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1.\" -*- nroff -*-
2.\" Copyright Neil Brown and others.
3.\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
4.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5.\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
6.\" (at your option) any later version.
7.\" See file COPYING in distribution for details.
8.TH MDADM 8 "" v3.2.5
9.SH NAME
10mdadm \- manage MD devices
11.I aka
12Linux Software RAID
13
14.SH SYNOPSIS
15
16.BI mdadm " [mode] <raiddevice> [options] <component-devices>"
17
18.SH DESCRIPTION
19RAID devices are virtual devices created from two or more
20real block devices. This allows multiple devices (typically disk
21drives or partitions thereof) to be combined into a single device to
22hold (for example) a single filesystem.
23Some RAID levels include redundancy and so can survive some degree of
24device failure.
25
26Linux Software RAID devices are implemented through the md (Multiple
27Devices) device driver.
28
29Currently, Linux supports
30.B LINEAR
31md devices,
32.B RAID0
33(striping),
34.B RAID1
35(mirroring),
36.BR RAID4 ,
37.BR RAID5 ,
38.BR RAID6 ,
39.BR RAID10 ,
40.BR MULTIPATH ,
41.BR FAULTY ,
42and
43.BR CONTAINER .
44
45.B MULTIPATH
46is not a Software RAID mechanism, but does involve
47multiple devices:
48each device is a path to one common physical storage device.
49New installations should not use md/multipath as it is not well
50supported and has no ongoing development. Use the Device Mapper based
51multipath-tools instead.
52
53.B FAULTY
54is also not true RAID, and it only involves one device. It
55provides a layer over a true device that can be used to inject faults.
56
57.B CONTAINER
58is different again. A
59.B CONTAINER
60is a collection of devices that are
61managed as a set. This is similar to the set of devices connected to
62a hardware RAID controller. The set of devices may contain a number
63of different RAID arrays each utilising some (or all) of the blocks from a
64number of the devices in the set. For example, two devices in a 5-device set
65might form a RAID1 using the whole devices. The remaining three might
66have a RAID5 over the first half of each device, and a RAID0 over the
67second half.
68
69With a
70.BR CONTAINER ,
71there is one set of metadata that describes all of
72the arrays in the container. So when
73.I mdadm
74creates a
75.B CONTAINER
76device, the device just represents the metadata. Other normal arrays (RAID1
77etc) can be created inside the container.
78
79.SH MODES
80mdadm has several major modes of operation:
81.TP
82.B Assemble
83Assemble the components of a previously created
84array into an active array. Components can be explicitly given
85or can be searched for.
86.I mdadm
87checks that the components
88do form a bona fide array, and can, on request, fiddle superblock
89information so as to assemble a faulty array.
90
91.TP
92.B Build
93Build an array that doesn't have per-device metadata (superblocks). For these
94sorts of arrays,
95.I mdadm
96cannot differentiate between initial creation and subsequent assembly
97of an array. It also cannot perform any checks that appropriate
98components have been requested. Because of this, the
99.B Build
100mode should only be used together with a complete understanding of
101what you are doing.
102
103.TP
104.B Create
105Create a new array with per-device metadata (superblocks).
106Appropriate metadata is written to each device, and then the array
107comprising those devices is activated. A 'resync' process is started
108to make sure that the array is consistent (e.g. both sides of a mirror
109contain the same data) but the content of the device is left otherwise
110untouched.
111The array can be used as soon as it has been created. There is no
112need to wait for the initial resync to finish.
113
114.TP
115.B "Follow or Monitor"
116Monitor one or more md devices and act on any state changes. This is
117only meaningful for RAID1, 4, 5, 6, 10 or multipath arrays, as
118only these have interesting state. RAID0 or Linear never have
119missing, spare, or failed drives, so there is nothing to monitor.
120
121.TP
122.B "Grow"
123Grow (or shrink) an array, or otherwise reshape it in some way.
124Currently supported growth options including changing the active size
125of component devices and changing the number of active devices in
126Linear and RAID levels 0/1/4/5/6,
127changing the RAID level between 0, 1, 5, and 6, and between 0 and 10,
128changing the chunk size and layout for RAID 0,4,5,6, as well as adding or
129removing a write-intent bitmap.
130
131.TP
132.B "Incremental Assembly"
133Add a single device to an appropriate array. If the addition of the
134device makes the array runnable, the array will be started.
135This provides a convenient interface to a
136.I hot-plug
137system. As each device is detected,
138.I mdadm
139has a chance to include it in some array as appropriate.
140Optionally, when the
141.I \-\-fail
142flag is passed in we will remove the device from any active array
143instead of adding it.
144
145If a
146.B CONTAINER
147is passed to
148.I mdadm
149in this mode, then any arrays within that container will be assembled
150and started.
151
152.TP
153.B Manage
154This is for doing things to specific components of an array such as
155adding new spares and removing faulty devices.
156
157.TP
158.B Misc
159This is an 'everything else' mode that supports operations on active
160arrays, operations on component devices such as erasing old superblocks, and
161information gathering operations.
162.\"This mode allows operations on independent devices such as examine MD
163.\"superblocks, erasing old superblocks and stopping active arrays.
164
165.TP
166.B Auto-detect
167This mode does not act on a specific device or array, but rather it
168requests the Linux Kernel to activate any auto-detected arrays.
169.SH OPTIONS
170
171.SH Options for selecting a mode are:
172
173.TP
174.BR \-A ", " \-\-assemble
175Assemble a pre-existing array.
176
177.TP
178.BR \-B ", " \-\-build
179Build a legacy array without superblocks.
180
181.TP
182.BR \-C ", " \-\-create
183Create a new array.
184
185.TP
186.BR \-F ", " \-\-follow ", " \-\-monitor
187Select
188.B Monitor
189mode.
190
191.TP
192.BR \-G ", " \-\-grow
193Change the size or shape of an active array.
194
195.TP
196.BR \-I ", " \-\-incremental
197Add/remove a single device to/from an appropriate array, and possibly start the array.
198
199.TP
200.B \-\-auto-detect
201Request that the kernel starts any auto-detected arrays. This can only
202work if
203.I md
204is compiled into the kernel \(em not if it is a module.
205Arrays can be auto-detected by the kernel if all the components are in
206primary MS-DOS partitions with partition type
207.BR FD ,
208and all use v0.90 metadata.
209In-kernel autodetect is not recommended for new installations. Using
210.I mdadm
211to detect and assemble arrays \(em possibly in an
212.I initrd
213\(em is substantially more flexible and should be preferred.
214
215.P
216If a device is given before any options, or if the first option is
217.BR \-\-add ,
218.BR \-\-fail ,
219.BR \-\-remove ,
220or
221.BR \-\-replace ,
222then the MANAGE mode is assumed.
223Anything other than these will cause the
224.B Misc
225mode to be assumed.
226
227.SH Options that are not mode-specific are:
228
229.TP
230.BR \-h ", " \-\-help
231Display general help message or, after one of the above options, a
232mode-specific help message.
233
234.TP
235.B \-\-help\-options
236Display more detailed help about command line parsing and some commonly
237used options.
238
239.TP
240.BR \-V ", " \-\-version
241Print version information for mdadm.
242
243.TP
244.BR \-v ", " \-\-verbose
245Be more verbose about what is happening. This can be used twice to be
246extra-verbose.
247The extra verbosity currently only affects
248.B \-\-detail \-\-scan
249and
250.BR "\-\-examine \-\-scan" .
251
252.TP
253.BR \-q ", " \-\-quiet
254Avoid printing purely informative messages. With this,
255.I mdadm
256will be silent unless there is something really important to report.
257
258
259.TP
260.BR \-f ", " \-\-force
261Be more forceful about certain operations. See the various modes for
262the exact meaning of this option in different contexts.
263
264.TP
265.BR \-c ", " \-\-config=
266Specify the config file. Default is to use
267.BR /etc/mdadm.conf ,
268or if that is missing then
269.BR /etc/mdadm/mdadm.conf .
270If the config file given is
271.B "partitions"
272then nothing will be read, but
273.I mdadm
274will act as though the config file contained exactly
275.B "DEVICE partitions containers"
276and will read
277.B /proc/partitions
278to find a list of devices to scan, and
279.B /proc/mdstat
280to find a list of containers to examine.
281If the word
282.B "none"
283is given for the config file, then
284.I mdadm
285will act as though the config file were empty.
286
287.TP
288.BR \-s ", " \-\-scan
289Scan config file or
290.B /proc/mdstat
291for missing information.
292In general, this option gives
293.I mdadm
294permission to get any missing information (like component devices,
295array devices, array identities, and alert destination) from the
296configuration file (see previous option);
297one exception is MISC mode when using
298.B \-\-detail
299or
300.B \-\-stop,
301in which case
302.B \-\-scan
303says to get a list of array devices from
304.BR /proc/mdstat .
305
306.TP
307.BR \-e ", " \-\-metadata=
308Declare the style of RAID metadata (superblock) to be used. The
309default is {DEFAULT_METADATA} for
310.BR \-\-create ,
311and to guess for other operations.
312The default can be overridden by setting the
313.B metadata
314value for the
315.B CREATE
316keyword in
317.BR mdadm.conf .
318
319Options are:
320.RS
321.ie '{DEFAULT_METADATA}'0.90'
322.IP "0, 0.90, default"
323.el
324.IP "0, 0.90"
325Use the original 0.90 format superblock. This format limits arrays to
32628 component devices and limits component devices of levels 1 and
327greater to 2 terabytes. It is also possible for there to be confusion
328about whether the superblock applies to a whole device or just the
329last partition, if that partition starts on a 64K boundary.
330.ie '{DEFAULT_METADATA}'0.90'
331.IP "1, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2"
332.el
333.IP "1, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2 default"
334Use the new version-1 format superblock. This has fewer restrictions.
335It can easily be moved between hosts with different endian-ness, and a
336recovery operation can be checkpointed and restarted. The different
337sub-versions store the superblock at different locations on the
338device, either at the end (for 1.0), at the start (for 1.1) or 4K from
339the start (for 1.2). "1" is equivalent to "1.2" (the commonly
340preferred 1.x format).
341'if '{DEFAULT_METADATA}'1.2' "default" is equivalent to "1.2".
342.IP ddf
343Use the "Industry Standard" DDF (Disk Data Format) format defined by
344SNIA.
345When creating a DDF array a
346.B CONTAINER
347will be created, and normal arrays can be created in that container.
348.IP imsm
349Use the Intel(R) Matrix Storage Manager metadata format. This creates a
350.B CONTAINER
351which is managed in a similar manner to DDF, and is supported by an
352option-rom on some platforms:
353.IP
354.B http://www.intel.com/design/chipsets/matrixstorage_sb.htm
355.PP
356.RE
357
358.TP
359.B \-\-homehost=
360This will override any
361.B HOMEHOST
362setting in the config file and provides the identity of the host which
363should be considered the home for any arrays.
364
365When creating an array, the
366.B homehost
367will be recorded in the metadata. For version-1 superblocks, it will
368be prefixed to the array name. For version-0.90 superblocks, part of
369the SHA1 hash of the hostname will be stored in the later half of the
370UUID.
371
372When reporting information about an array, any array which is tagged
373for the given homehost will be reported as such.
374
375When using Auto-Assemble, only arrays tagged for the given homehost
376will be allowed to use 'local' names (i.e. not ending in '_' followed
377by a digit string). See below under
378.BR "Auto Assembly" .
379
380.TP
381.B \-\-prefer=
382When
383.I mdadm
384needs to print the name for a device it normally finds the name in
385.B /dev
386which refers to the device and is shortest. When a path component is
387given with
388.B \-\-prefer
389.I mdadm
390will prefer a longer name if it contains that component. For example
391.B \-\-prefer=by-uuid
392will prefer a name in a subdirectory of
393.B /dev
394called
395.BR by-uuid .
396
397This functionality is currently only provided by
398.B \-\-detail
399and
400.BR \-\-monitor .
401
402.SH For create, build, or grow:
403
404.TP
405.BR \-n ", " \-\-raid\-devices=
406Specify the number of active devices in the array. This, plus the
407number of spare devices (see below) must equal the number of
408.I component-devices
409(including "\fBmissing\fP" devices)
410that are listed on the command line for
411.BR \-\-create .
