Provided by: lvm2_2.03.22-1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       lvextend — Add space to a logical volume

SYNOPSIS

       lvextend option_args position_args
           [ option_args ]
           [ position_args ]

           --alloc contiguous|cling|cling_by_tags|normal|anywhere|inherit
        -A|--autobackup y|n
           --commandprofile String
           --config String
        -d|--debug
           --devices PV
           --devicesfile String
           --driverloaded y|n
        -l|--extents [+]Number[PERCENT]
        -f|--force
           --fs String
           --fsmode String
        -h|--help
           --journal String
           --lockopt String
           --longhelp
        -m|--mirrors Number
        -n|--nofsck
           --nohints
           --nolocking
           --nosync
           --noudevsync
           --poolmetadatasize [+]Size[m|UNIT]
           --profile String
        -q|--quiet
           --reportformat basic|json|json_std
        -r|--resizefs
        -L|--size [+]Size[m|UNIT]
        -i|--stripes Number
        -I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT]
        -t|--test
           --type linear|striped|snapshot|raid|mirror|thin|thin-pool|vdo|vdo-pool|cache|cache-pool|writecache
           --usepolicies
        -v|--verbose
           --version
        -y|--yes

DESCRIPTION

       lvextend  extends the size of an LV. This requires allocating logical extents from the VG's free physical
       extents. If the extension adds a new LV segment, the new segment will use the existing  segment  type  of
       the LV.

       Extending a copy-on-write snapshot LV adds space for COW blocks.

       Use lvconvert(8) to change the number of data images in a RAID or mirrored LV.

       In the usage section below, --size Size can be replaced with --extents Number.  See both descriptions the
       options section.

USAGE

       Extend an LV by a specified size.

       lvextend -L|--size [+]Size[m|UNIT] LV
           [ -l|--extents [+]Number[PERCENT] ]
           [ -r|--resizefs ]
           [ -i|--stripes Number ]
           [ -I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT] ]
           [    --poolmetadatasize [+]Size[m|UNIT] ]
           [    --fs String ]
           [    --fsmode String ]
           [ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
           [ PV ... ]

       —

       Extend an LV by specified PV extents.

       lvextend LV PV ...
           [ -r|--resizefs ]
           [ -i|--stripes Number ]
           [ -I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT] ]
           [    --fs String ]
           [    --fsmode String ]
           [ COMMON_OPTIONS ]

       —

       Extend a pool metadata SubLV by a specified size.

       lvextend --poolmetadatasize [+]Size[m|UNIT] LV1
           [ -i|--stripes Number ]
           [ -I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT] ]
           [ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
           [ PV ... ]

           LV1 types: linear thinpool

       —

       Extend an LV according to a predefined policy.

       lvextend --usepolicies LV1
           [ -r|--resizefs ]
           [    --fs String ]
           [    --fsmode String ]
           [ COMMON_OPTIONS ]
           [ PV ... ]

           LV1 types: snapshot thinpool vdopool

       —

       Common options for command:
           [ -A|--autobackup y|n ]
           [ -f|--force ]
           [ -m|--mirrors Number ]
           [ -n|--nofsck ]
           [    --alloc contiguous|cling|cling_by_tags|normal|anywhere|inherit ]
           [    --nosync ]
           [    --noudevsync ]
           [    --reportformat basic|json|json_std ]
           [    --type linear|striped|snapshot|raid|mirror|thin|thin-pool|vdo|vdo-pool|cache|cache-pool|
           writecache ]

       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

       --alloc contiguous|cling|cling_by_tags|normal|anywhere|inherit
              Determines  the allocation policy when a command needs to allocate Physical Extents (PEs) from the
              VG. Each VG and LV has an allocation policy  which  can  be  changed  with  vgchange/lvchange,  or
              overridden  on  the  command line.  normal applies common sense rules such as not placing parallel
              stripes on the same PV.  inherit applies the VG policy to an LV.  contiguous requires new  PEs  be
              placed  adjacent to existing PEs.  cling places new PEs on the same PV as existing PEs in the same
              stripe of the LV.  If there are sufficient PEs for an allocation, but normal does  not  use  them,
              anywhere will use them even if it reduces performance, e.g. by placing two stripes on the same PV.
              Optional positional PV args on the command line can also be used to limit which  PVs  the  command
              will use for allocation.  See lvm(8) for more information about allocation.

