| dm-raid | 
 | ======= | 
 |  | 
 | The device-mapper RAID (dm-raid) target provides a bridge from DM to MD. | 
 | It allows the MD RAID drivers to be accessed using a device-mapper | 
 | interface. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Mapping Table Interface | 
 | ----------------------- | 
 | The target is named "raid" and it accepts the following parameters: | 
 |  | 
 |   <raid_type> <#raid_params> <raid_params> \ | 
 |     <#raid_devs> <metadata_dev0> <dev0> [.. <metadata_devN> <devN>] | 
 |  | 
 | <raid_type>: | 
 |   raid0		RAID0 striping (no resilience) | 
 |   raid1		RAID1 mirroring | 
 |   raid4		RAID4 with dedicated last parity disk | 
 |   raid5_n 	RAID5 with dedicated last parity disk supporting takeover | 
 | 		Same as raid4 | 
 | 		-Transitory layout | 
 |   raid5_la	RAID5 left asymmetric | 
 | 		- rotating parity 0 with data continuation | 
 |   raid5_ra	RAID5 right asymmetric | 
 | 		- rotating parity N with data continuation | 
 |   raid5_ls	RAID5 left symmetric | 
 | 		- rotating parity 0 with data restart | 
 |   raid5_rs 	RAID5 right symmetric | 
 | 		- rotating parity N with data restart | 
 |   raid6_zr	RAID6 zero restart | 
 | 		- rotating parity zero (left-to-right) with data restart | 
 |   raid6_nr	RAID6 N restart | 
 | 		- rotating parity N (right-to-left) with data restart | 
 |   raid6_nc	RAID6 N continue | 
 | 		- rotating parity N (right-to-left) with data continuation | 
 |   raid6_n_6	RAID6 with dedicate parity disks | 
 | 		- parity and Q-syndrome on the last 2 disks; | 
 | 		  layout for takeover from/to raid4/raid5_n | 
 |   raid6_la_6	Same as "raid_la" plus dedicated last Q-syndrome disk | 
 | 		- layout for takeover from raid5_la from/to raid6 | 
 |   raid6_ra_6	Same as "raid5_ra" dedicated last Q-syndrome disk | 
 | 		- layout for takeover from raid5_ra from/to raid6 | 
 |   raid6_ls_6	Same as "raid5_ls" dedicated last Q-syndrome disk | 
 | 		- layout for takeover from raid5_ls from/to raid6 | 
 |   raid6_rs_6	Same as "raid5_rs" dedicated last Q-syndrome disk | 
 | 		- layout for takeover from raid5_rs from/to raid6 | 
 |   raid10        Various RAID10 inspired algorithms chosen by additional params | 
 | 		(see raid10_format and raid10_copies below) | 
 | 		- RAID10: Striped Mirrors (aka 'Striping on top of mirrors') | 
 | 		- RAID1E: Integrated Adjacent Stripe Mirroring | 
 | 		- RAID1E: Integrated Offset Stripe Mirroring | 
 | 		-  and other similar RAID10 variants | 
 |  | 
 |   Reference: Chapter 4 of | 
 |   http://www.snia.org/sites/default/files/SNIA_DDF_Technical_Position_v2.0.pdf | 
 |  | 
 | <#raid_params>: The number of parameters that follow. | 
 |  | 
 | <raid_params> consists of | 
 |     Mandatory parameters: | 
 |         <chunk_size>: Chunk size in sectors.  This parameter is often known as | 
 | 		      "stripe size".  It is the only mandatory parameter and | 
 | 		      is placed first. | 
 |  | 
 |     followed by optional parameters (in any order): | 
 | 	[sync|nosync]   Force or prevent RAID initialization. | 
 |  | 
 | 	[rebuild <idx>]	Rebuild drive number 'idx' (first drive is 0). | 
 |  | 
 | 	[daemon_sleep <ms>] | 
 | 		Interval between runs of the bitmap daemon that | 
 | 		clear bits.  A longer interval means less bitmap I/O but | 
 | 		resyncing after a failure is likely to take longer. | 
 |  | 
 | 	[min_recovery_rate <kB/sec/disk>]  Throttle RAID initialization | 
 | 	[max_recovery_rate <kB/sec/disk>]  Throttle RAID initialization | 
 | 	[write_mostly <idx>]		   Mark drive index 'idx' write-mostly. | 
 | 	[max_write_behind <sectors>]       See '--write-behind=' (man mdadm) | 
 | 	[stripe_cache <sectors>]           Stripe cache size (RAID 4/5/6 only) | 
 | 	[region_size <sectors>] | 
