1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only 2# 3# Block device driver configuration 4# 5 6menuconfig MD 7 bool "Multiple devices driver support (RAID and LVM)" 8 depends on BLOCK 9 select SRCU 10 help 11 Support multiple physical spindles through a single logical device. 12 Required for RAID and logical volume management. 13 14if MD 15 16config BLK_DEV_MD 17 tristate "RAID support" 18 help 19 This driver lets you combine several hard disk partitions into one 20 logical block device. This can be used to simply append one 21 partition to another one or to combine several redundant hard disks 22 into a RAID1/4/5 device so as to provide protection against hard 23 disk failures. This is called "Software RAID" since the combining of 24 the partitions is done by the kernel. "Hardware RAID" means that the 25 combining is done by a dedicated controller; if you have such a 26 controller, you do not need to say Y here. 27 28 More information about Software RAID on Linux is contained in the 29 Software RAID mini-HOWTO, available from 30 <https://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>. There you will also learn 31 where to get the supporting user space utilities raidtools. 32 33 If unsure, say N. 34 35config MD_AUTODETECT 36 bool "Autodetect RAID arrays during kernel boot" 37 depends on BLK_DEV_MD=y 38 default y 39 help 40 If you say Y here, then the kernel will try to autodetect raid 41 arrays as part of its boot process. 42 43 If you don't use raid and say Y, this autodetection can cause 44 a several-second delay in the boot time due to various 45 synchronisation steps that are part of this step. 46 47 If unsure, say Y. 48 49config MD_LINEAR 50 tristate "Linear (append) mode" 51 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 52 help 53 If you say Y here, then your multiple devices driver will be able to 54 use the so-called linear mode, i.e. it will combine the hard disk 55 partitions by simply appending one to the other. 56 57 To compile this as a module, choose M here: the module 58 will be called linear. 59 60 If unsure, say Y. 61 62config MD_RAID0 63 tristate "RAID-0 (striping) mode" 64 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 65 help 66 If you say Y here, then your multiple devices driver will be able to 67 use the so-called raid0 mode, i.e. it will combine the hard disk 68 partitions into one logical device in such a fashion as to fill them 69 up evenly, one chunk here and one chunk there. This will increase 70 the throughput rate if the partitions reside on distinct disks. 71 72 Information about Software RAID on Linux is contained in the 73 Software-RAID mini-HOWTO, available from 74 <https://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>. There you will also 75 learn where to get the supporting user space utilities raidtools. 76 77 To compile this as a module, choose M here: the module 78 will be called raid0. 79 80 If unsure, say Y. 81 82config MD_RAID1 83 tristate "RAID-1 (mirroring) mode" 84 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 85 help 86 A RAID-1 set consists of several disk drives which are exact copies 87 of each other. In the event of a mirror failure, the RAID driver 88 will continue to use the operational mirrors in the set, providing 89 an error free MD (multiple device) to the higher levels of the 90 kernel. In a set with N drives, the available space is the capacity 91 of a single drive, and the set protects against a failure of (N - 1) 92 drives. 93 94 Information about Software RAID on Linux is contained in the 95 Software-RAID mini-HOWTO, available from 96 <https://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>. There you will also 97 learn where to get the supporting user space utilities raidtools. 98 99 If you want to use such a RAID-1 set, say Y. To compile this code 100 as a module, choose M here: the module will be called raid1. 101 102 If unsure, say Y. 103 104config MD_RAID10 105 tristate "RAID-10 (mirrored striping) mode" 106 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 107 help 108 RAID-10 provides a combination of striping (RAID-0) and 109 mirroring (RAID-1) with easier configuration and more flexible 110 layout. 111 Unlike RAID-0, but like RAID-1, RAID-10 requires all devices to 112 be the same size (or at least, only as much as the smallest device 113 will be used). 114 RAID-10 provides a variety of layouts that provide different levels 115 of redundancy and performance. 