[Guide] Factory condition restoration / Downgrade to webOS 3.0.0

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Cyrus221

Member
Jun 13, 2010
20
0
How does this work for people who do not have "C:\Program Files\Palm, Inc\" ? I only have "C:\program files (x86)\palm\sdk [and pdk]" I'm not sure if it matters, but usually with these kinds of things it does. Also, I tried using webos doctor and it wouldn't even get past "charging the touchpad" even though it was 100% when I plugged it in and switched to usb mode. Anyways, I used this install method:

http://xdaforums.com/showthread.php?t=1305891

Additionally, I have no clue where the hell novacom installed to. It could be anywhere for all I know. I know it DOES work though since I had to use it to install CM7. Any suggestions?

Im using Win7 Ultimate x64 if you havent guessed xD Also on a december 2011 version of XRON if that matters.

sort of update: moving novacom and that uimage file into c\programfilesx86\palm\ and running the command prompt from there does absolutely nothing... I hit enter and nothing happens on either the TP or the prompt

edit 2: so I opened up a new command prompt without navigating anywhere and did novacom -l and it spit this out: "53043 13663ce79cd[edited out a bunch of numbers.. not sure if this is my serial haha]a6dd6a79d297 usb topaz-bootie" <--- wtf?
 
Last edited:

rr5678

Senior Member
Dec 25, 2009
1,836
231
How does this work for people who do not have "C:\Program Files\Palm, Inc\" ? I only have "C:\program files (x86)\palm\sdk [and pdk]" I'm not sure if it matters, but usually with these kinds of things it does. Also, I tried using webos doctor and it wouldn't even get past "charging the touchpad" even though it was 100% when I plugged it in and switched to usb mode. Anyways, I used this install method:

http://xdaforums.com/showthread.php?t=1305891

Additionally, I have no clue where the hell novacom installed to. It could be anywhere for all I know. I know it DOES work though since I had to use it to install CM7. Any suggestions?

Im using Win7 Ultimate x64 if you havent guessed xD Also on a december 2011 version of XRON if that matters.

sort of update: moving novacom and that uimage file into c\programfilesx86\palm\ and running the command prompt from there does absolutely nothing... I hit enter and nothing happens on either the TP or the prompt

edit 2: so I opened up a new command prompt without navigating anywhere and did novacom -l and it spit this out: "53043 13663ce79cd[edited out a bunch of numbers.. not sure if this is my serial haha]a6dd6a79d297 usb topaz-bootie" <--- wtf?
I see you've been dealing with a lot here :p

Does the prompt just freeze after you press enter for the command?
 

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Rolfsted

Senior Member
Sep 28, 2011
415
84
Illinois
Thanks for this thread. When I first got my 32gb TP I immediately wanted Android. Then I wanted to ad hoc tether it to my Droid. Well I messed with some wpa supplicant files and that was a mistake


Anyway, I used webOS doctor and got it back but noticed that there Android files still there.

All is well with Cherry kang running now but I could have bricked my pad the first week of owning it.

Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App
 

lotherius

Inactive Recognized Developer
Jan 12, 2009
2,178
612
Houston, TX
Google Pixel 6
I have a Touchpad that according to the serial # is a 32gb (and it is supposed to be a 32gb)... Out of the box, it showed up as a 16gb... so I sent it back to HP to fix. Just got it back, STILL shows 16gb.

So I tried this fix... it errors out trying to create the media partition for 32gb.... Now I'm looking at having to send it back to HP *AGAIN* and hope they pay attention to what the actual problem is this time.
 

rr5678

Senior Member
Dec 25, 2009
1,836
231
I have a Touchpad that according to the serial # is a 32gb (and it is supposed to be a 32gb)... Out of the box, it showed up as a 16gb... so I sent it back to HP to fix. Just got it back, STILL shows 16gb.

So I tried this fix... it errors out trying to create the media partition for 32gb.... Now I'm looking at having to send it back to HP *AGAIN* and hope they pay attention to what the actual problem is this time.

Try the 16GB partitioning. If it works, then you are the first case of getting a different motherboard.
 

lotherius

Inactive Recognized Developer
Jan 12, 2009
2,178
612
Houston, TX
Google Pixel 6
Try the 16GB partitioning. If it works, then you are the first case of getting a different motherboard.