412Setting a value of 1 is probably
413a mistake and so requires that
414.B \-\-force
415be specified first. A value of 1 will then be allowed for linear,
416multipath, RAID0 and RAID1. It is never allowed for RAID4, RAID5 or RAID6.
417.br
418This number can only be changed using
419.B \-\-grow
420for RAID1, RAID4, RAID5 and RAID6 arrays, and only on kernels which provide
421the necessary support.
422
423.TP
424.BR \-x ", " \-\-spare\-devices=
425Specify the number of spare (eXtra) devices in the initial array.
426Spares can also be added
427and removed later. The number of component devices listed
428on the command line must equal the number of RAID devices plus the
429number of spare devices.
430
431.TP
432.BR \-z ", " \-\-size=
433Amount (in Kibibytes) of space to use from each drive in RAID levels 1/4/5/6.
434This must be a multiple of the chunk size, and must leave about 128Kb
435of space at the end of the drive for the RAID superblock.
436If this is not specified
437(as it normally is not) the smallest drive (or partition) sets the
438size, though if there is a variance among the drives of greater than 1%, a warning is
439issued.
440
441A suffix of 'M' or 'G' can be given to indicate Megabytes or
442Gigabytes respectively.
443
444Sometimes a replacement drive can be a little smaller than the
445original drives though this should be minimised by IDEMA standards.
446Such a replacement drive will be rejected by
447.IR md .
448To guard against this it can be useful to set the initial size
449slightly smaller than the smaller device with the aim that it will
450still be larger than any replacement.
451
452This value can be set with
453.B \-\-grow
454for RAID level 1/4/5/6 though
455.B CONTAINER
456based arrays such as those with IMSM metadata may not be able to
457support this.
458If the array was created with a size smaller than the currently
459active drives, the extra space can be accessed using
460.BR \-\-grow .
461The size can be given as
462.B max
463which means to choose the largest size that fits on all current drives.
464
465Before reducing the size of the array (with
466.BR "\-\-grow \-\-size=" )
467you should make sure that space isn't needed. If the device holds a
468filesystem, you would need to resize the filesystem to use less space.
469
470After reducing the array size you should check that the data stored in
471the device is still available. If the device holds a filesystem, then
472an 'fsck' of the filesystem is a minimum requirement. If there are
473problems the array can be made bigger again with no loss with another
474.B "\-\-grow \-\-size="
475command.
476
477This value cannot be used when creating a
478.B CONTAINER
479such as with DDF and IMSM metadata, though it perfectly valid when
480creating an array inside a container.
481
482.TP
483.BR \-Z ", " \-\-array\-size=
484This is only meaningful with
485.B \-\-grow
486and its effect is not persistent: when the array is stopped and
487restarted the default array size will be restored.
488
489Setting the array-size causes the array to appear smaller to programs
490that access the data. This is particularly needed before reshaping an
491array so that it will be smaller. As the reshape is not reversible,
492but setting the size with
493.B \-\-array-size
494is, it is required that the array size is reduced as appropriate
495before the number of devices in the array is reduced.
496
497Before reducing the size of the array you should make sure that space
498isn't needed. If the device holds a filesystem, you would need to
499resize the filesystem to use less space.
500
501After reducing the array size you should check that the data stored in
502the device is still available. If the device holds a filesystem, then
503an 'fsck' of the filesystem is a minimum requirement. If there are
504problems the array can be made bigger again with no loss with another
505.B "\-\-grow \-\-array\-size="
506command.
507
508A suffix of 'M' or 'G' can be given to indicate Megabytes or
509Gigabytes respectively.
510A value of
511.B max
512restores the apparent size of the array to be whatever the real
513amount of available space is.
514
515.TP
516.BR \-c ", " \-\-chunk=
517Specify chunk size of kibibytes. The default when creating an
518array is 512KB. To ensure compatibility with earlier versions, the
519default when Building and array with no persistent metadata is 64KB.
520This is only meaningful for RAID0, RAID4, RAID5, RAID6, and RAID10.
521
522RAID4, RAID5, RAID6, and RAID10 require the chunk size to be a power
523of 2. In any case it must be a multiple of 4KB.
524
525A suffix of 'M' or 'G' can be given to indicate Megabytes or
526Gigabytes respectively.
527
528.TP
529.BR \-\-rounding=
530Specify rounding factor for a Linear array. The size of each
531component will be rounded down to a multiple of this size.
532This is a synonym for
533.B \-\-chunk
534but highlights the different meaning for Linear as compared to other
535RAID levels. The default is 64K if a kernel earlier than 2.6.16 is in
536use, and is 0K (i.e. no rounding) in later kernels.
537
538.TP
539.BR \-l ", " \-\-level=
540Set RAID level. When used with
541.BR \-\-create ,
542options are: linear, raid0, 0, stripe, raid1, 1, mirror, raid4, 4,
543raid5, 5, raid6, 6, raid10, 10, multipath, mp, faulty, container.
544Obviously some of these are synonymous.
545
546When a
547.B CONTAINER
548metadata type is requested, only the
549.B container
550level is permitted, and it does not need to be explicitly given.
551
552When used with
553.BR \-\-build ,
554only linear, stripe, raid0, 0, raid1, multipath, mp, and faulty are valid.
555
556Can be used with
557.B \-\-grow
558to change the RAID level in some cases. See LEVEL CHANGES below.
559
560.TP
561.BR \-p ", " \-\-layout=
562This option configures the fine details of data layout for RAID5, RAID6,
563and RAID10 arrays, and controls the failure modes for
564.IR faulty .
565
566The layout of the RAID5 parity block can be one of
567.BR left\-asymmetric ,
568.BR left\-symmetric ,
569.BR right\-asymmetric ,
570.BR right\-symmetric ,
571.BR la ", " ra ", " ls ", " rs .
572The default is
573.BR left\-symmetric .
574
575It is also possible to cause RAID5 to use a RAID4-like layout by
576choosing
577.BR parity\-first ,
578or
579.BR parity\-last .
580
581Finally for RAID5 there are DDF\-compatible layouts,
582.BR ddf\-zero\-restart ,
583.BR ddf\-N\-restart ,
584and
585.BR ddf\-N\-continue .
586
587These same layouts are available for RAID6. There are also 4 layouts
588that will provide an intermediate stage for converting between RAID5
589and RAID6. These provide a layout which is identical to the
590corresponding RAID5 layout on the first N\-1 devices, and has the 'Q'
591syndrome (the second 'parity' block used by RAID6) on the last device.
592These layouts are:
593.BR left\-symmetric\-6 ,
594.BR right\-symmetric\-6 ,
595.BR left\-asymmetric\-6 ,
596.BR right\-asymmetric\-6 ,
597and
598.BR parity\-first\-6 .
599
600When setting the failure mode for level
601.I faulty,
602the options are:
603.BR write\-transient ", " wt ,
604.BR read\-transient ", " rt ,
605.BR write\-persistent ", " wp ,
606.BR read\-persistent ", " rp ,
607.BR write\-all ,
608.BR read\-fixable ", " rf ,
609.BR clear ", " flush ", " none .
610
611Each failure mode can be followed by a number, which is used as a period
612between fault generation. Without a number, the fault is generated
613once on the first relevant request. With a number, the fault will be
614generated after that many requests, and will continue to be generated
615every time the period elapses.
616
617Multiple failure modes can be current simultaneously by using the
618.B \-\-grow
619option to set subsequent failure modes.
620
621"clear" or "none" will remove any pending or periodic failure modes,
622and "flush" will clear any persistent faults.
623
624Finally, the layout options for RAID10 are one of 'n', 'o' or 'f' followed
625by a small number. The default is 'n2'. The supported options are:
626
627.I 'n'
628signals 'near' copies. Multiple copies of one data block are at
629similar offsets in different devices.
630
631.I 'o'
632signals 'offset' copies. Rather than the chunks being duplicated
633within a stripe, whole stripes are duplicated but are rotated by one
634device so duplicate blocks are on different devices. Thus subsequent
635copies of a block are in the next drive, and are one chunk further
636down.
637
638.I 'f'
639signals 'far' copies
640(multiple copies have very different offsets).
641See md(4) for more detail about 'near', 'offset', and 'far'.
642
643The number is the number of copies of each datablock. 2 is normal, 3
644can be useful. This number can be at most equal to the number of
645devices in the array. It does not need to divide evenly into that
646number (e.g. it is perfectly legal to have an 'n2' layout for an array
647with an odd number of devices).
648
649When an array is converted between RAID5 and RAID6 an intermediate
650RAID6 layout is used in which the second parity block (Q) is always on
651the last device. To convert a RAID5 to RAID6 and leave it in this new
652layout (which does not require re-striping) use
653.BR \-\-layout=preserve .
654This will try to avoid any restriping.
655
656The converse of this is
657.B \-\-layout=normalise
658which will change a non-standard RAID6 layout into a more standard
659arrangement.
660
661.TP
662.BR \-\-parity=
663same as
664.B \-\-layout
665(thus explaining the p of
666.BR \-p ).
667
668.TP
669.BR \-b ", " \-\-bitmap=
670Specify a file to store a write-intent bitmap in. The file should not
671exist unless
672.B \-\-force
673is also given. The same file should be provided
674when assembling the array. If the word
675.B "internal"
676is given, then the bitmap is stored with the metadata on the array,
677and so is replicated on all devices. If the word
678.B "none"
679is given with
680.B \-\-grow
681mode, then any bitmap that is present is removed.
682
683To help catch typing errors, the filename must contain at least one
684slash ('/') if it is a real file (not 'internal' or 'none').
685
686Note: external bitmaps are only known to work on ext2 and ext3.
687Storing bitmap files on other filesystems may result in serious problems.
688
689When creating an array on devices which are 100G or larger,
690.I mdadm
691automatically adds an internal bitmap as it will usually be
692beneficial. This can be suppressed with
693.B "\-\-bitmap=none".
694
695.TP
696.BR \-\-bitmap\-chunk=
697Set the chunksize of the bitmap. Each bit corresponds to that many
698Kilobytes of storage.
699When using a file based bitmap, the default is to use the smallest
700size that is at-least 4 and requires no more than 2^21 chunks.
701When using an
702.B internal
703bitmap, the chunksize defaults to 64Meg, or larger if necessary to
704fit the bitmap into the available space.
705
706A suffix of 'M' or 'G' can be given to indicate Megabytes or
707Gigabytes respectively.
708
709.TP
710.BR \-W ", " \-\-write\-mostly
711subsequent devices listed in a
712.BR \-\-build ,
713.BR \-\-create ,
714or
715.B \-\-add
716command will be flagged as 'write-mostly'. This is valid for RAID1
717only and means that the 'md' driver will avoid reading from these
718devices if at all possible. This can be useful if mirroring over a
719slow link.
720
721.TP
722.BR \-\-write\-behind=
723Specify that write-behind mode should be enabled (valid for RAID1
724only). If an argument is specified, it will set the maximum number
725of outstanding writes allowed. The default value is 256.
726A write-intent bitmap is required in order to use write-behind
727mode, and write-behind is only attempted on drives marked as
728.IR write-mostly .
729
730.TP
731.BR \-\-assume\-clean
732Tell
733.I mdadm
734that the array pre-existed and is known to be clean. It can be useful
735when trying to recover from a major failure as you can be sure that no
736data will be affected unless you actually write to the array. It can
737also be used when creating a RAID1 or RAID10 if you want to avoid the
738initial resync, however this practice \(em while normally safe \(em is not
739recommended. Use this only if you really know what you are doing.
740.IP
741When the devices that will be part of a new array were filled
742with zeros before creation the operator knows the array is
743actually clean. If that is the case, such as after running
744badblocks, this argument can be used to tell mdadm the
745facts the operator knows.
746.IP
747When an array is resized to a larger size with
748.B "\-\-grow \-\-size="
749the new space is normally resynced in that same way that the whole
750array is resynced at creation. From Linux version 3.0,
751.B \-\-assume\-clean
752can be used with that command to avoid the automatic resync.
