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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 MDADM.CONF 5
8 .SH NAME
9 mdadm.conf \- configuration for management of Software RAID with mdadm
10 .SH SYNOPSIS
11 /etc/mdadm.conf
12 .SH DESCRIPTION
13 .PP
14 .I mdadm
15 is a tool for creating, managing, and monitoring RAID devices using the
16 .B md
17 driver in Linux.
18 .PP
19 Some common tasks, such as assembling all arrays, can be simplified
20 by describing the devices and arrays in this configuration file.
21
22 .SS SYNTAX
23 The file should be seen as a collection of words separated by white
24 space (space, tab, or newline).
25 Any word that beings with a hash sign (#) starts a comment and that
26 word together with the remainder of the line is ignored.
27
28 Any line that starts with white space (space or tab) is treated as
29 though it were a continuation of the previous line.
30
31 Empty lines are ignored, but otherwise each (non continuation) line
32 must start with a keyword as listed below. The keywords are case
33 insensitive and can be abbreviated to 3 characters.
34
35 The keywords are:
36 .TP
37 .B DEVICE
38 A
39 .B device
40 line lists the devices (whole devices or partitions) that might contain
41 a component of an MD array. When looking for the components of an
42 array,
43 .I mdadm
44 will scan these devices (or any devices listed on the command line).
45
46 The
47 .B device
48 line may contain a number of different devices (separated by spaces)
49 and each device name can contain wild cards as defined by
50 .BR glob (7).
51
52 Also, there may be several device lines present in the file.
53
54 Alternatively, a
55 .B device
56 line can contain either of both of the words
57 .B containers
58 and
59 .BR partitions .
60 The word
61 .B containers
62 will cause
63 .I mdadm
64 to look for assembled CONTAINER arrays and included them as a source
65 for assembling further arrays.
66 .PP
67 The word
68 .I partitions
69 will cause
70 .I mdadm
71 to read
72 .I /proc/partitions
73 and include all devices and partitions found therein.
74 .I mdadm
75 does not use the names from
76 .I /proc/partitions
77 but only the major and minor device numbers. It scans
78 .I /dev
79 to find the name that matches the numbers.
80
81 If no DEVICE line is present, then "DEVICE partitions containers" is assumed.
82
83 For example:
84 .IP
85 DEVICE /dev/hda* /dev/hdc*
86 .br
87 DEV /dev/sd*
88 .br
89 DEVICE /dev/discs/disc*/disc
90 .br
91 DEVICE partitions
92
93 .TP
94 .B ARRAY
95 The ARRAY lines identify actual arrays. The second word on the line
96 may be the name of the device where the array is normally
97 assembled, such as
98 .B /dev/md1
99 or
100 .BR /dev/md/backup .
101 If the name does not start with a slash
102 .RB (' / '),
103 it is treated as being in
104 .BR /dev/md/ .
105 Alternately the word
106 .B <ignore>
107 (complete with angle brackets) can be given in which case any array
108 which matches the rest of the line will never be automatically assembled.
109 If no device name is given,
110 .I mdadm
111 will use various heuristics to determine an appropriate name.
112 .PP
113 Subsequent words identify the array, or identify the array as a member
114 of a group. If multiple identities are given,
115 then a component device must match ALL identities to be considered a
116 match. Each identity word has a tag, and equals sign, and some value.
117 The tags are:
118
119 .RS 4
120 .TP
121 .B uuid=
122 The value should be a 128 bit uuid in hexadecimal, with punctuation
123 interspersed if desired. This must match the uuid stored in the
124 superblock.
125 .TP
126 .B name=
127 The value should be a simple textual name as was given to
128 .I mdadm
129 when the array was created. This must match the name stored in the
130 superblock on a device for that device to be included in the array.
131 Not all superblock formats support names.
132 .TP
133 .B super\-minor=
134 The value is an integer which indicates the minor number that was
135 stored in the superblock when the array was created. When an array is
136 created as /dev/mdX, then the minor number X is stored.
137 .TP
138 .B devices=
139 The value is a comma separated list of device names or device name
140 patterns.
141 Only devices with names which match one entry in the list will be used
142 to assemble the array. Note that the devices
143 listed there must also be listed on a DEVICE line.
144 .TP
145 .B level=
146 The value is a raid level. This is not normally used to
147 identify an array, but is supported so that the output of
148
149 .B "mdadm \-\-examine \-\-scan"
150
151 can be use directly in the configuration file.
