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Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +00001Introduction
2============
3
Masanari Iida4998d8e2012-02-16 22:14:34 +09004This document describes a collection of device-mapper targets that
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +00005between them implement thin-provisioning and snapshots.
6
7The main highlight of this implementation, compared to the previous
8implementation of snapshots, is that it allows many virtual devices to
9be stored on the same data volume. This simplifies administration and
10allows the sharing of data between volumes, thus reducing disk usage.
11
12Another significant feature is support for an arbitrary depth of
13recursive snapshots (snapshots of snapshots of snapshots ...). The
14previous implementation of snapshots did this by chaining together
15lookup tables, and so performance was O(depth). This new
16implementation uses a single data structure to avoid this degradation
17with depth. Fragmentation may still be an issue, however, in some
18scenarios.
19
20Metadata is stored on a separate device from data, giving the
21administrator some freedom, for example to:
22
23- Improve metadata resilience by storing metadata on a mirrored volume
24 but data on a non-mirrored one.
25
26- Improve performance by storing the metadata on SSD.
27
28Status
29======
30
31These targets are very much still in the EXPERIMENTAL state. Please
32do not yet rely on them in production. But do experiment and offer us
33feedback. Different use cases will have different performance
34characteristics, for example due to fragmentation of the data volume.
35
36If you find this software is not performing as expected please mail
37dm-devel@redhat.com with details and we'll try our best to improve
38things for you.
39
40Userspace tools for checking and repairing the metadata are under
41development.
42
43Cookbook
44========
45
46This section describes some quick recipes for using thin provisioning.
47They use the dmsetup program to control the device-mapper driver
48directly. End users will be advised to use a higher-level volume
49manager such as LVM2 once support has been added.
50
51Pool device
52-----------
53
54The pool device ties together the metadata volume and the data volume.
55It maps I/O linearly to the data volume and updates the metadata via
56two mechanisms:
57
58- Function calls from the thin targets
59
60- Device-mapper 'messages' from userspace which control the creation of new
61 virtual devices amongst other things.
62
63Setting up a fresh pool device
64------------------------------
65
66Setting up a pool device requires a valid metadata device, and a
67data device. If you do not have an existing metadata device you can
68make one by zeroing the first 4k to indicate empty metadata.
69
70 dd if=/dev/zero of=$metadata_dev bs=4096 count=1
71
72The amount of metadata you need will vary according to how many blocks
73are shared between thin devices (i.e. through snapshots). If you have
74less sharing than average you'll need a larger-than-average metadata device.
75
76As a guide, we suggest you calculate the number of bytes to use in the
77metadata device as 48 * $data_dev_size / $data_block_size but round it up
Mike Snitzerc4a69ec2012-03-28 18:41:28 +010078to 2MB if the answer is smaller. If you're creating large numbers of
79snapshots which are recording large amounts of change, you may find you
80need to increase this.
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +000081
Mike Snitzerc4a69ec2012-03-28 18:41:28 +010082The largest size supported is 16GB: If the device is larger,
83a warning will be issued and the excess space will not be used.
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +000084
85Reloading a pool table
86----------------------
87
88You may reload a pool's table, indeed this is how the pool is resized
89if it runs out of space. (N.B. While specifying a different metadata
90device when reloading is not forbidden at the moment, things will go
91wrong if it does not route I/O to exactly the same on-disk location as
92previously.)
93
94Using an existing pool device
95-----------------------------
96
97 dmsetup create pool \
98 --table "0 20971520 thin-pool $metadata_dev $data_dev \
99 $data_block_size $low_water_mark"
100
101$data_block_size gives the smallest unit of disk space that can be
102allocated at a time expressed in units of 512-byte sectors. People
103primarily interested in thin provisioning may want to use a value such
104as 1024 (512KB). People doing lots of snapshotting may want a smaller value
105such as 128 (64KB). If you are not zeroing newly-allocated data,
106a larger $data_block_size in the region of 256000 (128MB) is suggested.
107$data_block_size must be the same for the lifetime of the
108metadata device.
109
110$low_water_mark is expressed in blocks of size $data_block_size. If
111free space on the data device drops below this level then a dm event
112will be triggered which a userspace daemon should catch allowing it to
113extend the pool device. Only one such event will be sent.
114Resuming a device with a new table itself triggers an event so the
115userspace daemon can use this to detect a situation where a new table
116already exceeds the threshold.
117
118Thin provisioning
119-----------------
120
121i) Creating a new thinly-provisioned volume.
122
123 To create a new thinly- provisioned volume you must send a message to an
124 active pool device, /dev/mapper/pool in this example.
125
126 dmsetup message /dev/mapper/pool 0 "create_thin 0"
127
128 Here '0' is an identifier for the volume, a 24-bit number. It's up
129 to the caller to allocate and manage these identifiers. If the
130 identifier is already in use, the message will fail with -EEXIST.
131
132ii) Using a thinly-provisioned volume.
133
134 Thinly-provisioned volumes are activated using the 'thin' target:
135
136 dmsetup create thin --table "0 2097152 thin /dev/mapper/pool 0"
137
138 The last parameter is the identifier for the thinp device.
139
140Internal snapshots
141------------------
142
143i) Creating an internal snapshot.
144
145 Snapshots are created with another message to the pool.
146
147 N.B. If the origin device that you wish to snapshot is active, you
148 must suspend it before creating the snapshot to avoid corruption.
