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1 .\" Copyright Neil Brown and others.
2 .\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
3 .\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
4 .\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
5 .\" (at your option) any later version.
6 .\" See file COPYING in distribution for details.
7 .TH MD 4
8 .SH NAME
9 md \- Multiple Device driver aka Linux Software RAID
10 .SH SYNOPSIS
11 .BI /dev/md n
12 .br
13 .BI /dev/md/ n
14 .br
15 .BR /dev/md/ name
16 .SH DESCRIPTION
17 The
18 .B md
19 driver provides virtual devices that are created from one or more
20 independent underlying devices. This array of devices often contains
21 redundancy and the devices are often disk drives, hence the acronym RAID
22 which stands for a Redundant Array of Independent Disks.
23 .PP
24 .B md
25 supports RAID levels
26 1 (mirroring),
27 4 (striped array with parity device),
28 5 (striped array with distributed parity information),
29 6 (striped array with distributed dual redundancy information), and
30 10 (striped and mirrored).
31 If some number of underlying devices fails while using one of these
32 levels, the array will continue to function; this number is one for
33 RAID levels 4 and 5, two for RAID level 6, and all but one (N-1) for
34 RAID level 1, and dependent on configuration for level 10.
35 .PP
36 .B md
37 also supports a number of pseudo RAID (non-redundant) configurations
38 including RAID0 (striped array), LINEAR (catenated array),
39 MULTIPATH (a set of different interfaces to the same device),
40 and FAULTY (a layer over a single device into which errors can be injected).
41
42 .SS MD METADATA
43 Each device in an array may have some
44 .I metadata
45 stored in the device. This metadata is sometimes called a
46 .BR superblock .
47 The metadata records information about the structure and state of the array.
48 This allows the array to be reliably re-assembled after a shutdown.
49
50 From Linux kernel version 2.6.10,
51 .B md
52 provides support for two different formats of metadata, and
53 other formats can be added. Prior to this release, only one format is
54 supported.
55
56 The common format \(em known as version 0.90 \(em has
57 a superblock that is 4K long and is written into a 64K aligned block that
58 starts at least 64K and less than 128K from the end of the device
59 (i.e. to get the address of the superblock round the size of the
60 device down to a multiple of 64K and then subtract 64K).
61 The available size of each device is the amount of space before the
62 super block, so between 64K and 128K is lost when a device in
63 incorporated into an MD array.
64 This superblock stores multi-byte fields in a processor-dependent
65 manner, so arrays cannot easily be moved between computers with
66 different processors.
67
68 The new format \(em known as version 1 \(em has a superblock that is
69 normally 1K long, but can be longer. It is normally stored between 8K
70 and 12K from the end of the device, on a 4K boundary, though
71 variations can be stored at the start of the device (version 1.1) or 4K from
72 the start of the device (version 1.2).
73 This metadata format stores multibyte data in a
74 processor-independent format and supports up to hundreds of
75 component devices (version 0.90 only supports 28).
76
77 The metadata contains, among other things:
78 .TP
79 LEVEL
80 The manner in which the devices are arranged into the array
81 (LINEAR, RAID0, RAID1, RAID4, RAID5, RAID10, MULTIPATH).
82 .TP
83 UUID
84 a 128 bit Universally Unique Identifier that identifies the array that
85 contains this device.
86
87 .PP
88 When a version 0.90 array is being reshaped (e.g. adding extra devices
89 to a RAID5), the version number is temporarily set to 0.91. This
90 ensures that if the reshape process is stopped in the middle (e.g. by
91 a system crash) and the machine boots into an older kernel that does
92 not support reshaping, then the array will not be assembled (which
93 would cause data corruption) but will be left untouched until a kernel
94 that can complete the reshape processes is used.
95
96 .SS ARRAYS WITHOUT METADATA
97 While it is usually best to create arrays with superblocks so that
98 they can be assembled reliably, there are some circumstances when an
99 array without superblocks is preferred. These include:
100 .TP
101 LEGACY ARRAYS
102 Early versions of the
103 .B md
104 driver only supported LINEAR and RAID0 configurations and did not use
105 a superblock (which is less critical with these configurations).
106 While such arrays should be rebuilt with superblocks if possible,
107 .B md
108 continues to support them.
109 .TP
110 FAULTY
111 Being a largely transparent layer over a different device, the FAULTY
112 personality doesn't gain anything from having a superblock.
113 .TP
114 MULTIPATH
115 It is often possible to detect devices which are different paths to
116 the same storage directly rather than having a distinctive superblock
117 written to the device and searched for on all paths. In this case,
118 a MULTIPATH array with no superblock makes sense.
119 .TP
120 RAID1
121 In some configurations it might be desired to create a RAID1
122 configuration that does not use a superblock, and to maintain the state of
123 the array elsewhere. While not encouraged for general use, it does
124 have special-purpose uses and is supported.
125
126 .SS ARRAYS WITH EXTERNAL METADATA
127
128 From release 2.6.28, the
129 .I md
130 driver supports arrays with externally managed metadata. That is,
131 the metadata is not managed by the kernel but rather by a user-space
132 program which is external to the kernel. This allows support for a
133 variety of metadata formats without cluttering the kernel with lots of
134 details.
135 .PP
136 .I md
137 is able to communicate with the user-space program through various
138 sysfs attributes so that it can make appropriate changes to the
139 metadata \- for example to mark a device as faulty. When necessary,
140 .I md
141 will wait for the program to acknowledge the event by writing to a
142 sysfs attribute.
143 The manual page for
144 .IR mdmon (8)
145 contains more detail about this interaction.
146
147 .SS CONTAINERS
148 Many metadata formats use a single block of metadata to describe a
149 number of different arrays which all use the same set of devices.