116 117 RAID-10 requires mdadm-1.7.0 or later, available at: 118 119 https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/raid/mdadm/ 120 121 If unsure, say Y. 122 123config MD_RAID456 124 tristate "RAID-4/RAID-5/RAID-6 mode" 125 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 126 select RAID6_PQ 127 select LIBCRC32C 128 select ASYNC_MEMCPY 129 select ASYNC_XOR 130 select ASYNC_PQ 131 select ASYNC_RAID6_RECOV 132 help 133 A RAID-5 set of N drives with a capacity of C MB per drive provides 134 the capacity of C * (N - 1) MB, and protects against a failure 135 of a single drive. For a given sector (row) number, (N - 1) drives 136 contain data sectors, and one drive contains the parity protection. 137 For a RAID-4 set, the parity blocks are present on a single drive, 138 while a RAID-5 set distributes the parity across the drives in one 139 of the available parity distribution methods. 140 141 A RAID-6 set of N drives with a capacity of C MB per drive 142 provides the capacity of C * (N - 2) MB, and protects 143 against a failure of any two drives. For a given sector 144 (row) number, (N - 2) drives contain data sectors, and two 145 drives contains two independent redundancy syndromes. Like 146 RAID-5, RAID-6 distributes the syndromes across the drives 147 in one of the available parity distribution methods. 148 149 Information about Software RAID on Linux is contained in the 150 Software-RAID mini-HOWTO, available from 151 <https://www.tldp.org/docs.html#howto>. There you will also 152 learn where to get the supporting user space utilities raidtools. 153 154 If you want to use such a RAID-4/RAID-5/RAID-6 set, say Y. To 155 compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module 156 will be called raid456. 157 158 If unsure, say Y. 159 160config MD_MULTIPATH 161 tristate "Multipath I/O support" 162 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 163 help 164 MD_MULTIPATH provides a simple multi-path personality for use 165 the MD framework. It is not under active development. New 166 projects should consider using DM_MULTIPATH which has more 167 features and more testing. 168 169 If unsure, say N. 170 171config MD_FAULTY 172 tristate "Faulty test module for MD" 173 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 174 help 175 The "faulty" module allows for a block device that occasionally returns 176 read or write errors. It is useful for testing. 177 178 In unsure, say N. 179 180 181config MD_CLUSTER 182 tristate "Cluster Support for MD" 183 depends on BLK_DEV_MD 184 depends on DLM 185 default n 186 help 187 Clustering support for MD devices. This enables locking and 188 synchronization across multiple systems on the cluster, so all 189 nodes in the cluster can access the MD devices simultaneously. 190 191 This brings the redundancy (and uptime) of RAID levels across the 192 nodes of the cluster. Currently, it can work with raid1 and raid10 193 (limited support). 194 195 If unsure, say N. 196 197source "drivers/md/bcache/Kconfig" 198 199config BLK_DEV_DM_BUILTIN 200 bool 201 202config BLK_DEV_DM 203 tristate "Device mapper support" 204 select BLK_DEV_DM_BUILTIN 205 depends on DAX || DAX=n 206 help 207 Device-mapper is a low level volume manager. It works by allowing 208 people to specify mappings for ranges of logical sectors. Various 209 mapping types are available, in addition people may write their own 210 modules containing custom mappings if they wish. 211 212 Higher level volume managers such as LVM2 use this driver. 213 214 To compile this as a module, choose M here: the module will be 215 called dm-mod. 216 217 If unsure, say N. 218 219config DM_DEBUG 220 bool "Device mapper debugging support" 221 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 222 help 223 Enable this for messages that may help debug device-mapper problems. 224 225 If unsure, say N. 226 227config DM_BUFIO 228 tristate 229 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 230 help 231 This interface allows you to do buffered I/O on a device and acts 232 as a cache, holding recently-read blocks in memory and performing 233 delayed writes. 234 235config DM_DEBUG_BLOCK_MANAGER_LOCKING 236 bool "Block manager locking" 237 depends on DM_BUFIO 238 help 239 Block manager locking can catch various metadata corruption issues. 240 241 If unsure, say N. 242 243config DM_DEBUG_BLOCK_STACK_TRACING 244 bool "Keep stack trace of persistent data block lock holders" 245 depends on STACKTRACE_SUPPORT && DM_DEBUG_BLOCK_MANAGER_LOCKING 246 select STACKTRACE 247 help 248 Enable this for messages that may help debug problems with the 249 block manager locking used by thin provisioning and caching. 250 251 If unsure, say N. 252 253config DM_BIO_PRISON 254 tristate 255 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 256 help 257 Some bio locking schemes used by other device-mapper targets 258 including thin provisioning. 259 260source "drivers/md/persistent-data/Kconfig" 261 262config DM_UNSTRIPED 263 tristate "Unstriped target" 264 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 265 help 266 Unstripes I/O so it is issued solely on a single drive in a HW 267 RAID0 or dm-striped target. 