lvm(8)


NAME

   lvm --- LVM2 tools

SYNOPSIS

   lvm [command|file]

DESCRIPTION

   lvm  provides  the command-line tools for LVM2.  A separate manual page
   describes each command in detail.

   If lvm is invoked with no  arguments  it  presents  a  readline  prompt
   (assuming  it was compiled with readline support).  LVM commands may be
   entered interactively at this prompt with readline facilities including
   history  and  command name and option completion.  Refer to readline(3)
   for details.

   If lvm is invoked with argv[0] set  to  the  name  of  a  specific  LVM
   command  (for  example  by  using  a hard or soft link) it acts as that
   command.

   On invocation, lvm requires that only  the  standard  file  descriptors
   stdin,  stdout and stderr are available.  If others are found, they get
   closed and messages are issued warning about the  leak.   This  warning
   can    be    suppressed    by    setting   the   environment   variable
   LVM_SUPPRESS_FD_WARNINGS.

   Where commands take VG or LV names as arguments, the full path name  is
   optional.   An  LV called "lvol0" in a VG called "vg0" can be specified
   as "vg0/lvol0".  Where a list of VGs is required but is left  empty,  a
   list  of  all VGs will be substituted.  Where a list of LVs is required
   but a VG is  given,  a  list  of  all  the  LVs  in  that  VG  will  be
   substituted.  So lvdisplay vg0 will display all the LVs in "vg0".  Tags
   can also be used - see --addtag below.

   One advantage  of  using  the  built-in  shell  is  that  configuration
   information gets cached internally between commands.

   A file containing a simple script with one command per line can also be
   given on the command line.  The script can also be executed directly if
   the first line is #! followed by the absolute path of lvm.

BUILT-IN COMMANDS

   The  following commands are built into lvm without links normally being
   created in the filesystem for them.

   config        The same as lvmconfig(8) below.
   devtypes      Display the recognised built-in block device types.
   dumpconfig    The same as lvmconfig(8) below.
   formats       Display recognised metadata formats.
   fullreport    Report information about PVs, PV segments, VGs,  LVs  and
                 LV segments, all at once.
   help          Display the help text.
   lastlog       Display  log  report  of last command run in LVM shell if
                 command log reporting is enabled.
   lvpoll        Complete lvmpolld operations (Internal command).
   pvdata        Not implemented in LVM2.
   segtypes      Display recognised Logical Volume segment types.
   systemid      Display any system ID currently set on this host.
   tags          Display any tags defined on this host.
   version       Display version information.

COMMANDS

   The following commands implement the core LVM functionality.

   pvchange      Change attributes of a Physical Volume.
   pvck          Check Physical Volume metadata.
   pvcreate      Initialize a disk or partition for use by LVM.
   pvdisplay     Display attributes of a Physical Volume.
   pvmove        Move Physical Extents.
   pvremove      Remove a Physical Volume.
   pvresize      Resize a disk or partition in use by LVM2.
   pvs           Report information about Physical Volumes.
   pvscan        Scan all disks for Physical Volumes.
   vgcfgbackup   Backup Volume Group descriptor area.
   vgcfgrestore  Restore Volume Group descriptor area.
   vgchange      Change attributes of a Volume Group.
   vgck          Check Volume Group metadata.
   vgconvert     Convert Volume Group metadata format.
   vgcreate      Create a Volume Group.
   vgdisplay     Display attributes of Volume Groups.
   vgexport      Make volume Groups unknown to the system.
   vgextend      Add Physical Volumes to a Volume Group.
   vgimport      Make exported Volume Groups known to the system.
   vgimportclone Import  and  rename  duplicated  Volume  Group  (e.g.   a
                 hardware snapshot).
   vgmerge       Merge two Volume Groups.
   vgmknodes     Recreate   Volume  Group  directory  and  Logical  Volume
                 special files
   vgreduce      Reduce a Volume Group by removing one  or  more  Physical
                 Volumes.
   vgremove      Remove a Volume Group.
   vgrename      Rename a Volume Group.
   vgs           Report information about Volume Groups.
   vgscan        Scan all disks for Volume Groups and rebuild caches.
   vgsplit       Split a Volume Group into two, moving any logical volumes
                 from  one  Volume  Group  to  another  by  moving  entire
                 Physical Volumes.
   lvchange      Change attributes of a Logical Volume.
   lvconvert     Convert  a  Logical  Volume  from  linear  to  mirror  or
                 snapshot.
   lvcreate      Create a Logical Volume in an existing Volume Group.
   lvdisplay     Display attributes of a Logical Volume.
   lvextend      Extend the size of a Logical Volume.
   lvmchange     Change attributes of the Logical Volume Manager.
   lvmconfig     Display  the  configuration  information  after   loading
                 lvm.conf(5) and any other configuration files.
   lvmdiskscan   Scan for all devices visible to LVM2.
   lvmdump       Create lvm2 information dumps for diagnostic purposes.
   lvreduce      Reduce the size of a Logical Volume.
   lvremove      Remove a Logical Volume.
   lvrename      Rename a Logical Volume.
   lvresize      Resize a Logical Volume.
   lvs           Report information about Logical Volumes.
   lvscan        Scan (all disks) for Logical Volumes.

