.TH VGRENAME 8 "LVM TOOLS #VERSION#" "Sistina Software UK" \" -*- nroff -*- .SH NAME vgrename \- rename a volume group .SH SYNOPSIS .B vgrename [\-A/\-\-autobackup y/n] [\-d/\-\-debug] [\-h/\-?/\-\-help] [\-t/\-\-test] [\-v/\-\-verbose] .IR OldVolumeGroup { Path | Name | UUID } .IR NewVolumeGroup { Path | Name } .SH DESCRIPTION vgrename renames an existing (see .B vgcreate(8) ) volume group from .IR OldVolumeGroup { Name | Path | UUID } to .IR NewVolumeGroup { Name | Path }. .SH OPTIONS See \fBlvm\fP for common options. .SH Examples "vgrename /dev/vg02 /dev/my_volume_group" renames existing volume group "vg02" to "my_volume_group". .TP "vgrename vg02 my_volume_group" does the same. .TP "vgrename Zvlifi-Ep3t-e0Ng-U42h-o0ye-KHu1-nl7Ns4 VolGroup00_tmp" changes the name of the Volume Group with UUID Zvlifi-Ep3t-e0Ng-U42h-o0ye-KHu1-nl7Ns4 to "VolGroup00_tmp". All the Volume Groups visible to a system need to have different names. Otherwise many LVM2 commands will refuse to run or give warning messages. This situation could arise when disks are moved between machines. If a disk is connected and it contains a Volume Group with the same name as the Volume Group containing your root filesystem the machine might not even boot correctly. However, the two Volume Groups should have different UUIDs (unless the disk was cloned) so you can rename one of the conflicting Volume Groups with \fBvgrename\fP. .TP .SH SEE ALSO .BR lvm (8), .BR vgchange (8), .BR vgcreate (8), .BR lvrename (8)