268 269config DM_CRYPT 270 tristate "Crypt target support" 271 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 272 depends on (ENCRYPTED_KEYS || ENCRYPTED_KEYS=n) 273 select CRYPTO 274 select CRYPTO_CBC 275 select CRYPTO_ESSIV 276 help 277 This device-mapper target allows you to create a device that 278 transparently encrypts the data on it. You'll need to activate 279 the ciphers you're going to use in the cryptoapi configuration. 280 281 For further information on dm-crypt and userspace tools see: 282 <https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup/wikis/DMCrypt> 283 284 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 285 be called dm-crypt. 286 287 If unsure, say N. 288 289config DM_DEFAULT_KEY 290 tristate "Default-key target support" 291 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 292 depends on BLK_INLINE_ENCRYPTION 293 # dm-default-key doesn't require -o inlinecrypt, but it does currently 294 # rely on the inline encryption hooks being built into the kernel. 295 depends on FS_ENCRYPTION_INLINE_CRYPT 296 help 297 This device-mapper target allows you to create a device that 298 assigns a default encryption key to bios that aren't for the 299 contents of an encrypted file. 300 301 This ensures that all blocks on-disk will be encrypted with 302 some key, without the performance hit of file contents being 303 encrypted twice when fscrypt (File-Based Encryption) is used. 304 305 It is only appropriate to use dm-default-key when key 306 configuration is tightly controlled, like it is in Android, 307 such that all fscrypt keys are at least as hard to compromise 308 as the default key. 309 310config DM_SNAPSHOT 311 tristate "Snapshot target" 312 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 313 select DM_BUFIO 314 help 315 Allow volume managers to take writable snapshots of a device. 316 317config DM_THIN_PROVISIONING 318 tristate "Thin provisioning target" 319 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 320 select DM_PERSISTENT_DATA 321 select DM_BIO_PRISON 322 help 323 Provides thin provisioning and snapshots that share a data store. 324 325config DM_CACHE 326 tristate "Cache target (EXPERIMENTAL)" 327 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 328 default n 329 select DM_PERSISTENT_DATA 330 select DM_BIO_PRISON 331 help 332 dm-cache attempts to improve performance of a block device by 333 moving frequently used data to a smaller, higher performance 334 device. Different 'policy' plugins can be used to change the 335 algorithms used to select which blocks are promoted, demoted, 336 cleaned etc. It supports writeback and writethrough modes. 337 338config DM_CACHE_SMQ 339 tristate "Stochastic MQ Cache Policy (EXPERIMENTAL)" 340 depends on DM_CACHE 341 default y 342 help 343 A cache policy that uses a multiqueue ordered by recent hits 344 to select which blocks should be promoted and demoted. 345 This is meant to be a general purpose policy. It prioritises 346 reads over writes. This SMQ policy (vs MQ) offers the promise 347 of less memory utilization, improved performance and increased 348 adaptability in the face of changing workloads. 349 350config DM_WRITECACHE 351 tristate "Writecache target" 352 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 353 help 354 The writecache target caches writes on persistent memory or SSD. 355 It is intended for databases or other programs that need extremely 356 low commit latency. 357 358 The writecache target doesn't cache reads because reads are supposed 359 to be cached in standard RAM. 360 361config DM_EBS 362 tristate "Emulated block size target (EXPERIMENTAL)" 363 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 364 select DM_BUFIO 365 help 366 dm-ebs emulates smaller logical block size on backing devices 367 with larger ones (e.g. 512 byte sectors on 4K native disks). 368 369config DM_ERA 370 tristate "Era target (EXPERIMENTAL)" 371 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 372 default n 373 select DM_PERSISTENT_DATA 374 select DM_BIO_PRISON 375 help 376 dm-era tracks which parts of a block device are written to 377 over time. Useful for maintaining cache coherency when using 378 vendor snapshots. 379 380config DM_CLONE 381 tristate "Clone target (EXPERIMENTAL)" 382 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 383 default n 384 select DM_PERSISTENT_DATA 385 help 386 dm-clone produces a one-to-one copy of an existing, read-only source 387 device into a writable destination device. The cloned device is 388 visible/mountable immediately and the copy of the source device to the 389 destination device happens in the background, in parallel with user 390 I/O. 391 392 If unsure, say N. 393 394config DM_MIRROR 395 tristate "Mirror target" 396 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 397 help 398 Allow volume managers to mirror logical volumes, also 399 needed for live data migration tools such as 'pvmove'. 