   The  following commands are not implemented in LVM2 but might be in the
   future: lvmsadc, lvmsar, pvdata.

OPTIONS

   The following options are available for many of the commands.  They are
   implemented  generically  and  documented  here rather than repeated on
   individual manual pages.

   Additional hyphens within  option  names  are  ignored.   For  example,
   --readonly and --read-only are both accepted.

   -h|-?|--help
          Display the help text.

   --version
          Display version information.

   -v|--verbose
          Set  verbose  level.  Repeat  from  1 to 3 times to increase the
          detail of messages sent to stdout and stderr.  Overrides  config
          file setting.

   -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).
          Overrides config file setting.

   -q|--quiet
          Suppress  output and log messages.  Overrides -d and -v.  Repeat
          once to also suppress any prompts with answer 'no'.

   --yes
          Don't prompt for confirmation interactively but  instead  always
          assume the answer is 'yes'.  Take great care if you use this!

   -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.

   --driverloaded {y|n}
          Whether or not the device-mapper kernel driver  is  loaded.   If
          you  set  this  to  n,  no  attempt  will be made to contact the
          driver.

   -A|--autobackup {y|n}
          Whether or not to metadata should  be  backed  up  automatically
          after  a  change.  You are strongly advised not to disable this!
          See vgcfgbackup(8).

   -P|--partial
          When set, the tools will do their  best  to  provide  access  to
          Volume  Groups  that  are  only partially available (one or more
          Physical Volumes belonging to the Volume Group are missing  from
          the  system).   Where  part  of  a  logical  volume  is missing,
          /dev/ioerror will be substituted, and you could  use  dmsetup(8)
          to  set this up to return I/O errors when accessed, or create it
          as a large block device of nulls.  Metadata may not  be  changed
          with this option. To insert a replacement Physical Volume of the
          same or large size use pvcreate -u to set the uuid to match  the
          original followed by vgcfgrestore(8).

   -S|--select Selection
          For  reporting  commands, display only rows that match Selection
          criteria.  All rows are displayed with the additional "selected"
          column  (-o selected) showing 1 if the row matches the Selection
          and 0 otherwise. For non-reporting commands  which  process  LVM
          entities,  the  selection can be used to match items to process.
          See SELECTION  CRITERIA  section  of  this  man  page  for  more
          information   about   the   way   the   selection  criteria  are
          constructed.

   -M|--metadatatype Type
          Specifies which type of on-disk metadata to use, such as lvm1 or
          lvm2,  which  can  be  abbreviated  to 1 or 2 respectively.  The
          default (lvm2) can be changed by setting format  in  the  global
          section of the config file lvm.conf(5).

   --ignorelockingfailure
          This lets you proceed with read-only metadata operations such as
          lvchange -ay and vgchange -ay even if the locking module  fails.
          One  use  for  this  is  in  a  system  init  script if the lock
          directory is mounted read-only when the script runs.

   --ignoreskippedcluster
          Use to avoid exiting with an non-zero status code if the command
          is  run  without  clustered  locking  and  some clustered Volume
          Groups have to be skipped over.

   --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.  It can also be used to
          peek  inside  the  metadata  of  clustered  Volume  Groups  when
          clustered locking is not configured or running.  No attempt will
          be made to communicate with the device-mapper kernel driver,  so
          this  option  is unable to report whether or not Logical Volumes
          are actually in use.