       -A|--autobackup y|n
              Specifies if metadata should be backed up automatically after a change.  Enabling this is strongly
              advised! See vgcfgbackup(8) for more information.

       --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.

       -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
              Restricts the devices that are visible and accessible to the command.   Devices  not  listed  will
              appear  to  be missing. This option can be repeated, 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) devices/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.

       -l|--extents [+]Number[PERCENT]
              Specifies the new size of the LV in  logical  extents.   The  --size  and  --extents  options  are
              alternate  methods  of specifying size.  The total number of physical extents used will be greater
              when redundant data is needed for RAID  levels.   An  alternate  syntax  allows  the  size  to  be
              determined  indirectly  as a percentage of the size of a related VG, LV, or set of PVs. The suffix
              %VG denotes the total size of the VG, the suffix %FREE the remaining free space in the VG, and the
              suffix  %PVS  the free space in the specified PVs.  For a snapshot, the size can be expressed as a
              percentage of the total size of the origin LV with the suffix %ORIGIN (100%ORIGIN  provides  space
              for  the  whole  origin).  When expressed as a percentage, the size defines an upper limit for the
              number of logical extents in the new LV. The precise number of logical extents in the  new  LV  is
              not  determined  until  the command has completed.  When the plus + or minus - prefix is used, the
              value is not an absolute size, but is relative and added or subtracted from the current size.

       -f|--force ...
              Override various checks, confirmations and protections.  Use with extreme caution.

       --fs String
              Control file system resizing when resizing an LV.  checksize: Check the fs size and reduce the  LV
              if  the  fs is not using the reduced space (fs reduce is not needed.) If the reduced space is used
              by the fs, then do not resize the fs or LV, and return an error.   (checksize  only  applies  when
              reducing,  and  does nothing for extend.)  resize: Resize the fs by calling the fs-specific resize
              command.  This may also include mounting, unmounting, or running fsck.  See  --fsmode  to  control
              mounting  behavior,  and  --nofsck  to  disable fsck.  resize_fsadm: Use the old method of calling
              fsadm to handle the  fs  (deprecated.)  Warning:  this  option  does  not  prevent  lvreduce  from
              destroying  file  systems  that are unmounted (or mounted if prompts are skipped.)  ignore: Resize
              the LV without checking for or handling a file system.  Warning: using ignore when reducing the LV
              size may destroy the file system.

       --fsmode String
              Control file system mounting behavior for fs resize.  manage: Mount or unmount the fs as needed to
              resize the fs, and attempt to restore the original mount state at the end.  nochange: Do not mount
              or  unmount the fs. If mounting or unmounting is required to resize the fs, then do not resize the
              fs or the LV and fail the command.  offline: Unmount the fs if it is mounted, and  resize  the  fs
              while  it is unmounted. If mounting is required to resize the fs, then do not resize the fs or the
              LV and fail the command.

       -h|--help
              Display help text.

       --journal String
              Record information in the systemd journal.  This information 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.

       --longhelp
              Display long help text.

       -m|--mirrors Number
              Not used.

       -n|--nofsck
              Do not perform fsck when resizing the file system with --resizefs.

       --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. Use with caution, concurrent commands may produce incorrect results.

       --nosync
              Causes the creation of mirror, raid1, raid4, raid5 and raid10 to skip the initial synchronization.
              In  case  of  mirror,  raid1  and  raid10,  any  data written afterwards will be mirrored, but the
              original contents will not be copied. In case of  raid4  and  raid5,  no  parity  blocks  will  be
              written, though any data written afterwards will cause parity blocks to be stored.  This is useful
              for  skipping  a  potentially  long  and   resource   intensive   initial   sync   of   an   empty
              mirror/raid1/raid4/raid5  and raid10 LV.  This option is not valid for raid6, because raid6 relies
              on proper parity (P and Q Syndromes) being created during  initial  synchronization  in  order  to
              reconstruct  proper user date in case of device failures.  raid0 and raid0_meta do not provide any
              data copies or parity support and thus do not support initial synchronization.

       --noudevsync
              Disables udev synchronization. The process will not wait  for  notification  from  udev.  It  will
              continue  irrespective of any possible udev processing in the background. Only use this if udev is
              not running or has rules that ignore the devices LVM creates.

       --poolmetadatasize [+]Size[m|UNIT]
              Specifies the new size of the pool metadata LV.  The plus prefix + can be used, in which case  the
              value is added to the current size.

