On Thu, Mar 13, 2008 at 21:53:09 +0000 (+0000), Adam Trickett wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> Linux's LVM implementation is from HP-UX and doesn't do mirroring for that you 
> need another application. IBM's original LVM solution can do mirroring of a 
> within a volume group, so you don't need a RAID application first.
IIRC it's the syntax which comes from HP-UX, not the code or
implementation.  Wikipedia says the "design was based on HP-UX".
Yes, IBM's (well, AIX - IBM's Unix) does upto 3-way mirroring as part
of the LVM.  IIRC (it's been a few years now!) each LV could have upto 1023
LPs (logical paritions), each of those referred to 1, 2 or 3 PPs
(physical paritions).  I'm pretty sure these limits were busted
properly with AIX5 (there were hacks in AIX4 ("-f factor" IIRC)).
> Apparently it's now possible to do this in Linux, from Debian Etch and Centos 
> 4 era systems. However I've not found out how, almost everyone talks about 
> running LVM2 on top of standard Linux software RAID.
When I looked into it, I decided to stick with LVM and MD - partly the
lack of documentation made me believe that it wasn't the robust choice.
Adrian
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