   --foreign
          Cause the command to access foreign VGs, that would otherwise be
          skipped.  It can be used to report or display a VG that is owned
          by another host.  This option can cause  a  command  to  perform
          poorly  because lvmetad caching is not used and metadata is read
          from disks.

   --shared
          Cause the command to access shared VGs, that would otherwise  be
          skipped  when  lvmlockd  is  not  being used.  It can be used to
          report or display a lockd VG without locking. Applicable only if
          LVM is compiled with lockd support.

   --addtag Tag
          Add  the  tag  Tag  to  a  PV,  VG  or LV.  Supply this argument
          multiple times to add more than one tag at once.   A  tag  is  a
          word  that  can  be  used to group LVM2 objects of the same type
          together.  Tags can be given on the command line in place of PV,
          VG  or  LV  arguments.   Tags should be prefixed with @ to avoid
          ambiguity.  Each tag  is  expanded  by  replacing  it  with  all
          objects  possessing  that  tag which are of the type expected by
          its position on the command line.  PVs  can  only  possess  tags
          while  they are part of a Volume Group: PV tags are discarded if
          the PV is removed from the VG.  As an  example,  you  could  tag
          some  LVs  as  database and others as userdata and then activate
          the database ones with  lvchange  -ay  @database.   Objects  can
          possess   multiple  tags  simultaneously.   Only  the  new  LVM2
          metadata  format  supports  tagging:  objects  using  the   LVM1
          metadata format cannot be tagged because the on-disk format does
          not support it.  Characters allowed in tags are: A-Z a-z 0-9 _ +
          .  - and as of version 2.02.78 the following characters are also
          accepted: / = ! : # &.

   --deltag Tag
          Delete the tag Tag from a PV, VG or LV, if it's present.  Supply
          this  argument  multiple  times  to  remove more than one tag at
          once.

   --alloc {anywhere|contiguous|cling|inherit|normal}
          Selects the allocation policy when a command needs  to  allocate
          Physical  Extents  from the Volume Group.  Each Volume Group and
          Logical Volume has an allocation policy  defined.   The  default
          for  a  Volume  Group is normal which applies common-sense rules
          such as not  placing  parallel  stripes  on  the  same  Physical
          Volume.   The  default  for  a  Logical  Volume is inherit which
          applies the same policy as for the Volume Group.  These policies
          can  be  changed using lvchange(8) and vgchange(8) or overridden
          on the command line of any  command  that  performs  allocation.
          The  contiguous  policy  requires  that  new Physical Extents be
          placed adjacent to existing Physical Extents.  The cling  policy
          places  new  Physical  Extents  on  the  same Physical Volume as
          existing Physical Extents in the  same  stripe  of  the  Logical
          Volume.   If  there  are  sufficient  free  Physical  Extents to
          satisfy an allocation  request  but  normal  doesn't  use  them,
          anywhere  will - even if that reduces performance by placing two
          stripes on the same Physical Volume.

   --commandprofile ProfileName
          Selects the command configuration profile to use when processing
          an LVM command.  See also lvm.conf(5) for more information about
          command profile config and  the  way  it  fits  with  other  LVM
          configuration  methods.  Using --commandprofile option overrides
          any   command   profile   specified   via    LVM_COMMAND_PROFILE
          environment variable.

   --metadataprofile ProfileName
          Selects   the   metadata   configuration  profile  to  use  when
          processing an LVM command.  When using metadata  profile  during
          Volume  Group  or  Logical Volume creation, the metadata profile
          name is saved in metadata. When such  Volume  Group  or  Logical
          Volume   is   processed  next  time,  the  metadata  profile  is
          automatically applied and the use of --metadataprofile option is
          not  necessary.  See also lvm.conf(5) for more information about
          metadata profile config and the  way  it  fits  with  other  LVM
          configuration methods.

   --profile ProfileName
          A  short  form  of  --metadataprofile  for  vgcreate,  lvcreate,
          vgchange  and   lvchange   command   and   a   short   form   of
          --commandprofile  for  any  other command (with the exception of
          lvmconfig command where the --profile has special  meaning,  see
          lvmconfig(8) for more information).

   --reportformat {basic|json}
          Overrides  current  output  format  for reports which is defined
          globally  by  report/output_format  configuration   setting   in
          lvm.conf(5).   The  basic  format  is  the  original format with
          columns and rows and if  there  is  more  than  one  report  per
          command,   each  report  is  prefixed  with  report's  name  for
          identification. The  json  stands  for  report  output  in  JSON
          format.