       --profile String
              An alias for --commandprofile or --metadataprofile, depending on the command.

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

       --reportformat basic|json|json_std
              Overrides current output format for reports which is defined 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 identification. json
              produces  report  output  in  JSON format. json_std produces report output in JSON format which is
              more compliant with JSON standard.  See lvmreport(7) for more information.

       -r|--resizefs
              Resize the fs using the fs-specific resize command.  May include mounting, unmounting, or  running
              fsck.  See  --fsmode to control mounting behavior, and --nofsck to disable fsck. See --fs for more
              options (--resizefs is equivalent to --fs resize.)

       -L|--size [+]Size[m|UNIT]
              Specifies the new size of the LV.  The --size and  --extents  options  are  alternate  methods  of
              specifying size.  The total number of physical extents used will be greater when redundant data is
              needed for RAID levels.  When the plus + or minus - prefix is used, the value is not  an  absolute
              size, but is relative and added or subtracted from the current size.

       -i|--stripes Number
              Specifies  the  number  of  stripes  in  a  striped LV. This is the number of PVs (devices) that a
              striped LV is spread across. Data that appears sequential in the  LV  is  spread  across  multiple
              devices  in  units  of the stripe size (see --stripesize). This does not change existing allocated
              space, but only applies to space being allocated by the command.  When creating a RAID  4/5/6  LV,
              this  number  does  not include the extra devices that are required for parity. The largest number
              depends on the RAID type (raid0: 64, raid10: 32, raid4/5: 63, raid6: 62),  and  when  unspecified,
              the default depends on the RAID type (raid0: 2, raid10: 2, raid4/5: 3, raid6: 5.)  To stripe a new
              raid LV across all PVs by default, see lvm.conf(5) allocation/raid_stripe_all_devices.

       -I|--stripesize Size[k|UNIT]
              The amount of data that is written to one device before moving to the next in a striped LV.

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

       --type linear|striped|snapshot|raid|mirror|thin|thin-pool|vdo|vdo-pool|cache|cache-pool|writecache
              The  LV  type, also known as "segment type" or "segtype".  See usage descriptions for the specific
              ways to use these types.  For more information about redundancy and performance (raid<N>,  mirror,
              striped,  linear)  see  lvmraid(7).   For thin provisioning (thin, thin-pool) see lvmthin(7).  For
              performance caching (cache, cache-pool) see lvmcache(7).  For copy-on-write  snapshots  (snapshot)
              see  usage  definitions.   For  VDO  (vdo)  see lvmvdo(7).  Several commands omit an explicit type
              option because the type is inferred from other options or shortcuts  (e.g.  --stripes,  --mirrors,
              --snapshot,  --virtualsize,  --thin, --cache, --vdo).  Use inferred types with care because it can
              lead to unexpected results.

       --usepolicies
              Perform an operation according to the policy configured in lvm.conf(5) or a profile.

       -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 automatic no, see -qq.)

VARIABLES

       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.  LV1 indicates the LV must have a specific type, where the accepted
              LV types are listed. (raid represents raid<N> type).

       PV     Physical Volume name, a device path under /dev.  For commands  managing  physical  extents,  a  PV
              positional  arg  generally  accepts  a  suffix indicating a range (or multiple ranges) of physical
              extents (PEs). When the first PE is omitted, it defaults to the start of the device, and when  the
              last  PE is omitted it defaults to end.  Start and end range (inclusive): PV[:PE-PE]...  Start and
              length range (counting from 0): PV[:PE+PE]...

       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, regardless of capitalization, e.g. 'k' and 'K' both refer to 1024.  The default input unit
              is specified by letter, followed 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 control --units, where  capital  letters
              mean multiple of 1000.)

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       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.

EXAMPLES

       Extend the size of an LV by 54MiB, using a specific PV.
       lvextend -L +54 vg01/lvol10 /dev/sdk3

       Extend the size of an LV by the amount of free space on PV /dev/sdk3. This is  equivalent  to  specifying
       "-l +100%PVS" on the command line.
       lvextend vg01/lvol01 /dev/sdk3

       Extend an LV by 16MiB using specific physical extents.
       lvextend -L+16m vg01/lvol01 /dev/sda:8-9 /dev/sdb:8-9

       Extend an LV to use all remaining free space in volume group and all resize its filesystem with fsadm(8).
       lvextend -l+100%FREE -r vg01/lvol01

SEE ALSO

       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)