the new Logical Volume  inactive.  But  for  example,
          snapshots  of  active  origin  can only be created in the active
          state so -an cannot be used with --type snapshot. This does  not
          apply  to  thin  volume  snapshots, which are by default created
          with flag to skip their activation (-ky).  Normally the --zero n
          argument  has  to  be  supplied too because zeroing (the default
          behaviour) also requires activation.  If  autoactivation  option
          is  used  (-aay),  the  logical  volume  is activated only if it
          matches an item  in  the  activation/auto_activation_volume_list
          set in lvm.conf(5).  For autoactivated logical volumes, --zero n
          and --wipesignatures  n  is  always  assumed  and  it  can't  be
          overridden.  If  the  clustered  locking  is  enabled, -aey will
          activate exclusively on one node and -a{a|l}y will activate only
          on the local node.

   -H|--cache
          Creates  cache  or  cache  pool  logical volume.  Specifying the
          optional argument --extents or --size will cause the creation of
          the  cache  logical  volume.   When  the  Volume  group  name is
          specified together with existing logical volume  name  which  is
          NOT  a  cache  pool name, such volume is treated as cache origin
          volume and cache pool is created. In this case the --extents  or
          --size  is  used  to  specify  size  of  cache pool volume.  See
          lvmcache(7) for more info about caching support.  Note that  the
          cache  segment  type  requires  a dm-cache kernel module version
          1.3.0 or greater.

   --cachemode {passthrough|writeback|writethrough}
          Specifying a cache mode determines when the writes to a cache LV
          are  considered  complete.  When writeback is specified, a write
          is considered complete as soon as it is stored in the cache pool
          LV.  If writethough is specified, a write is considered complete
          only when it has been stored in the cache pool  LV  and  on  the
          origin  LV.   While writethrough may be slower for writes, it is
          more resilient if something should happen to a device associated
          with  the  cache  pool  LV. With passthrough mode, all reads are
          served from origin LV (all reads miss the cache) and all  writes
          are  forwarded  to the origin LV; additionally, write hits cause
          cache block invalidates. See lvmcache(7) for more details.

   --cachepolicy Policy
          Only applicable to cached LVs; see also  lvmcache(7).  Sets  the
          cache  policy. mq is the basic policy name. smq is more advanced
          version available in newer kernels.

   --cachepool CachePoolLogicalVolume{Name|Path}
          Specifies the name of cache pool volume name. The other  way  to
          specify  pool  name  is  to  append  name  to  Volume group name
          argument.

   --cachesettings Key=Value
          Only applicable to cached LVs; see also  lvmcache(7).  Sets  the
          cache tunable settings. In most use-cases, default values should
          be adequate.  Special string value default switches setting back
          to  its  default  kernel  value  and removes it from the list of
          settings stored in lvm2 metadata.

   -c|--chunksize ChunkSize[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G]
          Gives the size of chunk for snapshot, cache pool and  thin  pool
          logical volumes.  Default unit is in kilobytes.
          For  snapshots  the  value  must  be power of 2 between 4KiB and
          512KiB and the default value is 4KiB.
          For cache pools the value must a multiple of 32KiB between 32KiB
          and 1GiB. The default is 64KiB.  When the size is specified with
          volume caching, it may not be smaller than cache  pool  creation
          chunk size was.
          For  thin  pools  the  value must be a multiple of 64KiB between
          64KiB and 1GiB.  Default value starts with 64KiB and grows up to
          fit  the  pool metadata size within 128MiB, if the pool metadata
          size   is    not    specified.     See    lvm.conf(5)    setting
          allocation/thin_pool_chunk_size_policy   to   select   different
          calculation policy.  Thin pool target version <1.4 requires this
          value  to  be  a power of 2.  For target version <1.5 discard is
          not supported for non power of 2 values.

   -C|--contiguous {y|n}
          Sets or resets the  contiguous  allocation  policy  for  logical
          volumes.  Default  is  no  contiguous allocation based on a next
          free principle.

