264
Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000-2010
dmesg
lvm
ssh
dmraid
mdadm
sshd
e2fsck
mkdir
strace
e2label
mke2fs
swapoff
echo
mknod
swapon
egrep
mkswap
sysinfo
fdisk
more
tar
fsck
mount
tune2fs
fxload
mtx
udev
gawk
mv
udevinfo
gpm
pccardctl
udevstart
grep
ping
umount
growisofs
pktsetup
uuidgen
grub
poweroff
vconfig
gunzip
ps
vi
halt
raidautorun
zcat
hexdump
readcd
hotplug
reboot
6.10.5
Recovering MD devices and logical volumes
To recover Linux Software RAID devices, known as MD devices, and/or devices created by Logical
Volume Manager (LVM), known as logical volumes, you need to create the corresponding volume
structure before starting the recovery.
You can create the volume structure in either of the following ways:
Automatically in Linux-based bootable media by using the management console or a script—see
Creating the volume structure automatically (p. 264).
Manually by using the
lvm
utility—see Creating the volume structure manually (p. 265).
6.10.5.1
Creating the volume structure automatically
Suppose that you saved the volume structure to the
/etc/Acronis
directory—see Backing up LVM
volumes (Linux) (p. 45)—and that the volume with this directory is included in the archive.
To recreate the volume structure in Linux-based bootable media, use either of the methods
described below.
Caution:
As a result of the following procedures, the current volume structure on the machine will be replaced
with the one stored in the archive. This will destroy the data that is currently stored on some or all of the
machine's hard disks.