 | 		The region_size multiplied by the number of regions is the | 
 | 		logical size of the array.  The bitmap records the device | 
 | 		synchronisation state for each region. | 
 |  | 
 |         [raid10_copies   <# copies>] | 
 |         [raid10_format   <near|far|offset>] | 
 | 		These two options are used to alter the default layout of | 
 | 		a RAID10 configuration.  The number of copies is can be | 
 | 		specified, but the default is 2.  There are also three | 
 | 		variations to how the copies are laid down - the default | 
 | 		is "near".  Near copies are what most people think of with | 
 | 		respect to mirroring.  If these options are left unspecified, | 
 | 		or 'raid10_copies 2' and/or 'raid10_format near' are given, | 
 | 		then the layouts for 2, 3 and 4 devices	are: | 
 | 		2 drives         3 drives          4 drives | 
 | 		--------         ----------        -------------- | 
 | 		A1  A1           A1  A1  A2        A1  A1  A2  A2 | 
 | 		A2  A2           A2  A3  A3        A3  A3  A4  A4 | 
 | 		A3  A3           A4  A4  A5        A5  A5  A6  A6 | 
 | 		A4  A4           A5  A6  A6        A7  A7  A8  A8 | 
 | 		..  ..           ..  ..  ..        ..  ..  ..  .. | 
 | 		The 2-device layout is equivalent 2-way RAID1.  The 4-device | 
 | 		layout is what a traditional RAID10 would look like.  The | 
 | 		3-device layout is what might be called a 'RAID1E - Integrated | 
 | 		Adjacent Stripe Mirroring'. | 
 |  | 
 | 		If 'raid10_copies 2' and 'raid10_format far', then the layouts | 
 | 		for 2, 3 and 4 devices are: | 
 | 		2 drives             3 drives             4 drives | 
 | 		--------             --------------       -------------------- | 
 | 		A1  A2               A1   A2   A3         A1   A2   A3   A4 | 
 | 		A3  A4               A4   A5   A6         A5   A6   A7   A8 | 
 | 		A5  A6               A7   A8   A9         A9   A10  A11  A12 | 
 | 		..  ..               ..   ..   ..         ..   ..   ..   .. | 
 | 		A2  A1               A3   A1   A2         A2   A1   A4   A3 | 
 | 		A4  A3               A6   A4   A5         A6   A5   A8   A7 | 
 | 		A6  A5               A9   A7   A8         A10  A9   A12  A11 | 
 | 		..  ..               ..   ..   ..         ..   ..   ..   .. | 
 |  | 
 | 		If 'raid10_copies 2' and 'raid10_format offset', then the | 
 | 		layouts for 2, 3 and 4 devices are: | 
 | 		2 drives       3 drives           4 drives | 
 | 		--------       ------------       ----------------- | 
 | 		A1  A2         A1  A2  A3         A1  A2  A3  A4 | 
 | 		A2  A1         A3  A1  A2         A2  A1  A4  A3 | 
 | 		A3  A4         A4  A5  A6         A5  A6  A7  A8 | 
 | 		A4  A3         A6  A4  A5         A6  A5  A8  A7 | 
 | 		A5  A6         A7  A8  A9         A9  A10 A11 A12 | 
 | 		A6  A5         A9  A7  A8         A10 A9  A12 A11 | 
 | 		..  ..         ..  ..  ..         ..  ..  ..  .. | 
 | 		Here we see layouts closely akin to 'RAID1E - Integrated | 
 | 		Offset Stripe Mirroring'. | 
 |  | 
 |         [delta_disks <N>] | 
 | 		The delta_disks option value (-251 < N < +251) triggers | 
 | 		device removal (negative value) or device addition (positive | 
 | 		value) to any reshape supporting raid levels 4/5/6 and 10. | 
 | 		RAID levels 4/5/6 allow for addition of devices (metadata | 
 | 		and data device tuple), raid10_near and raid10_offset only | 
 | 		allow for device addition. raid10_far does not support any | 
 | 		reshaping at all. | 
 | 		A minimum of devices have to be kept to enforce resilience, | 
 | 		which is 3 devices for raid4/5 and 4 devices for raid6. | 
 |  | 
 |         [data_offset <sectors>] | 
 | 		This option value defines the offset into each data device | 
 | 		where the data starts. This is used to provide out-of-place | 
 | 		reshaping space to avoid writing over data whilst | 