   --corelog
          This is shortcut for option --mirrorlog core.

   --discards {ignore|nopassdown|passdown}
          Sets discards behavior for thin pool.  Default is passdown.

   --errorwhenfull {y|n}
          Configures thin pool behaviour when  data  space  is  exhausted.
          Default  is  no.   Device will queue I/O operations until target
          timeout (see dm-thin-pool kernel module option no_space_timeout)
          expires.  Thus  configured  system has a time to i.e. extend the
          size of thin pool  data  device.   When  set  to  yes,  the  I/O
          operation is immeditelly errored.

   -K|--ignoreactivationskip
          Ignore  the flag to skip Logical Volumes during activation.  Use
          --setactivationskip option to set or reset  activation  skipping
          flag persistently for logical volume.

   --ignoremonitoring
          Make  no  attempt  to interact with dmeventd unless --monitor is
          specified.

   -l|--extents LogicalExtentsNumber[%{VG|PVS|FREE|ORIGIN}]
          Specifies the size of the new LV in logical extents.  The number
          of  physical  extents allocated may be different, and depends on
          the LV type.  Certain LV types require more physical extents for
          data  redundancy  or  metadata.   An alternate syntax allows the
          size to be determined indirectly as a percentage of the size  of
          a  related  VG,  LV,  or set of PVs.  The suffix %VG denotes the
          total size of the VG, the suffix %FREE the remaining free  space
          in  the  VG, and the suffix %PVS the free space in the specified
          Physical Volumes.  For a snapshot, the size can be expressed  as
          a percentage of the total size of the Origin Logical Volume with
          the suffix %ORIGIN (100%ORIGIN  provides  space  for  the  whole
          origin).   When  expressed  as a percentage, the size defines an
          upper limit for the number of logical extents in the new LV. The
          precise  number  of  logical  extents  in  the  new  LV  is  not
          determined until the command has completed.

   -j|--major Major
          Sets the major number.  Major numbers  are  not  supported  with
          pool  volumes.   This  option is supported only on older systems
          (kernel version 2.4) and is  ignored  on  modern  Linux  systems
          where major numbers are dynamically assigned.

   --metadataprofile ProfileName
          Uses  and  attaches the ProfileName configuration profile to the
          logical  volume  metadata.  Whenever  the  logical   volume   is
          processed  next  time,  the profile is automatically applied. If
          the volume group  has  another  profile  attached,  the  logical
          volume   profile   is   preferred.   See  lvm.conf(5)  for  more
          information about metadata profiles.

   --minor Minor
          Sets the minor number.  Minor numbers  are  not  supported  with
          pool volumes.

   -m|--mirrors mirrors
          Creates  a  mirrored  logical  volume  with mirrors copies.  For
          example, specifying -m 1 would result  in  a  mirror  with  two-
          sides; that is, a linear volume plus one copy.

          Specifying   the  optional  argument  --nosync  will  cause  the
          creation of the mirror LV to skip the initial resynchronization.
          Any  data  written afterwards will be mirrored, but the original
          contents will not be copied.

          This is useful for skipping  a  potentially  long  and  resource
          intensive initial sync of an empty mirrored RaidLV.

          There are two implementations of mirroring which can be used and
          correspond to the  "raid1"  and  "mirror"  segment  types.   The
          default  is "raid1".  See the --type option for more information
          if you would like to use the legacy "mirror" segment type.   See
          lvm.conf(5)    settings     global/mirror_segtype_default    and
          global/raid10_segtype_default  to   configure   default   mirror
          segment  type.   The  options --mirrorlog and --corelog apply to
          the legacy "mirror" segment type only.

          Note the current maxima for mirrors are 7 for "mirror" providing
          8 mirror legs and 9 for "raid1" providing 10 legs.