150 In this case it is helpful for the kernel to know about the full set
151 of devices as a whole. This set is known to md as a
152 .IR container .
153 A container is an
154 .I md
155 array with externally managed metadata and with device offset and size
156 so that it just covers the metadata part of the devices. The
157 remainder of each device is available to be incorporated into various
158 arrays.
159
160 .SS LINEAR
161
162 A LINEAR array simply catenates the available space on each
163 drive to form one large virtual drive.
164
165 One advantage of this arrangement over the more common RAID0
166 arrangement is that the array may be reconfigured at a later time with
167 an extra drive, so the array is made bigger without disturbing the
168 data that is on the array. This can even be done on a live
169 array.
170
171 If a chunksize is given with a LINEAR array, the usable space on each
172 device is rounded down to a multiple of this chunksize.
173
174 .SS RAID0
175
176 A RAID0 array (which has zero redundancy) is also known as a
177 striped array.
178 A RAID0 array is configured at creation with a
179 .B "Chunk Size"
180 which must be a power of two (prior to Linux 2.6.31), and at least 4
181 kibibytes.
182
183 The RAID0 driver assigns the first chunk of the array to the first
184 device, the second chunk to the second device, and so on until all
185 drives have been assigned one chunk. This collection of chunks forms a
186 .BR stripe .
187 Further chunks are gathered into stripes in the same way, and are
188 assigned to the remaining space in the drives.
189
190 If devices in the array are not all the same size, then once the
191 smallest device has been exhausted, the RAID0 driver starts
192 collecting chunks into smaller stripes that only span the drives which
193 still have remaining space.
194
195
196 .SS RAID1
197
198 A RAID1 array is also known as a mirrored set (though mirrors tend to
199 provide reflected images, which RAID1 does not) or a plex.
200
201 Once initialised, each device in a RAID1 array contains exactly the
202 same data. Changes are written to all devices in parallel. Data is
203 read from any one device. The driver attempts to distribute read
204 requests across all devices to maximise performance.
205
206 All devices in a RAID1 array should be the same size. If they are
207 not, then only the amount of space available on the smallest device is
208 used (any extra space on other devices is wasted).
209
210 Note that the read balancing done by the driver does not make the RAID1
211 performance profile be the same as for RAID0; a single stream of
212 sequential input will not be accelerated (e.g. a single dd), but
213 multiple sequential streams or a random workload will use more than one
214 spindle. In theory, having an N-disk RAID1 will allow N sequential
215 threads to read from all disks.
216
217 Individual devices in a RAID1 can be marked as "write-mostly".
218 These drives are excluded from the normal read balancing and will only
219 be read from when there is no other option. This can be useful for
220 devices connected over a slow link.
221
222 .SS RAID4
223
224 A RAID4 array is like a RAID0 array with an extra device for storing
225 parity. This device is the last of the active devices in the
226 array. Unlike RAID0, RAID4 also requires that all stripes span all
227 drives, so extra space on devices that are larger than the smallest is
228 wasted.
229
230 When any block in a RAID4 array is modified, the parity block for that
231 stripe (i.e. the block in the parity device at the same device offset
232 as the stripe) is also modified so that the parity block always
233 contains the "parity" for the whole stripe. I.e. its content is
234 equivalent to the result of performing an exclusive-or operation
235 between all the data blocks in the stripe.
236
237 This allows the array to continue to function if one device fails.
238 The data that was on that device can be calculated as needed from the
239 parity block and the other data blocks.
240
241 .SS RAID5
242
243 RAID5 is very similar to RAID4. The difference is that the parity
244 blocks for each stripe, instead of being on a single device, are
245 distributed across all devices. This allows more parallelism when
246 writing, as two different block updates will quite possibly affect
247 parity blocks on different devices so there is less contention.
248
249 This also allows more parallelism when reading, as read requests are
250 distributed over all the devices in the array instead of all but one.
251
252 .SS RAID6
253
254 RAID6 is similar to RAID5, but can handle the loss of any \fItwo\fP
255 devices without data loss. Accordingly, it requires N+2 drives to
256 store N drives worth of data.
257
258 The performance for RAID6 is slightly lower but comparable to RAID5 in
259 normal mode and single disk failure mode. It is very slow in dual
260 disk failure mode, however.
261
262 .SS RAID10
263
264 RAID10 provides a combination of RAID1 and RAID0, and is sometimes known
265 as RAID1+0. Every datablock is duplicated some number of times, and
266 the resulting collection of datablocks are distributed over multiple
267 drives.
268
269 When configuring a RAID10 array, it is necessary to specify the number
270 of replicas of each data block that are required (this will usually
271 be\ 2) and whether their layout should be "near", "far" or "offset"
272 (with "offset" being available since Linux\ 2.6.18).
273
274 .B About the RAID10 Layout Examples:
275 .br
276 The examples below visualise the chunk distribution on the underlying
277 devices for the respective layout.
278
279 For simplicity it is assumed that the size of the chunks equals the
280 size of the blocks of the underlying devices as well as those of the
281 RAID10 device exported by the kernel (for example \fB/dev/md/\fPname).
282 .br
283 Therefore the chunks\ /\ chunk numbers map directly to the blocks\ /\
284 block addresses of the exported RAID10 device.
285
286 Decimal numbers (0,\ 1, 2,\ ...) are the chunks of the RAID10 and due
287 to the above assumption also the blocks and block addresses of the
288 exported RAID10 device.
289 .br
290 Repeated numbers mean copies of a chunk\ /\ block (obviously on
291 different underlying devices).