753
754.TP
755.BR \-\-backup\-file=
756This is needed when
757.B \-\-grow
758is used to increase the number of raid-devices in a RAID5 or RAID6 if
759there are no spare devices available, or to shrink, change RAID level
760or layout. See the GROW MODE section below on RAID\-DEVICES CHANGES.
761The file must be stored on a separate device, not on the RAID array
762being reshaped.
763
764.TP
765.B \-\-data\-offset=
766Arrays with 1.x metadata can leave a gap between the start of the
767device and the start of array data. This gap can be used for various
768metadata. The start of data is known as the
769.IR data\-offset .
770Normally an appropriate data offset is computed automatically.
771However it can be useful to set it explicitly such as when re-creating
772an array which was originally created using a different version of
773.I mdadm
774which computed a different offset.
775
776Setting the offset explicitly over-rides the default. The value given
777is in Kilobytes unless an 'M' or 'G' suffix is given.
778
779Since Linux 3.4,
780.B \-\-data\-offset
781can also be used with
782.B --grow
783for some RAID levels (initially on RAID10). This allows the
784data\-offset to be changed as part of the reshape process. When the
785data offset is changed, no backup file is required as the difference
786in offsets is used to provide the same functionality.
787
788When the new offset is earlier than the old offset, the number of
789devices in the array cannot shrink. When it is after the old offset,
790the number of devices in the array cannot increase.
791
792When creating an array,
793.B \-\-data\-offset
794can be specified as
795.BR variable .
796In the case each member device is expected to have a offset appended
797to the name, separated by a colon. This makes it possible to recreate
798exactly an array which has varying data offsets (as can happen when
799different versions of
800.I mdadm
801are used to add different devices).
802
803.TP
804.BR \-\-continue
805This option is complementary to the
806.B \-\-freeze-reshape
807option for assembly. It is needed when
808.B \-\-grow
809operation is interrupted and it is not restarted automatically due to
810.B \-\-freeze-reshape
811usage during array assembly. This option is used together with
812.BR \-G
813, (
814.BR \-\-grow
815) command and device for a pending reshape to be continued.
816All parameters required for reshape continuation will be read from array metadata.
817If initial
818.BR \-\-grow
819command had required
820.BR \-\-backup\-file=
821option to be set, continuation option will require to have exactly the same
822backup file given as well.
823.IP
824Any other parameter passed together with
825.BR \-\-continue
826option will be ignored.
827
828.TP
829.BR \-N ", " \-\-name=
830Set a
831.B name
832for the array. This is currently only effective when creating an
833array with a version-1 superblock, or an array in a DDF container.
834The name is a simple textual string that can be used to identify array
835components when assembling. If name is needed but not specified, it
836is taken from the basename of the device that is being created.
837e.g. when creating
838.I /dev/md/home
839the
840.B name
841will default to
842.IR home .
843
844.TP
845.BR \-R ", " \-\-run
846Insist that
847.I mdadm
848run the array, even if some of the components
849appear to be active in another array or filesystem. Normally
850.I mdadm
851will ask for confirmation before including such components in an
852array. This option causes that question to be suppressed.
853
854.TP
855.BR \-f ", " \-\-force
856Insist that
857.I mdadm
858accept the geometry and layout specified without question. Normally
859.I mdadm
860will not allow creation of an array with only one device, and will try
861to create a RAID5 array with one missing drive (as this makes the
862initial resync work faster). With
863.BR \-\-force ,
864.I mdadm
865will not try to be so clever.
866
867.TP
868.BR \-o ", " \-\-readonly
869Start the array
870.B read only
871rather than read-write as normal. No writes will be allowed to the
872array, and no resync, recovery, or reshape will be started.
873
874.TP
875.BR \-a ", " "\-\-auto{=yes,md,mdp,part,p}{NN}"
876Instruct mdadm how to create the device file if needed, possibly allocating
877an unused minor number. "md" causes a non-partitionable array
878to be used (though since Linux 2.6.28, these array devices are in fact
879partitionable). "mdp", "part" or "p" causes a partitionable array (2.6 and
880later) to be used. "yes" requires the named md device to have
881a 'standard' format, and the type and minor number will be determined
882from this. With mdadm 3.0, device creation is normally left up to
883.I udev
884so this option is unlikely to be needed.
885See DEVICE NAMES below.
886
887The argument can also come immediately after
888"\-a". e.g. "\-ap".
889
890If
891.B \-\-auto
892is not given on the command line or in the config file, then
893the default will be
894.BR \-\-auto=yes .
895
896If
897.B \-\-scan
898is also given, then any
899.I auto=
900entries in the config file will override the
901.B \-\-auto
902instruction given on the command line.
903
904For partitionable arrays,
905.I mdadm
906will create the device file for the whole array and for the first 4
907partitions. A different number of partitions can be specified at the
908end of this option (e.g.
909.BR \-\-auto=p7 ).
910If the device name ends with a digit, the partition names add a 'p',
911and a number, e.g.
912.IR /dev/md/home1p3 .
913If there is no trailing digit, then the partition names just have a
914number added, e.g.
915.IR /dev/md/scratch3 .
916
917If the md device name is in a 'standard' format as described in DEVICE
918NAMES, then it will be created, if necessary, with the appropriate
919device number based on that name. If the device name is not in one of these
920formats, then a unused device number will be allocated. The device
921number will be considered unused if there is no active array for that
922number, and there is no entry in /dev for that number and with a
923non-standard name. Names that are not in 'standard' format are only
924allowed in "/dev/md/".
925
926This is meaningful with
927.B \-\-create
928or
929.BR \-\-build .
930
931.TP
932.BR \-a ", " "\-\-add"
933This option can be used in Grow mode in two cases.
934
935If the target array is a Linear array, then
936.B \-\-add
937can be used to add one or more devices to the array. They
938are simply catenated on to the end of the array. Once added, the
939devices cannot be removed.
940
941If the
942.B \-\-raid\-disks
943option is being used to increase the number of devices in an array,
944then
945.B \-\-add
946can be used to add some extra devices to be included in the array.
947In most cases this is not needed as the extra devices can be added as
948spares first, and then the number of raid-disks can be changed.
949However for RAID0, it is not possible to add spares. So to increase
950the number of devices in a RAID0, it is necessary to set the new
951number of devices, and to add the new devices, in the same command.
952
953.SH For assemble:
954
955.TP
956.BR \-u ", " \-\-uuid=
957uuid of array to assemble. Devices which don't have this uuid are
958excluded
959
960.TP
961.BR \-m ", " \-\-super\-minor=
962Minor number of device that array was created for. Devices which
963don't have this minor number are excluded. If you create an array as
964/dev/md1, then all superblocks will contain the minor number 1, even if
965the array is later assembled as /dev/md2.
966
967Giving the literal word "dev" for
968.B \-\-super\-minor
969will cause
970.I mdadm
971to use the minor number of the md device that is being assembled.
972e.g. when assembling
973.BR /dev/md0 ,
974.B \-\-super\-minor=dev
975will look for super blocks with a minor number of 0.
976
977.B \-\-super\-minor
978is only relevant for v0.90 metadata, and should not normally be used.
979Using
980.B \-\-uuid
981is much safer.
982
983.TP
984.BR \-N ", " \-\-name=
985Specify the name of the array to assemble. This must be the name
986that was specified when creating the array. It must either match
987the name stored in the superblock exactly, or it must match
988with the current
989.I homehost
990prefixed to the start of the given name.
991
992.TP
993.BR \-f ", " \-\-force
994Assemble the array even if the metadata on some devices appears to be
995out-of-date. If
996.I mdadm
997cannot find enough working devices to start the array, but can find
998some devices that are recorded as having failed, then it will mark
999those devices as working so that the array can be started.
1000An array which requires
1001.B \-\-force
1002to be started may contain data corruption. Use it carefully.
1003
1004.TP
1005.BR \-R ", " \-\-run
1006Attempt to start the array even if fewer drives were given than were
1007present last time the array was active. Normally if not all the
1008expected drives are found and
1009.B \-\-scan
1010is not used, then the array will be assembled but not started.
1011With
1012.B \-\-run
1013an attempt will be made to start it anyway.
1014
1015.TP
1016.B \-\-no\-degraded
1017This is the reverse of
1018.B \-\-run
1019in that it inhibits the startup of array unless all expected drives
1020are present. This is only needed with
1021.B \-\-scan,
1022and can be used if the physical connections to devices are
1023not as reliable as you would like.
1024
1025.TP
1026.BR \-a ", " "\-\-auto{=no,yes,md,mdp,part}"
1027See this option under Create and Build options.
1028
1029.TP
1030.BR \-b ", " \-\-bitmap=
1031Specify the bitmap file that was given when the array was created. If
1032an array has an
1033.B internal
1034bitmap, there is no need to specify this when assembling the array.
1035
1036.TP
1037.BR \-\-backup\-file=
1038If
1039.B \-\-backup\-file
1040was used while reshaping an array (e.g. changing number of devices or
1041chunk size) and the system crashed during the critical section, then the same
1042.B \-\-backup\-file
1043must be presented to
1044.B \-\-assemble
1045to allow possibly corrupted data to be restored, and the reshape
1046to be completed.
1047
1048.TP
1049.BR \-\-invalid\-backup
1050If the file needed for the above option is not available for any
1051reason an empty file can be given together with this option to
1052indicate that the backup file is invalid. In this case the data that
1053was being rearranged at the time of the crash could be irrecoverably
1054lost, but the rest of the array may still be recoverable. This option
1055should only be used as a last resort if there is no way to recover the
1056backup file.
1057
1058
1059.TP
1060.BR \-U ", " \-\-update=
1061Update the superblock on each device while assembling the array. The
1062argument given to this flag can be one of
1063.BR sparc2.2 ,
1064.BR summaries ,
1065.BR uuid ,
1066.BR name ,
1067.BR homehost ,
1068.BR resync ,
1069.BR byteorder ,
1070.BR devicesize ,
1071.BR no\-bitmap ,
1072.BR bbl ,
1073.BR no-\bbl ,
1074or
1075.BR super\-minor .
1076
1077The
1078.B sparc2.2
1079option will adjust the superblock of an array what was created on a Sparc
1080machine running a patched 2.2 Linux kernel. This kernel got the
1081alignment of part of the superblock wrong. You can use the
1082.B "\-\-examine \-\-sparc2.2"
1083option to
1084.I mdadm
1085to see what effect this would have.
1086
1087The
1088.B super\-minor
1089option will update the
1090.B "preferred minor"
1091field on each superblock to match the minor number of the array being
1092assembled.
1093This can be useful if
1094.B \-\-examine
1095reports a different "Preferred Minor" to
1096.BR \-\-detail .
1097In some cases this update will be performed automatically
1098by the kernel driver. In particular the update happens automatically
1099at the first write to an array with redundancy (RAID level 1 or
1100greater) on a 2.6 (or later) kernel.
1101
1102The
1103.B uuid
1104option will change the uuid of the array. If a UUID is given with the
1105.B \-\-uuid
1106option that UUID will be used as a new UUID and will
1107.B NOT
1108be used to help identify the devices in the array.
1109If no
1110.B \-\-uuid
1111is given, a random UUID is chosen.
1112
1113The
1114.B name
1115option will change the
1116.I name
1117of the array as stored in the superblock. This is only supported for
1118version-1 superblocks.
1119
1120The
1121.B homehost
1122option will change the
1123.I homehost
1124as recorded in the superblock. For version-0 superblocks, this is the
1125same as updating the UUID.
1126For version-1 superblocks, this involves updating the name.
1127
1128The
1129.B resync
1130option will cause the array to be marked
1131.I dirty
1132meaning that any redundancy in the array (e.g. parity for RAID5,
1133copies for RAID1) may be incorrect. This will cause the RAID system
1134to perform a "resync" pass to make sure that all redundant information
1135is correct.
1136
1137The
1138.B byteorder
1139option allows arrays to be moved between machines with different
1140byte-order.
1141When assembling such an array for the first time after a move, giving
1142.B "\-\-update=byteorder"
1143will cause
1144.I mdadm
1145to expect superblocks to have their byteorder reversed, and will
1146correct that order before assembling the array. This is only valid
1147with original (Version 0.90) superblocks.