   --mirrorlog {disk|core|mirrored}
          Specifies  the  type  of  log  to  be  used  for logical volumes
          utilizing the legacy "mirror" segment type.
          The default is disk, which is persistent and  requires  a  small
          amount  of  storage space, usually on a separate device from the
          data being mirrored.
          Using core means the mirror is regenerated by copying  the  data
          from the first device each time the logical volume is activated,
          like after every reboot.
          Using mirrored will create  a  persistent  log  that  is  itself
          mirrored.

   --monitor {y|n}
          Starts  or  avoids  monitoring a mirrored, snapshot or thin pool
          logical volume with dmeventd, if it is installed.  If  a  device
          used  by a monitored mirror reports an I/O error, the failure is
          handled according  to  activation/mirror_image_fault_policy  and
          activation/mirror_log_fault_policy set in lvm.conf(5).

   -n|--name LogicalVolume{Name|Path}
          Sets the name for the new logical volume.
          Without  this option a default name of "lvol#" will be generated
          where # is the LVM internal number of the logical volume.

   --nosync
          Causes the creation of mirror, raid1, raid4, raid5 and raid10 to
          skip  the  initial  resynchronization.  In case of mirror, raid1
          and raid10, any data written afterwards will  be  mirrored,  but
          the  original contents will not be copied.  In case of raid4 and
          raid5, no parity blocks will be written, though any data written
          afterwards will cause parity blocks to be stored.
          This  is  useful  for  skipping  a potentially long and resource
          intensive initial sync of an empty mirror/raid1/raid4/raid5  and
          raid10 LV.
          This  option  is  not  valid  for raid6, because raid6 relies on
          proper parity (P and Q Syndromes) being created  during  initial
          synchronization in order to reconstruct proper user date in case
          of device failures.

          raid0 and raid0_meta don't provide any  data  copies  or  parity
          support and thus don't support initial resynchronization.

   --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.  You should only use
          this if udev is not running or has rules that ignore the devices
          LVM2 creates.

   -p|--permission {r|rw}
          Sets access permissions to read only (r) or read and write (rw).
          Default is read and write.

   -M|--persistent {y|n}
          Set  to  y  to make the minor number specified persistent.  Pool
          volumes  cannot  have  persistent  major  and   minor   numbers.
          Defaults  to  yes  only when major or minor number is specified.
          Otherwise it is no.

   --poolmetadatasize MetadataVolumeSize[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G]
          Sets the size of  pool's  metadata  logical  volume.   Supported
          values  are  in  range between 2MiB and 16GiB for thin pool, and
          upto 16GiB for cache pool. The minimum value  is  computed  from
          pool's  data size.  Default value for thin pool is (Pool_LV_size
          / Pool_LV_chunk_size * 64b).  To work with a  thin  pool,  there
          should  be  at least 25% of free space when the size of metadata
          is smaller then 16MiB, or at least 4MiB of free space otherwise.
          Default unit is megabytes.

   --poolmetadataspare {y|n}
          Controls creation and maintanence of pool metadata spare logical
          volume that will be used for automated pool recovery.  Only  one
          such volume is maintained within a volume group with the size of
          the biggest pool metadata volume.  Default is yes.

   --[raid]maxrecoveryrate Rate[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G]
          Sets the maximum recovery rate for a RAID logical volume.   Rate
          is  specified  as  an  amount  per second for each device in the
          array.  If no suffix is given, then KiB/sec/device  is  assumed.
          Setting the recovery rate to 0 means it will be unbounded.

   --[raid]minrecoveryrate Rate[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G]
          Sets  the minimum recovery rate for a RAID logical volume.  Rate
          is specified as an amount per second  for  each  device  in  the
          array.   If  no suffix is given, then KiB/sec/device is assumed.
          Setting the recovery rate to 0 means it will be unbounded.

