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Proxmox: Adding Existing Logical Volumes

February 11th, 2014 No comments

Adding existing logical volumes to the list of virtual disks is non-obvious.
First add the VG to Proxmox using the “Storage|Add” UI. Once done, adding existing LV to Proxmox must be done via LVM command line tools.
A logical volume needs to have the correct naming, and (surprise!) an LVM tag set. For the correct tag (and LV name) format, use the UI to create a sample volume (VM|Hardware|Add|Hard Disk).
Note: LV names must fit a certain pattern. However, names like this seem to work: vm-110-timemachine.
The example below shows a pre-existing LV (vg1/vm-110-disk-2) without the “pve-vm-110” tag Proxmox requires.
Subsequent steps add the tag, after which the volume appears in Proxmox.

# lvs -o vg_name,lv_name,lv_tags
VG     LV              LV Tags
pve    data
pve    root
pve    swap
vg0    vm-110-disk-1   pve-vm-110
vg0    vm-110-disk-2   pve-vm-110
vg1    vm-110-disk-1   pve-vm-110
vg1    vm-110-disk-2

To see LV tags:

# lvs @pve-vm-110
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Move Log Copy% Convert
vm-110-disk-1 vg0 -wi-ao--- 500.00g
vm-110-disk-2 vg0 -wi-ao--- 750.00g
vm-110-disk-1 vg1 -wi-ao--- 750.00g

To add missing tags:

# lvchange --addtag pve-vm-110 /dev/vg1/vm-110-disk-2

Refresh the Proxmox Storage UI to see the new LV.

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CentOS 6.2 and LXC

January 16th, 2013 No comments

Followed this recipe first, but got bogged down on the home-brew tools and very detailed guest config. However, this blog has the best description and config I’ve ever seen for bridge networking on CentOS – worked like a charm.
Finally got everything working with these (much simpler) instructions using a centos6 guest from the openvz template download site.

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