That's what CLVM is for, it propagates the volume changes to every member of 
the 'cluster'.

David Martin

----- Original Message -----
> Am Monday 28 March 2011 schrieb David Martin:
> > ----- Original Message -----
> >
> > > On 3/28/11 2:46 PM, Avi Kivity wrote:
> > > > On 03/25/2011 10:26 PM, Marcin M. Jessa wrote:
> > > [...]
> > >
> > > > One LUN per image allows you to implement failover, LVM doesn't
> > > > (but
> > > > cluster-LVM does). I recommend using one LUN per image; it's
> > > > much
> > > > simpler.
> > >
> > > Some people say "Use one LUN, it's easier and use CLVM". Why is it
> > > easier to use CLVM and one LUN per virtual guest?
> >
> > I find it easier because i can do:
> > lvcreate -n vm1 --size 40G iscsi_vg
> > then virt-install or whatever
> > If I were using 1 lun per vm then I would have to provision the lun,
> > make
> > ALL hosts aware of the lun, and finally screw with the multipath
> > configs
> > etc.
> 
> Don't you have basically the same problem when using LVM in one LUN?
> You still
> have to make all the hosts aware of the new LV manually. I don't even
> know LVM
> even supports this, it wasn't exactly designed for a situation where
> multiple
> hosts might simultaneously read and write to a volume group, let alone
> create
> and destroy logical volumes while the VG is in use by any number of
> other
> hosts...
> 
> Guido
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