   -r|--readahead {ReadAheadSectors|auto|none}
          Sets read ahead sector count of this logical volume.  For volume
          groups  with  metadata  in  lvm1  format,  this  must be a value
          between 2 and 120.  The default value is auto which  allows  the
          kernel  to  choose  a  suitable  value  automatically.   none is
          equivalent to specifying zero.

   -R|--regionsize MirrorLogRegionSize[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G]
          A mirror is divided into regions of this size (in MiB), and  the
          mirror  log  uses this granularity to track which regions are in
          sync.

   -k|--setactivationskip {y|n}
          Controls whether Logical Volumes are persistently flagged to  be
          skipped during activation. By default, thin snapshot volumes are
          flagged    for     activation     skip.      See     lvm.conf(5)
          activation/auto_set_activation_skip  how  to  change its default
          behaviour.     To    activate    such    volumes,    an    extra
          --ignoreactivationskip  option  must  be  used.  The flag is not
          applied during deactivation.  Use  lvchange  --setactivationskip
          command  to  change  the skip flag for existing volumes.  To see
          whether the flag is attached, use lvs command where the state of
          the flag is reported within lv_attr bits.

   -L|--size LogicalVolumeSize[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G|t|T|p|P|e|E]
          Gives  the  size to allocate for the new logical volume.  A size
          suffix of B for bytes,  S  for  sectors  as  512  bytes,  K  for
          kilobytes,  M for megabytes, G for gigabytes, T for terabytes, P
          for petabytes or E for exabytes is optional.
          Default unit is megabytes.

   -s|--snapshot OriginalLogicalVolume{Name|Path}
          Creates a snapshot logical volume (or snapshot) for an existing,
          so  called  original  logical  volume  (or  origin).   Snapshots
          provide a 'frozen image' of the contents of the origin while the
          origin  can still be updated. They enable consistent backups and
          online recovery of removed/overwritten data/files.
          Thin snapshot is created when the origin is a  thin  volume  and
          the  size  IS  NOT  specified.  Thin snapshot shares same blocks
          within the thin pool volume.  The non thin volume snapshot  with
          the  specified size does not need the same amount of storage the
          origin has. In a typical scenario, 15-20% might  be  enough.  In
          case  the  snapshot runs out of storage, use lvextend(8) to grow
          it. Shrinking a snapshot is supported by  lvreduce(8)  as  well.
          Run  lvs(8)  on  the snapshot in order to check how much data is
          allocated to it.  Note: a small amount of the space you allocate
          to  the snapshot is used to track the locations of the chunks of
          data, so you  should  allocate  slightly  more  space  than  you
          actually  need  and  monitor  (--monitor)  the rate at which the
          snapshot data is growing so you can avoid running out of  space.
          If --thinpool is specified, thin volume is created that will use
          given original logical volume as an external origin that  serves
          unprovisioned  blocks.   Only  read-only  volumes can be used as
          external origins.  To  make  the  volume  external  origin,  lvm
          expects  the  volume to be inactive.  External origin volume can
          be used/shared for many thin volumes even  from  different  thin
          pools.  See  lvconvert(8)  for online conversion to thin volumes
          with external origin.

   -i|--stripes Stripes
          Gives the number of stripes.  This is equal  to  the  number  of
          physical  volumes  to  scatter  the  logical  volume data.  When
          creating a RAID 4/5/6 logical volume, the  extra  devices  which
          are   necessary   for   parity  are  internally  accounted  for.
          Specifying -i 3 would cause 3 devices for  striped  and  RAID  0
          logical  volumes,  4  devices for RAID 4/5, 5 devices for RAID 6
          and 6 devices for RAID 10.  Alternatively, RAID  0  will  stripe
          across 2 devices, RAID 4/5 across 3 PVs, RAID 6 across 5 PVs and
          RAID 10 across 4 PVs in the volume group if the -i  argument  is
          omitted.   In order to stripe across all PVs of the VG if the -i
          argument  is  omitted,  set  raid_stripe_all_devices=1  in   the
          allocation section of lvm.conf (5) or add
          --config allocation/raid_stripe_all_devices=1
          to the command.