400 401config DM_LOG_USERSPACE 402 tristate "Mirror userspace logging" 403 depends on DM_MIRROR && NET 404 select CONNECTOR 405 help 406 The userspace logging module provides a mechanism for 407 relaying the dm-dirty-log API to userspace. Log designs 408 which are more suited to userspace implementation (e.g. 409 shared storage logs) or experimental logs can be implemented 410 by leveraging this framework. 411 412config DM_RAID 413 tristate "RAID 1/4/5/6/10 target" 414 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 415 select MD_RAID0 416 select MD_RAID1 417 select MD_RAID10 418 select MD_RAID456 419 select BLK_DEV_MD 420 help 421 A dm target that supports RAID1, RAID10, RAID4, RAID5 and RAID6 mappings 422 423 A RAID-5 set of N drives with a capacity of C MB per drive provides 424 the capacity of C * (N - 1) MB, and protects against a failure 425 of a single drive. For a given sector (row) number, (N - 1) drives 426 contain data sectors, and one drive contains the parity protection. 427 For a RAID-4 set, the parity blocks are present on a single drive, 428 while a RAID-5 set distributes the parity across the drives in one 429 of the available parity distribution methods. 430 431 A RAID-6 set of N drives with a capacity of C MB per drive 432 provides the capacity of C * (N - 2) MB, and protects 433 against a failure of any two drives. For a given sector 434 (row) number, (N - 2) drives contain data sectors, and two 435 drives contains two independent redundancy syndromes. Like 436 RAID-5, RAID-6 distributes the syndromes across the drives 437 in one of the available parity distribution methods. 438 439config DM_ZERO 440 tristate "Zero target" 441 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 442 help 443 A target that discards writes, and returns all zeroes for 444 reads. Useful in some recovery situations. 445 446config DM_MULTIPATH 447 tristate "Multipath target" 448 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 449 # nasty syntax but means make DM_MULTIPATH independent 450 # of SCSI_DH if the latter isn't defined but if 451 # it is, DM_MULTIPATH must depend on it. We get a build 452 # error if SCSI_DH=m and DM_MULTIPATH=y 453 depends on !SCSI_DH || SCSI 454 help 455 Allow volume managers to support multipath hardware. 456 457config DM_MULTIPATH_QL 458 tristate "I/O Path Selector based on the number of in-flight I/Os" 459 depends on DM_MULTIPATH 460 help 461 This path selector is a dynamic load balancer which selects 462 the path with the least number of in-flight I/Os. 463 464 If unsure, say N. 465 466config DM_MULTIPATH_ST 467 tristate "I/O Path Selector based on the service time" 468 depends on DM_MULTIPATH 469 help 470 This path selector is a dynamic load balancer which selects 471 the path expected to complete the incoming I/O in the shortest 472 time. 473 474 If unsure, say N. 475 476config DM_MULTIPATH_HST 477 tristate "I/O Path Selector based on historical service time" 478 depends on DM_MULTIPATH 479 help 480 This path selector is a dynamic load balancer which selects 481 the path expected to complete the incoming I/O in the shortest 482 time by comparing estimated service time (based on historical 483 service time). 484 485 If unsure, say N. 486 487config DM_DELAY 488 tristate "I/O delaying target" 489 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 490 help 491 A target that delays reads and/or writes and can send 492 them to different devices. Useful for testing. 493 494 If unsure, say N. 495 496config DM_DUST 497 tristate "Bad sector simulation target" 498 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 499 help 500 A target that simulates bad sector behavior. 501 Useful for testing. 502 503 If unsure, say N. 504 505config DM_INIT 506 bool "DM \"dm-mod.create=\" parameter support" 507 depends on BLK_DEV_DM=y 508 help 509 Enable "dm-mod.create=" parameter to create mapped devices at init time. 510 This option is useful to allow mounting rootfs without requiring an 511 initramfs. 512 See Documentation/admin-guide/device-mapper/dm-init.rst for dm-mod.create="..." 513 format. 514 515 If unsure, say N. 516 517config DM_UEVENT 518 bool "DM uevents" 519 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 520 help 521 Generate udev events for DM events. 522 523config DM_FLAKEY 524 tristate "Flakey target" 525 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 526 help 527 A target that intermittently fails I/O for debugging purposes. 