Hi, Drop me an email; there are other ways to perform this without "destroying" the old snapshot. Regards Tomas Den tors 3 jan. 2019 kl 10:29 skrev Davis, Matthew < Matthew.Davis.2@team.telstra.com>: > Hi, > > I want to restore a snapshot without deleting the snapshot. > > My use case is that I'm experimenting with a lot of different drivers, > kernel modules, and file modifications all over my machine. > I want to > 1. take a snapshot of the working system > 2. make changes > 3. restore the snapshot (` sudo lvconvert --merge > /dev/ubuntu-vg/$SNAPSHOT` then reboot) > 4. make new changes > 5. restore to the snapshot again > > The problem is that step 3 deletes the snapshot, so step 5 fails. > > My current workaround is: > 1. take a snapshot of the working system > 2. make changes > 3. restore the snapshot (` sudo lvconvert --merge > /dev/ubuntu-vg/$SNAPSHOT` then reboot) > 4. Wait 1.5 hours, without making any changes to the machine > 5. Take a new snapshot, with the same name as the original > 6. make new changes > 7. restore to the snapshot > > This is not great because: > * I sometimes forget to do step 5 > * I can't take a snapshot of the volume while it is still merging. This > takes 1.5 hours. I want to be able to restore my snapshots multiple times > per day > > > Is there a flag I can add to `lvconvert` to make it not delete the > snapshot? > Alternatively, is there a way I can make a copy of the snapshot before I > restore it? > > It looks like someone else asked this question 10 years ago. > https://www.redhat.com/archives/linux-lvm/2008-November/msg00000.html > Has this problem been solved since then? > > Thanks, > Matt Davis > > Technical Specialist > Telstra | Product Strategy & Innovation - Telstra Labs | Programmable > Infrastructure > E Matthew.Davis.2@team.telstra.com > > > > _______________________________________________ > linux-lvm mailing list > linux-lvm@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm > read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/ >