. .SH EXAMPLES . .P Create a striped LV with 3 stripes, a stripe size of 8 KiB and a size of 100 MiB. The LV name is chosen by lvcreate. .br .B lvcreate -i 3 -I 8 -L 100m vg00 .P Create a raid1 LV with two images, and a useable size of 500 MiB. This operation requires two devices, one for each mirror image. RAID metadata (superblock and bitmap) is also included on the two devices. .br .B lvcreate --type raid1 -m1 -L 500m -n mylv vg00 .P Create a mirror LV with two images, and a useable size of 500 MiB. This operation requires three devices: two for mirror images and one for a disk log. .br .B lvcreate --type mirror -m1 -L 500m -n mylv vg00 .P Create a mirror LV with 2 images, and a useable size of 500 MiB. This operation requires 2 devices because the log is in memory. .br .B lvcreate --type mirror -m1 --mirrorlog core -L 500m -n mylv vg00 .P Create a copy-on-write snapshot of an LV: .br .B lvcreate --snapshot --size 100m --name mysnap vg00/mylv .P Create a copy-on-write snapshot with a size sufficient for overwriting 20% of the size of the original LV. .br .B lvcreate -s -l 20%ORIGIN -n mysnap vg00/mylv .P Create a sparse LV with 1 TiB of virtual space, and actual space just under 100 MiB. .br .B lvcreate --snapshot --virtualsize 1t --size 100m --name mylv vg00 .P Create a linear LV with a usable size of 64 MiB on specific physical extents. .br .B lvcreate -L 64m -n mylv vg00 /dev/sda:0-7 /dev/sdb:0-7 .P Create a RAID5 LV with a usable size of 5 GiB, 3 stripes, a stripe size of 64 KiB, using a total of 4 devices (including one for parity). .br .B lvcreate --type raid5 -L 5G -i 3 -I 64 -n mylv vg00 .P Create a RAID5 LV using all of the free space in the VG and spanning all the PVs in the VG (note that the command will fail if there are more than 8 PVs in the VG, in which case \fB-i 7\fP must be used to get to the current maximum of 8 devices including parity for RaidLVs). .br .B lvcreate --config allocation/raid_stripe_all_devices=1 .RS .B --type raid5 -l 100%FREE -n mylv vg00 .RE .P Create RAID10 LV with a usable size of 5 GiB, using 2 stripes, each on a two-image mirror. (Note that the \fB-i\fP and \fB-m\fP arguments behave differently: \fB-i\fP specifies the total number of stripes, but \fB-m\fP specifies the number of images in addition to the first image). .br .B lvcreate --type raid10 -L 5G -i 2 -m 1 -n mylv vg00 .P Create a 1 TiB thin LV mythin, with 256 GiB thinpool tpool0 in vg00. .br .B lvcreate -T -V 1T --size 256G --name mythin vg00/tpool0 .P Create a 1 TiB thin LV, first creating a new thin pool for it, where the thin pool has 100 MiB of space, uses 2 stripes, has a 64 KiB stripe size, and 256 KiB chunk size. .br .B lvcreate --type thin --name mylv --thinpool mypool .RS .B -V 1t -L 100m -i 2 -I 64 -c 256 vg00 .RE .P Create a thin snapshot of a thin LV (the size option must not be used, otherwise a copy-on-write snapshot would be created). .br .B lvcreate --snapshot --name mysnap vg00/thinvol .P Create a thin snapshot of the read-only inactive LV named "origin" which becomes an external origin for the thin snapshot LV. .br .B lvcreate --snapshot --name mysnap --thinpool mypool vg00/origin .P Create a cache pool from a fast physical device. The cache pool can then be used to cache an LV. .br .B lvcreate --type cache-pool -L 1G -n my_cpool vg00 /dev/fast1 .P Create a cache LV, first creating a new origin LV on a slow physical device, then combining the new origin LV with an existing cache pool. .br .B lvcreate --type cache --cachepool my_cpool .RS .B -L 100G -n mylv vg00 /dev/slow1 .RE .P Create a VDO LV vdo0 with VDOPoolLV size of 10 GiB and name vpool1. .br .B lvcreate --vdo --size 10G --name vdo0 vg00/vpool1