 | 		changing the layout of stripes, hence an interruption/crash | 
 | 		may happen at any time without the risk of losing data. | 
 | 		E.g. when adding devices to an existing raid set during | 
 | 		forward reshaping, the out-of-place space will be allocated | 
 | 		at the beginning of each raid device. The kernel raid4/5/6/10 | 
 | 		MD personalities supporting such device addition will read the data from | 
 | 		the existing first stripes (those with smaller number of stripes) | 
 | 		starting at data_offset to fill up a new stripe with the larger | 
 | 		number of stripes, calculate the redundancy blocks (CRC/Q-syndrome) | 
 | 		and write that new stripe to offset 0. Same will be applied to all | 
 | 		N-1 other new stripes. This out-of-place scheme is used to change | 
 | 		the RAID type (i.e. the allocation algorithm) as well, e.g. | 
 | 		changing from raid5_ls to raid5_n. | 
 |  | 
 | 	[journal_dev <dev>] | 
 | 		This option adds a journal device to raid4/5/6 raid sets and | 
 | 		uses it to close the 'write hole' caused by the non-atomic updates | 
 | 		to the component devices which can cause data loss during recovery. | 
 | 		The journal device is used as writethrough thus causing writes to | 
 | 		be throttled versus non-journaled raid4/5/6 sets. | 
 | 		Takeover/reshape is not possible with a raid4/5/6 journal device; | 
 | 		it has to be deconfigured before requesting these. | 
 |  | 
 | 	[journal_mode <mode>] | 
 | 		This option sets the caching mode on journaled raid4/5/6 raid sets | 
 | 		(see 'journal_dev <dev>' above) to 'writethrough' or 'writeback'. | 
 | 		If 'writeback' is selected the journal device has to be resilient | 
 | 		and must not suffer from the 'write hole' problem itself (e.g. use | 
 | 		raid1 or raid10) to avoid a single point of failure. | 
 |  | 
 | <#raid_devs>: The number of devices composing the array. | 
 | 	Each device consists of two entries.  The first is the device | 
 | 	containing the metadata (if any); the second is the one containing the | 
 | 	data. A Maximum of 64 metadata/data device entries are supported | 
 | 	up to target version 1.8.0. | 
 | 	1.9.0 supports up to 253 which is enforced by the used MD kernel runtime. | 
 |  | 
 | 	If a drive has failed or is missing at creation time, a '-' can be | 
 | 	given for both the metadata and data drives for a given position. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Example Tables | 
 | -------------- | 
 | # RAID4 - 4 data drives, 1 parity (no metadata devices) | 
 | # No metadata devices specified to hold superblock/bitmap info | 
 | # Chunk size of 1MiB | 
 | # (Lines separated for easy reading) | 
 |  | 
 | 0 1960893648 raid \ | 
 |         raid4 1 2048 \ | 
 |         5 - 8:17 - 8:33 - 8:49 - 8:65 - 8:81 | 
 |  | 
 | # RAID4 - 4 data drives, 1 parity (with metadata devices) | 
 | # Chunk size of 1MiB, force RAID initialization, | 
 | #       min recovery rate at 20 kiB/sec/disk | 
 |  | 
 | 0 1960893648 raid \ | 
 |         raid4 4 2048 sync min_recovery_rate 20 \ | 
 |         5 8:17 8:18 8:33 8:34 8:49 8:50 8:65 8:66 8:81 8:82 | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Status Output | 
 | ------------- | 
 | 'dmsetup table' displays the table used to construct the mapping. | 
 | The optional parameters are always printed in the order listed | 
 | above with "sync" or "nosync" always output ahead of the other | 
 | arguments, regardless of the order used when originally loading the table. | 
 | Arguments that can be repeated are ordered by value. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | 'dmsetup status' yields information on the state and health of the array. | 
 | The output is as follows (normally a single line, but expanded here for | 
 | clarity): | 