292 .br
293 Hexadecimal numbers (0x00,\ 0x01, 0x02,\ ...) are the block addresses
294 of the underlying devices.
295
296 .TP
297 \fB "near" Layout\fP
298 When "near" replicas are chosen, the multiple copies of a given chunk are laid
299 out consecutively ("as close to each other as possible") across the stripes of
300 the array.
301
302 With an even number of devices, they will likely (unless some misalignment is
303 present) lay at the very same offset on the different devices.
304 .br
305 This is as the "classic" RAID1+0; that is two groups of mirrored devices (in the
306 example below the groups Device\ #1\ /\ #2 and Device\ #3\ /\ #4 are each a
307 RAID1) both in turn forming a striped RAID0.
308
309 .ne 10
310 .B Example with 2\ copies per chunk and an even number\ (4) of devices:
311 .TS
312 tab(;);
313 C - - - -
314 C | C | C | C | C |
315 | - | - | - | - | - |
316 | C | C | C | C | C |
317 | C | C | C | C | C |
318 | C | C | C | C | C |
319 | C | C | C | C | C |
320 | C | C | C | C | C |
321 | C | C | C | C | C |
322 | - | - | - | - | - |
323 C C S C S
324 C C S C S
325 C C S S S
326 C C S S S.
327 ;
328 ;Device #1;Device #2;Device #3;Device #4
329 0x00;0;0;1;1
330 0x01;2;2;3;3
331 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.
332 :;:;:;:;:
333 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.
334 0x80;254;254;255;255
335 ;\\---------v---------/;\\---------v---------/
336 ;RAID1;RAID1
337 ;\\---------------------v---------------------/
338 ;RAID0
339 .TE
340
341 .ne 10
342 .B Example with 2\ copies per chunk and an odd number\ (5) of devices:
343 .TS
344 tab(;);
345 C - - - - -
346 C | C | C | C | C | C |
347 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
348 | C | C | C | C | C | C |
349 | C | C | C | C | C | C |
350 | C | C | C | C | C | C |
351 | C | C | C | C | C | C |
352 | C | C | C | C | C | C |
353 | C | C | C | C | C | C |
354 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
355 C.
356 ;
357 ;Dev #1;Dev #2;Dev #3;Dev #4;Dev #5
358 0x00;0;0;1;1;2
359 0x01;2;3;3;4;4
360 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.
361 :;:;:;:;:;:
362 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.
363 0x80;317;318;318;319;319
364 ;
365 .TE
366
367 .TP
368 \fB "far" Layout\fP
369 When "far" replicas are chosen, the multiple copies of a given chunk
370 are laid out quite distant ("as far as reasonably possible") from each
371 other.
372
373 First a complete sequence of all data blocks (that is all the data one
374 sees on the exported RAID10 block device) is striped over the
375 devices. Then another (though "shifted") complete sequence of all data
376 blocks; and so on (in the case of more than 2\ copies per chunk).
377
378 The "shift" needed to prevent placing copies of the same chunks on the
379 same devices is actually a cyclic permutation with offset\ 1 of each
380 of the stripes within a complete sequence of chunks.
381 .br
382 The offset\ 1 is relative to the previous complete sequence of chunks,
383 so in case of more than 2\ copies per chunk one gets the following
384 offsets:
385 .br
386 1.\ complete sequence of chunks: offset\ =\ \ 0
387 .br
388 2.\ complete sequence of chunks: offset\ =\ \ 1
389 .br
390 3.\ complete sequence of chunks: offset\ =\ \ 2
391 .br
392 :
393 .br
394 n.\ complete sequence of chunks: offset\ =\ n-1
395
396 .ne 10
397 .B Example with 2\ copies per chunk and an even number\ (4) of devices:
398 .TS
399 tab(;);
400 C - - - -
401 C | C | C | C | C |
402 | - | - | - | - | - |
403 | C | C | C | C | C | L
404 | C | C | C | C | C | L
405 | C | C | C | C | C | L
406 | C | C | C | C | C | L
407 | C | C | C | C | C | L
408 | C | C | C | C | C | L
409 | C | C | C | C | C | L
410 | C | C | C | C | C | L
411 | C | C | C | C | C | L
412 | C | C | C | C | C | L
413 | C | C | C | C | C | L
414 | C | C | C | C | C | L
415 | - | - | - | - | - |
416 C.
417 ;
418 ;Device #1;Device #2;Device #3;Device #4
419 ;
420 0x00;0;1;2;3;\\
421 0x01;4;5;6;7;> [#]
422 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
423 :;:;:;:;:;:
424 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
425 0x40;252;253;254;255;/
426 0x41;3;0;1;2;\\
427 0x42;7;4;5;6;> [#]~
428 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
429 :;:;:;:;:;:
430 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
431 0x80;255;252;253;254;/
432 ;
433 .TE
434
435 .ne 10
436 .B Example with 2\ copies per chunk and an odd number\ (5) of devices:
437 .TS
438 tab(;);
439 C - - - - -
440 C | C | C | C | C | C |
441 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
442 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
443 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
444 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
445 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
446 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
447 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
448 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
449 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
450 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
451 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
452 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
453 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
454 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
455 C.
456 ;
457 ;Dev #1;Dev #2;Dev #3;Dev #4;Dev #5
458 ;
459 0x00;0;1;2;3;4;\\
460 0x01;5;6;7;8;9;> [#]
461 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
462 :;:;:;:;:;:;:
463 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
464 0x40;315;316;317;318;319;/
465 0x41;4;0;1;2;3;\\
466 0x42;9;5;6;7;8;> [#]~
467 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
468 :;:;:;:;:;:;:
469 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;:
470 0x80;319;315;316;317;318;/
471 ;
472 .TE
473
474 With [#]\ being the complete sequence of chunks and [#]~\ the cyclic permutation
475 with offset\ 1 thereof (in the case of more than 2 copies per chunk there would
476 be ([#]~)~,\ (([#]~)~)~,\ ...).
