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1
2The SGI XFS Filesystem
3======================
4
5XFS is a high performance journaling filesystem which originated
6on the SGI IRIX platform.  It is completely multi-threaded, can
7support large files and large filesystems, extended attributes,
8variable block sizes, is extent based, and makes extensive use of
9Btrees (directories, extents, free space) to aid both performance
10and scalability.
11
12Refer to the documentation at http://oss.sgi.com/projects/xfs/
13for further details.  This implementation is on-disk compatible
14with the IRIX version of XFS.
15
16
17Mount Options
18=============
19
20When mounting an XFS filesystem, the following options are accepted.
21For boolean mount options, the names with the (*) suffix is the
22default behaviour.
23
24  allocsize=size
25	Sets the buffered I/O end-of-file preallocation size when
26	doing delayed allocation writeout (default size is 64KiB).
27	Valid values for this option are page size (typically 4KiB)
28	through to 1GiB, inclusive, in power-of-2 increments.
29
30	The default behaviour is for dynamic end-of-file
31	preallocation size, which uses a set of heuristics to
32	optimise the preallocation size based on the current
33	allocation patterns within the file and the access patterns
34	to the file. Specifying a fixed allocsize value turns off
35	the dynamic behaviour.
36
37  attr2
38  noattr2
39	The options enable/disable an "opportunistic" improvement to
40	be made in the way inline extended attributes are stored
41	on-disk.  When the new form is used for the first time when
42	attr2 is selected (either when setting or removing extended
43	attributes) the on-disk superblock feature bit field will be
44	updated to reflect this format being in use.
45
46	The default behaviour is determined by the on-disk feature
47	bit indicating that attr2 behaviour is active. If either
48	mount option it set, then that becomes the new default used
49	by the filesystem.
50
51	CRC enabled filesystems always use the attr2 format, and so
52	will reject the noattr2 mount option if it is set.
53
54  barrier (*)
55  nobarrier
56	Enables/disables the use of block layer write barriers for
57	writes into the journal and for data integrity operations.
58	This allows for drive level write caching to be enabled, for
59	devices that support write barriers.
60
61  discard
62  nodiscard (*)
63	Enable/disable the issuing of commands to let the block
64	device reclaim space freed by the filesystem.  This is
65	useful for SSD devices, thinly provisioned LUNs and virtual
66	machine images, but may have a performance impact.
67
68	Note: It is currently recommended that you use the fstrim
69	application to discard unused blocks rather than the discard
70	mount option because the performance impact of this option
71	is quite severe.
72
73  grpid/bsdgroups
74  nogrpid/sysvgroups (*)
75	These options define what group ID a newly created file
76	gets.  When grpid is set, it takes the group ID of the
77	directory in which it is created; otherwise it takes the
78	fsgid of the current process, unless the directory has the
79	setgid bit set, in which case it takes the gid from the
80	parent directory, and also gets the setgid bit set if it is
81	a directory itself.
82
83  filestreams
84	Make the data allocator use the filestreams allocation mode
85	across the entire filesystem rather than just on directories
86	configured to use it.
87
88  ikeep
89  noikeep (*)
90	When ikeep is specified, XFS does not delete empty inode
91	clusters and keeps them around on disk.  When noikeep is
92	specified, empty inode clusters are returned to the free
93	space pool.
94
95  inode32
96  inode64 (*)
97	When inode32 is specified, it indicates that XFS limits
98	inode creation to locations which will not result in inode
99	numbers with more than 32 bits of significance.
100
101	When inode64 is specified, it indicates that XFS is allowed
102	to create inodes at any location in the filesystem,
103	including those which will result in inode numbers occupying
104	more than 32 bits of significance.
105
106	inode32 is provided for backwards compatibility with older
107	systems and applications, since 64 bits inode numbers might
108	cause problems for some applications that cannot handle
109	large inode numbers.  If applications are in use which do
110	not handle inode numbers bigger than 32 bits, the inode32
111	option should be specified.
112
113
114  largeio
115  nolargeio (*)
116	If "nolargeio" is specified, the optimal I/O reported in
117	st_blksize by stat(2) will be as small as possible to allow
118	user applications to avoid inefficient read/modify/write
119	I/O.  This is typically the page size of the machine, as
120	this is the granularity of the page cache.
121
122	If "largeio" specified, a filesystem that was created with a
123	"swidth" specified will return the "swidth" value (in bytes)
124	in st_blksize. If the filesystem does not have a "swidth"
125	specified but does specify an "allocsize" then "allocsize"
126	(in bytes) will be returned instead. Otherwise the behaviour
127	is the same as if "nolargeio" was specified.
