Appendix D. LVM Object Tags
An LVM tag is a word that can be used to group LVM2 objects of the same type together. Tags can be attached to objects such as physical volumes, volume groups, and logical volumes. Tags can be attached to hosts in a cluster configuration.
Tags can be given on the command line in place of PV, VG or LV arguments. Tags should be prefixed with @ to avoid ambiguity. Each tag is expanded by replacing it with all objects possessing that tag which are of the type expected by its position on the command line.
LVM tags are strings of up to 1024 characters. LVM tags cannot start with a hyphen.
A valid tag can consist of a limited range of characters only. The allowed characters are [A-Za-z0-9_+.-]. As of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.1 release, the list of allowed characters was extended, and tags can contain the /, =, !, :, #, and & characters.
Only objects in a volume group can be tagged. Physical volumes lose their tags if they are removed from a volume group; this is because tags are stored as part of the volume group metadata and that is deleted when a physical volume is removed.
The following command lists all the logical volumes with the
database
tag.
# lvs @database
The following command lists the currently active host tags.
# lvm tags
D.1. Adding and Removing Object Tags
To add or delete tags from physical volumes, use the
--addtag
or --deltag
option of the pvchange
command.
To add or delete tags from volume groups, use the
--addtag
or --deltag
option of the vgchange
or vgcreate
commands.
To add or delete tags from logical volumes, use the
--addtag
or --deltag
option of the lvchange
or lvcreate
commands.
You can specify multiple
--addtag
and --deltag
arguments within a single pvchange
, vgchange
, or lvchange
command. For example, the following command deletes the tags T9
and T10
and adds the tags T13
and T14
to the volume group grant
.
# vgchange --deltag T9 --deltag T10 --addtag T13 --addtag T14 grant