477
478 The advantage of this layout is that MD can easily spread sequential reads over
479 the devices, making them similar to RAID0 in terms of speed.
480 .br
481 The cost is more seeking for writes, making them substantially slower.
482
483 .TP
484 \fB"offset" Layout\fP
485 When "offset" replicas are chosen, all the copies of a given chunk are
486 striped consecutively ("offset by the stripe length after each other")
487 over the devices.
488
489 Explained in detail, <number of devices> consecutive chunks are
490 striped over the devices, immediately followed by a "shifted" copy of
491 these chunks (and by further such "shifted" copies in the case of more
492 than 2\ copies per chunk).
493 .br
494 This pattern repeats for all further consecutive chunks of the
495 exported RAID10 device (in other words: all further data blocks).
496
497 The "shift" needed to prevent placing copies of the same chunks on the
498 same devices is actually a cyclic permutation with offset\ 1 of each
499 of the striped copies of <number of devices> consecutive chunks.
500 .br
501 The offset\ 1 is relative to the previous striped copy of <number of
502 devices> consecutive chunks, so in case of more than 2\ copies per
503 chunk one gets the following offsets:
504 .br
505 1.\ <number of devices> consecutive chunks: offset\ =\ \ 0
506 .br
507 2.\ <number of devices> consecutive chunks: offset\ =\ \ 1
508 .br
509 3.\ <number of devices> consecutive chunks: offset\ =\ \ 2
510 .br
511 :
512 .br
513 n.\ <number of devices> consecutive chunks: offset\ =\ n-1
514
515 .ne 10
516 .B Example with 2\ copies per chunk and an even number\ (4) of devices:
517 .TS
518 tab(;);
519 C - - - -
520 C | C | C | C | C |
521 | - | - | - | - | - |
522 | C | C | C | C | C | L
523 | C | C | C | C | C | L
524 | C | C | C | C | C | L
525 | C | C | C | C | C | L
526 | C | C | C | C | C | L
527 | C | C | C | C | C | L
528 | C | C | C | C | C | L
529 | C | C | C | C | C | L
530 | C | C | C | C | C | L
531 | - | - | - | - | - |
532 C.
533 ;
534 ;Device #1;Device #2;Device #3;Device #4
535 ;
536 0x00;0;1;2;3;) AA
537 0x01;3;0;1;2;) AA~
538 0x02;4;5;6;7;) AB
539 0x03;7;4;5;6;) AB~
540 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;) \.\.\.
541 :;:;:;:;:; :
542 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;) \.\.\.
543 0x79;251;252;253;254;) EX
544 0x80;254;251;252;253;) EX~
545 ;
546 .TE
547
548 .ne 10
549 .B Example with 2\ copies per chunk and an odd number\ (5) of devices:
550 .TS
551 tab(;);
552 C - - - - -
553 C | C | C | C | C | C |
554 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
555 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
556 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
557 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
558 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
559 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
560 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
561 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
562 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
563 | C | C | C | C | C | C | L
564 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
565 C.
566 ;
567 ;Dev #1;Dev #2;Dev #3;Dev #4;Dev #5
568 ;
569 0x00;0;1;2;3;4;) AA
570 0x01;4;0;1;2;3;) AA~
571 0x02;5;6;7;8;9;) AB
572 0x03;9;5;6;7;8;) AB~
573 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;) \.\.\.
574 :;:;:;:;:;:; :
575 \.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;\.\.\.;) \.\.\.
576 0x79;314;315;316;317;318;) EX
577 0x80;318;314;315;316;317;) EX~
578 ;
579 .TE
580
581 With AA,\ AB,\ ..., AZ,\ BA,\ ... being the sets of <number of devices> consecutive
582 chunks and AA~,\ AB~,\ ..., AZ~,\ BA~,\ ... the cyclic permutations with offset\ 1
583 thereof (in the case of more than 2 copies per chunk there would be (AA~)~,\ ...
584 as well as ((AA~)~)~,\ ... and so on).
585
586 This should give similar read characteristics to "far" if a suitably large chunk
587 size is used, but without as much seeking for writes.
588 .PP
589
590
591 It should be noted that the number of devices in a RAID10 array need
592 not be a multiple of the number of replica of each data block; however,
593 there must be at least as many devices as replicas.
594
595 If, for example, an array is created with 5 devices and 2 replicas,
596 then space equivalent to 2.5 of the devices will be available, and
597 every block will be stored on two different devices.
598
599 Finally, it is possible to have an array with both "near" and "far"
600 copies. If an array is configured with 2 near copies and 2 far
601 copies, then there will be a total of 4 copies of each block, each on
602 a different drive. This is an artifact of the implementation and is
603 unlikely to be of real value.
604
605 .SS MULTIPATH
606
607 MULTIPATH is not really a RAID at all as there is only one real device
608 in a MULTIPATH md array. However there are multiple access points
609 (paths) to this device, and one of these paths might fail, so there
610 are some similarities.
611
612 A MULTIPATH array is composed of a number of logically different
613 devices, often fibre channel interfaces, that all refer the the same
614 real device. If one of these interfaces fails (e.g. due to cable
615 problems), the MULTIPATH driver will attempt to redirect requests to
616 another interface.
617
618 The MULTIPATH drive is not receiving any ongoing development and
619 should be considered a legacy driver. The device-mapper based
620 multipath drivers should be preferred for new installations.