128
129  logbufs=value
130	Set the number of in-memory log buffers.  Valid numbers
131	range from 2-8 inclusive.
132
133	The default value is 8 buffers.
134
135	If the memory cost of 8 log buffers is too high on small
136	systems, then it may be reduced at some cost to performance
137	on metadata intensive workloads. The logbsize option below
138	controls the size of each buffer and so is also relevant to
139	this case.
140
141  logbsize=value
142	Set the size of each in-memory log buffer.  The size may be
143	specified in bytes, or in kilobytes with a "k" suffix.
144	Valid sizes for version 1 and version 2 logs are 16384 (16k)
145	and 32768 (32k).  Valid sizes for version 2 logs also
146	include 65536 (64k), 131072 (128k) and 262144 (256k). The
147	logbsize must be an integer multiple of the log
148	stripe unit configured at mkfs time.
149
150	The default value for for version 1 logs is 32768, while the
151	default value for version 2 logs is MAX(32768, log_sunit).
152
153  logdev=device and rtdev=device
154	Use an external log (metadata journal) and/or real-time device.
155	An XFS filesystem has up to three parts: a data section, a log
156	section, and a real-time section.  The real-time section is
157	optional, and the log section can be separate from the data
158	section or contained within it.
159
160  noalign
161	Data allocations will not be aligned at stripe unit
162	boundaries. This is only relevant to filesystems created
163	with non-zero data alignment parameters (sunit, swidth) by
164	mkfs.
165
166  norecovery
167	The filesystem will be mounted without running log recovery.
168	If the filesystem was not cleanly unmounted, it is likely to
169	be inconsistent when mounted in "norecovery" mode.
170	Some files or directories may not be accessible because of this.
171	Filesystems mounted "norecovery" must be mounted read-only or
172	the mount will fail.
173
174  nouuid
175	Don't check for double mounted file systems using the file
176	system uuid.  This is useful to mount LVM snapshot volumes,
177	and often used in combination with "norecovery" for mounting
178	read-only snapshots.
179
180  noquota
181	Forcibly turns off all quota accounting and enforcement
182	within the filesystem.
183
184  uquota/usrquota/uqnoenforce/quota
185	User disk quota accounting enabled, and limits (optionally)
186	enforced.  Refer to xfs_quota(8) for further details.
187
188  gquota/grpquota/gqnoenforce
189	Group disk quota accounting enabled and limits (optionally)
190	enforced.  Refer to xfs_quota(8) for further details.
191
192  pquota/prjquota/pqnoenforce
193	Project disk quota accounting enabled and limits (optionally)
194	enforced.  Refer to xfs_quota(8) for further details.
195
196  sunit=value and swidth=value
197	Used to specify the stripe unit and width for a RAID device
198	or a stripe volume.  "value" must be specified in 512-byte
199	block units. These options are only relevant to filesystems
200	that were created with non-zero data alignment parameters.
201
202	The sunit and swidth parameters specified must be compatible
203	with the existing filesystem alignment characteristics.  In
204	general, that means the only valid changes to sunit are
205	increasing it by a power-of-2 multiple. Valid swidth values
206	are any integer multiple of a valid sunit value.
207
208	Typically the only time these mount options are necessary if
209	after an underlying RAID device has had it's geometry
210	modified, such as adding a new disk to a RAID5 lun and
211	reshaping it.
212
213  swalloc
214	Data allocations will be rounded up to stripe width boundaries
215	when the current end of file is being extended and the file
216	size is larger than the stripe width size.
217
218  wsync
219	When specified, all filesystem namespace operations are
220	executed synchronously. This ensures that when the namespace
221	operation (create, unlink, etc) completes, the change to the
222	namespace is on stable storage. This is useful in HA setups
223	where failover must not result in clients seeing
224	inconsistent namespace presentation during or after a
225	failover event.
226
227
228Deprecated Mount Options
229========================
230
231None at present.
232
233
234Removed Mount Options
235=====================
236
237  Name				Removed
238  ----				-------
239  delaylog/nodelaylog		v4.0
240  ihashsize			v4.0
241  irixsgid			v4.0
242  osyncisdsync/osyncisosync	v4.0
243
244
245sysctls
246=======
247
248The following sysctls are available for the XFS filesystem:
249
250  fs.xfs.stats_clear		(Min: 0  Default: 0  Max: 1)
251	Setting this to "1" clears accumulated XFS statistics
252	in /proc/fs/xfs/stat.  It then immediately resets to "0".