528 529config DM_VERITY 530 tristate "Verity target support" 531 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 532 select CRYPTO 533 select CRYPTO_HASH 534 select DM_BUFIO 535 help 536 This device-mapper target creates a read-only device that 537 transparently validates the data on one underlying device against 538 a pre-generated tree of cryptographic checksums stored on a second 539 device. 540 541 You'll need to activate the digests you're going to use in the 542 cryptoapi configuration. 543 544 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 545 be called dm-verity. 546 547 If unsure, say N. 548 549config DM_VERITY_VERIFY_ROOTHASH_SIG 550 def_bool n 551 bool "Verity data device root hash signature verification support" 552 depends on DM_VERITY 553 select SYSTEM_DATA_VERIFICATION 554 help 555 Add ability for dm-verity device to be validated if the 556 pre-generated tree of cryptographic checksums passed has a pkcs#7 557 signature file that can validate the roothash of the tree. 558 559 If unsure, say N. 560 561config DM_VERITY_FEC 562 bool "Verity forward error correction support" 563 depends on DM_VERITY 564 select REED_SOLOMON 565 select REED_SOLOMON_DEC8 566 help 567 Add forward error correction support to dm-verity. This option 568 makes it possible to use pre-generated error correction data to 569 recover from corrupted blocks. 570 571 If unsure, say N. 572 573config DM_SWITCH 574 tristate "Switch target support (EXPERIMENTAL)" 575 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 576 help 577 This device-mapper target creates a device that supports an arbitrary 578 mapping of fixed-size regions of I/O across a fixed set of paths. 579 The path used for any specific region can be switched dynamically 580 by sending the target a message. 581 582 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 583 be called dm-switch. 584 585 If unsure, say N. 586 587config DM_LOG_WRITES 588 tristate "Log writes target support" 589 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 590 help 591 This device-mapper target takes two devices, one device to use 592 normally, one to log all write operations done to the first device. 593 This is for use by file system developers wishing to verify that 594 their fs is writing a consistent file system at all times by allowing 595 them to replay the log in a variety of ways and to check the 596 contents. 597 598 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 599 be called dm-log-writes. 600 601 If unsure, say N. 602 603config DM_INTEGRITY 604 tristate "Integrity target support" 605 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 606 select BLK_DEV_INTEGRITY 607 select DM_BUFIO 608 select CRYPTO 609 select CRYPTO_SKCIPHER 610 select ASYNC_XOR 611 help 612 This device-mapper target emulates a block device that has 613 additional per-sector tags that can be used for storing 614 integrity information. 615 616 This integrity target is used with the dm-crypt target to 617 provide authenticated disk encryption or it can be used 618 standalone. 619 620 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 621 be called dm-integrity. 622 623config DM_ZONED 624 tristate "Drive-managed zoned block device target support" 625 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 626 depends on BLK_DEV_ZONED 627 select CRC32 628 help 629 This device-mapper target takes a host-managed or host-aware zoned 630 block device and exposes most of its capacity as a regular block 631 device (drive-managed zoned block device) without any write 632 constraints. This is mainly intended for use with file systems that 633 do not natively support zoned block devices but still want to 634 benefit from the increased capacity offered by SMR disks. Other uses 635 by applications using raw block devices (for example object stores) 636 are also possible. 637 638 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will 639 be called dm-zoned. 640 641 If unsure, say N. 642 643config DM_BOW 644 tristate "Backup block device" 645 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 646 select DM_BUFIO 647 help 648 This device-mapper target takes a device and keeps a log of all 649 changes using free blocks identified by issuing a trim command. 650 This can then be restored by running a command line utility, 651 or committed by simply replacing the target. 652 653 If unsure, say N. 654 655config DM_USER 656 tristate "Block device in userspace" 657 depends on BLK_DEV_DM 658 default y 659 help 660 This device-mapper target allows a userspace daemon to provide the 661 contents of a block device. See 662 <file:Documentation/block/dm-user.rst> for more information. 663 664 To compile this code as a module, choose M here: the module will be 665 called dm-user. 666 667 If unsure, say N. 668 669endif # MD 670