lvs(8) — Linux manual page

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | USAGE | OPTIONS | VARIABLES | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | NOTES | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

LVS(8)                   System Manager's Manual                  LVS(8)

NAME         top

       lvs — Display information about logical volumes

SYNOPSIS         top

       lvs
           [ option_args ]
           [ position_args ]

DESCRIPTION         top

       lvs produces formatted output about LVs.

USAGE         top

       lvs
           [ -H|--history ]
           [ -a|--all ]
           [ -o|--options String ]
           [ -S|--select String ]
           [ -O|--sort String ]
           [    --segments ]
           [    --aligned ]
           [    --binary ]
           [    --configreport log|vg|lv|pv|pvseg|seg ]
           [    --foreign ]
           [    --ignorelockingfailure ]
           [    --logonly ]
           [    --nameprefixes ]
           [    --noheadings ]
           [    --nosuffix ]
           [    --readonly ]
           [    --reportformat basic|json ]
           [    --rows ]
           [    --separator String ]
           [    --shared ]
           [    --unbuffered ]
           [    --units [Number]r|R|h|H|b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G|t|T|p|P|e|E
           ]
           [    --unquoted ]
           [ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
           [ VG|LV|Tag ... ]

       Common options for lvm:
           [ -d|--debug ]
           [ -h|--help ]
           [ -q|--quiet ]
           [ -t|--test ]
           [ -v|--verbose ]
           [ -y|--yes ]
           [    --commandprofile String ]
           [    --config String ]
           [    --devices PV ]
           [    --devicesfile String ]
           [    --driverloaded y|n ]
           [    --journal String ]
           [    --lockopt String ]
           [    --longhelp ]
           [    --nohints ]
           [    --nolocking ]
           [    --profile String ]
           [    --version ]

OPTIONS         top


       --aligned
              Use with --separator to align the output columns

       -a|--all
              Show information about internal LVs.  These are components
              of normal LVs, such as mirrors, which are not independent‐
              ly accessible, e.g. not mountable.

       --binary
              Use binary values "0" or "1" instead of descriptive liter‐
              al  values  for columns that have exactly two valid values
              to report (not counting the "unknown" value which  denotes
              that the value could not be determined).

       --commandprofile String
              The command profile to use for command configuration.  See
              lvm.conf(5) for more information about profiles.

       --config String
              Config   settings   for   the   command.   These  override
              lvm.conf(5) settings.  The String arg uses the same format
              as lvm.conf(5), or  may  use  section/field  syntax.   See
              lvm.conf(5) for more information about config.

       --configreport log|vg|lv|pv|pvseg|seg
              See lvmreport(7).

       -d|--debug ...
              Set  debug level. Repeat from 1 to 6 times to increase the
              detail of messages sent to the log file and/or syslog  (if
              configured).

       --devices PV
              Devices  that  the command can use. This option can be re‐
              peated or accepts a comma separated list of devices.  This
              overrides the devices file.

       --devicesfile String
              A file listing devices that LVM should use.  The file must
              exist   in  /etc/lvm/devices/  and  is  managed  with  the
              lvmdevices(8) command.  This overrides the lvm.conf(5) de‐
              vices/devicesfile and devices/use_devicesfile settings.

       --driverloaded y|n
              If set to no, the command will not attempt to use  device-
              mapper.  For testing and debugging.

       --foreign
              Report/display   foreign   VGs  that  would  otherwise  be
              skipped.  See lvmsystemid(7) for  more  information  about
              foreign VGs.

       -h|--help
              Display help text.

       -H|--history
              Include historical LVs in the output.  (This has no effect
              unless   LVs   were   removed  while  lvm.conf(5)  metada‐
              ta/record_lvs_history was enabled.

       --ignorelockingfailure
              Allows a command to continue with read-only metadata oper‐
              ations after locking failures.

       --journal String
              Record information in the systemd journal.  This  informa‐
              tion is in addition to information enabled by the lvm.conf
              log/journal  setting.   command:  record information about
              the command.  output: record the default  command  output.
              debug: record full command debugging.

       --lockopt String
              Used  to  pass options for special cases to lvmlockd.  See
              lvmlockd(8) for more information.

       --logonly
              Suppress command report and display only log report.

       --longhelp
              Display long help text.

       --nameprefixes
              Add an "LVM2_" prefix plus the field name to  the  output.
              Useful  with --noheadings to produce a list of field=value
              pairs that can be used to set environment  variables  (for
              example, in udev rules).