   --config ConfigurationString
          Uses  the ConfigurationString as direct string representation of
          the configuration to override the  existing  configuration.  The
          ConfigurationString is of exactly the same format as used in any
          LVM configuration file. See  lvm.conf(5)  for  more  information
          about direct config override on command line and the way it fits
          with other LVM configuration methods.

VALID NAMES

   The valid characters for VG and LV names are: a-z A-Z 0-9 + _ . -

   VG names cannot begin with a hyphen.  The name of a new LV also  cannot
   begin   with   a   hyphen.    However,  if  the  configuration  setting
   metadata/record_lvs_history is enabled then an LV name with a hyphen as
   a prefix indicates that, although the LV was removed, it is still being
   tracked because it forms part of the history of at least one LV that is
   still  present.   This  helps  to record the ancestry of thin snapshots
   even after some links in the chain have been removed.  A  reference  to
   the  historical  LV 'lvol1' in VG 'vg00' would be 'vg00/-lvol1' or just
   '-lvol1' if the VG is already set.  (The latter form must  be  preceded
   by  '--'  to  terminate  command line option processing before reaching
   this argument.)

   There are also various reserved names that are used internally  by  lvm
   that  can not be used as LV or VG names. A VG cannot be called anything
   that exists in /dev/ at the time of creation, nor can it be called  '.'
   or  '..'.   An  LV  cannot be called '.', '..', 'snapshot' or 'pvmove'.
   The LV name  may  also  not  contain  any  of  the  following  strings:
   '_cdata',   '_cmeta',   '_corig',   '_mlog',   '_mimage',   '_pmspare',
   '_rimage', '_rmeta', '_tdata', '_tmeta'  or  '_vorigin'.   A  directory
   bearing the name of each Volume Group is created under /dev when any of
   its Logical Volumes are  activated.   Each  active  Logical  Volume  is
   accessible  from  this directory as a symbolic link leading to a device
   node.  Links or nodes in /dev/mapper are intended only for internal use
   and  the  precise format and escaping might change between releases and
   distributions.    Other   software   and   scripts   should   use   the
   /dev/VolumeGroupName/LogicalVolumeName  format  to reduce the chance of
   needing amendment when the software is updated.   Should  you  need  to
   process the node names in /dev/mapper, you may use dmsetup splitname to
   separate out the original VG, LV and internal layer names.

UNIQUE NAMES

   VG names should be unique.  vgcreate  will  produce  an  error  if  the
   specified  VG  name  matches  an  existing VG name.  However, there are
   cases where different VGs with the same name can appear  to  LVM,  e.g.
   after moving disks or changing filters.

   When  VGs  with the same name exist, commands operating on all VGs will
   include all of the VGs with the same name.  If the ambiguous VG name is
   specified  on the command line, the command will produce an error.  The
   error states that multiple VGs  exist  with  the  specified  name.   To
   process one of the VGs specifically, the --select option should be used
   with the UUID of the intended VG: '--select vg_uuid=<uuid>'.

   An exception is if all but one of the  VGs  with  the  shared  name  is
   foreign  (see  lvmsystemid(7).)   In  this case, the one VG that is not
   foreign is assumed to be the intended VG and is processed.

   LV names are unique within a VG.  The name of an historical  LV  cannot
   be reused until the historical LV has itself been removed or renamed.

ALLOCATION

   When  an  operation  needs to allocate Physical Extents for one or more
   Logical Volumes, the tools proceed as follows:

   First of all, they generate the complete set  of  unallocated  Physical
   Extents  in  the  Volume  Group.  If any ranges of Physical Extents are
   supplied at the end of the  command  line,  only  unallocated  Physical
   Extents  within  those  ranges  on  the  specified Physical Volumes are
   considered.

   Then they try  each  allocation  policy  in  turn,  starting  with  the
   strictest  policy  (contiguous)  and  ending with the allocation policy
   specified using --alloc or  set  as  the  default  for  the  particular
   Logical  Volume  or  Volume  Group concerned.  For each policy, working
   from the lowest-numbered Logical Extent of  the  empty  Logical  Volume
   space  that needs to be filled, they allocate as much space as possible
   according to the restrictions imposed by the policy.  If more space  is
   needed, they move on to the next policy.