 | 1: <s> <l> raid \ | 
 | 2:      <raid_type> <#devices> <health_chars> \ | 
 | 3:      <sync_ratio> <sync_action> <mismatch_cnt> | 
 |  | 
 | Line 1 is the standard output produced by device-mapper. | 
 | Line 2 & 3 are produced by the raid target and are best explained by example: | 
 |         0 1960893648 raid raid4 5 AAAAA 2/490221568 init 0 | 
 | Here we can see the RAID type is raid4, there are 5 devices - all of | 
 | which are 'A'live, and the array is 2/490221568 complete with its initial | 
 | recovery.  Here is a fuller description of the individual fields: | 
 | 	<raid_type>     Same as the <raid_type> used to create the array. | 
 | 	<health_chars>  One char for each device, indicating: 'A' = alive and | 
 | 			in-sync, 'a' = alive but not in-sync, 'D' = dead/failed. | 
 | 	<sync_ratio>    The ratio indicating how much of the array has undergone | 
 | 			the process described by 'sync_action'.  If the | 
 | 			'sync_action' is "check" or "repair", then the process | 
 | 			of "resync" or "recover" can be considered complete. | 
 | 	<sync_action>   One of the following possible states: | 
 | 			idle    - No synchronization action is being performed. | 
 | 			frozen  - The current action has been halted. | 
 | 			resync  - Array is undergoing its initial synchronization | 
 | 				  or is resynchronizing after an unclean shutdown | 
 | 				  (possibly aided by a bitmap). | 
 | 			recover - A device in the array is being rebuilt or | 
 | 				  replaced. | 
 | 			check   - A user-initiated full check of the array is | 
 | 				  being performed.  All blocks are read and | 
 | 				  checked for consistency.  The number of | 
 | 				  discrepancies found are recorded in | 
 | 				  <mismatch_cnt>.  No changes are made to the | 
 | 				  array by this action. | 
 | 			repair  - The same as "check", but discrepancies are | 
 | 				  corrected. | 
 | 			reshape - The array is undergoing a reshape. | 
 | 	<mismatch_cnt>  The number of discrepancies found between mirror copies | 
 | 			in RAID1/10 or wrong parity values found in RAID4/5/6. | 
 | 			This value is valid only after a "check" of the array | 
 | 			is performed.  A healthy array has a 'mismatch_cnt' of 0. | 
 | 	<data_offset>   The current data offset to the start of the user data on | 
 | 			each component device of a raid set (see the respective | 
 | 			raid parameter to support out-of-place reshaping). | 
 | 	<journal_char>	'A' - active write-through journal device. | 
 | 			'a' - active write-back journal device. | 
 | 			'D' - dead journal device. | 
 | 			'-' - no journal device. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Message Interface | 
 | ----------------- | 
 | The dm-raid target will accept certain actions through the 'message' interface. | 
 | ('man dmsetup' for more information on the message interface.)  These actions | 
 | include: | 
 | 	"idle"   - Halt the current sync action. | 
 | 	"frozen" - Freeze the current sync action. | 
 | 	"resync" - Initiate/continue a resync. | 
 | 	"recover"- Initiate/continue a recover process. | 
 | 	"check"  - Initiate a check (i.e. a "scrub") of the array. | 
 | 	"repair" - Initiate a repair of the array. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Discard Support | 
 | --------------- | 
 | The implementation of discard support among hardware vendors varies. | 
 | When a block is discarded, some storage devices will return zeroes when | 
 | the block is read.  These devices set the 'discard_zeroes_data' | 
 | attribute.  Other devices will return random data.  Confusingly, some | 
 | devices that advertise 'discard_zeroes_data' will not reliably return | 
 | zeroes when discarded blocks are read!  Since RAID 4/5/6 uses blocks | 
