Learn how to rename logical volume in Linux or Unix. Understand what happens in the background when you change the logical volume name of existing LVOL.
LVM i.e. logical volume manager is one of the widely used volume managers in Linux and Unix. A logical volume is a portion of the volume group which can be mounted on a mount point. Once mounted, space belonging to that logical volume is available for use to end-user.
In this post, we are going to see step by step how to rename logical volume. In Linux, lvrename
is a direct command which does this stuff for you. But first, we will see how it works in the background so that you know the flow and you can rename LV even without lvrename
command.
LV renaming procedure follows below flow :
- Stop all user/app access to related mount point (on which lvol is mounted) using
fuser
- Un-mount LV using
umount
- Rename device names of lvol using
mv
- Mount LV using
mount
- Edit /etc/fstab entry related to this lvol using
vi
Let’s see an example where we are renaming /dev/vg01/lvol1
which is mounted on /data
to /dev/vg01/lvol_one
. See the below output for the above-mentioned steps (HPUX console).
# bdf /data
/dev/vg01/lvol1 524288 49360 471256 9% /data
# fuser -cku /data
/data: 223412c(user1)
# umount /data
# mv /dev/vg01/lvol1 /dev/vg01/lvol_one
# mv /dev/vg01/rlvol1 /dev/vg01/rlvol_one
# mount /data
# bdf /data
/dev/vg01/lvol_one 524288 49360 471256 9% /data
In the above output, you can see how we renamed logical volume just by renaming its device files.
In Linux, we have a single command lvrename
which do all the above steps in the background for you. You just need to provide it with old and new lvol names along with the volume group where this lvol belongs. So, the above scenario will have below command –
# lvrename vg01 lvol1 lvol_one
Renamed "lvol1" to "lvol_one" in volume group "vg01"
You can see in the output that single command renamed lvol1 to lvol_one! This command also supports below option :
-t
For test-v
Verbose mode-f
Forceful operation-d
debug