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1Tools that manage md devices can be found at
2 http://www.<country>.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/raid/....
3
4
5Boot time assembly of RAID arrays
6---------------------------------
7
8You can boot with your md device with the following kernel command
9lines:
10
11for old raid arrays without persistent superblocks:
12 md=<md device no.>,<raid level>,<chunk size factor>,<fault level>,dev0,dev1,...,devn
13
14for raid arrays with persistent superblocks
15 md=<md device no.>,dev0,dev1,...,devn
16or, to assemble a partitionable array:
17 md=d<md device no.>,dev0,dev1,...,devn
18
19md device no. = the number of the md device ...
20 0 means md0,
21 1 md1,
22 2 md2,
23 3 md3,
24 4 md4
25
26raid level = -1 linear mode
27 0 striped mode
28 other modes are only supported with persistent super blocks
29
30chunk size factor = (raid-0 and raid-1 only)
31 Set the chunk size as 4k << n.
32
33fault level = totally ignored
34
35dev0-devn: e.g. /dev/hda1,/dev/hdc1,/dev/sda1,/dev/sdb1
36
37A possible loadlin line (Harald Hoyer <HarryH@Royal.Net>) looks like this:
38
39e:\loadlin\loadlin e:\zimage root=/dev/md0 md=0,0,4,0,/dev/hdb2,/dev/hdc3 ro
40
41
42Boot time autodetection of RAID arrays
43--------------------------------------
44
45When md is compiled into the kernel (not as module), partitions of
46type 0xfd are scanned and automatically assembled into RAID arrays.
47This autodetection may be suppressed with the kernel parameter
48"raid=noautodetect". As of kernel 2.6.9, only drives with a type 0
49superblock can be autodetected and run at boot time.
50
51The kernel parameter "raid=partitionable" (or "raid=part") means
52that all auto-detected arrays are assembled as partitionable.
53
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54Boot time assembly of degraded/dirty arrays
55-------------------------------------------
56
57If a raid5 or raid6 array is both dirty and degraded, it could have
58undetectable data corruption. This is because the fact that it is
59'dirty' means that the parity cannot be trusted, and the fact that it
60is degraded means that some datablocks are missing and cannot reliably
61be reconstructed (due to no parity).
62
63For this reason, md will normally refuse to start such an array. This
64requires the sysadmin to take action to explicitly start the array
65desipite possible corruption. This is normally done with
66 mdadm --assemble --force ....
67
68This option is not really available if the array has the root
69filesystem on it. In order to support this booting from such an
70array, md supports a module parameter "start_dirty_degraded" which,
71when set to 1, bypassed the checks and will allows dirty degraded
72arrays to be started.
73
74So, to boot with a root filesystem of a dirty degraded raid[56], use
75
76 md-mod.start_dirty_degraded=1
77
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78
79Superblock formats
80------------------
81
82The md driver can support a variety of different superblock formats.
83Currently, it supports superblock formats "0.90.0" and the "md-1" format
84introduced in the 2.5 development series.
85
86The kernel will autodetect which format superblock is being used.
87
88Superblock format '0' is treated differently to others for legacy
89reasons - it is the original superblock format.
90
91
92General Rules - apply for all superblock formats
93------------------------------------------------
94
95An array is 'created' by writing appropriate superblocks to all
96devices.
97
98It is 'assembled' by associating each of these devices with an
99particular md virtual device. Once it is completely assembled, it can
100be accessed.
101
102An array should be created by a user-space tool. This will write
103superblocks to all devices. It will usually mark the array as
104'unclean', or with some devices missing so that the kernel md driver
105can create appropriate redundancy (copying in raid1, parity
106calculation in raid4/5).
107
108When an array is assembled, it is first initialized with the
109SET_ARRAY_INFO ioctl. This contains, in particular, a major and minor
110version number. The major version number selects which superblock
111format is to be used. The minor number might be used to tune handling
112of the format, such as suggesting where on each device to look for the
113superblock.
114
115Then each device is added using the ADD_NEW_DISK ioctl. This
116provides, in particular, a major and minor number identifying the
117device to add.
118
119The array is started with the RUN_ARRAY ioctl.
120
121Once started, new devices can be added. They should have an
122appropriate superblock written to them, and then passed be in with
123ADD_NEW_DISK.
124
125Devices that have failed or are not yet active can be detached from an
126array using HOT_REMOVE_DISK.
127
128
129Specific Rules that apply to format-0 super block arrays, and
130 arrays with no superblock (non-persistent).
131-------------------------------------------------------------
132
133An array can be 'created' by describing the array (level, chunksize
134etc) in a SET_ARRAY_INFO ioctl. This must has major_version==0 and
135raid_disks != 0.
136
137Then uninitialized devices can be added with ADD_NEW_DISK. The
138structure passed to ADD_NEW_DISK must specify the state of the device
139and it's role in the array.