1148
1149The
1150.B summaries
1151option will correct the summaries in the superblock. That is the
1152counts of total, working, active, failed, and spare devices.
1153
1154The
1155.B devicesize
1156option will rarely be of use. It applies to version 1.1 and 1.2 metadata
1157only (where the metadata is at the start of the device) and is only
1158useful when the component device has changed size (typically become
1159larger). The version 1 metadata records the amount of the device that
1160can be used to store data, so if a device in a version 1.1 or 1.2
1161array becomes larger, the metadata will still be visible, but the
1162extra space will not. In this case it might be useful to assemble the
1163array with
1164.BR \-\-update=devicesize .
1165This will cause
1166.I mdadm
1167to determine the maximum usable amount of space on each device and
1168update the relevant field in the metadata.
1169
1170The
1171.B no\-bitmap
1172option can be used when an array has an internal bitmap which is
1173corrupt in some way so that assembling the array normally fails. It
1174will cause any internal bitmap to be ignored.
1175
1176The
1177.B bbl
1178option will reserve space in each device for a bad block list. This
1179will be 4K in size and positioned near the end of any free space
1180between the superblock and the data.
1181
1182The
1183.B no\-bbl
1184option will cause any reservation of space for a bad block list to be
1185removed. If the bad block list contains entries, this will fail, as
1186removing the list could cause data corruption.
1187
1188.TP
1189.BR \-\-freeze\-reshape
1190Option is intended to be used in start-up scripts during initrd boot phase.
1191When array under reshape is assembled during initrd phase, this option
1192stops reshape after reshape critical section is being restored. This happens
1193before file system pivot operation and avoids loss of file system context.
1194Losing file system context would cause reshape to be broken.
1195
1196Reshape can be continued later using the
1197.B \-\-continue
1198option for the grow command.
1199
1200.SH For Manage mode:
1201
1202.TP
1203.BR \-t ", " \-\-test
1204Unless a more serious error occurred,
1205.I mdadm
1206will exit with a status of 2 if no changes were made to the array and
12070 if at least one change was made.
1208This can be useful when an indirect specifier such as
1209.BR missing ,
1210.B detached
1211or
1212.B faulty
1213is used in requesting an operation on the array.
1214.B \-\-test
1215will report failure if these specifiers didn't find any match.
1216
1217.TP
1218.BR \-a ", " \-\-add
1219hot-add listed devices.
1220If a device appears to have recently been part of the array
1221(possibly it failed or was removed) the device is re\-added as described
1222in the next point.
1223If that fails or the device was never part of the array, the device is
1224added as a hot-spare.
1225If the array is degraded, it will immediately start to rebuild data
1226onto that spare.
1227
1228Note that this and the following options are only meaningful on array
1229with redundancy. They don't apply to RAID0 or Linear.
1230
1231.TP
1232.BR \-\-re\-add
1233re\-add a device that was previous removed from an array.
1234If the metadata on the device reports that it is a member of the
1235array, and the slot that it used is still vacant, then the device will
1236be added back to the array in the same position. This will normally
1237cause the data for that device to be recovered. However based on the
1238event count on the device, the recovery may only require sections that
1239are flagged a write-intent bitmap to be recovered or may not require
1240any recovery at all.
1241
1242When used on an array that has no metadata (i.e. it was built with
1243.BR \-\-build)
1244it will be assumed that bitmap-based recovery is enough to make the
1245device fully consistent with the array.
1246
1247When used with v1.x metadata,
1248.B \-\-re\-add
1249can be accompanied by
1250.BR \-\-update=devicesize ,
1251.BR \-\-update=bbl ", or"
1252.BR \-\-update=no\-bbl .
1253See the description of these option when used in Assemble mode for an
1254explanation of their use.
1255
1256If the device name given is
1257.B missing
1258then
1259.I mdadm
1260will try to find any device that looks like it should be
1261part of the array but isn't and will try to re\-add all such devices.
1262
1263If the device name given is
1264.B faulty
1265then
1266.I mdadm
1267will find all devices in the array that are marked
1268.BR faulty ,
1269remove them and attempt to immediately re\-add them. This can be
1270useful if you are certain that the reason for failure has been
1271resolved.
1272
1273.TP
1274.BR \-r ", " \-\-remove
1275remove listed devices. They must not be active. i.e. they should
1276be failed or spare devices.
1277
1278As well as the name of a device file
1279(e.g.
1280.BR /dev/sda1 )
1281the words
1282.BR failed ,
1283.B detached
1284and names like
1285.B set-A
1286can be given to
1287.BR \-\-remove .
1288The first causes all failed device to be removed. The second causes
1289any device which is no longer connected to the system (i.e an 'open'
1290returns
1291.BR ENXIO )
1292to be removed.
1293The third will remove a set as describe below under
1294.BR \-\-fail .
1295
1296.TP
1297.BR \-f ", " \-\-fail
1298Mark listed devices as faulty.
1299As well as the name of a device file, the word
1300.B detached
1301or a set name like
1302.B set\-A
1303can be given. The former will cause any device that has been detached from
1304the system to be marked as failed. It can then be removed.
1305
1306For RAID10 arrays where the number of copies evenly divides the number
1307of devices, the devices can be conceptually divided into sets where
1308each set contains a single complete copy of the data on the array.
1309Sometimes a RAID10 array will be configured so that these sets are on
1310separate controllers. In this case all the devices in one set can be
1311failed by giving a name like
1312.B set\-A
1313or
1314.B set\-B
1315to
1316.BR \-\-fail .
1317The appropriate set names are reported by
1318.BR \-\-detail .
1319
1320.TP
1321.BR \-\-set\-faulty
1322same as
1323.BR \-\-fail .
1324
1325.TP
1326.B \-\-replace
1327Mark listed devices as requiring replacement. As soon as a spare is
1328available, it will be rebuilt and will replace the marked device.
1329This is similar to marking a device as faulty, but the device remains
1330in service during the recovery process to increase resilience against
1331multiple failures. When the replacement process finishes, the
1332replaced device will be marked as faulty.
1333
1334.TP
1335.B \-\-with
1336This can follow a list of
1337.B \-\-replace
1338devices. The devices listed after
1339.B \-\-with
1340will be preferentially used to replace the devices listed after
1341.BR \-\-replace .
1342These device must already be spare devices in the array.
1343
1344.TP
1345.BR \-\-write\-mostly
1346Subsequent devices that are added or re\-added will have the 'write-mostly'
1347flag set. This is only valid for RAID1 and means that the 'md' driver
1348will avoid reading from these devices if possible.
1349.TP
1350.BR \-\-readwrite
1351Subsequent devices that are added or re\-added will have the 'write-mostly'
1352flag cleared.
1353
1354.P
1355Each of these options requires that the first device listed is the array
1356to be acted upon, and the remainder are component devices to be added,
1357removed, marked as faulty, etc. Several different operations can be
1358specified for different devices, e.g.
1359.in +5
1360mdadm /dev/md0 \-\-add /dev/sda1 \-\-fail /dev/sdb1 \-\-remove /dev/sdb1
1361.in -5
1362Each operation applies to all devices listed until the next
1363operation.
1364
1365If an array is using a write-intent bitmap, then devices which have
1366been removed can be re\-added in a way that avoids a full
1367reconstruction but instead just updates the blocks that have changed
1368since the device was removed. For arrays with persistent metadata
1369(superblocks) this is done automatically. For arrays created with
1370.B \-\-build
1371mdadm needs to be told that this device we removed recently with
1372.BR \-\-re\-add .
1373
1374Devices can only be removed from an array if they are not in active
1375use, i.e. that must be spares or failed devices. To remove an active
1376device, it must first be marked as
1377.B faulty.
1378
1379.SH For Misc mode:
1380
1381.TP
1382.BR \-Q ", " \-\-query
1383Examine a device to see
1384(1) if it is an md device and (2) if it is a component of an md
1385array.
1386Information about what is discovered is presented.
1387
1388.TP
1389.BR \-D ", " \-\-detail
1390Print details of one or more md devices.
1391
1392.TP
1393.BR \-\-detail\-platform
1394Print details of the platform's RAID capabilities (firmware / hardware
1395topology) for a given metadata format. If used without argument, mdadm
1396will scan all controllers looking for their capabilities. Otherwise, mdadm
1397will only look at the controller specified by the argument in form of an
1398absolute filepath or a link, e.g.
1399.IR /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.2 .
1400
1401.TP
1402.BR \-Y ", " \-\-export
1403When used with
1404.B \-\-detail , \-\-detail-platform
1405or
1406.BR \-\-examine ,
1407output will be formatted as
1408.B key=value
1409pairs for easy import into the environment.
1410
1411.TP
1412.BR \-E ", " \-\-examine
1413Print contents of the metadata stored on the named device(s).
1414Note the contrast between
1415.B \-\-examine
1416and
1417.BR \-\-detail .
1418.B \-\-examine
1419applies to devices which are components of an array, while
1420.B \-\-detail
1421applies to a whole array which is currently active.
1422.TP
1423.B \-\-sparc2.2
1424If an array was created on a SPARC machine with a 2.2 Linux kernel
1425patched with RAID support, the superblock will have been created
1426incorrectly, or at least incompatibly with 2.4 and later kernels.
1427Using the
1428.B \-\-sparc2.2
1429flag with
1430.B \-\-examine
1431will fix the superblock before displaying it. If this appears to do
1432the right thing, then the array can be successfully assembled using
1433.BR "\-\-assemble \-\-update=sparc2.2" .
1434
1435.TP
1436.BR \-X ", " \-\-examine\-bitmap
1437Report information about a bitmap file.
1438The argument is either an external bitmap file or an array component
1439in case of an internal bitmap. Note that running this on an array
1440device (e.g.
1441.BR /dev/md0 )
1442does not report the bitmap for that array.
1443
1444.TP
1445.B \-\-examine\-badblocks
1446List the bad-blocks recorded for the device, if a bad-blocks list has
1447been configured. Currently only
1448.B 1.x
1449metadata supports bad-blocks lists.
1450
1451.TP
1452.BR \-R ", " \-\-run
1453start a partially assembled array. If
1454.B \-\-assemble
1455did not find enough devices to fully start the array, it might leaving
1456it partially assembled. If you wish, you can then use
1457.B \-\-run
1458to start the array in degraded mode.
1459
1460.TP
1461.BR \-S ", " \-\-stop
1462deactivate array, releasing all resources.
1463
1464.TP
1465.BR \-o ", " \-\-readonly
1466mark array as readonly.
1467
1468.TP
1469.BR \-w ", " \-\-readwrite
1470mark array as readwrite.
1471
1472.TP
1473.B \-\-zero\-superblock
1474If the device contains a valid md superblock, the block is
1475overwritten with zeros. With
1476.B \-\-force
1477the block where the superblock would be is overwritten even if it
1478doesn't appear to be valid.
1479
1480.TP
1481.B \-\-kill\-subarray=
1482If the device is a container and the argument to \-\-kill\-subarray
1483specifies an inactive subarray in the container, then the subarray is
1484deleted. Deleting all subarrays will leave an 'empty-container' or
1485spare superblock on the drives. See \-\-zero\-superblock for completely
1486removing a superblock. Note that some formats depend on the subarray
1487index for generating a UUID, this command will fail if it would change
1488the UUID of an active subarray.
1489
1490.TP
1491.B \-\-update\-subarray=
1492If the device is a container and the argument to \-\-update\-subarray
1493specifies a subarray in the container, then attempt to update the given
1494superblock field in the subarray. See below in
1495.B MISC MODE
1496for details.
1497
1498.TP
1499.BR \-t ", " \-\-test
1500When used with
1501.BR \-\-detail ,
1502the exit status of
1503.I mdadm
1504is set to reflect the status of the device. See below in
1505.B MISC MODE
1506for details.
1507
1508.TP
1509.BR \-W ", " \-\-wait
1510For each md device given, wait for any resync, recovery, or reshape
1511activity to finish before returning.
1512.I mdadm
1513will return with success if it actually waited for every device
1514listed, otherwise it will return failure.
