Administering disks 119

Renaming a disk

Renaming a disk

If you do not specify a VM disk name, VxVM gives the disk a default name when you add the disk to VxVM control. The VM disk name is used by VxVM to identify the location of the disk or the disk type. To change the disk name to reflect a change of use or ownership, use the following command:

#vxedit [-gdiskgroup] rename old_diskname new_diskname

For example, you might want to rename disk mydg03, as shown in the following output from vxdisk list, to mydg02: #

#vxdisk list

DEVICE

TYPE

DISK

GROUP

STATUS

c0t0d0

auto:hpdisk

mydg01

mydg

online

c1t0d0

auto:hpdisk

mydg03

mydg

online

c1t1d0

auto:hpdisk

-

-

online

You would use the following command to rename the disk.#vxedit -g mydg rename mydg03 mydg02To confirm that the name change took place, use the vxdisk list command again:

#vxdisk list

DEVICE

TYPE

DISK

GROUP

STATUS

c0t0d0

auto:hpdisk

mydg01

mydg

online

c1t0d0

auto:hpdisk

mydg02

mydg

online

c1t1d0

auto:hpdisk

-

-

online

Note: By default, VxVM names subdisk objects after the VM disk on which they are located. Renaming a VM disk does not automatically rename the subdisks on that disk.

Reserving disks

By default, the vxassist command allocates space from any disk that has free space. You can reserve a set of disks for special purposes, such as to avoid general use of a particularly slow or a particularly fast disk.

To reserve a disk for special purposes, use the following command:#vxedit [-g diskgroup] set reserve=on diskname

After you enter this command, the vxassist program does not allocate space from the selected disk unless that disk is specifically mentioned on the vxassist command line. For example, if mydg03 is reserved, use the following command:

# vxassist [-g diskgroup] make vol03 20m mydg03