140
141Once started with RUN_ARRAY, uninitialized spares can be added with
142HOT_ADD_DISK.
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143
144
145
146MD devices in sysfs
147-------------------
148md devices appear in sysfs (/sys) as regular block devices,
149e.g.
150 /sys/block/md0
151
152Each 'md' device will contain a subdirectory called 'md' which
153contains further md-specific information about the device.
154
155All md devices contain:
156 level
157 a text file indicating the 'raid level'. This may be a standard
158 numerical level prefixed by "RAID-" - e.g. "RAID-5", or some
159 other name such as "linear" or "multipath".
160 If no raid level has been set yet (array is still being
161 assembled), this file will be empty.
162
163 raid_disks
164 a text file with a simple number indicating the number of devices
165 in a fully functional array. If this is not yet known, the file
166 will be empty. If an array is being resized (not currently
167 possible) this will contain the larger of the old and new sizes.
168
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169 chunk_size
170 This is the size if bytes for 'chunks' and is only relevant to
171 raid levels that involve striping (1,4,5,6,10). The address space
172 of the array is conceptually divided into chunks and consecutive
173 chunks are striped onto neighbouring devices.
174 The size should be atleast PAGE_SIZE (4k) and should be a power
175 of 2. This can only be set while assembling an array
176
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177 component_size
178 For arrays with data redundancy (i.e. not raid0, linear, faulty,
179 multipath), all components must be the same size - or at least
180 there must a size that they all provide space for. This is a key
181 part or the geometry of the array. It is measured in sectors
182 and can be read from here. Writing to this value may resize
183 the array if the personality supports it (raid1, raid5, raid6),
184 and if the component drives are large enough.
185
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186As component devices are added to an md array, they appear in the 'md'
187directory as new directories named
188 dev-XXX
189where XXX is a name that the kernel knows for the device, e.g. hdb1.
190Each directory contains:
191
192 block
193 a symlink to the block device in /sys/block, e.g.
194 /sys/block/md0/md/dev-hdb1/block -> ../../../../block/hdb/hdb1
195
196 super
197 A file containing an image of the superblock read from, or
198 written to, that device.
199
200 state
201 A file recording the current state of the device in the array
202 which can be a comma separated list of
203 faulty - device has been kicked from active use due to
204 a detected fault
205 in_sync - device is a fully in-sync member of the array
206 spare - device is working, but not a full member.
207 This includes spares that are in the process
208 of being recoverred to
209 This list make grow in future.
210
211
212An active md device will also contain and entry for each active device
213in the array. These are named
214
215 rdNN
216
217where 'NN' is the possition in the array, starting from 0.
218So for a 3 drive array there will be rd0, rd1, rd2.
219These are symbolic links to the appropriate 'dev-XXX' entry.
220Thus, for example,
221 cat /sys/block/md*/md/rd*/state
222will show 'in_sync' on every line.
223
224
225
226Active md devices for levels that support data redundancy (1,4,5,6)
227also have
228
229 sync_action
230 a text file that can be used to monitor and control the rebuild
231 process. It contains one word which can be one of:
232 resync - redundancy is being recalculated after unclean
233 shutdown or creation
234 recover - a hot spare is being built to replace a
235 failed/missing device
236 idle - nothing is happening
237 check - A full check of redundancy was requested and is
238 happening. This reads all block and checks
239 them. A repair may also happen for some raid
240 levels.
241 repair - A full check and repair is happening. This is
242 similar to 'resync', but was requested by the
243 user, and the write-intent bitmap is NOT used to
244 optimise the process.
245
246 This file is writable, and each of the strings that could be
247 read are meaningful for writing.
248
249 'idle' will stop an active resync/recovery etc. There is no
250 guarantee that another resync/recovery may not be automatically
251 started again, though some event will be needed to trigger
252 this.
253 'resync' or 'recovery' can be used to restart the
254 corresponding operation if it was stopped with 'idle'.
255 'check' and 'repair' will start the appropriate process
256 providing the current state is 'idle'.
257
258 mismatch_count
259 When performing 'check' and 'repair', and possibly when
260 performing 'resync', md will count the number of errors that are
261 found. The count in 'mismatch_cnt' is the number of sectors
262 that were re-written, or (for 'check') would have been
263 re-written. As most raid levels work in units of pages rather
264 than sectors, this my be larger than the number of actual errors
265 by a factor of the number of sectors in a page.
266
267Each active md device may also have attributes specific to the
268personality module that manages it.
269These are specific to the implementation of the module and could
270change substantially if the implementation changes.
271
272These currently include
273
274 stripe_cache_size (currently raid5 only)
275 number of entries in the stripe cache. This is writable, but
276 there are upper and lower limits (32768, 16). Default is 128.
277 strip_cache_active (currently raid5 only)
278 number of active entries in the stripe cache