152 .TP
153 .B num\-devices=
154 The value is the number of devices in a complete active array. As with
155 .B level=
156 this is mainly for compatibility with the output of
157
158 .BR "mdadm \-\-examine \-\-scan" .
159
160 .TP
161 .B spares=
162 The value is a number of spare devices to expect the array to have.
163 .B mdadm \-\-monitor
164 will report an array if it is found to have fewer than this number of
165 spares when
166 .B \-\-monitor
167 starts or when
168 .B \-\-oneshot
169 is used.
170
171 .TP
172 .B spare\-group=
173 The value is a textual name for a group of arrays. All arrays with
174 the same
175 .B spare\-group
176 name are considered to be part of the same group. The significance of
177 a group of arrays is that
178 .I mdadm
179 will, when monitoring the arrays, move a spare drive from one array in
180 a group to another array in that group if the first array had a failed
181 or missing drive but no spare.
182
183 .TP
184 .B auto=
185 This option is rarely needed with mdadm-3.0, particularly if use with
186 the Linux kernel v2.6.28 or later.
187 It tells
188 .I mdadm
189 whether to use partitionable array or non-partitionable arrays and,
190 in the absence of
191 .IR udev ,
192 how many partition devices to create. From 2.6.28 all md array
193 devices are partitionable, hence this option is not needed.
194
195 The value of this option can be "yes" or "md" to indicate that a
196 traditional, non-partitionable md array should be created, or "mdp",
197 "part" or "partition" to indicate that a partitionable md array (only
198 available in linux 2.6 and later) should be used. This later set can
199 also have a number appended to indicate how many partitions to create
200 device files for, e.g.
201 .BR auto=mdp5 .
202 The default is 4.
203
204 .TP
205 .B bitmap=
206 The option specifies a file in which a write-intent bitmap should be
207 found. When assembling the array,
208 .I mdadm
209 will provide this file to the
210 .B md
211 driver as the bitmap file. This has the same function as the
212 .B \-\-bitmap\-file
213 option to
214 .BR \-\-assemble .
215
216 .TP
217 .B metadata=
218 Specify the metadata format that the array has. This is mainly
219 recognised for comparability with the output of
220 .BR "mdadm \-Es" .
221
222 .TP
223 .B container=
224 Specify that this array is a member array of some container. The
225 value given can be either a path name in /dev, or a UUID of the
226 container array.
227
228 .IP
229 .B member=
230 Specify that this array is a member array of some container. Each
231 type of container has some way to enumerate member arrays, often a
232 simple sequence number. The value identifies which member of a
233 container the array is. It will usually accompany a 'container=' word.
234 .RE
235
236 .TP
237 .B MAILADDR
238 The
239 .B mailaddr
240 line gives an E-mail address that alerts should be
241 sent to when
242 .I mdadm
243 is running in
244 .B \-\-monitor
245 mode (and was given the
246 .B \-\-scan
247 option). There should only be one
248 .B MAILADDR
249 line and it should have only one address.
250
251
252 .TP
253 .B MAILFROM
254 The
255 .B mailfrom
256 line (which can only be abbreviated to at least 5 characters) gives an
257 address to appear in the "From" address for alert mails. This can be
258 useful if you want to explicitly set a domain, as the default from
259 address is "root" with no domain. All words on this line are
260 catenated with spaces to form the address.
261
262 Note that this value cannot be set via the
263 .I mdadm
264 commandline. It is only settable via the config file.
265
266 .TP
267 .B PROGRAM
268 The
269 .B program
270 line gives the name of a program to be run when
271 .B "mdadm \-\-monitor"
272 detects potentially interesting events on any of the arrays that it
273 is monitoring. This program gets run with two or three arguments, they
274 being the Event, the md device, and possibly the related component
275 device.
276
277 There should only be one
278 .B program
279 line and it should be give only one program.
280
281
282 .TP
283 .B CREATE
284 The
285 .B create
286 line gives default values to be used when creating arrays and device entries for
287 arrays.
288 These include:
289
290 .RS 4
291 .TP
292 .B owner=
293 .TP
294 .B group=
295 These can give user/group ids or names to use instead of system
296 defaults (root/wheel or root/disk).
297 .TP
298 .B mode=
299 An octal file mode such as 0660 can be given to override the default
300 of 0600.
301 .TP
302 .B auto=
303 This corresponds to the
304 .B \-\-auto
305 flag to mdadm. Give
306 .BR yes ,
307 .BR md ,
308 .BR mdp ,
309 .B part
310 \(em possibly followed by a number of partitions \(em to indicate how
311 missing device entries should be created.
