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 lsacl(1) -- list access control lists (ACLs) of files
    lsacl lists access control lists (ACLs) of one or more files in symbolic, ``short'' form, one file's ACL per line of output, followed by the file name; see acl(5) for ACL syntax.
 lsdev(1m) -- list device drivers in the system
    The lsdev command lists, one pair per line, the major device numbers and driver names of device drivers configured into the system and available for invocation via special files. A -1 in either the block or character column means that a major number does not exist for that type. If no arguments are specified, lsdev lists all drivers configured into the system. If the -h option is specified, lsdev ...
 lsf(1) -- list contents of directories
    For each directory argument, the ls command lists the contents of the directory. For each file argument, ls repeats its name and any other information requested. The output is sorted in ascending collation order by default (see Environment Variables below). When no argument is given, the current directory is listed. When several arguments are given, the arguments are first sorted appropriately, bu...
 lsr(1) -- list contents of directories
    For each directory argument, the ls command lists the contents of the directory. For each file argument, ls repeats its name and any other information requested. The output is sorted in ascending collation order by default (see Environment Variables below). When no argument is given, the current directory is listed. When several arguments are given, the arguments are first sorted appropriately, bu...
 lssf(1m) -- list a special file
    lssf lists information about a special file. For each special_file name, lssf determines the major number of the special file and whether it is block or character (using stat(2)). It then scans the system for the device that is associated with the special file. When the device is found, the minor number of the special file is decoded. A mnemonic description of the minor number is printed on standa...
 lsx(1) -- list contents of directories
    For each directory argument, the ls command lists the contents of the directory. For each file argument, ls repeats its name and any other information requested. The output is sorted in ascending collation order by default (see Environment Variables below). When no argument is given, the current directory is listed. When several arguments are given, the arguments are first sorted appropriately, bu...
 lvchange(1m) -- change LVM logical volume characteristics
    The lvchange command changes certain characteristics of a logical volume. Other characteristics can be changed with the lvextend and lvreduce commands (see lvextend(1M) and lvreduce(1M)). The command-line options specify the type and extent of change. Each current characteristic for a logical volume remains in effect until explicitly changed by the corresponding option. All options take effect imm...
 lvcreate(1m) -- create logical volume in LVM volume group
    The lvcreate command creates a new logical volume within the volume group specified by vg_name. Up to 255 logical volumes can be created in one volume group. If you specify the -n lv_name option, a new logical volume is created with that name. Otherwise, a system-generated name of the form lvolN is created, where N is created, where N is the decimal equivalent of the two least significant bytes of...
 lvdisplay(1m) -- display information about LVM logical volumes
    The lvdisplay command displays the characteristics and status of each logical volume specified by lv_path.
 lvextend(1m) -- increase space, increase mirrors for LVM logical volume
    The lvextend command can increase a logical volume's allocated extents, or increase its number of mirrored copies. Other logical volume characteristics can be modified with the lvchange and lvreduce commands (see lvchang ). To limit the allocation to specific physical volumes, specify the physical volume names as pv_path arguments or specify the physical volume group names as pvg_name arguments. ...
 lvlnboot(1m) -- prepare LVM logical volume to be root, boot, primary swap, or dump volume
    The lvlnboot command updates all physical volumes in the volume group so that the logical volume becomes the root, boot, primary swap, or a dump volume when the system is next booted on the volume group. If a nonexistent logical volume is specified, this command fails. If a different logical volume is already linked to the root or primary swap, the command fails. This command should be run in reco...
 lvmerge(1m) -- merge two LVM logical volumes into one logical volume
    The lvmerge command merges two logical volumes of the same size. The number of mirrored copies of the dest_lv_path is increased by the number of copies in the src_lv_path. Data previously contained in the dest_lv_path is resynchronized using the data in the src_lv_path. All new data on the dest_lv_path is destroyed. Whenever a mirrored logical volume is split into two logical volumes, a bit map is...
 lvmmigrate(1m) -- prepare root file system for migration from partitions to LVM logical volumes
    The lvmmigrate command records the configuration information of the current system in the LIF volume of the boot section for use with a subsequent cold-install process. If there is no LIF volume on the disk, lvmmigrate creates it using lifinit(1), then records the information in a LIF file named CUSTOM. A copy of the LIF file is saved as /tmp/LVMMIGRATE.CFG. The information is also written to file...
 lvreduce(1m) -- decrease space allocation or the number of mirror copies of logical volumes
    The lvreduce command reduces the number of logical extents allocated to a logical volume specified by lv_path. The excess physical extents in the logical volume and any mirror copies are deallocated. Alternatively, it reduces the number of mirror copies in the logical volume. The physical extents that comprise the deleted mirror copy or copies are deallocated. If pv_path ... is specified, the mirr...
 lvremove(1m) -- remove one or more logical volumes from LVM volume group
    The lvremove command removes each logical volume specified by lv_path .... Logical volumes must be closed before they can be removed. For example, if the logical volume contains a file system, unmount the file system before removing it.
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