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Since understanding the reason for choosing the appmachineid over the direct use of machineid is not easily found, I extended to help text to clarify this a bit.
380 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
380 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
.TH "LVMSYSTEMID" "7" "LVM TOOLS #VERSION#" "Red Hat, Inc" "\""
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.
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.SH NAME
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.
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lvmsystemid \(em LVM system ID
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.
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.
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The \fBlvm\fP(8) system ID restricts Volume Group (VG) access to one host.
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This is useful when a VG is placed on shared storage devices, or when
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local devices are visible to both host and guest operating systems. In
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cases like these, a VG can be visible to multiple hosts at once, and some
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mechanism is needed to protect it from being used by more than one host at
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a time.
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.P
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A VG's system ID identifies one host as the VG owner. The host with a
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matching system ID can use the VG and its LVs, while LVM on other hosts
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will ignore it. This protects the VG from being accidentally used from
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other hosts.
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.P
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The system ID is a string that uniquely identifies a host. It can be
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configured as a custom value, or it can be assigned automatically by LVM
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using some unique identifier already available on the host, e.g.
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machine-id or uname.
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.P
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When a new VG is created, the system ID of the local host is recorded in
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the VG metadata. The creating host then owns the new VG, and LVM on other
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hosts will ignore it. When an existing, exported VG is imported
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(vgimport), the system ID of the local host is saved in the VG metadata,
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and the importing host owns the VG.
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.P
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A VG without a system ID can be used by LVM on any host where the VG's
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devices are visible. When system IDs are not used, device filters should
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be configured on all hosts to exclude the VG's devices from all but one
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host.
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.P
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A
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.B foreign VG
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is a VG seen by a host with an unmatching system ID, i.e. the system ID
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in the VG metadata does not match the system ID configured on the host.
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If the host has no system ID, and the VG does, the VG is foreign and LVM
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will ignore it. If the VG has no system ID, access is unrestricted, and
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LVM can access it from any host, whether the host has a system ID or not.
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.P
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Changes to a host's system ID and a VG's system ID can be made in limited
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circumstances (see vgexport and vgimport). Improper changes can result in
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a host losing access to its VG, or a VG being accidentally damaged by
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access from an unintended host. Even limited changes to the VG system ID
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may not be perfectly reflected across hosts. A more coherent view of
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shared storage requires an inter-host locking system to coordinate access.
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.P
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Valid system ID characters are the same as valid VG name characters. If a
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system ID contains invalid characters, those characters are omitted and
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remaining characters are used. If a system ID is longer than the maximum
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name length, the characters up to the maximum length are used. The
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maximum length of a system ID is 128 characters.
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.P
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Print the system ID of a VG to check if it is set:
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.P
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.B vgs -o systemid
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.I VG
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.P
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Print the system ID of the local host to check if it is configured:
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.P
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.B lvm systemid
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.
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.SS Limitations and warnings
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.
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To benefit fully from system ID, all hosts should have a system ID
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configured, and all VGs should have a system ID set. Without any method
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to restrict access, e.g. system ID or device filters, a VG that is visible
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to multiple hosts can be accidentally damaged or destroyed.
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.
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.IP \[bu] 2
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A VG without a system ID can be used without restriction from any host
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where it is visible, even from hosts that have a system ID.
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.
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.IP \[bu]
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Many VGs will not have a system ID set because LVM has not enabled it by
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default, and even when enabled, many VGs were created before the feature
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was added to LVM or enabled. A system ID can be assigned to these VGs by
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using vgchange --systemid (see below).
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.
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.IP \[bu]
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Two hosts should not be assigned the same system ID. Doing so defeats
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the purpose of distinguishing different hosts with this value.
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.
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.IP \[bu]
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Orphan PVs (or unused devices) on shared storage are unprotected by the
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system ID feature. Commands that use these PVs, such as vgcreate or
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vgextend, are not prevented from performing conflicting operations and
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corrupting the PVs. See the
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.B orphans
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section for more information.
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.
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.IP \[bu]
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The system ID does not protect devices in a VG from programs other than LVM.
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.