          Note  the  current maxima for stripes depend on the created RAID
          type.  For raid10, the maximum of stripes is 32, for  raid0,  it
          is 64, for raid4/5, it is 63 and for raid6 it is 62.

          See   the   --nosync   option   to   optionally   avoid  initial
          syncrhonization of RaidLVs.

          Two implementations of  basic  striping  are  available  in  the
          kernel.    The  original  device-mapper  implementation  is  the
          default  and  should  normally   be   used.    The   alternative
          implementation using MD, available since version 1.7 of the RAID
          device-mapper kernel target (kernel version 4.2) is provided  to
          facilitate  the  development  of  new  RAID features.  It may be
          accessed with  --type  raid0[_meta],  but  is  best  avoided  at
          present   because  of  assorted  restrictions  on  resizing  and
          converting such devices.

   -I|--stripesize StripeSize
          Gives the  number  of  kilobytes  for  the  granularity  of  the
          stripes.
          StripeSize must be 2^n (n = 2 to 9) for metadata in LVM1 format.
          For metadata in LVM2 format, the stripe size  may  be  a  larger
          power of 2 but must not exceed the physical extent size.

   -T|--thin
          Creates  thin  pool  or thin logical volume or both.  Specifying
          the  optional  argument  --size  or  --extents  will  cause  the
          creation  of  the  thin  pool  logical  volume.   Specifying the
          optional argument --virtualsize will cause the creation  of  the
          thin  logical  volume  from  given thin pool volume.  Specifying
          both arguments will cause the creation of  both  thin  pool  and
          thin volume using this pool.  See lvmthin(7) for more info about
          thin provisioning support.  Thin  provisioning  requires  device
          mapper kernel driver from kernel 3.2 or greater.

   --thinpool ThinPoolLogicalVolume{Name|Path}
          Specifies  the  name  of thin pool volume name. The other way to
          specify pool name  is  to  append  name  to  Volume  group  name
          argument.

   --type SegmentType
          Creates  a  logical  volume  with  the  specified  segment type.
          Supported types are: cache, cache-pool, error,  linear,  mirror,
          raid0,  raid1,  raid4,  raid5_la,  raid5_ls (= raid5), raid5_ra,
          raid5_rs,  raid6_nc,  raid6_nr,  raid6_zr  (=  raid6),   raid10,
          snapshot,  striped,  thin,  thin-pool or zero.  Segment type may
          have a commandline switch alias that will enable its use.   When
          the  type  is  not  explicitly  specified  an  implicit  type is
          selected from  combination  of  options:  -H|--cache|--cachepool
          (cache  or  cachepool), -T|--thin|--thinpool (thin or thinpool),
          -m|--mirrors (raid1 or  mirror),  -s|--snapshot|-V|--virtualsize
          (snapshot or thin), -i|--stripes (striped).  The default segment
          type is linear.

   -V|--virtualsize VirtualSize[b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G|t|T|p|P|e|E]
          Creates a thinly provisioned device or a sparse  device  of  the
          given  size  (in  MiB  by  default).   See  lvm.conf(5) settings
          global/sparse_segtype_default  to   configure   default   sparse
          segment   type.    See  lvmthin(7)  for  more  info  about  thin
          provisioning support.  Anything written  to  a  sparse  snapshot
          will be returned when reading from it.  Reading from other areas
          of the device will return blocks  of  zeros.   Virtual  snapshot
          (sparse  snapshot)  is  implemented by creating a hidden virtual
          device of the requested size using the zero target.  A suffix of
          _vorigin  is used for this device.  Note: using sparse snapshots
          is  not  efficient  for  larger   device   sizes   (GiB),   thin
          provisioning should be used for this case.