16GB partitioning worked. On the phone with HP to send it back a second time.... Guy on the phone says there are 2 possible problems that cause this, one software and one hardware. Guess I got the hardware problem.

EDIT: HP guy told me it isn't fixable and is sending an advanced exchange and waiving the advanced exchange fee.... so we'll see how well the replacement fares.
 
Last edited:

rasit_aksu

Senior Member
May 4, 2011
92
5
Kocaeli
Thank you very much. the hands of health.

---------- Post added at 05:50 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:48 PM ----------

My device is collapsed. I applied and was written on.
 

Xarick

Member
Feb 3, 2012
22
0
Wow. I was told advanced replacement was no longer an option and got sent a box instead. That really pisses me off.
 

Xarick

Member
Feb 3, 2012
22
0
Im actually wondering if it is because it is a hardware issue they know is not repairable and would just end up sending you a new one anyway. This spares their repair department.
 

scariola

Senior Member
Nov 15, 2009
1,244
454
Sandy Eggo, CA
I didn't even ask for it. Maybe it was because it was a second exchange for the same issue?

More then likely, I sent mine in for the screen lifting out and crack at usb port.

Asked about advance exchange, they said $60 would be charged with no refund, so I let them take their 2 weeks, got it back working great.

Sent from my HTC EVO 3D X515m using Tapatalk
 

lotherius

Inactive Recognized Developer
Jan 12, 2009
2,178
612
Houston, TX
Google Pixel 6
Im actually wondering if it is because it is a hardware issue they know is not repairable and would just end up sending you a new one anyway. This spares their repair department.

Yeah.... if it had been flashed incorrectly, then this procedure in this thread shouldn't have errored out. It's clearly a 16gb chip, any attempt to create a larger partition failed. Probably had the wrong serial # coded at the factory... they could easily re-serial it as a 16gb and have no problem, but "fixing" it as a 32gb isn't going to happen.
 

jlpek17

Member
Sep 29, 2008
11
0
Hi,

Does someone know how many free space on the 32GB after doing that and install 3.0.5 update ?

Thanks.
 

worm9110

Senior Member
Apr 28, 2009
111
11
Can someone provide link to nova-installer-image-topaz.uImage file. The original link is no longer valid.

UPDATE: Nevermind found it.
 
Last edited:

byt3b0mb

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2009
581
136
Seattle
phone disconnected

for some reason, when i try to run webos doctor 3.0.0 it says the device is disconnected, despite having over 25% power.

any thoughts?

____


got it to work - had to plug in until it showed the recovery logo (usb) then on my computer i loaded up webosdoctor and got to the point where it asks for the device to be connected, and then switched the TP from wall outlet to usb port and pressed next. finished doctoring as expected. thanks for the tutorial.
 
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HansTWN

Senior Member
Oct 22, 2007
153
3
Taichung, Taiwan
I have a 64 GB Touchpad. What would be the right value to replace 3532 for the command

"lvm.static lvcreate -l 3523 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 6 -n media store"

be? As far as I can see this is the only command that is different between the versions? This is the one that wipes the existing partitions and creates a new one?
 

rr5678

Senior Member
Dec 25, 2009
1,836
231
I have a 64 GB Touchpad. What would be the right value to replace 3532 for the command

"lvm.static lvcreate -l 3523 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 6 -n media store"

be? As far as I can see this is the only command that is different between the versions? This is the one that wipes the existing partitions and creates a new one?
Did you erase the partitions yet? I've never encountered a 64GB TouchPad before.
 

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    This is for all those people who want to start over. I made the mistake of using webOS Doctor without removing the Android and Linux partitions. That left me with a deer turd for an HP TouchPad. So after about 2 hours of slaving, I figured out what to do

    I. What you need
    Novacom - Click
    Novaterm - Click (or found in C:\Program Files\Palm, Inc\terminal. Run novaterm.bat)
    Recovery uImage - Click
    WebOS Doctor 3.0.0 - Click
    WebOS Doctor 3.0.4 (optional) - Click

    II. What to do
    1) Install Novacom and extract Novaterm.

    2) Open a command prompt and navigate to your Palm, Inc folder (usually \Program Files\Palm, Inc)

    3) Move the recovery uImage to the Palm, Inc folder.