       --noheadings
              Suppress the headings line that is normally the first line
              of output.  Useful if grepping the output.

       --nohints
              Do  not  use  the  hints file to locate devices for PVs. A
              command may read more devices to find PVs when  hints  are
              not  used.  The  command  will still perform standard hint
              file invalidation where appropriate.

       --nolocking
              Disable locking.

       --nosuffix
              Suppress the suffix on output sizes. Use with --units (ex‐
              cept h and H) if processing the output.

       -o|--options String
              Comma-separated, ordered list  of  fields  to  display  in
              columns.  String arg syntax is: [+|-|#]Field1[,Field2 ...]
              The  prefix  + will append the specified fields to the de‐
              fault fields, - will remove the specified fields from  the
              default  fields,  and # will compact specified fields (re‐
              moving them when empty for all rows.)  Use -o help to view
              the list of all available fields.  Use separate  lists  of
              fields  to  add, remove or compact by repeating the -o op‐
              tion: -o+field1,field2 -o-field3,field4 -o#field5.   These
              lists  are  evaluated  from left to right.  Use field name
              lv_all to view all LV fields, vg_all all VG fields, pv_all
              all PV fields, pvseg_all all PV  segment  fields,  seg_all
              all  LV  segment  fields,  and  pvseg_all  all  PV segment
              columns.  See the lvm.conf(5) report section for more con‐
              fig options.  See lvmreport(7) for more information  about
              reporting.

       --profile String
              An  alias  for  --commandprofile or --metadataprofile, de‐
              pending on the command.

       -q|--quiet ...
              Suppress output and log messages.  Overrides  --debug  and
              --verbose.   Repeat once to also suppress any prompts with
              answer 'no'.

       --readonly
              Run the command in a special  read-only  mode  which  will
              read  on-disk  metadata without needing to take any locks.
              This can be used to peek inside metadata used by a virtual
              machine image while the virtual machine is running. No at‐
              tempt will be made to communicate with  the  device-mapper
              kernel  driver, so this option is unable to report whether
              or not LVs are actually in use.

       --reportformat basic|json
              Overrides current output format for reports which  is  de‐
              fined  globally  by  the  report/output_format  setting in
              lvm.conf(5).  basic is the original  format  with  columns
              and  rows.   If there is more than one report per command,
              each report is prefixed with the report name for identifi‐
              cation. json produces report output in  JSON  format.  See
              lvmreport(7) for more information.

       --rows
              Output columns as rows.

       --segments
              Use default columns that emphasize segment information.

       -S|--select String
              Select objects for processing and reporting based on spec‐
              ified criteria.  The criteria syntax is described by --se‐
              lect  help  and lvmreport(7).  For reporting commands, one
              row is displayed for each object  matching  the  criteria.
              See --options help for selectable object fields.  Rows can
              be  displayed  with an additional "selected" field (-o se‐
              lected) showing 1 if the row matches the selection  and  0
              otherwise.   For  non-reporting commands which process LVM
              entities,  the  selection  is  used  to  choose  items  to
              process.

       --separator String
              String  to use to separate each column. Useful if grepping
              the output.

       --shared
              Report/display shared VGs that would otherwise be  skipped
              when  lvmlockd  is  not  being  used  on  the  host.   See
              lvmlockd(8) for more information about shared VGs.

       -O|--sort String
              Comma-separated ordered list of columns to  sort  by.  Re‐
              places  the  default  selection. Precede any column with -
              for a reverse sort on that column.

       -t|--test
              Run in test mode. Commands will not update metadata.  This
              is implemented by disabling all metadata writing but  nev‐
              ertheless  returning success to the calling function. This
              may lead to unusual error messages in  multi-stage  opera‐
              tions  if  a  tool  relies on reading back metadata it be‐
              lieves has changed but hasn't.

       --unbuffered
              Produce output immediately without sorting or aligning the
              columns properly.

       --units [Number]r|R|h|H|b|B|s|S|k|K|m|M|g|G|t|T|p|P|e|E
              All sizes are output in these units: human-(r)eadable with
              '<' rounding indicator, (h)uman-readable, (b)ytes,  (s)ec‐
              tors,  (k)ilobytes, (m)egabytes, (g)igabytes, (t)erabytes,
              (p)etabytes, (e)xabytes.  Capitalise to use  multiples  of
              1000  (S.I.)  instead of 1024.  Custom units can be speci‐
              fied, e.g. --units 3M.

