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mirror of git://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git synced 2024-12-21 13:34:40 +03:00

man: expanded explanation of pvscan

Related to it's role with lvmetad and auto-activation.
This commit is contained in:
David Teigland 2015-05-01 13:44:31 -05:00
parent 9c7063ef89
commit 9273b1a964

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@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
.TH PVSCAN 8 "LVM TOOLS #VERSION#" "Sistina Software UK" \" -*- nroff -*-
.SH NAME
pvscan \(em scan all disks for physical volumes
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B pvscan
.RB [ \-\-commandprofile
@ -30,9 +31,118 @@ pvscan \(em scan all disks for physical volumes
.IR DevicePath
|
.IR major:minor ]...
.SH DESCRIPTION
pvscan scans all supported LVM block devices in the system for
physical volumes.
pvscan scans all supported LVM block devices in the system for physical
volumes.
.SS Scanning with lvmetad
pvscan operates differently when used with the
.BR lvmetad (8)
daemon.
Scanning disks is required to read LVM metadata and identify LVM PVs.
Once read, lvmetad caches the metadata so that LVM commands can read it
without repeatedly scanning disks. This is helpful because scanning disks
is time consuming, and frequent scanning may interfere with the normal
work of the system and disks.
When lvmetad is not used, LVM commands revert to scanning disks to read
metadata. Any LVM command that needs metadata will scan disks for it;
running the pvscan command is not necessary for the sake of other LVM
commands.
When lvmetad is used, LVM commands avoid scanning disks by reading
metadata from lvmetad. When new disks appear, they must be scanned so
their metadata can be cached in lvmetad. This is done by the command
pvscan \-\-cache, which scans disks and passes the metadata to lvmetad.
The pvscan \-\-cache command is typically run automatically by system
services when a new device appears. Users do not generally need to run
this command if the system and lvmetad are running properly.
Many scripts contain unnecessary pvscan (or vgscan) commands for
historical reasons. To avoid disrupting the system with extraneous disk
scanning, an ordinary pvscan (without \-\-cache) will simply read metadata
from lvmetad like other LVM commands. It does not do anything beyond
displaying the current state of the cache.
.I Notes
.IP \[bu] 2
When given specific device name arguments, pvscan \-\-cache will only
read the named devices.
.IP \[bu] 2
LVM udev rules and systemd services are used to intiate automatic device
scanning.
.IP \[bu] 2
To prevent devices from being scanned by pvscan --cache, add them
to
.BR lvm.conf (5)
.B devices/global_filter.
The devices/filter setting does not
apply to system level scanning.
For more information, see:
.br
.B lvmconfig --withcomments devices/global_filter
.IP \[bu] 2
If lvmetad is started or restarted after devices are visible, or
if the global_filter has changed, then all devices must be rescanned
for metadata with the command pvscan \-\-cache.
.IP \[bu] 2
lvmetad ignores older metadata formats, e.g. lvm1, and should not be
used if they exist.
.IP \[bu] 2
To notify lvmetad about a device that is no longer present, the major and
minor numbers must be given, not the path.
.SS Automatic activation
When event-driven system services detect a new LVM device, the first step
is to automatically scan and cache the metadata from the device. This is
done by pvscan \-\-cache. A second step is to automatically activate LVs
that are present on the new device. This auto-activation is done by the
same pvscan \-\-cache command when the option '\-a|\-\-activate ay' is
included.
Auto-activation of VGs or LVs can be enabled/disabled using:
.br
.BR lvm.conf (5)
.B activation/auto_activation_volume_list
For more information, see:
.br
.B lvmconfig --withcomments activation/auto_activation_volume_list
When this setting is undefined, all LVs are auto-activated (when lvm is
fully integrated with the event-driven system services.)
When a VG or LV is not auto-activated, traditional activation using
vgchange or lvchange -a|--activate is needed.
.I Notes
.IP \[bu] 2
pvscan auto-activation can be only done in combination with \-\-cache.
.IP \[bu] 2
Auto-activation is designated by the "a" argument in '-a|--activate ay'.
This is meant to distinguish system generated commands from explicit user
commands, although it can be used in any activation command. Whenever it
is used, the auto_activation_volume_list is applied.
.IP \[bu] 2
Auto-activation is not yet supported for LVs that are part of partial or
clustered volume groups.
.P
.SH OPTIONS
See \fBlvm\fP(8) for common options.
.TP
@ -46,37 +156,19 @@ Only show physical volumes not belonging to any volume group.
Short listing format.
.TP
.BR \-u ", " \-\-uuid
Show UUIDs (Uniform Unique Identifiers) in addition to device special names.
Show UUIDs in addition to device names.
.TP
.BR \-a ", " \-\-activate " " \fIay
Together with the information already cached in lvmetad, automatically activate
any logical volumes that become activatable after the scan done on one or more devices.
The logical volume to autoactivate is matched against the
activation/auto_activation_volume_list set in lvm.conf. If this list is not set, then
all volumes are considered for autoactivation. The autoactivation is not yet
supported for logical volumes that are part of partial or clustered volume groups.
Automatically activate any logical volumes that are possible to activate
with the addition of the new devices.
.TP
.BR \-b ", " \-\-background
Run the command in the background.
.TP
.BR \-\-cache " [" \-\-major " " \fImajor " " \-\-minor " " \fIminor " | " \fIDevicePath " | " \fImajor:minor " ]..."
Scan one or more devices and instruct the lvmetad daemon to update its cached
state accordingly. Called internally by udev rules.
All devices listed explicitly are processed \fBregardless\fP of any device
filters set using \fBdevices/filter\fP configuration setting. To filter
devices even in this case, the \fBdevices/global_filter\fP must be used.
If lvmetad has not yet cached any metadata or the filters have recently been
changed, then all devices may be scanned, effectively ignoring the rest of
the command line. Otherwise, if all the devices referenced on the command line
contain metadata in the default lvm2 format, other devices are not accessed.
If metadata written using the obsolete GFS pool or lvm1 format is encountered,
this is ignored and so lvmetad should not be used.
To notify lvmetad about a device that is not present in the system anymore,
\fB\-\-major\fP and \fB\-\-minor\fP pair of that device must be always supplied,
not \fBDevicePath\fP as pvscan is not able to translate the \fBDevicePath\fP
into major and minor pair which lvmetad requires.
Scan one or more devices and send the metadata to lvmetad.
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR lvm (8),
.BR lvmetad (8),
.BR pvcreate (8),
.BR pvdisplay (8)
.BR lvmconfig (8),
.BR lvmetad (8)