Logical Volume Manager (LVM): Difference between revisions
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Most people install Proxmox VE directly on a local disk. The Proxmox VE | Most people install Proxmox VE directly on a local disk. The Proxmox VE | ||
installation CD offers several options for local disk management, and | installation CD offers several options for local disk management, and | ||
the current default setup uses LVM. The installer | the current default setup uses LVM. The installer lets you select a | ||
single disk for such setup, and uses that disk as physical volume for | single disk for such setup, and uses that disk as physical volume for | ||
the Volume Group (VG) pve. The following output is from a | the Volume Group (VG) pve. The following output is from a | ||
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swap pve -wi-ao---- 896.00m | swap pve -wi-ao---- 896.00m | ||
root | root | ||
Formatted as ext4, and contains the | Formatted as ext4, and contains the operating system. | ||
swap | swap | ||
Swap partition | Swap partition | ||
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We install two boot loaders by default. The first partition contains | We install two boot loaders by default. The first partition contains | ||
the standard GRUB boot loader. The second partition is an EFI System | the standard GRUB boot loader. The second partition is an EFI System | ||
Partition (ESP), which makes it possible to boot on EFI systems. | Partition (ESP), which makes it possible to boot on EFI systems and to | ||
apply persistent firmware updates from the | |||
user space. | |||
Creating a Volume Group | Creating a Volume Group | ||
Let’s assume we have an empty disk /dev/sdb, onto which we want to | Let’s assume we have an empty disk /dev/sdb, onto which we want to | ||
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# lvcreate -n vz -V 10G pve/data | # lvcreate -n vz -V 10G pve/data | ||
Now a filesystem must be created on the LV. | Now a filesystem must be created on the LV. | ||
# mkfs.ext4 /dev/ | # mkfs.ext4 /dev/pve/vz | ||
At last this has to be mounted. | At last this has to be mounted. | ||
be sure that /var/lib/vz is empty. On a default | be sure that /var/lib/vz is empty. On a default | ||
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# echo '/dev/pve/vz /var/lib/vz ext4 defaults 0 2' >> /etc/fstab | # echo '/dev/pve/vz /var/lib/vz ext4 defaults 0 2' >> /etc/fstab | ||
Resizing the thin pool | Resizing the thin pool | ||
Resize the LV and the metadata pool | Resize the LV and the metadata pool with the following command: | ||
command | |||
# lvresize --size +<size[\M,G,T]> --poolmetadatasize +<size[\M,G]> <VG>/<LVThin_pool> | # lvresize --size +<size[\M,G,T]> --poolmetadatasize +<size[\M,G]> <VG>/<LVThin_pool> | ||
When extending the data pool, the metadata pool must also be | When extending the data pool, the metadata pool must also be |
Latest revision as of 14:11, 23 November 2023
Most people install Proxmox VE directly on a local disk. The Proxmox VE installation CD offers several options for local disk management, and the current default setup uses LVM. The installer lets you select a single disk for such setup, and uses that disk as physical volume for the Volume Group (VG) pve. The following output is from a test installation using a small 8GB disk:
# pvs PV VG Fmt Attr PSize PFree /dev/sda3 pve lvm2 a-- 7.87g 876.00m # vgs VG #PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree pve 1 3 0 wz--n- 7.87g 876.00m
The installer allocates three Logical Volumes (LV) inside this VG:
# lvs LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Meta% data pve twi-a-tz-- 4.38g 0.00 0.63 root pve -wi-ao---- 1.75g swap pve -wi-ao---- 896.00m
- root
-
Formatted as ext4, and contains the operating system.
- swap
-
Swap partition
- data
-
This volume uses LVM-thin, and is used to store VM images. LVM-thin is preferable for this task, because it offers efficient support for snapshots and clones.
For Proxmox VE versions up to 4.1, the installer creates a standard logical volume called “data”, which is mounted at /var/lib/vz.
Starting from version 4.2, the logical volume “data” is a LVM-thin pool, used to store block based guest images, and /var/lib/vz is simply a directory on the root file system.
Hardware
We highly recommend to use a hardware RAID controller (with BBU) for such setups. This increases performance, provides redundancy, and make disk replacements easier (hot-pluggable).
LVM itself does not need any special hardware, and memory requirements are very low.
Bootloader
We install two boot loaders by default. The first partition contains the standard GRUB boot loader. The second partition is an EFI System Partition (ESP), which makes it possible to boot on EFI systems and to apply persistent firmware updates from the user space.
Creating a Volume Group
Let’s assume we have an empty disk /dev/sdb, onto which we want to create a volume group named “vmdata”.
Please note that the following commands will destroy all existing data on /dev/sdb. |
First create a partition.
# sgdisk -N 1 /dev/sdb
Create a Physical Volume (PV) without confirmation and 250K metadatasize.
# pvcreate --metadatasize 250k -y -ff /dev/sdb1
Create a volume group named “vmdata” on /dev/sdb1
# vgcreate vmdata /dev/sdb1
Creating an extra LV for /var/lib/vz
This can be easily done by creating a new thin LV.
# lvcreate -n <Name> -V <Size[M,G,T]> <VG>/<LVThin_pool>
A real world example:
# lvcreate -n vz -V 10G pve/data
Now a filesystem must be created on the LV.
# mkfs.ext4 /dev/pve/vz
At last this has to be mounted.
be sure that /var/lib/vz is empty. On a default installation it’s not. |
To make it always accessible add the following line in /etc/fstab.
# echo '/dev/pve/vz /var/lib/vz ext4 defaults 0 2' >> /etc/fstab
Resizing the thin pool
Resize the LV and the metadata pool with the following command:
# lvresize --size +<size[\M,G,T]> --poolmetadatasize +<size[\M,G]> <VG>/<LVThin_pool>
When extending the data pool, the metadata pool must also be extended. |
Create a LVM-thin pool
A thin pool has to be created on top of a volume group. How to create a volume group see Section LVM.
# lvcreate -L 80G -T -n vmstore vmdata