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.IP \[bu]
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A host using an old LVM version (without the system ID feature) will not
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recognize a system ID set in VGs. The old LVM can read a VG with a
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system ID, but is prevented from writing to the VG (or its LVs).
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The system ID feature changes the write mode of a VG, making it appear
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read-only to previous versions of LVM.
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.sp
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This also means that if a host downgrades to the old LVM version, it would
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lose access to any VGs it had created with a system ID. To avoid this,
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the system ID should be removed from local VGs before downgrading LVM to a
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version without the system ID feature.
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.
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.SS Types of VG access
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.
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A local VG is meant to be used by a single host.
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.P
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A shared or clustered VG is meant to be used by multiple hosts.
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.P
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These can be further distinguished as:
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.
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.TP
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.B Unrestricted:
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A local VG that has no system ID. This VG type is unprotected and
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accessible to any host.
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.
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.TP
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.B Owned:
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A local VG that has a system ID set, as viewed from the host with a
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matching system ID (the owner). This VG type is accessible to the host.
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.
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.TP
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.B Foreign:
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A local VG that has a system ID set, as viewed from any host with an
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unmatching system ID (or no system ID). It is owned by another host.
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This VG type is not accessible to the host.
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.
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.TP
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.B Exported:
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A local VG that has been exported with vgexport and has no system ID.
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This VG type can only be accessed by vgimport which will change it to
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owned.
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.
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.TP
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.B Shared:
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A shared or "lockd" VG has the lock_type set and has no system ID.
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A shared VG is meant to be used on shared storage from multiple hosts,
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and is only accessible to hosts using lvmlockd. Applicable only if LVM
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is compiled with lvmlockd support.
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.
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.TP
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.B Clustered:
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A clustered or "clvm" VG has the clustered flag set and has no system ID.
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A clustered VG is meant to be used on shared storage from multiple hosts,
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and is only accessible to hosts using clvmd. Applicable only if LVM
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is compiled with clvm support.
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.
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.SS Host system ID configuration
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.
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A host's own system ID can be defined in a number of ways. lvm.conf
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global/system_id_source defines the method LVM will use to find the local
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system ID:
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.
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.TP
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.B none
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.br
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LVM will not use a system ID. LVM is allowed to access VGs without a
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system ID, and will create new VGs without a system ID. An undefined
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system_id_source is equivalent to none.
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.sp
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.I lvm.conf
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.nf
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global {
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system_id_source = "none"
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}
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.fi
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.
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.TP
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.B appmachineid
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.br
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An LVM-specific derivation of /etc/machine-id is used as the system ID.
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See
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.BR machine-id (5)
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to check if machine-id is available on the host.
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.I lvm.conf
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.nf
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global {
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system_id_source = "appmachineid"
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}
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.fi
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.TP
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.B machineid
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.br
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The content of /etc/machine-id is used as the system ID if available.
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(appmachineid is recommended to avoid exposing the confidential
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machine-id.)
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.sp
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.I lvm.conf
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.nf
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global {
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system_id_source = "machineid"
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}
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.fi
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.
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.TP
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.B uname
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.br
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The string utsname.nodename from
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.BR uname (2)
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is used as the system ID. A uname beginning with "localhost"
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is ignored and equivalent to none.
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.sp
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.I lvm.conf
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.nf
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global {
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system_id_source = "uname"
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}
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.fi
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.
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.TP
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.B lvmlocal
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.br
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The system ID is defined in lvmlocal.conf local/system_id.
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.sp
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.I lvm.conf
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.nf
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global {
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system_id_source = "lvmlocal"
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}
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.fi
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.sp
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.I lvmlocal.conf
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.nf
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local {
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system_id = "example_name"
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}
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.fi
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.
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.TP
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.B file
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.br
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The system ID is defined in a file specified by lvm.conf
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global/system_id_file.
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.sp
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.I lvm.conf
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.nf
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global {
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system_id_source = "file"
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system_id_file = "/path/to/file"
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}
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.fi
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.LP
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Changing system_id_source will likely cause the system ID of the host to
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change, which will prevent the host from using VGs that it previously used
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(see extra_system_ids below to handle this.)
