Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | dm-zero |
| 2 | ======= |
| 3 | |
| 4 | Device-Mapper's "zero" target provides a block-device that always returns |
| 5 | zero'd data on reads and silently drops writes. This is similar behavior to |
| 6 | /dev/zero, but as a block-device instead of a character-device. |
| 7 | |
| 8 | Dm-zero has no target-specific parameters. |
| 9 | |
| 10 | One very interesting use of dm-zero is for creating "sparse" devices in |
| 11 | conjunction with dm-snapshot. A sparse device reports a device-size larger |
| 12 | than the amount of actual storage space available for that device. A user can |
| 13 | write data anywhere within the sparse device and read it back like a normal |
| 14 | device. Reads to previously unwritten areas will return a zero'd buffer. When |
| 15 | enough data has been written to fill up the actual storage space, the sparse |
| 16 | device is deactivated. This can be very useful for testing device and |
| 17 | filesystem limitations. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | To create a sparse device, start by creating a dm-zero device that's the |
| 20 | desired size of the sparse device. For this example, we'll assume a 10TB |
| 21 | sparse device. |
| 22 | |
| 23 | TEN_TERABYTES=`expr 10 \* 1024 \* 1024 \* 1024 \* 2` # 10 TB in sectors |
| 24 | echo "0 $TEN_TERABYTES zero" | dmsetup create zero1 |
| 25 | |
| 26 | Then create a snapshot of the zero device, using any available block-device as |
| 27 | the COW device. The size of the COW device will determine the amount of real |
| 28 | space available to the sparse device. For this example, we'll assume /dev/sdb1 |
| 29 | is an available 10GB partition. |
| 30 | |
| 31 | echo "0 $TEN_TERABYTES snapshot /dev/mapper/zero1 /dev/sdb1 p 128" | \ |
| 32 | dmsetup create sparse1 |
| 33 | |
| 34 | This will create a 10TB sparse device called /dev/mapper/sparse1 that has |
| 35 | 10GB of actual storage space available. If more than 10GB of data is written |
| 36 | to this device, it will start returning I/O errors. |
| 37 | |