    4) Boot your Touchpad into recovery (Power + Volume Up from power off)

    5) In that command prompt, run ( novacom boot mem:// < nova-installer-image-topaz.uImage ) (without the parenthesis)

    6) Once run, all you'll see on the Touchpad is the HP logo. This is good. Now open Novaterm and hit Connect

    7) If you see a prompt that says something like "root@webOS device" this is good, now run these commands IN ORDER and these commands are CASE SENSITIVE

    (For 32GB Touchpads only)

    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgremove store
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgcreate -s 8M store /dev/mmcblk0p14
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 71 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 0 -n root store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 8 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 1 -n var store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 2 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 2 -n update store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 3 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 3 -n log store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 32 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 4 -n mojodb store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 17 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 5 -n filecache store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 3523 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 6 -n media store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 64 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 7 -n swap store
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    mkdosfs -f 1 -s 64 /dev/store/media

    (16GB Touchpads)
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgremove store
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgcreate -s 8M store /dev/mmcblk0p14
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 71 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 0 -n root store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 8 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 1 -n var store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 2 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 2 -n update store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 3 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 3 -n log store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 32 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 4 -n mojodb store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 17 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 5 -n filecache store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 1618 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 6 -n media store
    lvm.static lvcreate -l 64 -i 1 -M y --major 254 --minor 7 -n swap store
    lvm.static vgscan --ignorelockingfailure
    lvm.static vgchange -ay --ignorelockingfailure
    mkdosfs -f 1 -s 64 /dev/store/media

    8) When done, reboot the Touchpad into recovery (Power + Center/Home until screen off, then Power + Volume Up)

    9) Run webOS Doctor 3.0.0 (This is to ensure a repartitioning and no other version will work at this point :p)

    Branch 1) You can stop here to have 3.0.0 as your webOS version. You've just completed a downgrade that was before thought impossible.

    Branch 2) If you want webOS 3.0.4, continue on.

    10) When webOS Doctor is complete, hold down Power and Center, and when the screen turns off, immediately hold Power and Volume Up.

    11) You'll see the USB icon again, just run webOS Doctor 3.0.4 and you're done.

    Have fun.

    _____________________________

    For those having problems with novaterm:
    I had the same problem with the downloaded novaterm on three different win7x64 machines. If you've run WebOS Doctor at all you should have a Palm, Inc/terminal/ folder with a novaterm.bat in it. Try using that instead.

    For those having problems with Java:
    got it working by adding the path to java.
    set PATH =%PATH%;c:\program files (x86)\java\jre6\bin.
    7
    This information should be added to the OP as I was going through hell trying to get novaterm to work. I tried every pointer I could find but no matter what I did, any key I pressed on the keyboard would bring this error up "arithmetic overflow error." Then I finally found something that worked, if anything I think the novaterm step should be removed and just put this down as this seems to for sure work.

    After doing the novacom mem...... command
    Type novacom -t open tty://
    You will stay in the command prompt but will now see the root terminal line for the Touchpad, and you can continue typing the rest of the commands in to reset it. This worked perfectly for me, in case anyone was running into a similar problem to me.

    Thanks for the detailed instructions though OP, I've been really wanting to fully restore my TP and start from scratch, it's gotten quite cluttered over the time I've had it and it's been bugging me.

    P.S. - I didn't stop to think whether the OP instructions would work with the method I used, since they only have you install novacom and novaterm, so I'm guessing that the TTY option may not work. Well if that is the case, then just install the latest Java Development Kit for your version of Windows, as well as the latest HP webOS SDK/PDK for your version of Windows, which can both be found easily by searching for the corresponding website. Hopefully this helps someone.
    6
    Read-only flash / unable to delete 'store'

    Hey all, new here. Apologies ahead of time for the length, but I hope it will end up being worth it for some of you. I actually don't have a problem myself, but was doing some research about the various ways TouchPads have been (and thus could still possibly be) bricked, and what known-working fixes existed for those scenarios. I intend to start playing around with other OSes on my TouchPad and want to make sure I don't do anything stupid; if I know what can brick a TP, then perhaps I can make sure to avoid doing those things.

    From what I can tell, between jcsullins' TPDebrick (for Qualcomm Downloader Mode problem) and this thread (complete NAND wipe and repartition), it seems almost impossible to permanently brick a TouchPad, which is impressive.

