Installation guide

Creating Physical Volumes
23
The following subsections describe the commands used for creating physical volumes.
4.2.1.1. Setting the Partition Type
If you are using a whole disk device for your physical volume, the disk must have no partition table.
For DOS disk partitions, the partition id should be set to 0x8e using the fdisk or cfdisk command
or an equivalent. For whole disk devices only the partition table must be erased, which will effectively
destroy all data on that disk. You can remove an existing partition table by zeroing the first sector with
the following command:
# dd if=/dev/zero of=PhysicalVolume bs=512 count=1
4.2.1.2. Initializing Physical Volumes
Use the pvcreate command to initialize a block device to be used as a physical volume. Initialization
is analogous to formatting a file system.
The following command initializes /dev/sdd, /dev/sde, and /dev/sdf as LVM physical volumes
for later use as part of LVM logical volumes.
# pvcreate /dev/sdd /dev/sde /dev/sdf
To initialize partitions rather than whole disks: run the pvcreate command on the partition. The
following example initializes the partition /dev/hdb1 as an LVM physical volume for later use as part
of an LVM logical volume.
# pvcreate /dev/hdb1
4.2.1.3. Scanning for Block Devices
You can scan for block devices that may be used as physical volumes with the lvmdiskscan
command, as shown in the following example.
# lvmdiskscan
/dev/ram0 [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/sda [ 17.15 GB]
/dev/root [ 13.69 GB]
/dev/ram [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/sda1 [ 17.14 GB] LVM physical volume
/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol01 [ 512.00 MB]
/dev/ram2 [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/new_vg/lvol0 [ 52.00 MB]
/dev/ram3 [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/pkl_new_vg/sparkie_lv [ 7.14 GB]
/dev/ram4 [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/ram5 [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/ram6 [ 16.00 MB]
/dev/ram7 [ 16.00 MB]