Veritas Volume Manager 5.0.1 Administrator's Guide, HP-UX 11i v3, First Edition, November 2009

# vxassist [-b] [-g diskgroup] make volume length \
[layout=layout] diskname ...
Specify the -b option if you want to make the volume immediately available for
use.
See Initializing and starting a volume on page 303.
For example, to create the volume volspec with length 5 gigabytes on disks mydg03
and mydg04, use the following command:
# vxassist -b -g mydg make volspec 5g mydg03 mydg04
The vxassist command allows you to specify storage attributes. These give you
control over the devices, including disks, controllers and targets, which vxassist
uses to configure a volume. For example, you can specifically exclude disk mydg05.
Note: The ! character is a special character in some shells. The following examples
show how to escape it in a bash shell.
# vxassist -b -g mydg make volspec 5g \!mydg05
The following example excludes all disks that are on controller c2:
# vxassist -b -g mydg make volspec 5g \!ctlr:c2
This example includes only disks on controller c1 except for target t5:
# vxassist -b -g mydg make volspec 5g ctlr:c1 \!target:c1t5
If you want a volume to be created using only disks from a specific disk group,
use the -g option to vxassist, for example:
# vxassist -g bigone -b make volmega 20g bigone10 bigone11
or alternatively, use the diskgroup attribute:
# vxassist -b make volmega 20g diskgroup=bigone bigone10 \
bigone11
Any storage attributes that you specify for use must belong to the disk group.
Otherwise, vxassist will not use them to create a volume.
You can also use storage attributes to control how vxassist uses available storage,
for example, when calculating the maximum size of a volume, when growing a
volume or when removing mirrors or logs from a volume. The following example
Creating volumes
Creating a volume on specific disks
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