    "Almost," though, being the key word. There are a troubling number of people in this thread and elsewhere (both here on XDA and other forums) whose TouchPad NANDs have become stuck in some sort of permanent read-only mode, where no writes to flash that they do actually stick. It's system-wide, too, not just in one OS. This is what is preventing people from completing the steps listed in the OP of this thread: they can't wipe the logical volumes on the flash because they can't write to the flash. And as far as I have been able to tell, nobody has found a fix yet, so the only way people who have had their TouchPads afflicted by this malady have gotten past this is if HP replaces their TouchPad for them. That's kinda scary. What's even more scary is that it seems like every story about a TouchPad stuck in read-only mode corresponds to an attempt at an Android install; I've not found anybody who only uses WebOS who has also suffered from this, which suggests that somehow some component of the Android port might be causing this.

    One thread that I ran into, though, got my wheels turning, because it included a link to the datasheet for the SanDisk flash chip that is in the TouchPad (unfortunately, I cannot include the URL and properly give attribution to the author because this forum won't let me as a n00b include outside links; if you want it, PM me). It's called an iNAND (that's the trademark name), and it is an eMMC chip, which means it is not just a flash chip, but a flash chip with a built-in flash controller that essentially presents itself to the OS the way an SD card controller/slot would: the OS thinks it's talking to an SD/MMC card!

    There seems to be a misconception both in the post I linked to as well as by people who have composed other posts that the flash chip in the TouchPad has failed in some way when this happens, and that either the chip simply broke in such a way that you can no longer write to it, or it has gone into a perpetual read-only mode as a fallback/"safe-mode" measure in response to some other failure or corruption. But if you read the datasheet, it's pretty clear at least that the chip is not designed to fall back to a read-only mode in response to corruption or breakage elsewhere. In section 2.9 (p. 11), "Enhanced Write Protection", it explains that the entire flash chip can be purposefully write-protected by changing some flags in the CSD ("Card Specific Data") register.

    The CSD register is further laid out in detail on section 4.3.4 (p. 21), where it is revealed to be a 128-bit-wide register consisting mostly (as I found out by reading another document -- page 86 of the "SD Specifications, Part 1, Physical Layer Simplified Specification, Version 2.00", which again I am not allowed to link to...thank XDA) of read-only values and a couple of changeable values. Two of the changeable ones are bits 12 (TMP_WRITE_PROTECT) and 13 (PERM_WRITE_PROTECT). If either of these bits are set to '1', the entire flash chip is write-protected. But there is an important difference between the two bits: the former can be set and unset at-will (and the setting survives loss of power). The latter, once set, can NEVER be undone and will write-protect the chip permanently!

    I suspect that those of you with TouchPads that will no longer accept writes made to the NAND have had one (or both) of those bits in the CSD of the SanDisk eMMC toggled to be 'on' (1) somehow. How, I know not. Perhaps there is a bug in the 2.6.35 kernel SD/MMC driver, or perhaps there is a bug in ClockworkMod for the TouchPad, or perhaps there is a bizarre bug in moboot itself. Or maybe there *is* an engineering defect in these iNAND chips that causes these bits to flip themselves under certain rare (or perhaps not-so-rare) conditions. I dunno. But if we are lucky, then only TMP_WRITE_PROTECT is getting set, which is something that theoretically CAN be undone.

    There is a way to read the CSD from the command shell via sysfs, so if you can boot up your device and get to a shell somehow, we can try to check this. If this theory turns out to be correct, then we can perhaps try to work on a way to unset TMP_WRITE_PROTECT (or at least confirm that PERM_WRITE_PROTECT was set and so know with certainty that nothing more can be done). Execute this command:

    Code:
    cat /sys/class/mmc_host/mmc0/mmc0:0001/csd
    You should see a 32-digit-long (16-byte/128-bit) hexadecimal number when you do this; this is the contents of the CSD register. My TouchPad's eMMC's CSD register, for example, looks like this (16GB TouchPad):

    Code:
    d00f00320f5903ffffffffff92404010
    The part we are interested in is the 4th digit from the right; as you can see in my case, the last 4 digits are 4010, and the 4 is the digit of import. 4 is in fact what we want to see here. If TMP_WRITE_PROTECT is set, this will be a 5 instead of a 4. If PERM_WRITE_PROTECT is set, it will be a 6. If both TMP_WRITE_PROTECT and PERM_WRITE_PROTECT are set, it will be a 7. Given what the MMC CSD spec states, it is unlikely for that number to be anything other than something between 4 and 7 (bit 14, the Copy bit, is almost always set to 1 from the factory and is unchangeable once set to 1, and bit 15 will always be 0).