253
254  fs.xfs.xfssyncd_centisecs	(Min: 100  Default: 3000  Max: 720000)
255	The interval at which the filesystem flushes metadata
256	out to disk and runs internal cache cleanup routines.
257
258  fs.xfs.filestream_centisecs	(Min: 1  Default: 3000  Max: 360000)
259	The interval at which the filesystem ages filestreams cache
260	references and returns timed-out AGs back to the free stream
261	pool.
262
263  fs.xfs.speculative_prealloc_lifetime
264		(Units: seconds   Min: 1  Default: 300  Max: 86400)
265	The interval at which the background scanning for inodes
266	with unused speculative preallocation runs. The scan
267	removes unused preallocation from clean inodes and releases
268	the unused space back to the free pool.
269
270  fs.xfs.error_level		(Min: 0  Default: 3  Max: 11)
271	A volume knob for error reporting when internal errors occur.
272	This will generate detailed messages & backtraces for filesystem
273	shutdowns, for example.  Current threshold values are:
274
275		XFS_ERRLEVEL_OFF:       0
276		XFS_ERRLEVEL_LOW:       1
277		XFS_ERRLEVEL_HIGH:      5
278
279  fs.xfs.panic_mask		(Min: 0  Default: 0  Max: 255)
280	Causes certain error conditions to call BUG(). Value is a bitmask;
281	OR together the tags which represent errors which should cause panics:
282
283		XFS_NO_PTAG                     0
284		XFS_PTAG_IFLUSH                 0x00000001
285		XFS_PTAG_LOGRES                 0x00000002
286		XFS_PTAG_AILDELETE              0x00000004
287		XFS_PTAG_ERROR_REPORT           0x00000008
288		XFS_PTAG_SHUTDOWN_CORRUPT       0x00000010
289		XFS_PTAG_SHUTDOWN_IOERROR       0x00000020
290		XFS_PTAG_SHUTDOWN_LOGERROR      0x00000040
291		XFS_PTAG_FSBLOCK_ZERO           0x00000080
292
293	This option is intended for debugging only.
294
295  fs.xfs.irix_symlink_mode	(Min: 0  Default: 0  Max: 1)
296	Controls whether symlinks are created with mode 0777 (default)
297	or whether their mode is affected by the umask (irix mode).
298
299  fs.xfs.irix_sgid_inherit	(Min: 0  Default: 0  Max: 1)
300	Controls files created in SGID directories.
301	If the group ID of the new file does not match the effective group
302	ID or one of the supplementary group IDs of the parent dir, the
303	ISGID bit is cleared if the irix_sgid_inherit compatibility sysctl
304	is set.
305
306  fs.xfs.inherit_sync		(Min: 0  Default: 1  Max: 1)
307	Setting this to "1" will cause the "sync" flag set
308	by the xfs_io(8) chattr command on a directory to be
309	inherited by files in that directory.
310
311  fs.xfs.inherit_nodump		(Min: 0  Default: 1  Max: 1)
312	Setting this to "1" will cause the "nodump" flag set
313	by the xfs_io(8) chattr command on a directory to be
314	inherited by files in that directory.
315
316  fs.xfs.inherit_noatime	(Min: 0  Default: 1  Max: 1)
317	Setting this to "1" will cause the "noatime" flag set
318	by the xfs_io(8) chattr command on a directory to be
319	inherited by files in that directory.
320
321  fs.xfs.inherit_nosymlinks	(Min: 0  Default: 1  Max: 1)
322	Setting this to "1" will cause the "nosymlinks" flag set
323	by the xfs_io(8) chattr command on a directory to be
324	inherited by files in that directory.
325
326  fs.xfs.inherit_nodefrag	(Min: 0  Default: 1  Max: 1)
327	Setting this to "1" will cause the "nodefrag" flag set
328	by the xfs_io(8) chattr command on a directory to be
329	inherited by files in that directory.
330
331  fs.xfs.rotorstep		(Min: 1  Default: 1  Max: 256)
332	In "inode32" allocation mode, this option determines how many
333	files the allocator attempts to allocate in the same allocation
334	group before moving to the next allocation group.  The intent
335	is to control the rate at which the allocator moves between
336	allocation groups when allocating extents for new files.
337
338Deprecated Sysctls
339==================
340
341None at present.
