# Provisioning with LVM

First off the drive should be partitioned, possibly with `fdisk` or `cfdisk`. It should have atleast two partitions with one `EFI System` Partition and one `Linux filesystem` partition.

It should look something like this:

| Number of partition | Size | Type |
|:-----:|:-----:|:-----:|
| 1     |  1 to 2 GB or more | EFI System        |
| 2     |  Rest of the drive | Linux filesystem  |

Then to create the filesystem of the efi partition.

```
# mkfs.fat -F 32 -n efi /dev/<disk1>
```

And the encrypted filesystem of the root partition.

```
# cryptsetup luksFormat /dev/<disk2> --type luks2 --label luks
# cryptsetup open --type luks /dev/<disk2> lv0
```

Now to create a new LVM volume group:

```
# vgcreate lv0 /dev/mapper/lv0
```

To create partitions inside the volume group:

```
# lvcreate --name root -L 64G lv0
# lvcreate --name home -l 100%FREE lv0
```

To create the filesystems on the logical partitions:

```
# mkfs.ext4 -L root /dev/mapper/lv0-root
# mkfs.ext4 -L home /dev/mapper/lv0-home
```

Other filesystems can also be used but `ext4` is the standard for most linux distrobutions. Other sizes for the partitions can also be used depending on the needs of the user.