   -W|--wipesignatures {y|n}
          Controls  detection and subsequent wiping of signatures on newly
          created Logical Volume. There's  a  prompt  for  each  signature
          detected  to  confirm its wiping (unless --yes is used where LVM
          assumes 'yes' answer for each  prompt  automatically).  If  this
          option is not specified, then by default -W | --wipesignatures y
          is assumed each time the zeroing is done (-Z | --zero  y).  This
          default       behaviour      can      be      controlled      by
          allocation/wipe_signatures_when_zeroing_new_lvs setting found in
          lvm.conf(5).
          If  blkid wiping is used (allocation/use_blkid_wiping setting in
          lvm.conf(5)) and LVM2 is compiled  with  blkid  wiping  support,
          then  blkid(8)  library  is  used  to detect the signatures (use
          blkid -k command to list the signatures  that  are  recognized).
          Otherwise,  native  LVM2  code  is used to detect signatures (MD
          RAID, swap and LUKS signatures are detected only in this case).
          Logical volume is not wiped if the read only flag is set.

   -Z|--zero {y|n}
          Controls zeroing of the first 4KiB of data in  the  new  logical
          volume.   Default  is  yes.   Snapshot  COW  volumes  are always
          zeroed.  Logical volume is not zeroed if the read only  flag  is
          set.
          Warning:  trying  to  mount an unzeroed logical volume can cause
          the system to hang.

Examples

   Creates a striped logical volume with 3 stripes, a stripe size of  8KiB
   and  a  size  of  100MiB  in  the volume group named vg00.  The logical
   volume name will be chosen by lvcreate:

   lvcreate -i 3 -I 8 -L 100M vg00

   Creates a mirror logical volume with 2 sides with a useable size of 500
   MiB.   This  operation  would  require  3  devices  (or  option --alloc
   anywhere) - two for the mirror devices and one for the disk log:

   lvcreate -m1 -L 500M vg00

   Creates a mirror logical volume with 2 sides with a useable size of 500
   MiB.  This operation would require 2 devices - the log is "in-memory":

   lvcreate -m1 --mirrorlog core -L 500M vg00

   Creates a snapshot logical volume named "vg00/snap" which has access to
   the contents of the  original  logical  volume  named  "vg00/lvol1"  at
   snapshot  logical  volume creation time. If the original logical volume
   contains a file system, you can mount the snapshot logical volume on an
   arbitrary  directory  in order to access the contents of the filesystem
   to run a backup while the original filesystem continues to get updated:

   lvcreate --size 100m --snapshot --name snap /dev/vg00/lvol1

   Creates a snapshot logical  volume  named  "vg00/snap"  with  size  for
   overwriting 20% of the original logical volume named "vg00/lvol1".:

   lvcreate -s -l 20%ORIGIN --name snap vg00/lvol1

   Creates  a  sparse device named /dev/vg1/sparse of size 1TiB with space
   for just under 100MiB of actual data on it:

   lvcreate --virtualsize 1T --size 100M --snapshot --name sparse vg1

   Creates a linear logical volume  "vg00/lvol1"  using  physical  extents
   /dev/sda:0-7 and /dev/sdb:0-7 for allocation of extents:

   lvcreate -L 64M -n lvol1 vg00 /dev/sda:0-7 /dev/sdb:0-7

   Creates  a 5GiB RAID5 logical volume "vg00/my_lv", with 3 stripes (plus
   a parity drive for a total of 4 devices) and a stripesize of 64KiB:

   lvcreate --type raid5 -L 5G -i 3 -I 64 -n my_lv vg00

   Creates a RAID5 logical volume "vg00/my_lv",  using  all  of  the  free
   space  in  the  VG  and  spanning  all the PVs in the VG (note that the
   command will fail if there's more than 8 PVs in the VG in which case -i
   7  has to be used to get to the currently possible maximum of 8 devices
   including parity for RaidLVs):

   lvcreate --config allocation/raid_stripe_all_devices=1 --type raid5  -l
   100%FREE -n my_lv vg00