1515
1516.TP
1517.BR \-\-wait\-clean
1518For each md device given, or each device in /proc/mdstat if
1519.B \-\-scan
1520is given, arrange for the array to be marked clean as soon as possible.
1521.I mdadm
1522will return with success if the array uses external metadata and we
1523successfully waited. For native arrays this returns immediately as the
1524kernel handles dirty-clean transitions at shutdown. No action is taken
1525if safe-mode handling is disabled.
1526
1527.SH For Incremental Assembly mode:
1528.TP
1529.BR \-\-rebuild\-map ", " \-r
1530Rebuild the map file
1531.RB ( {MAP_PATH} )
1532that
1533.I mdadm
1534uses to help track which arrays are currently being assembled.
1535
1536.TP
1537.BR \-\-run ", " \-R
1538Run any array assembled as soon as a minimal number of devices are
1539available, rather than waiting until all expected devices are present.
1540
1541.TP
1542.BR \-\-scan ", " \-s
1543Only meaningful with
1544.B \-R
1545this will scan the
1546.B map
1547file for arrays that are being incrementally assembled and will try to
1548start any that are not already started. If any such array is listed
1549in
1550.B mdadm.conf
1551as requiring an external bitmap, that bitmap will be attached first.
1552
1553.TP
1554.BR \-\-fail ", " \-f
1555This allows the hot-plug system to remove devices that have fully disappeared
1556from the kernel. It will first fail and then remove the device from any
1557array it belongs to.
1558The device name given should be a kernel device name such as "sda",
1559not a name in
1560.IR /dev .
1561
1562.TP
1563.BR \-\-path=
1564Only used with \-\-fail. The 'path' given will be recorded so that if
1565a new device appears at the same location it can be automatically
1566added to the same array. This allows the failed device to be
1567automatically replaced by a new device without metadata if it appears
1568at specified path. This option is normally only set by a
1569.I udev
1570script.
1571
1572.SH For Monitor mode:
1573.TP
1574.BR \-m ", " \-\-mail
1575Give a mail address to send alerts to.
1576
1577.TP
1578.BR \-p ", " \-\-program ", " \-\-alert
1579Give a program to be run whenever an event is detected.
1580
1581.TP
1582.BR \-y ", " \-\-syslog
1583Cause all events to be reported through 'syslog'. The messages have
1584facility of 'daemon' and varying priorities.
1585
1586.TP
1587.BR \-d ", " \-\-delay
1588Give a delay in seconds.
1589.I mdadm
1590polls the md arrays and then waits this many seconds before polling
1591again. The default is 60 seconds. Since 2.6.16, there is no need to
1592reduce this as the kernel alerts
1593.I mdadm
1594immediately when there is any change.
1595
1596.TP
1597.BR \-r ", " \-\-increment
1598Give a percentage increment.
1599.I mdadm
1600will generate RebuildNN events with the given percentage increment.
1601
1602.TP
1603.BR \-f ", " \-\-daemonise
1604Tell
1605.I mdadm
1606to run as a background daemon if it decides to monitor anything. This
1607causes it to fork and run in the child, and to disconnect from the
1608terminal. The process id of the child is written to stdout.
1609This is useful with
1610.B \-\-scan
1611which will only continue monitoring if a mail address or alert program
1612is found in the config file.
1613
1614.TP
1615.BR \-i ", " \-\-pid\-file
1616When
1617.I mdadm
1618is running in daemon mode, write the pid of the daemon process to
1619the specified file, instead of printing it on standard output.
1620
1621.TP
1622.BR \-1 ", " \-\-oneshot
1623Check arrays only once. This will generate
1624.B NewArray
1625events and more significantly
1626.B DegradedArray
1627and
1628.B SparesMissing
1629events. Running
1630.in +5
1631.B " mdadm \-\-monitor \-\-scan \-1"
1632.in -5
1633from a cron script will ensure regular notification of any degraded arrays.
1634
1635.TP
1636.BR \-t ", " \-\-test
1637Generate a
1638.B TestMessage
1639alert for every array found at startup. This alert gets mailed and
1640passed to the alert program. This can be used for testing that alert
1641message do get through successfully.
1642
1643.TP
1644.BR \-\-no\-sharing
1645This inhibits the functionality for moving spares between arrays.
1646Only one monitoring process started with
1647.B \-\-scan
1648but without this flag is allowed, otherwise the two could interfere
1649with each other.
1650
1651.SH ASSEMBLE MODE
1652
1653.HP 12
1654Usage:
1655.B mdadm \-\-assemble
1656.I md-device options-and-component-devices...
1657.HP 12
1658Usage:
1659.B mdadm \-\-assemble \-\-scan
1660.I md-devices-and-options...
1661.HP 12
1662Usage:
1663.B mdadm \-\-assemble \-\-scan
1664.I options...
1665
1666.PP
1667This usage assembles one or more RAID arrays from pre-existing components.
1668For each array, mdadm needs to know the md device, the identity of the
1669array, and a number of component-devices. These can be found in a number of ways.
1670
1671In the first usage example (without the
1672.BR \-\-scan )
1673the first device given is the md device.
1674In the second usage example, all devices listed are treated as md
1675devices and assembly is attempted.
1676In the third (where no devices are listed) all md devices that are
1677listed in the configuration file are assembled. If no arrays are
1678described by the configuration file, then any arrays that
1679can be found on unused devices will be assembled.
1680
1681If precisely one device is listed, but
1682.B \-\-scan
1683is not given, then
1684.I mdadm
1685acts as though
1686.B \-\-scan
1687was given and identity information is extracted from the configuration file.
1688
1689The identity can be given with the
1690.B \-\-uuid
1691option, the
1692.B \-\-name
1693option, or the
1694.B \-\-super\-minor
1695option, will be taken from the md-device record in the config file, or
1696will be taken from the super block of the first component-device
1697listed on the command line.
1698
1699Devices can be given on the
1700.B \-\-assemble
1701command line or in the config file. Only devices which have an md
1702superblock which contains the right identity will be considered for
1703any array.
1704
1705The config file is only used if explicitly named with
1706.B \-\-config
1707or requested with (a possibly implicit)
1708.BR \-\-scan .
1709In the later case,
1710.B /etc/mdadm.conf
1711or
1712.B /etc/mdadm/mdadm.conf
1713is used.
1714
1715If
1716.B \-\-scan
1717is not given, then the config file will only be used to find the
1718identity of md arrays.
1719
1720Normally the array will be started after it is assembled. However if
1721.B \-\-scan
1722is not given and not all expected drives were listed, then the array
1723is not started (to guard against usage errors). To insist that the
1724array be started in this case (as may work for RAID1, 4, 5, 6, or 10),
1725give the
1726.B \-\-run
1727flag.
1728
1729If
1730.I udev
1731is active,
1732.I mdadm
1733does not create any entries in
1734.B /dev
1735but leaves that to
1736.IR udev .
1737It does record information in
1738.B {MAP_PATH}
1739which will allow
1740.I udev
1741to choose the correct name.
1742
1743If
1744.I mdadm
1745detects that udev is not configured, it will create the devices in
1746.B /dev
1747itself.
1748
1749In Linux kernels prior to version 2.6.28 there were two distinctly
1750different types of md devices that could be created: one that could be
1751partitioned using standard partitioning tools and one that could not.
1752Since 2.6.28 that distinction is no longer relevant as both type of
1753devices can be partitioned.
1754.I mdadm
1755will normally create the type that originally could not be partitioned
1756as it has a well defined major number (9).
1757
1758Prior to 2.6.28, it is important that mdadm chooses the correct type
1759of array device to use. This can be controlled with the
1760.B \-\-auto
1761option. In particular, a value of "mdp" or "part" or "p" tells mdadm
1762to use a partitionable device rather than the default.
1763
1764In the no-udev case, the value given to
1765.B \-\-auto
1766can be suffixed by a number. This tells
1767.I mdadm
1768to create that number of partition devices rather than the default of 4.
1769
1770The value given to
1771.B \-\-auto
1772can also be given in the configuration file as a word starting
1773.B auto=
1774on the ARRAY line for the relevant array.
1775
1776.SS Auto Assembly
1777When
1778.B \-\-assemble
1779is used with
1780.B \-\-scan
1781and no devices are listed,
1782.I mdadm
1783will first attempt to assemble all the arrays listed in the config
1784file.
1785
1786If no arrays are listed in the config (other than those marked
1787.BR <ignore> )
1788it will look through the available devices for possible arrays and
1789will try to assemble anything that it finds. Arrays which are tagged
1790as belonging to the given homehost will be assembled and started
1791normally. Arrays which do not obviously belong to this host are given
1792names that are expected not to conflict with anything local, and are
1793started "read-auto" so that nothing is written to any device until the
1794array is written to. i.e. automatic resync etc is delayed.
1795
1796If
1797.I mdadm
1798finds a consistent set of devices that look like they should comprise
1799an array, and if the superblock is tagged as belonging to the given
1800home host, it will automatically choose a device name and try to
1801assemble the array. If the array uses version-0.90 metadata, then the
1802.B minor
1803number as recorded in the superblock is used to create a name in
1804.B /dev/md/
1805so for example
1806.BR /dev/md/3 .
1807If the array uses version-1 metadata, then the
1808.B name
1809from the superblock is used to similarly create a name in
1810.B /dev/md/
1811(the name will have any 'host' prefix stripped first).
1812
1813This behaviour can be modified by the
1814.I AUTO
1815line in the
1816.I mdadm.conf
1817configuration file. This line can indicate that specific metadata
1818type should, or should not, be automatically assembled. If an array
1819is found which is not listed in
1820.I mdadm.conf
1821and has a metadata format that is denied by the
1822.I AUTO
1823line, then it will not be assembled.
1824The
1825.I AUTO
1826line can also request that all arrays identified as being for this
1827homehost should be assembled regardless of their metadata type.
1828See
1829.IR mdadm.conf (5)
1830for further details.
1831
1832Note: Auto assembly cannot be used for assembling and activating some
1833arrays which are undergoing reshape. In particular as the
1834.B backup\-file
1835cannot be given, any reshape which requires a backup-file to continue
1836cannot be started by auto assembly. An array which is growing to more
1837devices and has passed the critical section can be assembled using
1838auto-assembly.
1839
1840.SH BUILD MODE
1841
1842.HP 12
1843Usage:
1844.B mdadm \-\-build
1845.I md-device
1846.BI \-\-chunk= X
1847.BI \-\-level= Y
1848.BI \-\-raid\-devices= Z
1849.I devices
1850
1851.PP
1852This usage is similar to
1853.BR \-\-create .
1854The difference is that it creates an array without a superblock. With
1855these arrays there is no difference between initially creating the array and
1856subsequently assembling the array, except that hopefully there is useful
1857data there in the second case.
1858
1859The level may raid0, linear, raid1, raid10, multipath, or faulty, or
1860one of their synonyms. All devices must be listed and the array will
1861be started once complete. It will often be appropriate to use
1862.B \-\-assume\-clean
1863with levels raid1 or raid10.
1864
1865.SH CREATE MODE
1866
1867.HP 12
1868Usage:
1869.B mdadm \-\-create
1870.I md-device
1871.BI \-\-chunk= X
1872.BI \-\-level= Y
1873.br
1874.BI \-\-raid\-devices= Z
1875.I devices
1876
1877.PP
1878This usage will initialise a new md array, associate some devices with
1879it, and activate the array.
1880
1881The named device will normally not exist when
1882.I "mdadm \-\-create"
1883is run, but will be created by
1884.I udev
1885once the array becomes active.
1886
1887As devices are added, they are checked to see if they contain RAID
1888superblocks or filesystems. They are also checked to see if the variance in
1889device size exceeds 1%.
1890
1891If any discrepancy is found, the array will not automatically be run, though
1892the presence of a
1893.B \-\-run
1894can override this caution.
1895
1896To create a "degraded" array in which some devices are missing, simply
1897give the word "\fBmissing\fP"
1898in place of a device name. This will cause
1899.I mdadm
1900to leave the corresponding slot in the array empty.
1901For a RAID4 or RAID5 array at most one slot can be
1902"\fBmissing\fP"; for a RAID6 array at most two slots.
1903For a RAID1 array, only one real device needs to be given. All of the
1904others can be
1905"\fBmissing\fP".