   The restrictions are as follows:

   Contiguous  requires  that  the physical location of any Logical Extent
   that is not the first Logical Extent of a Logical Volume is adjacent to
   the physical location of the Logical Extent immediately preceding it.

   Cling  requires that the Physical Volume used for any Logical Extent to
   be added to an existing Logical Volume is already in use  by  at  least
   one   Logical   Extent   earlier   in  that  Logical  Volume.   If  the
   configuration parameter allocation/cling_tag_list is defined, then  two
   Physical  Volumes  are considered to match if any of the listed tags is
   present on both Physical  Volumes.   This  allows  groups  of  Physical
   Volumes with similar properties (such as their physical location) to be
   tagged and treated as equivalent for allocation purposes.

   When a Logical Volume is striped or mirrored,  the  above  restrictions
   are  applied  independently  to  each stripe or mirror image (leg) that
   needs space.

   Normal will not choose a Physical Extent that shares the same  Physical
   Volume  as  a  Logical  Extent  already allocated to a parallel Logical
   Volume (i.e. a different stripe or mirror image/leg) at the same offset
   within that parallel Logical Volume.

   When  allocating  a  mirror  log at the same time as Logical Volumes to
   hold the mirror  data,  Normal  will  first  try  to  select  different
   Physical  Volumes for the log and the data.  If that's not possible and
   the allocation/mirror_logs_require_separate_pvs configuration parameter
   is  set  to  0,  it will then allow the log to share Physical Volume(s)
   with part of the data.

   When allocating thin pool metadata, similar considerations to those  of
   a  mirror  log  in  the  last paragraph apply based on the value of the
   allocation/thin_pool_metadata_require_separate_pvs        configuration
   parameter.

   If  you  rely upon any layout behaviour beyond that documented here, be
   aware that it might change in future versions of the code.

   For example, if you supply on  the  command  line  two  empty  Physical
   Volumes  that  have  an  identical  number  of  free  Physical  Extents
   available for allocation, the current code considers using each of them
   in  the  order  they  are listed, but there is no guarantee that future
   releases will maintain that property.  If it is important to  obtain  a
   specific  layout for a particular Logical Volume, then you should build
   it up through a sequence of lvcreate(8)  and  lvconvert(8)  steps  such
   that  the  restrictions  described above applied to each step leave the
   tools no discretion over the layout.

   To view the way the allocation process currently works in any  specific
   case,  read  the debug logging output, for example by adding -vvvv to a
   command.

LOGICAL VOLUME TYPES

   Some logical volume types are simple to create and can be done  with  a
   single  lvcreate(8)  command.   The  linear  and striped logical volume
   types are an example of this.  Other logical volume types  may  require
   more  than  one  command  to  create.  The cache (lvmcache(7)) and thin
   provisioning (lvmthin(7)) types are examples of this.

SELECTION CRITERIA

   The selection criteria are a set of statements combined by logical  and
   grouping  operators.  The statement consists of column name for which a
   set of valid values is defined using comparison operators. For complete
   list  of  column  names (fields) that can be used in selection, see the
   output of <lvm reporting command> -S help.

   Comparison operators (cmp_op)
   =~     Matching regular expression.
   !~     Not matching regular expression.
   =      Equal to.
   !=     Not equal to.
   >=     Greater than or equal to.
   >      Greater than
   <=     Less than or equal to.
   <      Less than.

   Binary logical operators (cmp_log)
   &&     All fields must match
   ,      All fields must match
   ||     At least one field must match
   #      At least one field must match

   Unary logical operators
   !      Logical negation

   Grouping operators
   (      Left parenthesis
   )      Right parenthesis
   [      List start
   ]      List end
   {      List subset start
   }      List subset end

   Informal grammar specification
   STATEMENT  =  column  cmp_op  VALUE  |  STATEMENT  log_op  STATEMENT  |
          (STATEMENT) | !(STATEMENT)

   VALUE = [VALUE log_op VALUE]
          For list-based types: string list. Matches strictly.  The log_op
          must always be of one type within the whole list value.

   VALUE = {VALUE log_op VALUE}
          For list-based types: string list. Matches a subset.  The log_op
          must always be of one type within the whole list value.