621
622 .SS FAULTY
623 The FAULTY md module is provided for testing purposes. A FAULTY array
624 has exactly one component device and is normally assembled without a
625 superblock, so the md array created provides direct access to all of
626 the data in the component device.
627
628 The FAULTY module may be requested to simulate faults to allow testing
629 of other md levels or of filesystems. Faults can be chosen to trigger
630 on read requests or write requests, and can be transient (a subsequent
631 read/write at the address will probably succeed) or persistent
632 (subsequent read/write of the same address will fail). Further, read
633 faults can be "fixable" meaning that they persist until a write
634 request at the same address.
635
636 Fault types can be requested with a period. In this case, the fault
637 will recur repeatedly after the given number of requests of the
638 relevant type. For example if persistent read faults have a period of
639 100, then every 100th read request would generate a fault, and the
640 faulty sector would be recorded so that subsequent reads on that
641 sector would also fail.
642
643 There is a limit to the number of faulty sectors that are remembered.
644 Faults generated after this limit is exhausted are treated as
645 transient.
646
647 The list of faulty sectors can be flushed, and the active list of
648 failure modes can be cleared.
649
650 .SS UNCLEAN SHUTDOWN
651
652 When changes are made to a RAID1, RAID4, RAID5, RAID6, or RAID10 array
653 there is a possibility of inconsistency for short periods of time as
654 each update requires at least two block to be written to different
655 devices, and these writes probably won't happen at exactly the same
656 time. Thus if a system with one of these arrays is shutdown in the
657 middle of a write operation (e.g. due to power failure), the array may
658 not be consistent.
659
660 To handle this situation, the md driver marks an array as "dirty"
661 before writing any data to it, and marks it as "clean" when the array
662 is being disabled, e.g. at shutdown. If the md driver finds an array
663 to be dirty at startup, it proceeds to correct any possibly
664 inconsistency. For RAID1, this involves copying the contents of the
665 first drive onto all other drives. For RAID4, RAID5 and RAID6 this
666 involves recalculating the parity for each stripe and making sure that
667 the parity block has the correct data. For RAID10 it involves copying
668 one of the replicas of each block onto all the others. This process,
669 known as "resynchronising" or "resync" is performed in the background.
670 The array can still be used, though possibly with reduced performance.
671
672 If a RAID4, RAID5 or RAID6 array is degraded (missing at least one
673 drive, two for RAID6) when it is restarted after an unclean shutdown, it cannot
674 recalculate parity, and so it is possible that data might be
675 undetectably corrupted. The 2.4 md driver
676 .B does not
677 alert the operator to this condition. The 2.6 md driver will fail to
678 start an array in this condition without manual intervention, though
679 this behaviour can be overridden by a kernel parameter.
680
681 .SS RECOVERY
682
683 If the md driver detects a write error on a device in a RAID1, RAID4,
684 RAID5, RAID6, or RAID10 array, it immediately disables that device
685 (marking it as faulty) and continues operation on the remaining
686 devices. If there are spare drives, the driver will start recreating
687 on one of the spare drives the data which was on that failed drive,
688 either by copying a working drive in a RAID1 configuration, or by
689 doing calculations with the parity block on RAID4, RAID5 or RAID6, or
690 by finding and copying originals for RAID10.
691
692 In kernels prior to about 2.6.15, a read error would cause the same
693 effect as a write error. In later kernels, a read-error will instead
694 cause md to attempt a recovery by overwriting the bad block. i.e. it
695 will find the correct data from elsewhere, write it over the block
696 that failed, and then try to read it back again. If either the write
697 or the re-read fail, md will treat the error the same way that a write
698 error is treated, and will fail the whole device.
699
700 While this recovery process is happening, the md driver will monitor
701 accesses to the array and will slow down the rate of recovery if other
702 activity is happening, so that normal access to the array will not be
703 unduly affected. When no other activity is happening, the recovery
704 process proceeds at full speed. The actual speed targets for the two
705 different situations can be controlled by the
706 .B speed_limit_min
707 and
708 .B speed_limit_max
709 control files mentioned below.
710
711 .SS SCRUBBING AND MISMATCHES
712
713 As storage devices can develop bad blocks at any time it is valuable
714 to regularly read all blocks on all devices in an array so as to catch
715 such bad blocks early. This process is called
716 .IR scrubbing .
717
718 md arrays can be scrubbed by writing either
719 .I check
720 or
721 .I repair
722 to the file
723 .I md/sync_action
724 in the
725 .I sysfs
726 directory for the device.
727
728 Requesting a scrub will cause
729 .I md
730 to read every block on every device in the array, and check that the
731 data is consistent. For RAID1 and RAID10, this means checking that the copies
732 are identical. For RAID4, RAID5, RAID6 this means checking that the
733 parity block is (or blocks are) correct.
734
735 If a read error is detected during this process, the normal read-error
736 handling causes correct data to be found from other devices and to be
737 written back to the faulty device. In many case this will
738 effectively
739 .I fix
740 the bad block.
741
742 If all blocks read successfully but are found to not be consistent,
743 then this is regarded as a
744 .IR mismatch .
745
746 If
747 .I check
748 was used, then no action is taken to handle the mismatch, it is simply
749 recorded.
750 If
751 .I repair
752 was used, then a mismatch will be repaired in the same way that
753 .I resync
754 repairs arrays. For RAID5/RAID6 new parity blocks are written. For RAID1/RAID10,
755 all but one block are overwritten with the content of that one block.
756
757 A count of mismatches is recorded in the
758 .I sysfs
759 file
760 .IR md/mismatch_cnt .
761 This is set to zero when a
762 scrub starts and is incremented whenever a sector is
763 found that is a mismatch.