1906
1907When creating a RAID5 array,
1908.I mdadm
1909will automatically create a degraded array with an extra spare drive.
1910This is because building the spare into a degraded array is in general
1911faster than resyncing the parity on a non-degraded, but not clean,
1912array. This feature can be overridden with the
1913.B \-\-force
1914option.
1915
1916When creating an array with version-1 metadata a name for the array is
1917required.
1918If this is not given with the
1919.B \-\-name
1920option,
1921.I mdadm
1922will choose a name based on the last component of the name of the
1923device being created. So if
1924.B /dev/md3
1925is being created, then the name
1926.B 3
1927will be chosen.
1928If
1929.B /dev/md/home
1930is being created, then the name
1931.B home
1932will be used.
1933
1934When creating a partition based array, using
1935.I mdadm
1936with version-1.x metadata, the partition type should be set to
1937.B 0xDA
1938(non fs-data). This type selection allows for greater precision since
1939using any other [RAID auto-detect (0xFD) or a GNU/Linux partition (0x83)],
1940might create problems in the event of array recovery through a live cdrom.
1941
1942A new array will normally get a randomly assigned 128bit UUID which is
1943very likely to be unique. If you have a specific need, you can choose
1944a UUID for the array by giving the
1945.B \-\-uuid=
1946option. Be warned that creating two arrays with the same UUID is a
1947recipe for disaster. Also, using
1948.B \-\-uuid=
1949when creating a v0.90 array will silently override any
1950.B \-\-homehost=
1951setting.
1952.\"If the
1953.\".B \-\-size
1954.\"option is given, it is not necessary to list any component-devices in this command.
1955.\"They can be added later, before a
1956.\".B \-\-run.
1957.\"If no
1958.\".B \-\-size
1959.\"is given, the apparent size of the smallest drive given is used.
1960
1961If the array type supports a write-intent bitmap, and if the devices
1962in the array exceed 100G is size, an internal write-intent bitmap
1963will automatically be added unless some other option is explicitly
1964requested with the
1965.B \-\-bitmap
1966option. In any case space for a bitmap will be reserved so that one
1967can be added layer with
1968.BR "\-\-grow \-\-bitmap=internal" .
1969
1970If the metadata type supports it (currently only 1.x metadata), space
1971will be allocated to store a bad block list. This allows a modest
1972number of bad blocks to be recorded, allowing the drive to remain in
1973service while only partially functional.
1974
1975When creating an array within a
1976.B CONTAINER
1977.I mdadm
1978can be given either the list of devices to use, or simply the name of
1979the container. The former case gives control over which devices in
1980the container will be used for the array. The latter case allows
1981.I mdadm
1982to automatically choose which devices to use based on how much spare
1983space is available.
1984
1985The General Management options that are valid with
1986.B \-\-create
1987are:
1988.TP
1989.B \-\-run
1990insist on running the array even if some devices look like they might
1991be in use.
1992
1993.TP
1994.B \-\-readonly
1995start the array readonly \(em not supported yet.
1996
1997.SH MANAGE MODE
1998.HP 12
1999Usage:
2000.B mdadm
2001.I device
2002.I options... devices...
2003.PP
2004
2005This usage will allow individual devices in an array to be failed,
2006removed or added. It is possible to perform multiple operations with
2007on command. For example:
2008.br
2009.B " mdadm /dev/md0 \-f /dev/hda1 \-r /dev/hda1 \-a /dev/hda1"
2010.br
2011will firstly mark
2012.B /dev/hda1
2013as faulty in
2014.B /dev/md0
2015and will then remove it from the array and finally add it back
2016in as a spare. However only one md array can be affected by a single
2017command.
2018
2019When a device is added to an active array, mdadm checks to see if it
2020has metadata on it which suggests that it was recently a member of the
2021array. If it does, it tries to "re\-add" the device. If there have
2022been no changes since the device was removed, or if the array has a
2023write-intent bitmap which has recorded whatever changes there were,
2024then the device will immediately become a full member of the array and
2025those differences recorded in the bitmap will be resolved.
2026
2027.SH MISC MODE
2028.HP 12
2029Usage:
2030.B mdadm
2031.I options ...
2032.I devices ...
2033.PP
2034
2035MISC mode includes a number of distinct operations that
2036operate on distinct devices. The operations are:
2037.TP
2038.B \-\-query
2039The device is examined to see if it is
2040(1) an active md array, or
2041(2) a component of an md array.
2042The information discovered is reported.
2043
2044.TP
2045.B \-\-detail
2046The device should be an active md device.
2047.B mdadm
2048will display a detailed description of the array.
2049.B \-\-brief
2050or
2051.B \-\-scan
2052will cause the output to be less detailed and the format to be
2053suitable for inclusion in
2054.BR mdadm.conf .
2055The exit status of
2056.I mdadm
2057will normally be 0 unless
2058.I mdadm
2059failed to get useful information about the device(s); however, if the
2060.B \-\-test
2061option is given, then the exit status will be:
2062.RS
2063.TP
20640
2065The array is functioning normally.
2066.TP
20671
2068The array has at least one failed device.
2069.TP
20702
2071The array has multiple failed devices such that it is unusable.
2072.TP
20734
2074There was an error while trying to get information about the device.
2075.RE
2076
2077.TP
2078.B \-\-detail\-platform
2079Print detail of the platform's RAID capabilities (firmware / hardware
2080topology). If the metadata is specified with
2081.B \-e
2082or
2083.B \-\-metadata=
2084then the return status will be:
2085.RS
2086.TP
20870
2088metadata successfully enumerated its platform components on this system
2089.TP
20901
2091metadata is platform independent
2092.TP
20932
2094metadata failed to find its platform components on this system
2095.RE
2096
2097.TP
2098.B \-\-update\-subarray=
2099If the device is a container and the argument to \-\-update\-subarray
2100specifies a subarray in the container, then attempt to update the given
2101superblock field in the subarray. Similar to updating an array in
2102"assemble" mode, the field to update is selected by
2103.B \-U
2104or
2105.B \-\-update=
2106option. Currently only
2107.B name
2108is supported.
2109
2110The
2111.B name
2112option updates the subarray name in the metadata, it may not affect the
2113device node name or the device node symlink until the subarray is
2114re\-assembled. If updating
2115.B name
2116would change the UUID of an active subarray this operation is blocked,
2117and the command will end in an error.
2118
2119.TP
2120.B \-\-examine
2121The device should be a component of an md array.
2122.I mdadm
2123will read the md superblock of the device and display the contents.
2124If
2125.B \-\-brief
2126or
2127.B \-\-scan
2128is given, then multiple devices that are components of the one array
2129are grouped together and reported in a single entry suitable
2130for inclusion in
2131.BR mdadm.conf .
2132
2133Having
2134.B \-\-scan
2135without listing any devices will cause all devices listed in the
2136config file to be examined.
2137
2138.TP
2139.B \-\-stop
2140The devices should be active md arrays which will be deactivated, as
2141long as they are not currently in use.
2142
2143.TP
2144.B \-\-run
2145This will fully activate a partially assembled md array.
2146
2147.TP
2148.B \-\-readonly
2149This will mark an active array as read-only, providing that it is
2150not currently being used.
2151
2152.TP
2153.B \-\-readwrite
2154This will change a
2155.B readonly
2156array back to being read/write.
2157
2158.TP
2159.B \-\-scan
2160For all operations except
2161.BR \-\-examine ,
2162.B \-\-scan
2163will cause the operation to be applied to all arrays listed in
2164.BR /proc/mdstat .
2165For
2166.BR \-\-examine,
2167.B \-\-scan
2168causes all devices listed in the config file to be examined.
2169
2170.TP
2171.BR \-b ", " \-\-brief
2172Be less verbose. This is used with
2173.B \-\-detail
2174and
2175.BR \-\-examine .
2176Using
2177.B \-\-brief
2178with
2179.B \-\-verbose
2180gives an intermediate level of verbosity.
2181
2182.SH MONITOR MODE
2183
2184.HP 12
2185Usage:
2186.B mdadm \-\-monitor
2187.I options... devices...
2188
2189.PP
2190This usage causes
2191.I mdadm
2192to periodically poll a number of md arrays and to report on any events
2193noticed.
2194.I mdadm
2195will never exit once it decides that there are arrays to be checked,
2196so it should normally be run in the background.
2197
2198As well as reporting events,
2199.I mdadm
2200may move a spare drive from one array to another if they are in the
2201same
2202.B spare-group
2203or
2204.B domain
2205and if the destination array has a failed drive but no spares.
2206
2207If any devices are listed on the command line,
2208.I mdadm
2209will only monitor those devices. Otherwise all arrays listed in the
2210configuration file will be monitored. Further, if
2211.B \-\-scan
2212is given, then any other md devices that appear in
2213.B /proc/mdstat
2214will also be monitored.
2215
2216The result of monitoring the arrays is the generation of events.
2217These events are passed to a separate program (if specified) and may
2218be mailed to a given E-mail address.
2219
2220When passing events to a program, the program is run once for each event,
2221and is given 2 or 3 command-line arguments: the first is the
2222name of the event (see below), the second is the name of the
2223md device which is affected, and the third is the name of a related
2224device if relevant (such as a component device that has failed).
2225
2226If
2227.B \-\-scan
2228is given, then a program or an E-mail address must be specified on the
2229command line or in the config file. If neither are available, then
2230.I mdadm
2231will not monitor anything.
2232Without
2233.B \-\-scan,
2234.I mdadm
2235will continue monitoring as long as something was found to monitor. If
2236no program or email is given, then each event is reported to
2237.BR stdout .
2238
2239The different events are:
2240
2241.RS 4
2242.TP
2243.B DeviceDisappeared
2244An md array which previously was configured appears to no longer be
2245configured. (syslog priority: Critical)
2246
2247If
2248.I mdadm
2249was told to monitor an array which is RAID0 or Linear, then it will
2250report
2251.B DeviceDisappeared
2252with the extra information
2253.BR Wrong-Level .
2254This is because RAID0 and Linear do not support the device-failed,
2255hot-spare and resync operations which are monitored.
2256
2257.TP
2258.B RebuildStarted
2259An md array started reconstruction. (syslog priority: Warning)
2260
2261.TP
2262.BI Rebuild NN
2263Where
2264.I NN
2265is a two-digit number (ie. 05, 48). This indicates that rebuild
2266has passed that many percent of the total. The events are generated
2267with fixed increment since 0. Increment size may be specified with
2268a commandline option (default is 20). (syslog priority: Warning)
2269
2270.TP
2271.B RebuildFinished
2272An md array that was rebuilding, isn't any more, either because it
2273finished normally or was aborted. (syslog priority: Warning)
2274
2275.TP
2276.B Fail
2277An active component device of an array has been marked as
2278faulty. (syslog priority: Critical)
2279
2280.TP
2281.B FailSpare
2282A spare component device which was being rebuilt to replace a faulty
2283device has failed. (syslog priority: Critical)
2284
2285.TP
2286.B SpareActive
2287A spare component device which was being rebuilt to replace a faulty
2288device has been successfully rebuilt and has been made active.
2289(syslog priority: Info)
2290
2291.TP
2292.B NewArray
2293A new md array has been detected in the
2294.B /proc/mdstat
2295file. (syslog priority: Info)
2296
2297.TP
2298.B DegradedArray
2299A newly noticed array appears to be degraded. This message is not
2300generated when
2301.I mdadm
2302notices a drive failure which causes degradation, but only when
2303.I mdadm
2304notices that an array is degraded when it first sees the array.
2305(syslog priority: Critical)
2306
2307.TP
2308.B MoveSpare
2309A spare drive has been moved from one array in a
2310.B spare-group
2311or
2312.B domain
2313to another to allow a failed drive to be replaced.
2314(syslog priority: Info)
2315
2316.TP
2317.B SparesMissing
2318If
2319.I mdadm
2320has been told, via the config file, that an array should have a certain
2321number of spare devices, and
2322.I mdadm
2323detects that it has fewer than this number when it first sees the
2324array, it will report a
2325.B SparesMissing
2326message.
