vgreduce(1M)
NAME
vgreduce − remove physical volumes from an LVM volume group
SYNOPSIS
/sbin/vgreduce vg_name pv_path ...
/sbin/vgreduce -f vg_name
Remarks
vgreduce cannot be performed if the volume group is activated in shared mode.
DESCRIPTION
The vgreduce command removes each physical volume specified by a pv_path argument from volume group vg_name.
The vgreduce command with -f option removes all missing physical volume from the volume group.
All but one physical volume can be removed. The last physical volume must remain in the volume group so that the logical volume driver can continue to operate. The last physical volume in the volume group can be removed with the vgremove command (see vgremove(1M)).
Before executing vgreduce, remove all logical volumes residing on each physical volume represented by a pv_path by executing lvremove (see lvremove(1M)).
Any physical volume in the pv_path list that is also a member of a physical volume group (as defined in /etc/lvmpvg) is also removed from the physical volume group. If the physical volume happens to be the last one in the physical volume group, the physical volume group is also removed from the volume group.
When a physical volume in the pv_path list has multiple PV-links, the physical volume is not removed from the volume group, until all the links to the volume are removed. When a physical volume in the pv_path list is the primary link (in use) to a physical volume, removing the link forces LVM to switch to the alternate link to access the physical volume. When the pv_path removed is an alternate link to the device, only the link is removed; the volume group and physical volume are otherwise unchanged.
Options and Arguments
vgreduce recognizes the following option and arguments:
-f vg_name force reduction of missing physical volume(s) in a given volume group. vgreduce obtains the name of each physical volume (PV) belonging to the volume group from the file /etc/lvmtab. It then reads the LVM structures from each PV and compares these with that held by the kernel to work out which PVs are missing. PVs which are missing will be candidates for removal. If all the physical extents on the missing PV are free then it will be removed from the volume group. Otherwise vgreduce will report the physical to logical extent mapping. For missing PVs which have extents in use you must free up all the extents by using lvreduce(1M) and re-run vgreduce with the -f option. This option is most commonly used when the vgdisplay(1M) command shows "Cur PV" higher than "Act PV" and all of the PVs belonging to the volume group are attached.
pv_path The block device path name of a physical volume.
vg_name The path name of the volume group.
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Environment Variables
LANG determines the language in which messages are displayed.
If LANG is not specified or is null, it defaults to "C" (see lang(5)).
If any internationalization variable contains an invalid setting, all internationalization variables default to "C" (see environ(5)).
EXAMPLES
Remove physical volume /dev/dsk/c0t1d0 from volume group /dev/vg01:
vgreduce /dev/vg01 /dev/dsk/c0t1d0
Force reduction of missing PVs from volume group: vg01
vgreduce -f /dev/vg01
The following messages will appear after missing PVS has been removed successfully:
PV with key 0 sucessfully deleted from vg /dev/vg01
Repair done, please do the following steps.....:
1. Save /etc/lvmtab to another file.
2. Remove /etc/lvmtab.
3. Use vgscan -v to recreate /etc/lvmtab.
4. NOW use vgcfgbackup(1M) to save the LVM setup.
SEE ALSO
vgchange(1M), vgcreate(1M), vgdisplay(1M), vgextend(1M).
Hewlett-Packard Company — HP-UX Release 10.20: July 1996