Re: deactivate dm disks?
From: Wakko Warner
Date: Tue Mar 16 2004 - 14:17:02 EST
> > I was playing with evms (2.2 kernel 2.6.3 vanilla) and some reason, it
> > grabbed my usb disk (sde) and won't let go of it. Is there any way I can
> > make it let go of the disk? It grabbed sde1 and sde2 of the disk.
>
> You can put entries in your /etc/evms.conf file to tell EVMS to ignore certain
> disks (e.g. if you don't want it to examine sde). See the "legacy_devices"
> section (for 2.4 kernels) and/or the "sysfs_devices" section (for 2.6
> kernels).
Ok, great, that works.
> > I tried the deactivate which just gave me an invalid argument. I really do
> > not wish to reboot this machine just to remove the usb disk.
>
> If you have the "dmsetup" tool, you can issue a "dmsetup remove_all" command
> to deactivate all the DM devices. Just make sure all the DM devices are
> unmounted, or it won't actually release the underlying disks. Dmsetup is part
> of the device-mapper package, available at ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/dm/.
Ahh, thanks. That did the trick.
> > I also noticed it wanted to grab my partitions on sda which were already
> > mounted and couldn't grab them.
>
> Again, you can add an "exclude" entry in your /etc/evms.conf if you want EVMS
> to ignore sda. Otherwise, have a look at
> http://evms.sf.net/install/kernel.html#bdclaim
I think I'll only give it disks that I want in evms. The "sde" is a USB
disk that I move around alot.
If you're not the right person to ask, please direct me to someone else.
I was going to do a raid5 across a few disks (this is in the future not
now). Is there any way to add disks to that raid5 using evms?
--
Lab tests show that use of micro$oft causes cancer in lab animals
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/