LVM + RAID follow up

John Abreau john.abreau at zuken.com
Tue Nov 7 20:02:50 EST 2006


On Tue, 2006-11-07 at 19:44 -0500, Rich Braun wrote:

> "Derek Atkins" <warlord at MIT.EDU> wrote:
> > I can't be the first person to think about this problem but
> > not want an infinitely increasing number of MDn RAID arrays.
> 
> I think you're expressing concern about something that's really not as much of
> an issue as you think.  If you did an average of one hardware upgrade each
> year, you'd have /dev/md0 through /dev/md9 at the end of a decade.  By then
> the whole approach to the problem will almost certainly have evolved, and the
> tools you seek may very well have developed.  With today's tools, yes, in
> order to shrink down the number of md[0-9] devices back toward 1 or 2 you'd
> have to make a big fs on a new volume and rsync it, might be a few hours of
> shuffling files.  But that's only after quite a few years of continuous
> runtime.

Like I said before, in the LVM layer you can add the new md device
to the PV, slide the filesystem transparently from the old md device 
to the new one, and then remove the old md device from the PV. No need 
to mess with rsync or to copy files at the filesystem level. It's as 
simple as 

    # Add a new RAID device /dev/md4
    vgextend FooVG /dev/md4

    # Move everything from /dev/md2 to /dev/md4
    pvmove -v /dev/md2 /dev/md4

    # Remove /dev/md2 from the VG
    vgreduce FooVG /dev/md2

The "vgextend" adds the new device, the "pvmove" migrates everything 
off the old device and onto the new one, and the "vgreduce" removes 
the old device. You can then delete the old md device and the disks 
it's composed of, then when you replace those disks, you can reuse 
the old md device number. Bingo, no unlimited proliferation of md devices.


-- 
John Abreau / Executive Director, Boston Linux & Unix
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