I read the man on pvmove and it looks very cool, especially the "auto-continue" if there is some sort of system interruption. I plan to try this on a new, non-production machine I am building out, but need to do something right now on the Windows LV. BUT, according to 'man pvmove' it doesn't have a switch to leave a copy behind, or the old extents in place for a fallback. That makes me a little apprehensive about having something ready to roll back to in its most current "data" state. I don't think I am in the mood for this to be my first test case. haha. Feel's like a Murphy's Law morning. RedShift wrote: > Ben M. wrote: >> Using CentOS Xen current with the 5.4 update applied. >> >> I need to move a Windows 2008 installation in LVM2 from one pv/vg/lv to >> different disk pv/vg/lv. >> >> What are considered safe ways to move it on same machine and retain a >> copy until sure it reboots? >> >> Turn off (shutdown) in Xen create identical extents in target pv/vg/lv >> and mount -t ntfs and cp? dd? rsync? >> >> Or pvmove (doesn't look like it retains a copy)? >> >> Is there an equivalent to AIX cplv? >> >> > > > If you haven't created a volumegroup on the new target disks, add those disks to the old volume group, execute pvmove on the old logical volume, when that's complete, execute vgsplit to create the new volume group. Pvmove is pretty robust, it can restart if it's been interrupted and can be aborted. > > > Glenn > _______________________________________________ > CentOS-virt mailing list > CentOS-virt at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-virt >