312
313 .TP
314 .B metadata=
315 The name of the metadata format to use if none is explicitly given.
316 This can be useful to impose a system-wide default of version-1 superblocks.
317
318 .TP
319 .B symlinks=no
320 Normally when creating devices in
321 .B /dev/md/
322 .I mdadm
323 will create a matching symlink from
324 .B /dev/
325 with a name starting
326 .B md
327 or
328 .BR md_ .
329 Give
330 .B symlinks=no
331 to suppress this symlink creation.
332 .RE
333
334 .TP
335 .B HOMEHOST
336 The
337 .B homehost
338 line gives a default value for the
339 .B --homehost=
340 option to mdadm. There should be exactly one other word on the line.
341 It should either be a host name, or one of the special words
342 .B <system>
343 and
344 .BR <ignore> .
345 If
346 .B <system>
347 is given, then the
348 .BR gethostname ( 2 )
349 systemcall is used to get the host name.
350
351 If
352 .B <ignore>
353 is given, then a flag is set so that when arrays are being
354 auto-assemble the checking of the recorded
355 .I homehost
356 is disabled.
357
358 When arrays are created, this host name will be stored in the
359 metadata. When arrays are assembled using auto-assembly, arrays which
360 do not record the correct homehost name in their metadata will be
361 assembled using a 'foreign' name. A 'foreign' name alway ends with a
362 digit string (possibly preceded by an underscore) to differentiate it
363 from any possible local name. e.g.
364 .B /dev/md/1_1
365 or
366 .BR /dev/md/home0 .
367 .TP
368 .B AUTO
369 A list of names of metadata format can be given, each preceded by a
370 plus or minus sign. Also the word
371 .I all
372 preceded by plus or minus is allowed and is usually last.
373
374 When
375 .I mdadm
376 is auto-assembling an array, with via
377 .I --assemble
378 or
379 .I --incremental
380 and it finds metadata of a given type, it checks that metadata type
381 against those listed in this line. The first match wins, where
382 .I all
383 matches anything.
384 If a match is found that was preceded by a plus sign, the auto
385 assembly is allowed. If the match was preceded by a minus sign, the
386 auto assembly is disallowed. If no match is found, the auto assembly
387 is allowed.
388
389 This can be used to disable all auto-assembly (so that only arrays
390 explicitly listed in mdadm.conf or on the command line are assembled),
391 or to disable assembly of certain metadata types which might be
392 handled by other software.
393
394 The known metadata types are
395 .BR 0.90 ,
396 .BR 1.x ,
397 .BR ddf ,
398 .BR imsm .
399
400 .SH EXAMPLE
401 DEVICE /dev/sd[bcdjkl]1
402 .br
403 DEVICE /dev/hda1 /dev/hdb1
404
405 # /dev/md0 is known by its UUID.
406 .br
407 ARRAY /dev/md0 UUID=3aaa0122:29827cfa:5331ad66:ca767371
408 .br
409 # /dev/md1 contains all devices with a minor number of
410 .br
411 # 1 in the superblock.
412 .br
413 ARRAY /dev/md1 superminor=1
414 .br
415 # /dev/md2 is made from precisely these two devices
416 .br
417 ARRAY /dev/md2 devices=/dev/hda1,/dev/hdb1
418
419 # /dev/md4 and /dev/md5 are a spare-group and spares
420 .br
421 # can be moved between them
422 .br
423 ARRAY /dev/md4 uuid=b23f3c6d:aec43a9f:fd65db85:369432df
424 .br
425 spare\-group=group1
426 .br
427 ARRAY /dev/md5 uuid=19464854:03f71b1b:e0df2edd:246cc977
428 .br
429 spare\-group=group1
430 .br
431 # /dev/md/home is created if need to be a partitionable md array
432 .br
433 # any spare device number is allocated.
434 .br
435 ARRAY /dev/md/home UUID=9187a482:5dde19d9:eea3cc4a:d646ab8b
436 .br
437 auto=part
438
439 MAILADDR root@mydomain.tld
440 .br
441 PROGRAM /usr/sbin/handle\-mdadm\-events
442 .br
443 CREATE group=system mode=0640 auto=part\-8
444 .br
445 HOMEHOST <system>
446 .br
447 AUTO +1.x -all
448
449 .SH SEE ALSO
450 .BR mdadm (8),
451 .BR md (4).
452