2327(syslog priority: Warning)
2328
2329.TP
2330.B TestMessage
2331An array was found at startup, and the
2332.B \-\-test
2333flag was given.
2334(syslog priority: Info)
2335.RE
2336
2337Only
2338.B Fail,
2339.B FailSpare,
2340.B DegradedArray,
2341.B SparesMissing
2342and
2343.B TestMessage
2344cause Email to be sent. All events cause the program to be run.
2345The program is run with two or three arguments: the event
2346name, the array device and possibly a second device.
2347
2348Each event has an associated array device (e.g.
2349.BR /dev/md1 )
2350and possibly a second device. For
2351.BR Fail ,
2352.BR FailSpare ,
2353and
2354.B SpareActive
2355the second device is the relevant component device.
2356For
2357.B MoveSpare
2358the second device is the array that the spare was moved from.
2359
2360For
2361.I mdadm
2362to move spares from one array to another, the different arrays need to
2363be labeled with the same
2364.B spare-group
2365or the spares must be allowed to migrate through matching POLICY domains
2366in the configuration file. The
2367.B spare-group
2368name can be any string; it is only necessary that different spare
2369groups use different names.
2370
2371When
2372.I mdadm
2373detects that an array in a spare group has fewer active
2374devices than necessary for the complete array, and has no spare
2375devices, it will look for another array in the same spare group that
2376has a full complement of working drive and a spare. It will then
2377attempt to remove the spare from the second drive and add it to the
2378first.
2379If the removal succeeds but the adding fails, then it is added back to
2380the original array.
2381
2382If the spare group for a degraded array is not defined,
2383.I mdadm
2384will look at the rules of spare migration specified by POLICY lines in
2385.B mdadm.conf
2386and then follow similar steps as above if a matching spare is found.
2387
2388.SH GROW MODE
2389The GROW mode is used for changing the size or shape of an active
2390array.
2391For this to work, the kernel must support the necessary change.
2392Various types of growth are being added during 2.6 development.
2393
2394Currently the supported changes include
2395.IP \(bu 4
2396change the "size" attribute for RAID1, RAID4, RAID5 and RAID6.
2397.IP \(bu 4
2398increase or decrease the "raid\-devices" attribute of RAID0, RAID1, RAID4,
2399RAID5, and RAID6.
2400.IP \(bu 4
2401change the chunk-size and layout of RAID0, RAID4, RAID5 and RAID6.
2402.IP \(bu 4
2403convert between RAID1 and RAID5, between RAID5 and RAID6, between
2404RAID0, RAID4, and RAID5, and between RAID0 and RAID10 (in the near-2 mode).
2405.IP \(bu 4
2406add a write-intent bitmap to any array which supports these bitmaps, or
2407remove a write-intent bitmap from such an array.
2408.PP
2409
2410Using GROW on containers is currently supported only for Intel's IMSM
2411container format. The number of devices in a container can be
2412increased - which affects all arrays in the container - or an array
2413in a container can be converted between levels where those levels are
2414supported by the container, and the conversion is on of those listed
2415above. Resizing arrays in an IMSM container with
2416.B "--grow --size"
2417is not yet supported.
2418
2419Grow functionality (e.g. expand a number of raid devices) for Intel's
2420IMSM container format has an experimental status. It is guarded by the
2421.B MDADM_EXPERIMENTAL
2422environment variable which must be set to '1' for a GROW command to
2423succeed.
2424This is for the following reasons:
2425
2426.IP 1.
2427Intel's native IMSM check-pointing is not fully tested yet.
2428This can causes IMSM incompatibility during the grow process: an array
2429which is growing cannot roam between Microsoft Windows(R) and Linux
2430systems.
2431
2432.IP 2.
2433Interrupting a grow operation is not recommended, because it
2434has not been fully tested for Intel's IMSM container format yet.
2435
2436.PP
2437Note: Intel's native checkpointing doesn't use
2438.B --backup-file
2439option and it is transparent for assembly feature.
2440
2441.SS SIZE CHANGES
2442Normally when an array is built the "size" is taken from the smallest
2443of the drives. If all the small drives in an arrays are, one at a
2444time, removed and replaced with larger drives, then you could have an
2445array of large drives with only a small amount used. In this
2446situation, changing the "size" with "GROW" mode will allow the extra
2447space to start being used. If the size is increased in this way, a
2448"resync" process will start to make sure the new parts of the array
2449are synchronised.
2450
2451Note that when an array changes size, any filesystem that may be
2452stored in the array will not automatically grow or shrink to use or
2453vacate the space. The
2454filesystem will need to be explicitly told to use the extra space
2455after growing, or to reduce its size
2456.B prior
2457to shrinking the array.
2458
2459Also the size of an array cannot be changed while it has an active
2460bitmap. If an array has a bitmap, it must be removed before the size
2461can be changed. Once the change is complete a new bitmap can be created.
2462
2463.SS RAID\-DEVICES CHANGES
2464
2465A RAID1 array can work with any number of devices from 1 upwards
2466(though 1 is not very useful). There may be times which you want to
2467increase or decrease the number of active devices. Note that this is
2468different to hot-add or hot-remove which changes the number of
2469inactive devices.
2470
2471When reducing the number of devices in a RAID1 array, the slots which
2472are to be removed from the array must already be vacant. That is, the
2473devices which were in those slots must be failed and removed.
2474
2475When the number of devices is increased, any hot spares that are
2476present will be activated immediately.
2477
2478Changing the number of active devices in a RAID5 or RAID6 is much more
2479effort. Every block in the array will need to be read and written
2480back to a new location. From 2.6.17, the Linux Kernel is able to
2481increase the number of devices in a RAID5 safely, including restarting
2482an interrupted "reshape". From 2.6.31, the Linux Kernel is able to
2483increase or decrease the number of devices in a RAID5 or RAID6.
2484
2485From 2.6.35, the Linux Kernel is able to convert a RAID0 in to a RAID4
2486or RAID5.
2487.I mdadm
2488uses this functionality and the ability to add
2489devices to a RAID4 to allow devices to be added to a RAID0. When
2490requested to do this,
2491.I mdadm
2492will convert the RAID0 to a RAID4, add the necessary disks and make
2493the reshape happen, and then convert the RAID4 back to RAID0.
2494
2495When decreasing the number of devices, the size of the array will also
2496decrease. If there was data in the array, it could get destroyed and
2497this is not reversible, so you should firstly shrink the filesystem on
2498the array to fit within the new size. To help prevent accidents,
2499.I mdadm
2500requires that the size of the array be decreased first with
2501.BR "mdadm --grow --array-size" .
2502This is a reversible change which simply makes the end of the array
2503inaccessible. The integrity of any data can then be checked before
2504the non-reversible reduction in the number of devices is request.
2505
2506When relocating the first few stripes on a RAID5 or RAID6, it is not
2507possible to keep the data on disk completely consistent and
2508crash-proof. To provide the required safety, mdadm disables writes to
2509the array while this "critical section" is reshaped, and takes a
2510backup of the data that is in that section. For grows, this backup may be
2511stored in any spare devices that the array has, however it can also be
2512stored in a separate file specified with the
2513.B \-\-backup\-file
2514option, and is required to be specified for shrinks, RAID level
2515changes and layout changes. If this option is used, and the system
2516does crash during the critical period, the same file must be passed to
2517.B \-\-assemble
2518to restore the backup and reassemble the array. When shrinking rather
2519than growing the array, the reshape is done from the end towards the
2520beginning, so the "critical section" is at the end of the reshape.
2521
2522.SS LEVEL CHANGES
2523
2524Changing the RAID level of any array happens instantaneously. However
2525in the RAID5 to RAID6 case this requires a non-standard layout of the
2526RAID6 data, and in the RAID6 to RAID5 case that non-standard layout is
2527required before the change can be accomplished. So while the level
2528change is instant, the accompanying layout change can take quite a
2529long time. A
2530.B \-\-backup\-file
2531is required. If the array is not simultaneously being grown or
2532shrunk, so that the array size will remain the same - for example,
2533reshaping a 3-drive RAID5 into a 4-drive RAID6 - the backup file will
2534be used not just for a "cricital section" but throughout the reshape
2535operation, as described below under LAYOUT CHANGES.
2536
2537.SS CHUNK-SIZE AND LAYOUT CHANGES
2538
2539Changing the chunk-size of layout without also changing the number of
2540devices as the same time will involve re-writing all blocks in-place.
2541To ensure against data loss in the case of a crash, a
2542.B --backup-file
2543must be provided for these changes. Small sections of the array will
2544be copied to the backup file while they are being rearranged. This
2545means that all the data is copied twice, once to the backup and once
2546to the new layout on the array, so this type of reshape will go very
2547slowly.
2548
2549If the reshape is interrupted for any reason, this backup file must be
2550made available to
2551.B "mdadm --assemble"
2552so the array can be reassembled. Consequently the file cannot be
2553stored on the device being reshaped.
2554
2555
2556.SS BITMAP CHANGES
2557
2558A write-intent bitmap can be added to, or removed from, an active
2559array. Either internal bitmaps, or bitmaps stored in a separate file,
2560can be added. Note that if you add a bitmap stored in a file which is
2561in a filesystem that is on the RAID array being affected, the system
2562will deadlock. The bitmap must be on a separate filesystem.
2563
2564.SH INCREMENTAL MODE
2565
2566.HP 12
2567Usage:
2568.B mdadm \-\-incremental
2569.RB [ \-\-run ]
2570.RB [ \-\-quiet ]
2571.I component-device
2572.HP 12
2573Usage:
2574.B mdadm \-\-incremental \-\-fail
2575.I component-device
2576.HP 12
2577Usage:
2578.B mdadm \-\-incremental \-\-rebuild\-map
2579.HP 12
2580Usage:
2581.B mdadm \-\-incremental \-\-run \-\-scan
2582
2583.PP
2584This mode is designed to be used in conjunction with a device
2585discovery system. As devices are found in a system, they can be
2586passed to
2587.B "mdadm \-\-incremental"
2588to be conditionally added to an appropriate array.
2589
2590Conversely, it can also be used with the
2591.B \-\-fail
2592flag to do just the opposite and find whatever array a particular device
2593is part of and remove the device from that array.
2594
2595If the device passed is a
2596.B CONTAINER
2597device created by a previous call to
2598.IR mdadm ,
2599then rather than trying to add that device to an array, all the arrays
2600described by the metadata of the container will be started.
2601
2602.I mdadm
2603performs a number of tests to determine if the device is part of an
2604array, and which array it should be part of. If an appropriate array
2605is found, or can be created,
2606.I mdadm
2607adds the device to the array and conditionally starts the array.
2608
2609Note that
2610.I mdadm
2611will normally only add devices to an array which were previously working
2612(active or spare) parts of that array. The support for automatic
2613inclusion of a new drive as a spare in some array requires
2614a configuration through POLICY in config file.
2615
2616The tests that
2617.I mdadm
2618makes are as follow:
2619.IP +
2620Is the device permitted by
2621.BR mdadm.conf ?
2622That is, is it listed in a
2623.B DEVICES
2624line in that file. If
2625.B DEVICES
2626is absent then the default it to allow any device. Similar if
2627.B DEVICES
2628contains the special word
2629.B partitions
2630then any device is allowed. Otherwise the device name given to
2631.I mdadm
2632must match one of the names or patterns in a
2633.B DEVICES
2634line.
2635
2636.IP +
2637Does the device have a valid md superblock? If a specific metadata
2638version is requested with
2639.B \-\-metadata
2640or
2641.B \-e
2642then only that style of metadata is accepted, otherwise
2643.I mdadm
2644finds any known version of metadata. If no
2645.I md
2646metadata is found, the device may be still added to an array
2647as a spare if POLICY allows.
2648
2649.ig
2650.IP +
2651Does the metadata match an expected array?
2652The metadata can match in two ways. Either there is an array listed
2653in
2654.B mdadm.conf
2655which identifies the array (either by UUID, by name, by device list,
2656or by minor-number), or the array was created with a
2657.B homehost
2658specified and that
2659.B homehost
2660matches the one in
2661.B mdadm.conf
2662or on the command line.
2663If
2664.I mdadm
2665is not able to positively identify the array as belonging to the
2666current host, the device will be rejected.