764 .I md
765 normally works in units much larger than a single sector and when it
766 finds a mismatch, it does not determine exactly how many actual sectors were
767 affected but simply adds the number of sectors in the IO unit that was
768 used. So a value of 128 could simply mean that a single 64KB check
769 found an error (128 x 512bytes = 64KB).
770
771 If an array is created by
772 .I mdadm
773 with
774 .I \-\-assume\-clean
775 then a subsequent check could be expected to find some mismatches.
776
777 On a truly clean RAID5 or RAID6 array, any mismatches should indicate
778 a hardware problem at some level - software issues should never cause
779 such a mismatch.
780
781 However on RAID1 and RAID10 it is possible for software issues to
782 cause a mismatch to be reported. This does not necessarily mean that
783 the data on the array is corrupted. It could simply be that the
784 system does not care what is stored on that part of the array - it is
785 unused space.
786
787 The most likely cause for an unexpected mismatch on RAID1 or RAID10
788 occurs if a swap partition or swap file is stored on the array.
789
790 When the swap subsystem wants to write a page of memory out, it flags
791 the page as 'clean' in the memory manager and requests the swap device
792 to write it out. It is quite possible that the memory will be
793 changed while the write-out is happening. In that case the 'clean'
794 flag will be found to be clear when the write completes and so the
795 swap subsystem will simply forget that the swapout had been attempted,
796 and will possibly choose a different page to write out.
797
798 If the swap device was on RAID1 (or RAID10), then the data is sent
799 from memory to a device twice (or more depending on the number of
800 devices in the array). Thus it is possible that the memory gets changed
801 between the times it is sent, so different data can be written to
802 the different devices in the array. This will be detected by
803 .I check
804 as a mismatch. However it does not reflect any corruption as the
805 block where this mismatch occurs is being treated by the swap system as
806 being empty, and the data will never be read from that block.
807
808 It is conceivable for a similar situation to occur on non-swap files,
809 though it is less likely.
810
811 Thus the
812 .I mismatch_cnt
813 value can not be interpreted very reliably on RAID1 or RAID10,
814 especially when the device is used for swap.
815
816
817 .SS BITMAP WRITE-INTENT LOGGING
818
819 From Linux 2.6.13,
820 .I md
821 supports a bitmap based write-intent log. If configured, the bitmap
822 is used to record which blocks of the array may be out of sync.
823 Before any write request is honoured, md will make sure that the
824 corresponding bit in the log is set. After a period of time with no
825 writes to an area of the array, the corresponding bit will be cleared.
826
827 This bitmap is used for two optimisations.
828
829 Firstly, after an unclean shutdown, the resync process will consult
830 the bitmap and only resync those blocks that correspond to bits in the
831 bitmap that are set. This can dramatically reduce resync time.
832
833 Secondly, when a drive fails and is removed from the array, md stops
834 clearing bits in the intent log. If that same drive is re-added to
835 the array, md will notice and will only recover the sections of the
836 drive that are covered by bits in the intent log that are set. This
837 can allow a device to be temporarily removed and reinserted without
838 causing an enormous recovery cost.
839
840 The intent log can be stored in a file on a separate device, or it can
841 be stored near the superblocks of an array which has superblocks.
842
843 It is possible to add an intent log to an active array, or remove an
844 intent log if one is present.
845
846 In 2.6.13, intent bitmaps are only supported with RAID1. Other levels
847 with redundancy are supported from 2.6.15.
848
849 .SS BAD BLOCK LIST
850
851 From Linux 3.5 each device in an
852 .I md
853 array can store a list of known-bad-blocks. This list is 4K in size
854 and usually positioned at the end of the space between the superblock
855 and the data.
856
857 When a block cannot be read and cannot be repaired by writing data
858 recovered from other devices, the address of the block is stored in
859 the bad block list. Similarly if an attempt to write a block fails,
860 the address will be recorded as a bad block. If attempting to record
861 the bad block fails, the whole device will be marked faulty.
862
863 Attempting to read from a known bad block will cause a read error.
864 Attempting to write to a known bad block will be ignored if any write
865 errors have been reported by the device. If there have been no write
866 errors then the data will be written to the known bad block and if
867 that succeeds, the address will be removed from the list.
868
869 This allows an array to fail more gracefully - a few blocks on
870 different devices can be faulty without taking the whole array out of
871 action.
872
873 The list is particularly useful when recovering to a spare. If a few blocks
874 cannot be read from the other devices, the bulk of the recovery can
875 complete and those few bad blocks will be recorded in the bad block list.
876
877 .SS RAID456 WRITE JOURNAL
878
879 Due to non-atomicity nature of RAID write operations, interruption of
880 write operations (system crash, etc.) to RAID456 array can lead to
881 inconsistent parity and data loss (so called RAID-5 write hole).
882
883 To plug the write hole, from Linux 4.4 (to be confirmed),
884 .I md
885 supports write ahead journal for RAID456. When the array is created,
886 an additional journal device can be added to the array through
887 .IR write-journal
888 option. The RAID write journal works similar to file system journals.
889 Before writing to the data disks, md persists data AND parity of the
890 stripe to the journal device. After crashes, md searches the journal
891 device for incomplete write operations, and replay them to the data
892 disks.
893
894 When the journal device fails, the RAID array is forced to run in
895 read-only mode.
896
897 .SS WRITE-BEHIND
898
899 From Linux 2.6.14,
900 .I md
901 supports WRITE-BEHIND on RAID1 arrays.
902
903 This allows certain devices in the array to be flagged as
904 .IR write-mostly .
905 MD will only read from such devices if there is no
906 other option.
