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- use :file: and :command: - simplify manual page references - add more web links - typo fixes - more cross-references Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
128 lines
5.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
128 lines
5.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
From kernel 3.3 onwards, BTRFS balance can limit its action to a subset of the
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whole filesystem, and can be used to change the replication configuration (e.g.
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convert data from ``single`` to ``RAID1``).
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Balance can be limited to a block group profile with the following options:
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* ``-d`` for data block groups
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* ``-m`` for metadata block groups (also implicitly applies to *-s*)
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* ``-s`` for system block groups
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The options have an optional parameter which means that the parameter must start
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right after the option without a space (this is mandatory getopt syntax), like
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``-dusage=10``. Options for all block group types can be specified in one command.
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A filter has the following structure: ``filter[=params][,filter=...]``
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To combine multiple filters use ``,``, without spaces. Example: ``-dconvert=raid1,soft``
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BTRFS can have different profiles on a single device or the same profile on
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multiple device.
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The main reason why you want to have different profiles for data and metadata
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is to provide additional protection of the filesystem's metadata when devices fail,
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since a single sector of unrecoverable metadata will break the filesystem,
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while a single sector of lost data can be trivially recovered by deleting the broken file.
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Before changing profiles, make sure there is enough unallocated space on
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existing drives to create new metadata block groups (for filesystems
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over 50GiB, this is ``1GB * (number_of_devices + 2))``.
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Default profiles on BTRFS are:
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* data: ``single``
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* metadata:
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* single devices: ``dup``
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* multiple devices: ``raid1``
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The available filter types are:
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Filter types
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^^^^^^^^^^^^
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profiles=<profiles>
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Balances only block groups with the given profiles. Parameters
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are a list of profile names separated by ``|`` (pipe).
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usage=<percent>, usage=<range>
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Balances only block groups with usage under the given percentage. The
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value of 0 is allowed and will clean up completely unused block groups, this
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should not require any new work space allocated. You may want to use *usage=0*
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in case balance is returning ENOSPC and your filesystem is not too full.
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The argument may be a single value or a range. The single value ``N`` means *at
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most N percent used*, equivalent to ``..N`` range syntax. Kernels prior to 4.4
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accept only the single value format.
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The minimum range boundary is inclusive, maximum is exclusive.
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devid=<id>
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Balances only block groups which have at least one chunk on the given
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device. To list devices with ids use :command:`btrfs filesystem show`.
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drange=<range>
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Balance only block groups which overlap with the given byte range on any
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device. Use in conjunction with ``devid`` to filter on a specific device. The
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parameter is a range specified as ``start..end``.
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vrange=<range>
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Balance only block groups which overlap with the given byte range in the
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filesystem's internal virtual address space. This is the address space that
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most reports from btrfs in the kernel log use. The parameter is a range
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specified as ``start..end``.
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convert=<profile>
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Convert each selected block group to the given profile name identified by
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parameters.
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.. note::
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Starting with kernel 4.5, the ``data`` chunks can be converted to/from the
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``DUP`` profile on a single device.
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.. note::
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Starting with kernel 4.6, all profiles can be converted to/from ``DUP`` on
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multi-device filesystems.
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limit=<number>, limit=<range>
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Process only given number of chunks, after all filters are applied. This can be
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used to specifically target a chunk in connection with other filters (``drange``,
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``vrange``) or just simply limit the amount of work done by a single balance run.
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The argument may be a single value or a range. The single value ``N`` means *at
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most N chunks*, equivalent to ``..N`` range syntax. Kernels prior to 4.4 accept
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only the single value format. The range minimum and maximum are inclusive.
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stripes=<range>
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Balance only block groups which have the given number of stripes. The parameter
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is a range specified as ``start..end``. Makes sense for block group profiles that
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utilize striping, i.e. RAID0/10/5/6. The range minimum and maximum are
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inclusive.
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soft
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Takes no parameters. Only has meaning when converting between profiles, or
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When doing convert from one profile to another and soft mode is on,
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chunks that already have the target profile are left untouched.
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This is useful e.g. when half of the filesystem was converted earlier but got
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cancelled.
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The soft mode switch is (like every other filter) per-type.
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For example, this means that we can convert metadata chunks the "hard" way
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while converting data chunks selectively with soft switch.
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Profile names, used in ``profiles`` and ``convert`` are one of:
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* ``raid0``
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* ``raid1``
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* ``raid1c3``
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* ``raid1c4``
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* ``raid10``
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* ``raid5``
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* ``raid6``
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* ``dup``
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* ``single``
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The mixed data/metadata profiles can be converted in the same way, but conversion
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between mixed and non-mixed is not implemented. For the constraints of the
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profiles please refer to :doc:`mkfs.btrfs` section
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:ref:`PROFILES<man-mkfs-profiles>`.
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