2667..
2668
2669.PP
2670.I mdadm
2671keeps a list of arrays that it has partially assembled in
2672.BR {MAP_PATH} .
2673If no array exists which matches
2674the metadata on the new device,
2675.I mdadm
2676must choose a device name and unit number. It does this based on any
2677name given in
2678.B mdadm.conf
2679or any name information stored in the metadata. If this name
2680suggests a unit number, that number will be used, otherwise a free
2681unit number will be chosen. Normally
2682.I mdadm
2683will prefer to create a partitionable array, however if the
2684.B CREATE
2685line in
2686.B mdadm.conf
2687suggests that a non-partitionable array is preferred, that will be
2688honoured.
2689
2690If the array is not found in the config file and its metadata does not
2691identify it as belonging to the "homehost", then
2692.I mdadm
2693will choose a name for the array which is certain not to conflict with
2694any array which does belong to this host. It does this be adding an
2695underscore and a small number to the name preferred by the metadata.
2696
2697Once an appropriate array is found or created and the device is added,
2698.I mdadm
2699must decide if the array is ready to be started. It will
2700normally compare the number of available (non-spare) devices to the
2701number of devices that the metadata suggests need to be active. If
2702there are at least that many, the array will be started. This means
2703that if any devices are missing the array will not be restarted.
2704
2705As an alternative,
2706.B \-\-run
2707may be passed to
2708.I mdadm
2709in which case the array will be run as soon as there are enough
2710devices present for the data to be accessible. For a RAID1, that
2711means one device will start the array. For a clean RAID5, the array
2712will be started as soon as all but one drive is present.
2713
2714Note that neither of these approaches is really ideal. If it can
2715be known that all device discovery has completed, then
2716.br
2717.B " mdadm \-IRs"
2718.br
2719can be run which will try to start all arrays that are being
2720incrementally assembled. They are started in "read-auto" mode in
2721which they are read-only until the first write request. This means
2722that no metadata updates are made and no attempt at resync or recovery
2723happens. Further devices that are found before the first write can
2724still be added safely.
2725
2726.SH ENVIRONMENT
2727This section describes environment variables that affect how mdadm
2728operates.
2729
2730.TP
2731.B MDADM_NO_MDMON
2732Setting this value to 1 will prevent mdadm from automatically launching
2733mdmon. This variable is intended primarily for debugging mdadm/mdmon.
2734
2735.TP
2736.B MDADM_NO_UDEV
2737Normally,
2738.I mdadm
2739does not create any device nodes in /dev, but leaves that task to
2740.IR udev .
2741If
2742.I udev
2743appears not to be configured, or if this environment variable is set
2744to '1', the
2745.I mdadm
2746will create and devices that are needed.
2747
2748.TP
2749.B IMSM_NO_PLATFORM
2750A key value of IMSM metadata is that it allows interoperability with
2751boot ROMs on Intel platforms, and with other major operating systems.
2752Consequently,
2753.I mdadm
2754will only allow an IMSM array to be created or modified if detects
2755that it is running on an Intel platform which supports IMSM, and
2756supports the particular configuration of IMSM that is being requested
2757(some functionality requires newer OROM support).
2758
2759These checks can be suppressed by setting IMSM_NO_PLATFORM=1 in the
2760environment. This can be useful for testing or for disaster
2761recovery. You should be aware that interoperability may be
2762compromised by setting this value.
2763.SH EXAMPLES
2764
2765.B " mdadm \-\-query /dev/name-of-device"
2766.br
2767This will find out if a given device is a RAID array, or is part of
2768one, and will provide brief information about the device.
2769
2770.B " mdadm \-\-assemble \-\-scan"
2771.br
2772This will assemble and start all arrays listed in the standard config
2773file. This command will typically go in a system startup file.
2774
2775.B " mdadm \-\-stop \-\-scan"
2776.br
2777This will shut down all arrays that can be shut down (i.e. are not
2778currently in use). This will typically go in a system shutdown script.
2779
2780.B " mdadm \-\-follow \-\-scan \-\-delay=120"
2781.br
2782If (and only if) there is an Email address or program given in the
2783standard config file, then
2784monitor the status of all arrays listed in that file by
2785polling them ever 2 minutes.
2786
2787.B " mdadm \-\-create /dev/md0 \-\-level=1 \-\-raid\-devices=2 /dev/hd[ac]1"
2788.br
2789Create /dev/md0 as a RAID1 array consisting of /dev/hda1 and /dev/hdc1.
2790
2791.br
2792.B " echo 'DEVICE /dev/hd*[0\-9] /dev/sd*[0\-9]' > mdadm.conf"
2793.br
2794.B " mdadm \-\-detail \-\-scan >> mdadm.conf"
2795.br
2796This will create a prototype config file that describes currently
2797active arrays that are known to be made from partitions of IDE or SCSI drives.
2798This file should be reviewed before being used as it may
2799contain unwanted detail.
2800
2801.B " echo 'DEVICE /dev/hd[a\-z] /dev/sd*[a\-z]' > mdadm.conf"
2802.br
2803.B " mdadm \-\-examine \-\-scan \-\-config=mdadm.conf >> mdadm.conf"
2804.br
2805This will find arrays which could be assembled from existing IDE and
2806SCSI whole drives (not partitions), and store the information in the
2807format of a config file.
2808This file is very likely to contain unwanted detail, particularly
2809the
2810.B devices=
2811entries. It should be reviewed and edited before being used as an
2812actual config file.
2813
2814.B " mdadm \-\-examine \-\-brief \-\-scan \-\-config=partitions"
2815.br
2816.B " mdadm \-Ebsc partitions"
2817.br
2818Create a list of devices by reading
2819.BR /proc/partitions ,
2820scan these for RAID superblocks, and printout a brief listing of all
2821that were found.
2822
2823.B " mdadm \-Ac partitions \-m 0 /dev/md0"
2824.br
2825Scan all partitions and devices listed in
2826.BR /proc/partitions
2827and assemble
2828.B /dev/md0
2829out of all such devices with a RAID superblock with a minor number of 0.
2830
2831.B " mdadm \-\-monitor \-\-scan \-\-daemonise > /run/mdadm/mon.pid"
2832.br
2833If config file contains a mail address or alert program, run mdadm in
2834the background in monitor mode monitoring all md devices. Also write
2835pid of mdadm daemon to
2836.BR /run/mdadm/mon.pid .
2837
2838.B " mdadm \-Iq /dev/somedevice"
2839.br
2840Try to incorporate newly discovered device into some array as
2841appropriate.
2842
2843.B " mdadm \-\-incremental \-\-rebuild\-map \-\-run \-\-scan"
2844.br
2845Rebuild the array map from any current arrays, and then start any that
2846can be started.
2847
2848.B " mdadm /dev/md4 --fail detached --remove detached"
2849.br
2850Any devices which are components of /dev/md4 will be marked as faulty
2851and then remove from the array.
2852
2853.B " mdadm --grow /dev/md4 --level=6 --backup-file=/root/backup-md4"
2854.br
2855The array
2856.B /dev/md4
2857which is currently a RAID5 array will be converted to RAID6. There
2858should normally already be a spare drive attached to the array as a
2859RAID6 needs one more drive than a matching RAID5.
2860
2861.B " mdadm --create /dev/md/ddf --metadata=ddf --raid-disks 6 /dev/sd[a-f]"
2862.br
2863Create a DDF array over 6 devices.
2864
2865.B " mdadm --create /dev/md/home -n3 -l5 -z 30000000 /dev/md/ddf"
2866.br
2867Create a RAID5 array over any 3 devices in the given DDF set. Use
2868only 30 gigabytes of each device.
2869
2870.B " mdadm -A /dev/md/ddf1 /dev/sd[a-f]"
2871.br
2872Assemble a pre-exist ddf array.
2873
2874.B " mdadm -I /dev/md/ddf1"
2875.br
2876Assemble all arrays contained in the ddf array, assigning names as
2877appropriate.
2878
2879.B " mdadm \-\-create \-\-help"
2880.br
2881Provide help about the Create mode.
2882
2883.B " mdadm \-\-config \-\-help"
2884.br
2885Provide help about the format of the config file.
2886
2887.B " mdadm \-\-help"
2888.br
2889Provide general help.
2890
2891.SH FILES
2892
2893.SS /proc/mdstat
2894
2895If you're using the
2896.B /proc
2897filesystem,
2898.B /proc/mdstat
2899lists all active md devices with information about them.
2900.I mdadm
2901uses this to find arrays when
2902.B \-\-scan
2903is given in Misc mode, and to monitor array reconstruction
2904on Monitor mode.
2905
2906.SS /etc/mdadm.conf
2907
2908The config file lists which devices may be scanned to see if
2909they contain MD super block, and gives identifying information
2910(e.g. UUID) about known MD arrays. See
2911.BR mdadm.conf (5)
2912for more details.
2913
2914.SS {MAP_PATH}
2915When
2916.B \-\-incremental
2917mode is used, this file gets a list of arrays currently being created.
2918
2919.SH DEVICE NAMES
2920
2921.I mdadm
2922understand two sorts of names for array devices.
2923
2924The first is the so-called 'standard' format name, which matches the
2925names used by the kernel and which appear in
2926.IR /proc/mdstat .
2927
2928The second sort can be freely chosen, but must reside in
2929.IR /dev/md/ .
2930When giving a device name to
2931.I mdadm
2932to create or assemble an array, either full path name such as
2933.I /dev/md0
2934or
2935.I /dev/md/home
2936can be given, or just the suffix of the second sort of name, such as
2937.I home
2938can be given.
2939
2940When
2941.I mdadm
2942chooses device names during auto-assembly or incremental assembly, it
2943will sometimes add a small sequence number to the end of the name to
2944avoid conflicted between multiple arrays that have the same name. If
2945.I mdadm
2946can reasonably determine that the array really is meant for this host,
2947either by a hostname in the metadata, or by the presence of the array
2948in
2949.BR mdadm.conf ,
2950then it will leave off the suffix if possible.
2951Also if the homehost is specified as
2952.B <ignore>
2953.I mdadm
2954will only use a suffix if a different array of the same name already
2955exists or is listed in the config file.
2956
2957The standard names for non-partitioned arrays (the only sort of md
2958array available in 2.4 and earlier) are of the form
2959.IP
2960/dev/mdNN
2961.PP
2962where NN is a number.
2963The standard names for partitionable arrays (as available from 2.6
2964onwards) are of the form
2965.IP
2966/dev/md_dNN
2967.PP
2968Partition numbers should be indicated by added "pMM" to these, thus "/dev/md/d1p2".
2969.PP
2970From kernel version, 2.6.28 the "non-partitioned array" can actually
2971be partitioned. So the "md_dNN" names are no longer needed, and
2972partitions such as "/dev/mdNNpXX" are possible.
2973
2974.SH NOTE
2975.I mdadm
2976was previously known as
2977.IR mdctl .
2978.P
2979.I mdadm
2980is completely separate from the
2981.I raidtools
2982package, and does not use the
2983.I /etc/raidtab
2984configuration file at all.
2985
2986.SH SEE ALSO
2987For further information on mdadm usage, MD and the various levels of
2988RAID, see:
2989.IP
2990.B http://raid.wiki.kernel.org/
2991.PP
2992(based upon Jakob \(/Ostergaard's Software\-RAID.HOWTO)
2993.\".PP
2994.\"for new releases of the RAID driver check out:
2995.\"
2996.\".IP
2997.\".UR ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/mingo/raid-patches
2998.\"ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/mingo/raid-patches
2999.\".UE
3000.\".PP
3001.\"or
3002.\".IP
3003.\".UR http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~neilb/patches/linux-stable/
3004.\"http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~neilb/patches/linux-stable/
3005.\".UE
3006.PP
3007The latest version of
3008.I mdadm
3009should always be available from
3010.IP
3011.B http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/raid/mdadm/
3012.PP
3013Related man pages:
3014.PP
3015.IR mdmon (8),
3016.IR mdadm.conf (5),
3017.IR md (4).
3018.PP
3019.IR raidtab (5),
3020.IR raid0run (8),
3021.IR raidstop (8),
3022.IR mkraid (8).