24.04.2024, 12:06 UhrDeutsch | English
Hallo Gast [ Registrierung | Anmelden ]
Letzte Änderung am 2006-08-10 04:02:26 von Richard

Erweiterungen:
Thanks to slh.

Löschungen:
Thanks to slh


Editiert am 2006-08-10 04:01:28 von Richard proofing

Erweiterungen:
How do I remove LVM

LVM is the abbreviation for "Logical Volume Manager" and designates a function, which is integrated in the standard Kernel since version 2.4. For Windows users, this corresponds to the "Dynamic Data Media" in Microsoft Windows 2000 or XP Pro, for instance. A logical layer can be put between the filesystem and the partition of a physical hard disk with LVM. So it is possible to stretch a file system over several partitions and hard drives, after the creation of a file system mind you, even if data was already stored therein. In addition, the file system is put on a virtual partition, called a logical volume. This is obviously the actual salient point of LVM: one can later add free storage space to a too small partition or hard drive which is administered with LVM. A condition is, however, that the partitions concerned were administered in advance by LVM. [Which seems to be the reasoning for including it by default.] Source

After the HD installation the Logical Volume Manager was installed and there was no need for it, so I wanted to remove it.

The #kanotix channel provided the solution fast.
# apt-get remove --purge lvm2 lvm-common 

and that was it. Done


Löschungen:
How do I remove LVM

LVM is the abbreviation for "Logical volume manager" and designates a function, which is integrated in the standard Kernel since version 2.4. For Windows users, this corresponds to the "dynamic data media" in Microsoft Windows 2000 or XP pro, for instance. A logical layer can be put between the
filesystem and the partition of a physical hard disk with LVM. So it is possible to stretch a file system over several partitions and hard drives, after the creation of a file system mind you, even if data was already stored therein. In addition, the filesystem is put on a virtual partition, called a logical volume . This is obviously the actual salient point of LVM: One can later add free storage space to a too small partition or hard drive which is administered with LVM. A condition is however that the partitions concerned were administered in advance by LVM.... Source

After the HD installation the Logical volume manager was installed and there was no need for it, so I wanted to remove it.

The #kanotix channel provided the solution fast

apt-get remove --purge lvm2? lvm-common

and that was it. Done



älteste bekannte Version dieser Seite wurde bearbeitet am 2005-02-14 02:50:06 von OffTopic [ ]

How do I remove LVM

LVM is the abbreviation for "Logical volume manager" and designates a function, which is integrated in the standard Kernel since version 2.4. For Windows users, this corresponds to the "dynamic data media" in Microsoft Windows 2000 or XP pro, for instance. A logical layer can be put between the
filesystem and the partition of a physical hard disk with LVM. So it is possible to stretch a file system over several partitions and hard drives, after the creation of a file system mind you, even if data was already stored therein. In addition, the filesystem is put on a virtual partition, called a logical volume . This is obviously the actual salient point of LVM: One can later add free storage space to a too small partition or hard drive which is administered with LVM. A condition is however that the partitions concerned were administered in advance by LVM.... Source

After the HD installation the Logical volume manager was installed and there was no need for it, so I wanted to remove it.

The #kanotix channel provided the solution fast

apt-get remove --purge lvm2? lvm-common

and that was it. Done

Thanks to slh
Letzte Revision :
Letzter Editor :
Eigentümer :
 
Deutsch | English
Logos and trademarks are the property of their respective owners, comments are property of their posters, the rest is © 2004 - 2006 by Jörg Schirottke (Kano).
Consult Impressum and Legal Terms for details. Kanotix is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL license.
This CMS is powered by PostNuke, all themes used at this site are released under the GNU/GPL license. designed and hosted by w3you. Our web server is running on Kanotix64-2006.