907
908 If a write-intent bitmap is also provided, write requests to
909 write-mostly devices will be treated as write-behind requests and md
910 will not wait for writes to those requests to complete before
911 reporting the write as complete to the filesystem.
912
913 This allows for a RAID1 with WRITE-BEHIND to be used to mirror data
914 over a slow link to a remote computer (providing the link isn't too
915 slow). The extra latency of the remote link will not slow down normal
916 operations, but the remote system will still have a reasonably
917 up-to-date copy of all data.
918
919 .SS FAILFAST
920
921 From Linux 4.10,
922 .I
923 md
924 supports FAILFAST for RAID1 and RAID10 arrays. This is a flag that
925 can be set on individual drives, though it is usually set on all
926 drives, or no drives.
927
928 When
929 .I md
930 sends an I/O request to a drive that is marked as FAILFAST, and when
931 the array could survive the loss of that drive without losing data,
932 .I md
933 will request that the underlying device does not perform any retries.
934 This means that a failure will be reported to
935 .I md
936 promptly, and it can mark the device as faulty and continue using the
937 other device(s).
938 .I md
939 cannot control the timeout that the underlying devices use to
940 determine failure. Any changes desired to that timeout must be set
941 explictly on the underlying device, separately from using
942 .IR mdadm .
943
944 If a FAILFAST request does fail, and if it is still safe to mark the
945 device as faulty without data loss, that will be done and the array
946 will continue functioning on a reduced number of devices. If it is not
947 possible to safely mark the device as faulty,
948 .I md
949 will retry the request without disabling retries in the underlying
950 device. In any case,
951 .I md
952 will not attempt to repair read errors on a device marked as FAILFAST
953 by writing out the correct. It will just mark the device as faulty.
954
955 FAILFAST is appropriate for storage arrays that have a low probability
956 of true failure, but will sometimes introduce unacceptable delays to
957 I/O requests while performing internal maintenance. The value of
958 setting FAILFAST involves a trade-off. The gain is that the chance of
959 unacceptable delays is substantially reduced. The cost is that the
960 unlikely event of data-loss on one device is slightly more likely to
961 result in data-loss for the array.
962
963 When a device in an array using FAILFAST is marked as faulty, it will
964 usually become usable again in a short while.
965 .I mdadm
966 makes no attempt to detect that possibility. Some separate
967 mechanism, tuned to the specific details of the expected failure modes,
968 needs to be created to monitor devices to see when they return to full
969 functionality, and to then re-add them to the array. In order of
970 this "re-add" functionality to be effective, an array using FAILFAST
971 should always have a write-intent bitmap.
972
973 .SS RESTRIPING
974
975 .IR Restriping ,
976 also known as
977 .IR Reshaping ,
978 is the processes of re-arranging the data stored in each stripe into a
979 new layout. This might involve changing the number of devices in the
980 array (so the stripes are wider), changing the chunk size (so stripes
981 are deeper or shallower), or changing the arrangement of data and
982 parity (possibly changing the RAID level, e.g. 1 to 5 or 5 to 6).
983
984 As of Linux 2.6.35, md can reshape a RAID4, RAID5, or RAID6 array to
985 have a different number of devices (more or fewer) and to have a
986 different layout or chunk size. It can also convert between these
987 different RAID levels. It can also convert between RAID0 and RAID10,
988 and between RAID0 and RAID4 or RAID5.
989 Other possibilities may follow in future kernels.
990
991 During any stripe process there is a 'critical section' during which
992 live data is being overwritten on disk. For the operation of
993 increasing the number of drives in a RAID5, this critical section
994 covers the first few stripes (the number being the product of the old
995 and new number of devices). After this critical section is passed,
996 data is only written to areas of the array which no longer hold live
997 data \(em the live data has already been located away.
998
999 For a reshape which reduces the number of devices, the 'critical
1000 section' is at the end of the reshape process.
1001
1002 md is not able to ensure data preservation if there is a crash
1003 (e.g. power failure) during the critical section. If md is asked to
1004 start an array which failed during a critical section of restriping,
1005 it will fail to start the array.
1006
1007 To deal with this possibility, a user-space program must
1008 .IP \(bu 4
1009 Disable writes to that section of the array (using the
1010 .B sysfs
1011 interface),
1012 .IP \(bu 4
1013 take a copy of the data somewhere (i.e. make a backup),
1014 .IP \(bu 4
1015 allow the process to continue and invalidate the backup and restore
1016 write access once the critical section is passed, and
1017 .IP \(bu 4
1018 provide for restoring the critical data before restarting the array
1019 after a system crash.
1020 .PP
1021
1022 .B mdadm
1023 versions from 2.4 do this for growing a RAID5 array.
1024
1025 For operations that do not change the size of the array, like simply
1026 increasing chunk size, or converting RAID5 to RAID6 with one extra
1027 device, the entire process is the critical section. In this case, the
1028 restripe will need to progress in stages, as a section is suspended,
1029 backed up, restriped, and released.
1030
1031 .SS SYSFS INTERFACE
1032 Each block device appears as a directory in
1033 .I sysfs
1034 (which is usually mounted at
1035 .BR /sys ).
1036 For MD devices, this directory will contain a subdirectory called
1037 .B md
1038 which contains various files for providing access to information about
1039 the array.
1040
1041 This interface is documented more fully in the file
1042 .B Documentation/md.txt
1043 which is distributed with the kernel sources. That file should be
1044 consulted for full documentation. The following are just a selection
1045 of attribute files that are available.
1046
1047 .TP
1048 .B md/sync_speed_min
1049 This value, if set, overrides the system-wide setting in
1050 .B /proc/sys/dev/raid/speed_limit_min
1051 for this array only.