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.P
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If a system_id_source other than none fails to produce a system ID value,
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it is the equivalent of having none. The host will be allowed to access
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VGs with no system ID, but will not be allowed to access VGs with a system
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ID set.
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.
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.SS Overriding system ID
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.
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In some cases, it may be necessary for a host to access VGs with different
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system IDs, e.g. if a host's system ID changes, and it wants to use VGs
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that it created with its old system ID. To allow a host to access VGs
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with other system IDs, those other system IDs can be listed in
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lvmlocal.conf local/extra_system_ids.
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.P
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.I lvmlocal.conf
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.nf
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local {
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extra_system_ids = [ "my_other_name" ]
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}
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.fi
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.P
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A safer option may be configuring the extra values as needed on the
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command line as:
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.br
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\fB--config 'local/extra_system_ids=["\fP\fIid\fP\fB"]'\fP
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.
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.SS vgcreate
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.
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In vgcreate, the host running the command assigns its own system ID to the
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new VG. To override this and set another system ID:
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.P
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.B vgcreate --systemid
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.I SystemID VG PVs
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.P
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Overriding the host's system ID makes it possible for a host to create a
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VG that it may not be able to use. Another host with a system ID matching
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the one specified may not recognize the new VG without manually rescanning
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devices.
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.P
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If the --systemid argument is an empty string (""), the VG is created with
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no system ID, making it accessible to other hosts (see warnings above.)
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.
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.SS report/display
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.
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The system ID of a VG is displayed with the "systemid" reporting option.
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.P
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Report/display commands ignore foreign VGs by default. To report foreign
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VGs, the --foreign option can be used. This causes the VGs to be read
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from disk.
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.P
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.B vgs --foreign -o +systemid
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.P
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When a host with no system ID sees foreign VGs, it warns about them as
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they are skipped. The host should be assigned a system ID, after which
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standard reporting commands will silently ignore foreign VGs.
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.
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.SS vgexport/vgimport
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.
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vgexport clears the VG system ID when exporting the VG.
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.P
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vgimport sets the VG system ID to the system ID of the host doing the
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import.
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.
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.SS vgchange
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.
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A host can change the system ID of its own VGs, but the command requires
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confirmation because the host may lose access to the VG being changed:
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.P
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.B vgchange --systemid
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.I SystemID VG
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.P
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The system ID can be removed from a VG by specifying an empty string ("")
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as the new system ID. This makes the VG accessible to other hosts (see
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warnings above.)
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.P
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A host cannot directly change the system ID of a foreign VG.
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.P
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To move a VG from one host to another, vgexport and vgimport should be
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used.
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.P
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To forcibly gain ownership of a foreign VG, a host can temporarily add the
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foreign system ID to its extra_system_ids list, and change the system ID
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of the foreign VG to its own. See Overriding system ID above.
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.
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.SS shared VGs
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.
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A shared VG has no system ID set, allowing multiple hosts to use it
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via lvmlockd. Changing a VG to shared will clear the existing
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system ID. Applicable only if LVM is compiled with lvmlockd support.
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.
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.SS clustered VGs
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.
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A clustered/clvm VG has no system ID set, allowing multiple hosts to use
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it via clvmd. Changing a VG to clustered will clear the existing system
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ID. Changing a VG to not clustered will set the system ID to the host
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running the vgchange command.
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.
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.SS creation_host
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.
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In vgcreate, the VG metadata field creation_host is set by default to the
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host's uname. The creation_host cannot be changed, and is not used to
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control access. When system_id_source is "uname", the system_id and
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creation_host fields will be the same.
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.
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.SS orphans
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.
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Orphan PVs are unused devices; they are not currently used in any VG.
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Because of this, they are not protected by a system ID, and any host can
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use them. Coordination of changes to orphan PVs is beyond the scope of
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system ID. The same is true of any block device that is not a PV.
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.
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.SH SEE ALSO
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.
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.nh
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.ad l
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.BR vgcreate (8),
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.BR vgchange (8),
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.BR vgimport (8),
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.BR vgexport (8),
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.BR vgs (8),
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.BR lvmlockd (8),
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.BR lvm.conf (5),
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.BR machine-id (5),
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.BR uname (2)
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