5.3.5. Displaying Volume Groups
There are two commands you can use to display properties of LVM volume groups:
vgs
and vgdisplay
.
The
vgscan
command, which scans all the disks for volume groups and rebuilds the LVM cache file, also displays the volume groups. For information on the vgscan
command, see Section 5.3.6, “Scanning Disks for Volume Groups to Build the Cache File”.
The
vgs
command provides volume group information in a configurable form, displaying one line per volume group. The vgs
command provides a great deal of format control, and is useful for scripting. For information on using the vgs
command to customize your output, see Section 5.8, “Customized Reporting for LVM”.
The
vgdisplay
command displays volume group properties (such as size, extents, number of physical volumes, and so on) in a fixed form. The following example shows the output of a vgdisplay
command for the volume group new_vg
. If you do not specify a volume group, all existing volume groups are displayed.
# vgdisplay new_vg
--- Volume group ---
VG Name new_vg
System ID
Format lvm2
Metadata Areas 3
Metadata Sequence No 11
VG Access read/write
VG Status resizable
MAX LV 0
Cur LV 1
Open LV 0
Max PV 0
Cur PV 3
Act PV 3
VG Size 51.42 GB
PE Size 4.00 MB
Total PE 13164
Alloc PE / Size 13 / 52.00 MB
Free PE / Size 13151 / 51.37 GB
VG UUID jxQJ0a-ZKk0-OpMO-0118-nlwO-wwqd-fD5D32