342
343
344Removed Sysctls
345===============
346
347  Name				Removed
348  ----				-------
349  fs.xfs.xfsbufd_centisec	v4.0
350  fs.xfs.age_buffer_centisecs	v4.0
351
352
353Error handling
354==============
355
356XFS can act differently according to the type of error found during its
357operation. The implementation introduces the following concepts to the error
358handler:
359
360 -failure speed:
361	Defines how fast XFS should propagate an error upwards when a specific
362	error is found during the filesystem operation. It can propagate
363	immediately, after a defined number of retries, after a set time period,
364	or simply retry forever.
365
366 -error classes:
367	Specifies the subsystem the error configuration will apply to, such as
368	metadata IO or memory allocation. Different subsystems will have
369	different error handlers for which behaviour can be configured.
370
371 -error handlers:
372	Defines the behavior for a specific error.
373
374The filesystem behavior during an error can be set via sysfs files. Each
375error handler works independently - the first condition met by an error handler
376for a specific class will cause the error to be propagated rather than reset and
377retried.
378
379The action taken by the filesystem when the error is propagated is context
380dependent - it may cause a shut down in the case of an unrecoverable error,
381it may be reported back to userspace, or it may even be ignored because
382there's nothing useful we can with the error or anyone we can report it to (e.g.
383during unmount).
384
385The configuration files are organized into the following hierarchy for each
386mounted filesystem:
387
388  /sys/fs/xfs/<dev>/error/<class>/<error>/
389
390Where:
391  <dev>
392	The short device name of the mounted filesystem. This is the same device
393	name that shows up in XFS kernel error messages as "XFS(<dev>): ..."
394
395  <class>
396	The subsystem the error configuration belongs to. As of 4.9, the defined
397	classes are:
398
399		- "metadata": applies metadata buffer write IO
400
401  <error>
402	The individual error handler configurations.
403
404
405Each filesystem has "global" error configuration options defined in their top
406level directory:
407
408  /sys/fs/xfs/<dev>/error/
409
410  fail_at_unmount		(Min:  0  Default:  1  Max: 1)
411	Defines the filesystem error behavior at unmount time.
412
413	If set to a value of 1, XFS will override all other error configurations
414	during unmount and replace them with "immediate fail" characteristics.
415	i.e. no retries, no retry timeout. This will always allow unmount to
416	succeed when there are persistent errors present.
417
418	If set to 0, the configured retry behaviour will continue until all
419	retries and/or timeouts have been exhausted. This will delay unmount
420	completion when there are persistent errors, and it may prevent the
421	filesystem from ever unmounting fully in the case of "retry forever"
422	handler configurations.
423
424	Note: there is no guarantee that fail_at_unmount can be set whilst an
425	unmount is in progress. It is possible that the sysfs entries are
426	removed by the unmounting filesystem before a "retry forever" error
427	handler configuration causes unmount to hang, and hence the filesystem
428	must be configured appropriately before unmount begins to prevent
429	unmount hangs.
430
431Each filesystem has specific error class handlers that define the error
432propagation behaviour for specific errors. There is also a "default" error
433handler defined, which defines the behaviour for all errors that don't have
434specific handlers defined. Where multiple retry constraints are configuredi for
435a single error, the first retry configuration that expires will cause the error
436to be propagated. The handler configurations are found in the directory:
437
438  /sys/fs/xfs/<dev>/error/<class>/<error>/
439
440  max_retries			(Min: -1  Default: Varies  Max: INTMAX)
441	Defines the allowed number of retries of a specific error before
442	the filesystem will propagate the error. The retry count for a given
443	error context (e.g. a specific metadata buffer) is reset every time
444	there is a successful completion of the operation.
445
446	Setting the value to "-1" will cause XFS to retry forever for this
447	specific error.
448
449	Setting the value to "0" will cause XFS to fail immediately when the
450	specific error is reported.
451
452	Setting the value to "N" (where 0 < N < Max) will make XFS retry the
453	operation "N" times before propagating the error.
454
455  retry_timeout_seconds		(Min:  -1  Default:  Varies  Max: 1 day)
456	Define the amount of time (in seconds) that the filesystem is
457	allowed to retry its operations when the specific error is
458	found.
459
460	Setting the value to "-1" will allow XFS to retry forever for this
461	specific error.
462
463	Setting the value to "0" will cause XFS to fail immediately when the
464	specific error is reported.
465
466	Setting the value to "N" (where 0 < N < Max) will allow XFS to retry the
467	operation for up to "N" seconds before propagating the error.
468
469Note: The default behaviour for a specific error handler is dependent on both
470the class and error context. For example, the default values for
471"metadata/ENODEV" are "0" rather than "-1" so that this error handler defaults
472to "fail immediately" behaviour. This is done because ENODEV is a fatal,
473unrecoverable error no matter how many times the metadata IO is retried.
474