   VALUE = value
          For  scalar types: number (integer), size (floating point number
          with size unit suffix), percent (floating point number  with  or
          without % suffix), string.

DIAGNOSTICS

   All  tools  return  a  status  code  of  zero on success or non-zero on
   failure.   The  non-zero  codes  distinguish  only  between  the  broad
   categories  of  unrecognised  commands, problems processing the command
   line arguments and any other failures.  As  LVM  remains  under  active
   development,  the  code  used  in  a specific case occasionally changes
   between releases.  Message text may also change.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

   HOME   Directory containing .lvm_history if the internal readline shell
          is invoked.

   LVM_OUT_FD
          File descriptor to use for common output from LVM commands.

   LVM_ERR_FD
          File descriptor to use for error output from LVM commands.

   LVM_REPORT_FD
          File descriptor to use for report output from LVM commands.

   LVM_COMMAND_PROFILE
          Name  of  default  command profile to use for LVM commands. This
          profile is overriden by direct use of  --commandprofile  command
          line option.

   LVM_SYSTEM_DIR
          Directory  containing  lvm.conf(5)  and  other LVM system files.
          Defaults to "/etc/lvm".

   LVM_SUPPRESS_FD_WARNINGS
          Suppress warnings about unexpected file descriptors passed  into
          LVM.

   LVM_VG_NAME
          The  Volume  Group  name  that is assumed for any reference to a
          Logical Volume that doesn't specify a path.  Not set by default.

   LVM_LVMETAD_PIDFILE
          Path to the file that stores the lvmetad process ID.

   LVM_LVMETAD_SOCKET
          Path to the socket used to communicate with lvmetad.

   LVM_LVMPOLLD_PIDFILE
          Path to the file that stores the lvmpolld process ID.

   LVM_LVMPOLLD_SOCKET
          Path to the socket used to communicate with lvmpolld..

   LVM_LOG_FILE_EPOCH
          A string of up to 32 letters appended to the  log  filename  and
          followed  by  the  process ID and a startup timestamp using this
          format string "_%s_%d_%llu".  When set, each process logs  to  a
          separate file.

   LVM_LOG_FILE_MAX_LINES
          If  more than this number of lines are sent to the log file, the
          command gets aborted.  Automated tests  use  this  to  terminate
          looping commands.

   LVM_EXPECTED_EXIT_STATUS
          The  status  anticipated  when  the  process exits.  Use ">N" to
          match any status greater than N.   If  the  actual  exit  status
          matches   and   a   log   file  got  produced,  it  is  deleted.
          LVM_LOG_FILE_EPOCH and LVM_EXPECTED_EXIT_STATUS  together  allow
          automated test scripts to discard uninteresting log data.

   LVM_SUPPRESS_LOCKING_FAILURE_MESSAGES
          Used to suppress warning messages when the configured locking is
          known to be unavailable.

   DM_ABORT_ON_INTERNAL_ERRORS
          Abort processing if the code detects a non-fatal internal error.

   DM_DISABLE_UDEV
          Avoid interaction with udev.  LVM will manage the relevant nodes
          in /dev directly.

FILES

   /etc/lvm/lvm.conf
   $HOME/.lvm_history

SEE ALSO

   lvm.conf(5),    lvmcache(7),    lvmthin(7),    clvmd(8),    dmsetup(8),
   lvchange(8),  lvcreate(8),  lvdisplay(8),  lvextend(8),   lvmchange(8),
   lvmconfig(8),  lvmdiskscan(8),  lvreduce(8),  lvremove(8), lvrename(8),
   lvresize(8),  lvs(8),  lvscan(8),  pvchange(8),  pvck(8),  pvcreate(8),
   pvdisplay(8),     pvmove(8),     pvremove(8),     pvs(8),    pvscan(8),
   vgcfgbackup(8),  vgchange(8),   vgck(8),   vgconvert(8),   vgcreate(8),
   vgdisplay(8),  vgextend(8),  vgimport(8), vgimportclone(8), vgmerge(8),
   vgmknodes(8), vgreduce(8), vgremove(8), vgrename(8), vgs(8), vgscan(8),
   vgsplit(8), readline(3)





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.


Free Office Software - The Libre Office suite provides top desktop productivity tools for free. This includes, a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation engine, drawing and flowcharting, database and math applications. Libre Office is available for Linux or Windows.





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.