 | from a number of devices to calculate parity blocks and (for performance | 
 | reasons) relies on 'discard_zeroes_data' being reliable, it is important | 
 | that the devices be consistent.  Blocks may be discarded in the middle | 
 | of a RAID 4/5/6 stripe and if subsequent read results are not | 
 | consistent, the parity blocks may be calculated differently at any time; | 
 | making the parity blocks useless for redundancy.  It is important to | 
 | understand how your hardware behaves with discards if you are going to | 
 | enable discards with RAID 4/5/6. | 
 |  | 
 | Since the behavior of storage devices is unreliable in this respect, | 
 | even when reporting 'discard_zeroes_data', by default RAID 4/5/6 | 
 | discard support is disabled -- this ensures data integrity at the | 
 | expense of losing some performance. | 
 |  | 
 | Storage devices that properly support 'discard_zeroes_data' are | 
 | increasingly whitelisted in the kernel and can thus be trusted. | 
 |  | 
 | For trusted devices, the following dm-raid module parameter can be set | 
 | to safely enable discard support for RAID 4/5/6: | 
 |     'devices_handle_discards_safely' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Version History | 
 | --------------- | 
 | 1.0.0	Initial version.  Support for RAID 4/5/6 | 
 | 1.1.0	Added support for RAID 1 | 
 | 1.2.0	Handle creation of arrays that contain failed devices. | 
 | 1.3.0	Added support for RAID 10 | 
 | 1.3.1	Allow device replacement/rebuild for RAID 10 | 
 | 1.3.2   Fix/improve redundancy checking for RAID10 | 
 | 1.4.0	Non-functional change.  Removes arg from mapping function. | 
 | 1.4.1   RAID10 fix redundancy validation checks (commit 55ebbb5). | 
 | 1.4.2   Add RAID10 "far" and "offset" algorithm support. | 
 | 1.5.0   Add message interface to allow manipulation of the sync_action. | 
 | 	New status (STATUSTYPE_INFO) fields: sync_action and mismatch_cnt. | 
 | 1.5.1   Add ability to restore transiently failed devices on resume. | 
 | 1.5.2   'mismatch_cnt' is zero unless [last_]sync_action is "check". | 
 | 1.6.0   Add discard support (and devices_handle_discard_safely module param). | 
 | 1.7.0   Add support for MD RAID0 mappings. | 
 | 1.8.0   Explicitly check for compatible flags in the superblock metadata | 
 | 	and reject to start the raid set if any are set by a newer | 
 | 	target version, thus avoiding data corruption on a raid set | 
 | 	with a reshape in progress. | 
 | 1.9.0   Add support for RAID level takeover/reshape/region size | 
 | 	and set size reduction. | 
 | 1.9.1   Fix activation of existing RAID 4/10 mapped devices | 
 | 1.9.2   Don't emit '- -' on the status table line in case the constructor | 
 | 	fails reading a superblock. Correctly emit 'maj:min1 maj:min2' and | 
 | 	'D' on the status line.  If '- -' is passed into the constructor, emit | 
 | 	'- -' on the table line and '-' as the status line health character. | 
 | 1.10.0  Add support for raid4/5/6 journal device | 
 | 1.10.1  Fix data corruption on reshape request | 
 | 1.11.0  Fix table line argument order | 
 | 	(wrong raid10_copies/raid10_format sequence) | 
 | 1.11.1  Add raid4/5/6 journal write-back support via journal_mode option | 
 | 1.12.1  Fix for MD deadlock between mddev_suspend() and md_write_start() available | 
 | 1.13.0  Fix dev_health status at end of "recover" (was 'a', now 'A') | 
 | 1.13.1  Fix deadlock caused by early md_stop_writes().  Also fix size an | 
 | 	state races. | 
 | 1.13.2  Fix raid redundancy validation and avoid keeping raid set frozen | 
 | 1.14.0  Fix reshape race on small devices.  Fix stripe adding reshape | 
 | 	deadlock/potential data corruption.  Update superblock when | 
 | 	specific devices are requested via rebuild.  Fix RAID leg | 
 | 	rebuild errors. |