   Creates  a 5GiB RAID10 logical volume "vg00/my_lv", with 2 stripes on 2
   2-way mirrors.  Note that the -i and -m arguments  behave  differently.
   The -i specifies the number of stripes.  The -m specifies the number of
   additional copies:

   lvcreate --type raid10 -L 5G -i 2 -m 1 -n my_lv vg00

   Creates 100MiB pool logical volume for thin provisioning build  with  2
   stripes 64KiB and chunk size 256KiB together with 1TiB thin provisioned
   logical volume "vg00/thin_lv":

   lvcreate -i 2 -I 64 -c 256 -L100M -T vg00/pool -V 1T --name thin_lv

   Creates a thin snapshot volume "thinsnap" of thin volume "thinvol" that
   will  share  the same blocks within the thin pool.  Note: the size MUST
   NOT be specified, otherwise the non-thin snapshot is created instead:

   lvcreate -s vg00/thinvol --name thinsnap

   Creates a thin snapshot volume of read-only  inactive  volume  "origin"
   which  then  becomes  the  thin  external  origin for the thin snapshot
   volume in vg00 that will use an existing thin pool "vg00/pool":

   lvcreate -s --thinpool vg00/pool origin

   Create a cache pool LV that can later be  used  to  cache  one  logical
   volume.

   lvcreate --type cache-pool -L 1G -n my_lv_cachepool vg /dev/fast1

   If  there  is  an  existing cache pool LV, create the large slow device
   (i.e. the origin LV) and  link  it  to  the  supplied  cache  pool  LV,
   creating a cache LV.

   lvcreate --cache -L 100G -n my_lv vg/my_lv_cachepool /dev/slow1

   If there is an existing logical volume, create the small and fast cache
   pool LV and link it to the supplied existing logical volume  (i.e.  the
   origin LV), creating a cache LV.

   lvcreate --type cache -L 1G -n my_lv_cachepool vg/my_lv /dev/fast1

SEE ALSO

   lvm(8),    lvm.conf(5),    lvmcache(7),    lvmthin(7),    lvconvert(8),
   lvchange(8), lvextend(8), lvreduce(8), lvremove(8), lvrename(8) lvs(8),
   lvscan(8), vgcreate(8), blkid(8)





Opportunity


Personal Opportunity - Free software gives you access to billions of dollars of software at no cost. Use this software for your business, personal use or to develop a profitable skill. Access to source code provides access to a level of capabilities/information that companies protect though copyrights. Open source is a core component of the Internet and it is available to you. Leverage the billions of dollars in resources and capabilities to build a career, establish a business or change the world. The potential is endless for those who understand the opportunity.

Business Opportunity - Goldman Sachs, IBM and countless large corporations are leveraging open source to reduce costs, develop products and increase their bottom lines. Learn what these companies know about open source and how open source can give you the advantage.





Free Software


Free Software provides computer programs and capabilities at no cost but more importantly, it provides the freedom to run, edit, contribute to, and share the software. The importance of free software is a matter of access, not price. Software at no cost is a benefit but ownership rights to the software and source code is far more significant.


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Free Books


The Free Books Library is a collection of thousands of the most popular public domain books in an online readable format. The collection includes great classical literature and more recent works where the U.S. copyright has expired. These books are yours to read and use without restrictions.


Source Code - Want to change a program or know how it works? Open Source provides the source code for its programs so that anyone can use, modify or learn how to write those programs themselves. Visit the GNU source code repositories to download the source.





Education


Study at Harvard, Stanford or MIT - Open edX provides free online courses from Harvard, MIT, Columbia, UC Berkeley and other top Universities. Hundreds of courses for almost all major subjects and course levels. Open edx also offers some paid courses and selected certifications.


Linux Manual Pages - A man or manual page is a form of software documentation found on Linux/Unix operating systems. Topics covered include computer programs (including library and system calls), formal standards and conventions, and even abstract concepts.