    So those of you with still-bricked read-only TouchPads, if you could run this test and report back with the contents of your CSD, I suspect the results would be very educational!

    -- Nathan
    2
    Sure.

    Here you have :

    Code:
    lvm.static lvdisplay
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/root
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                Aq5Mpj-p1ou-AMwd-j0YJ-1ytK-nHVn-NlOGUR
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                568.00 MB
      Current LE             71
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       0
      Block device           254:0
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/var
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                1OQAZu-Zx0P-fK6M-xdYj-8T0z-CoDw-2pwy00
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                64.00 MB
      Current LE             8
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       1
      Block device           254:1
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/update
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                9Cpv99-Al2S-eCWp-ioAi-AGMS-T10i-qba3pn
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 0
      LV Size                16.00 MB
      Current LE             2
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       2
      Block device           254:2
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/log
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                jaNcqX-uRU7-uwWi-yvZE-KHiN-K5RX-mh3jkJ
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                24.00 MB
      Current LE             3
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       3
      Block device           254:3
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/mojodb
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                7nT2OX-nlbV-U6HQ-UrVi-Pja6-nDwP-BpHsTR
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                256.00 MB
      Current LE             32
      Segments               2
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       4
      Block device           254:4
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/filecache
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                oH0jt0-AcIO-pFTF-3wD7-cYC2-W88I-H0UqPj
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                136.00 MB
      Current LE             17
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       5
      Block device           254:5
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/media
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                NWNspe-aKe5-glCM-c0mb-15sM-32Mu-64e8jx
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                12.64 GB
      Current LE             1618
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       6
      Block device           254:6
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/swap
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                TOq7Y8-2XCB-diKE-3D7s-3pIp-Ksbl-4LbZP0
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                512.00 MB
      Current LE             64
      Segments               2
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       7
      Block device           254:7
    2
    Sure.

    Here you have :

    Code:
    lvm.static lvdisplay
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/root
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                Aq5Mpj-p1ou-AMwd-j0YJ-1ytK-nHVn-NlOGUR
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                568.00 MB
      Current LE             71
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       0
      Block device           254:0
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/var
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                1OQAZu-Zx0P-fK6M-xdYj-8T0z-CoDw-2pwy00
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                64.00 MB
      Current LE             8
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       1
      Block device           254:1
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/update
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                9Cpv99-Al2S-eCWp-ioAi-AGMS-T10i-qba3pn
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 0
      LV Size                16.00 MB
      Current LE             2
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       2
      Block device           254:2
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/log
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                jaNcqX-uRU7-uwWi-yvZE-KHiN-K5RX-mh3jkJ
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                24.00 MB
      Current LE             3
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       3
      Block device           254:3
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/mojodb
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                7nT2OX-nlbV-U6HQ-UrVi-Pja6-nDwP-BpHsTR
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                256.00 MB
      Current LE             32
      Segments               2
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       4
      Block device           254:4
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/filecache
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                oH0jt0-AcIO-pFTF-3wD7-cYC2-W88I-H0UqPj
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                136.00 MB
      Current LE             17
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       5
      Block device           254:5
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/media
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                NWNspe-aKe5-glCM-c0mb-15sM-32Mu-64e8jx
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                12.64 GB
      Current LE             1618
      Segments               1
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       6
      Block device           254:6
    
      --- Logical volume ---
      LV Name                /dev/store/swap
      VG Name                store
      LV UUID                TOq7Y8-2XCB-diKE-3D7s-3pIp-Ksbl-4LbZP0
      LV Write Access        read/write
      LV Status              available
      # open                 1
      LV Size                512.00 MB
      Current LE             64
      Segments               2
      Allocation             inherit
      Read ahead sectors     auto
      - currently set to     256
      Persistent major       254
      Persistent minor       7
      Block device           254:7

    Thank you. I was able to make the correct commands for 16GB Touchpads.