       --unquoted
              When  used  with  --nameprefixes,  output  values  in  the
              field=value pairs are not quoted.

       -v|--verbose ...
              Set  verbose  level.  Repeat from 1 to 4 times to increase
              the detail of messages sent to stdout and stderr.

       --version
              Display version information.

       -y|--yes
              Do not prompt for confirmation  interactively  but  always
              assume the answer yes. Use with extreme caution.  (For au‐
              tomatic no, see -qq.)

VARIABLES         top

       VG     Volume Group name.  See lvm(8) for valid names.

       LV     Logical Volume name.  See lvm(8) for valid names.  An LV
              positional arg generally includes the VG name and LV name,
              e.g. VG/LV.

       Tag    Tag name.  See lvm(8) for information about tag names and
              using tags in place of a VG, LV or PV.

       String See the option description for information about the
              string content.

       Size[UNIT]
              Size is an input number that accepts an optional unit.
              Input units are always treated as base two values, regard‐
              less of capitalization, e.g. 'k' and 'K' both refer to
              1024.  The default input unit is specified by letter, fol‐
              lowed by |UNIT.  UNIT represents other possible input
              units: b|B is bytes, s|S is sectors of 512 bytes, k|K is
              KiB, m|M is MiB, g|G is GiB, t|T is TiB, p|P is PiB, e|E
              is EiB.  (This should not be confused with the output con‐
              trol --units, where capital letters mean multiple of
              1000.)

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES         top

       See lvm(8) for information about environment variables used by
       lvm.  For example, LVM_VG_NAME can generally be substituted for a
       required VG parameter.

NOTES         top

       The lv_attr bits are:

       1  Volume type: (C)ache, (m)irrored, (M)irrored without initial
          sync, (o)rigin, (O)rigin with merging snapshot, inte(g)rity,
          (r)aid, (R)aid without initial sync, (s)napshot, merging
          (S)napshot, (p)vmove, (v)irtual, mirror or raid (i)mage, mir‐
          ror or raid (I)mage out-of-sync, mirror (l)og device, under
          (c)onversion, thin (V)olume, (t)hin pool, (T)hin pool data,
          v(d)o pool, v(D)o pool data, raid or pool m(e)tadata or pool
          metadata spare.

       2  Permissions: (w)riteable, (r)ead-only, (R)ead-only activation
          of non-read-only volume

       3  Allocation policy:  (a)nywhere, (c)ontiguous, (i)nherited,
          c(l)ing, (n)ormal This is capitalised if the volume is cur‐
          rently locked against allocation changes, for example during
          pvmove(8).

       4  fixed (m)inor

       5  State: (a)ctive, (h)istorical, (s)uspended, (I)nvalid snap‐
          shot, invalid (S)uspended snapshot, snapshot (m)erge failed,
          suspended snapshot (M)erge failed, mapped (d)evice present
          without tables, mapped device present with (i)nactive table,
          thin-pool (c)heck needed, suspended thin-pool (C)heck needed,
          (X) unknown

       6  device (o)pen, (X) unknown

       7  Target type: (C)ache, (m)irror, (r)aid, (s)napshot, (t)hin,
          (u)nknown, (v)irtual.  This groups logical volumes related to
          the same kernel target together.  So, for example, mirror im‐
          ages, mirror logs as well as mirrors themselves appear as (m)
          if they use the original device-mapper mirror kernel driver;
          whereas the raid equivalents using the md raid kernel driver
          all appear as (r).  Snapshots using the original device-mapper
          driver appear as (s); whereas snapshots of thin volumes using
          the new thin provisioning driver appear as (t).

       8  Newly-allocated data blocks are overwritten with blocks of
          (z)eroes before use.

       9  Volume Health, where there are currently three groups of at‐
          tributes identified:

          Common ones for all Logical Volumes: (p)artial, (X) unknown.
          (p)artial signifies that one or more of the Physical Volumes
          this Logical Volume uses is missing from the system. (X) un‐
          known signifies the status is unknown.