1052 Writing the value
1053 .B "system"
1054 to this file will cause the system-wide setting to have effect.
1055
1056 .TP
1057 .B md/sync_speed_max
1058 This is the partner of
1059 .B md/sync_speed_min
1060 and overrides
1061 .B /proc/sys/dev/raid/speed_limit_max
1062 described below.
1063
1064 .TP
1065 .B md/sync_action
1066 This can be used to monitor and control the resync/recovery process of
1067 MD.
1068 In particular, writing "check" here will cause the array to read all
1069 data block and check that they are consistent (e.g. parity is correct,
1070 or all mirror replicas are the same). Any discrepancies found are
1071 .B NOT
1072 corrected.
1073
1074 A count of problems found will be stored in
1075 .BR md/mismatch_count .
1076
1077 Alternately, "repair" can be written which will cause the same check
1078 to be performed, but any errors will be corrected.
1079
1080 Finally, "idle" can be written to stop the check/repair process.
1081
1082 .TP
1083 .B md/stripe_cache_size
1084 This is only available on RAID5 and RAID6. It records the size (in
1085 pages per device) of the stripe cache which is used for synchronising
1086 all write operations to the array and all read operations if the array
1087 is degraded. The default is 256. Valid values are 17 to 32768.
1088 Increasing this number can increase performance in some situations, at
1089 some cost in system memory. Note, setting this value too high can
1090 result in an "out of memory" condition for the system.
1091
1092 memory_consumed = system_page_size * nr_disks * stripe_cache_size
1093
1094 .TP
1095 .B md/preread_bypass_threshold
1096 This is only available on RAID5 and RAID6. This variable sets the
1097 number of times MD will service a full-stripe-write before servicing a
1098 stripe that requires some "prereading". For fairness this defaults to
1099 1. Valid values are 0 to stripe_cache_size. Setting this to 0
1100 maximizes sequential-write throughput at the cost of fairness to threads
1101 doing small or random writes.
1102
1103 .SS KERNEL PARAMETERS
1104
1105 The md driver recognised several different kernel parameters.
1106 .TP
1107 .B raid=noautodetect
1108 This will disable the normal detection of md arrays that happens at
1109 boot time. If a drive is partitioned with MS-DOS style partitions,
1110 then if any of the 4 main partitions has a partition type of 0xFD,
1111 then that partition will normally be inspected to see if it is part of
1112 an MD array, and if any full arrays are found, they are started. This
1113 kernel parameter disables this behaviour.
1114
1115 .TP
1116 .B raid=partitionable
1117 .TP
1118 .B raid=part
1119 These are available in 2.6 and later kernels only. They indicate that
1120 autodetected MD arrays should be created as partitionable arrays, with
1121 a different major device number to the original non-partitionable md
1122 arrays. The device number is listed as
1123 .I mdp
1124 in
1125 .IR /proc/devices .
1126
1127 .TP
1128 .B md_mod.start_ro=1
1129 .TP
1130 .B /sys/module/md_mod/parameters/start_ro
1131 This tells md to start all arrays in read-only mode. This is a soft
1132 read-only that will automatically switch to read-write on the first
1133 write request. However until that write request, nothing is written
1134 to any device by md, and in particular, no resync or recovery
1135 operation is started.
1136
1137 .TP
1138 .B md_mod.start_dirty_degraded=1
1139 .TP
1140 .B /sys/module/md_mod/parameters/start_dirty_degraded
1141 As mentioned above, md will not normally start a RAID4, RAID5, or
1142 RAID6 that is both dirty and degraded as this situation can imply
1143 hidden data loss. This can be awkward if the root filesystem is
1144 affected. Using this module parameter allows such arrays to be started
1145 at boot time. It should be understood that there is a real (though
1146 small) risk of data corruption in this situation.
1147
1148 .TP
1149 .BI md= n , dev , dev ,...
1150 .TP
1151 .BI md=d n , dev , dev ,...
1152 This tells the md driver to assemble
1153 .B /dev/md n
1154 from the listed devices. It is only necessary to start the device
1155 holding the root filesystem this way. Other arrays are best started
1156 once the system is booted.
1157
1158 In 2.6 kernels, the
1159 .B d
1160 immediately after the
1161 .B =
1162 indicates that a partitionable device (e.g.
1163 .BR /dev/md/d0 )
1164 should be created rather than the original non-partitionable device.
1165
1166 .TP
1167 .BI md= n , l , c , i , dev...
1168 This tells the md driver to assemble a legacy RAID0 or LINEAR array
1169 without a superblock.
1170 .I n
1171 gives the md device number,
1172 .I l
1173 gives the level, 0 for RAID0 or \-1 for LINEAR,
1174 .I c
1175 gives the chunk size as a base-2 logarithm offset by twelve, so 0
1176 means 4K, 1 means 8K.
1177 .I i
1178 is ignored (legacy support).
1179
1180 .SH FILES
1181 .TP
1182 .B /proc/mdstat
1183 Contains information about the status of currently running array.
1184 .TP
1185 .B /proc/sys/dev/raid/speed_limit_min
1186 A readable and writable file that reflects the current "goal" rebuild
1187 speed for times when non-rebuild activity is current on an array.
1188 The speed is in Kibibytes per second, and is a per-device rate, not a
1189 per-array rate (which means that an array with more disks will shuffle
1190 more data for a given speed). The default is 1000.
1191
1192 .TP
1193 .B /proc/sys/dev/raid/speed_limit_max
1194 A readable and writable file that reflects the current "goal" rebuild
1195 speed for times when no non-rebuild activity is current on an array.
1196 The default is 200,000.
1197
1198 .SH SEE ALSO
1199 .BR mdadm (8),