Ok, I see that, but what about the lvm manpage? I was incorrect in
stating lvcreate. My apologies. Do a man on lvm and this is what you get.
Now reading this, it just tells me that to create a disk group or pool, it
"concatenates" these disks. Not at the logical level however, but rather
to create a "pool" or "group". I think concatenate here is a bad word to
use. But, here's what it says.
DESCRIPTION
lvm is a logical volume manager for Linux. It enables you
to concatenate several physical volumes (hard disks etc.)
into a so called volume group (VG, see pvcreate(8) and
vgcreate(8) ) forming a storage pool, like a virtual disk.
...
Seems a bit odd here if I want to create a striped set, it seems that you
must create several "groups" of single disks and then when using lvcreate
stripe those "Groups". Thoughts?
--
Austin Gonyou
Systems Architect, CCNA
Coremetrics, Inc.
Phone: 512-796-9023
email: austin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On 10 May 2001, Martin K. Petersen wrote:
> >>>>> "Austin" == Austin Gonyou <austin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>
> Austin> From the man page it says LVM only performs
> Austin> concatenation. This is NOT striping.
>
> Where does it say that?
>
> man lvcreate. Take a look at the -i and -I options.
>
>
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