          Related to RAID Logical Volumes: (r)efresh needed, (m)ismatch‐
          es exist, (w)ritemostly.
          (r)efresh signifies that one or more of the Physical Volumes
          this RAID Logical Volume uses had suffered a write error. The
          write error could be due to a temporary failure of that Physi‐
          cal Volume or an indication that it is failing.  The device
          should be refreshed or replaced. (m)ismatches signifies that
          the RAID logical volume has portions of the array that are not
          coherent.  Inconsistencies are detected by initiating a
          "check" on a RAID logical volume.  (The scrubbing operations,
          "check" and "repair", can be performed on a RAID logical vol‐
          ume via the 'lvchange' command.)  (w)ritemostly signifies the
          devices in a RAID 1 logical volume that have been marked
          write-mostly.  Re(s)haping signifies a RAID Logical Volume is
          either undergoing a stripe addition/removal, a stripe size or
          RAID algorithm change.  (R)emove after reshape signifies freed
          striped raid images to be removed.

          Related to Thin pool Logical Volumes: (F)ailed, out of (D)ata
          space, (M)etadata read only.
          (F)ailed is set if thin pool encounters serious failures and
          hence no further I/O is permitted at all. The out of (D)ata
          space is set if thin pool has run out of data space. (M)etada‐
          ta read only signifies that thin pool encounters certain types
          of failures but it's still possible to do reads at least, but
          no metadata changes are allowed.

          Related to Thin Logical Volumes: (F)ailed.
          (F)ailed is set when related thin pool enters Failed state and
          no further I/O is permitted at all.

          Related to writecache logical volumes: (E)rror.
          (E)rror is set dm-writecache reports an error.

       10 s(k)ip activation: this volume is flagged to be skipped during
          activation.

SEE ALSO         top

       lvm(8), lvm.conf(5), lvmconfig(8), lvmdevices(8),

       pvchange(8), pvck(8), pvcreate(8), pvdisplay(8), pvmove(8),
       pvremove(8), pvresize(8), pvs(8), pvscan(8),

       vgcfgbackup(8), vgcfgrestore(8), vgchange(8), vgck(8),
       vgcreate(8), vgconvert(8), vgdisplay(8), vgexport(8),
       vgextend(8), vgimport(8), vgimportclone(8), vgimportdevices(8),
       vgmerge(8), vgmknodes(8), vgreduce(8), vgremove(8), vgrename(8),
       vgs(8), vgscan(8), vgsplit(8),

       lvcreate(8), lvchange(8), lvconvert(8), lvdisplay(8),
       lvextend(8), lvreduce(8), lvremove(8), lvrename(8), lvresize(8),
       lvs(8), lvscan(8),

       lvm-fullreport(8), lvm-lvpoll(8), blkdeactivate(8), lvmdump(8),

       dmeventd(8), lvmpolld(8), lvmlockd(8), lvmlockctl(8),
       cmirrord(8), lvmdbusd(8), fsadm(8),

       lvmsystemid(7), lvmreport(7), lvmcache(7), lvmraid(7),
       lvmthin(7), lvmvdo(7), lvmautoactivation(7)

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the lvm2 (Logical Volume Manager 2) project.
       Information about the project can be found at 
       ⟨http://www.sourceware.org/lvm2/⟩.  If you have a bug report for
       this manual page, see ⟨https://github.com/lvmteam/lvm2/issues⟩.
       This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
       ⟨git://sourceware.org/git/lvm2.git⟩ on 2024-06-14.  (At that
       time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in the
       repository was 2024-06-11.)  If you discover any rendering
       problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
       is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
       corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
       (which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
       [email protected]

Red Hat, Inc.     LVM TOOLS 2.03.25(2)-git (2024-05-16)           LVS(8)

Pages that refer to this page: lvmcache(7)lvmreport(7)lvmthin(7)lvmvdo(7)dmeventd(8)lvchange(8)lvconvert(8)lvcreate(8)lvdisplay(8)lvextend(8)lvm(8)lvmconfig(8)lvmdevices(8)lvmdiskscan(8)lvm-fullreport(8)lvm-lvpoll(8)lvreduce(8)lvremove(8)lvrename(8)lvresize(8)lvs(8)lvscan(8)pvchange(8)pvck(8)pvcreate(8)pvdisplay(8)pvmove(8)pvremove(8)pvresize(8)pvs(8)pvscan(8)vgcfgbackup(8)vgcfgrestore(8)vgchange(8)vgck(8)vgconvert(8)vgcreate(8)vgdisplay(8)vgexport(8)vgextend(8)vgimport(8)vgimportclone(8)vgimportdevices(8)vgmerge(8)vgmknodes(8)vgreduce(8)vgremove(8)vgrename(8)vgs(8)vgscan(8)vgsplit(8)