149 This is NOT enforced at the moment, so please be careful!
150
151 dmsetup suspend /dev/mapper/thin
152 dmsetup message /dev/mapper/pool 0 "create_snap 1 0"
153 dmsetup resume /dev/mapper/thin
154
155 Here '1' is the identifier for the volume, a 24-bit number. '0' is the
156 identifier for the origin device.
157
158ii) Using an internal snapshot.
159
160 Once created, the user doesn't have to worry about any connection
161 between the origin and the snapshot. Indeed the snapshot is no
162 different from any other thinly-provisioned device and can be
163 snapshotted itself via the same method. It's perfectly legal to
164 have only one of them active, and there's no ordering requirement on
165 activating or removing them both. (This differs from conventional
166 device-mapper snapshots.)
167
168 Activate it exactly the same way as any other thinly-provisioned volume:
169
170 dmsetup create snap --table "0 2097152 thin /dev/mapper/pool 1"
171
Joe Thornber2dd9c252012-03-28 18:41:28 +0100172External snapshots
173------------------
174
175You can use an external _read only_ device as an origin for a
176thinly-provisioned volume. Any read to an unprovisioned area of the
177thin device will be passed through to the origin. Writes trigger
178the allocation of new blocks as usual.
179
180One use case for this is VM hosts that want to run guests on
181thinly-provisioned volumes but have the base image on another device
182(possibly shared between many VMs).
183
184You must not write to the origin device if you use this technique!
185Of course, you may write to the thin device and take internal snapshots
186of the thin volume.
187
188i) Creating a snapshot of an external device
189
190 This is the same as creating a thin device.
191 You don't mention the origin at this stage.
192
193 dmsetup message /dev/mapper/pool 0 "create_thin 0"
194
195ii) Using a snapshot of an external device.
196
197 Append an extra parameter to the thin target specifying the origin:
198
199 dmsetup create snap --table "0 2097152 thin /dev/mapper/pool 0 /dev/image"
200
201 N.B. All descendants (internal snapshots) of this snapshot require the
202 same extra origin parameter.
203
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +0000204Deactivation
205------------
206
207All devices using a pool must be deactivated before the pool itself
208can be.
209
210 dmsetup remove thin
211 dmsetup remove snap
212 dmsetup remove pool
213
214Reference
215=========
216
217'thin-pool' target
218------------------
219
220i) Constructor
221
222 thin-pool <metadata dev> <data dev> <data block size (sectors)> \
223 <low water mark (blocks)> [<number of feature args> [<arg>]*]
224
225 Optional feature arguments:
226 - 'skip_block_zeroing': skips the zeroing of newly-provisioned blocks.
227
228 Data block size must be between 64KB (128 sectors) and 1GB
229 (2097152 sectors) inclusive.
230
231
232ii) Status
233
234 <transaction id> <used metadata blocks>/<total metadata blocks>
235 <used data blocks>/<total data blocks> <held metadata root>
236
237
238 transaction id:
239 A 64-bit number used by userspace to help synchronise with metadata
240 from volume managers.
241
242 used data blocks / total data blocks
243 If the number of free blocks drops below the pool's low water mark a
244 dm event will be sent to userspace. This event is edge-triggered and
245 it will occur only once after each resume so volume manager writers
246 should register for the event and then check the target's status.
247
248 held metadata root:
249 The location, in sectors, of the metadata root that has been
250 'held' for userspace read access. '-' indicates there is no
251 held root. This feature is not yet implemented so '-' is
252 always returned.
253
254iii) Messages
255
256 create_thin <dev id>
257
258 Create a new thinly-provisioned device.
259 <dev id> is an arbitrary unique 24-bit identifier chosen by
260 the caller.
261
262 create_snap <dev id> <origin id>
263
264 Create a new snapshot of another thinly-provisioned device.
265 <dev id> is an arbitrary unique 24-bit identifier chosen by
266 the caller.
267 <origin id> is the identifier of the thinly-provisioned device
268 of which the new device will be a snapshot.
269
270 delete <dev id>
271
272 Deletes a thin device. Irreversible.
273
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +0000274 set_transaction_id <current id> <new id>
275
276 Userland volume managers, such as LVM, need a way to
277 synchronise their external metadata with the internal metadata of the
278 pool target. The thin-pool target offers to store an
279 arbitrary 64-bit transaction id and return it on the target's
280 status line. To avoid races you must provide what you think
281 the current transaction id is when you change it with this
282 compare-and-swap message.
283
284'thin' target
285-------------
286
287i) Constructor
288
Joe Thornber2dd9c252012-03-28 18:41:28 +0100289 thin <pool dev> <dev id> [<external origin dev>]
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +0000290
291 pool dev:
292 the thin-pool device, e.g. /dev/mapper/my_pool or 253:0
293
294 dev id:
295 the internal device identifier of the device to be
296 activated.
297
Joe Thornber2dd9c252012-03-28 18:41:28 +0100298 external origin dev:
299 an optional block device outside the pool to be treated as a
300 read-only snapshot origin: reads to unprovisioned areas of the
301 thin target will be mapped to this device.
302
Joe Thornber991d9fa2011-10-31 20:21:18 +0000303The pool doesn't store any size against the thin devices. If you
304load a thin target that is smaller than you've been using previously,
305then you'll have no access to blocks mapped beyond the end. If you
306load a target that is bigger than before, then extra blocks will be
307provisioned as and when needed.
308
309If you wish to reduce the size of your thin device and potentially
310regain some space then send the 'trim' message to the pool.
311
312ii) Status
313
314 <nr mapped sectors> <highest mapped sector>