graid3
—
control utility for RAID3 devices
graid3 |
label [-Fhnrvw ]
[-s blocksize]
name prov prov prov ... |
graid3 |
clear [-v ]
prov ... |
graid3 |
configure [-adfFhnrRvwW ]
name |
graid3 |
rebuild [-v ]
name prov |
graid3 |
insert [-hv ]
[-n number]
name prov |
graid3 |
remove [-v ]
-n number
name |
graid3 |
stop [-fv ]
name ... |
The graid3
utility is used for RAID3 array
configuration. After a device is created, all components are detected and
configured automatically. All operations such as failure detection, stale
component detection, rebuild of stale components, etc. are also done
automatically. The graid3
utility uses on-disk
metadata (the provider's last sector) to store all needed information.
The first argument to graid3
indicates an
action to be performed:
label
- Create a RAID3 device. The last given component will contain parity data,
whilst the others will all contain regular data. The number of components
must be equal to 3, 5, 9, 17, etc. (2^n + 1).
Additional options include:
-F
- Do not synchronize after a power failure or system crash. Assumes
device is in consistent state.
-h
- Hardcode providers' names in metadata.
-n
- Turn off autosynchronization of stale components.
-r
- Use parity component for reading in round-robin fashion. Without this
option the parity component is not used at all for reading operations
when the device is in a complete state. With this option specified
random I/O read operations are even 40% faster, but sequential reads
are slower. One cannot use this option if the
-w
option is also specified.
-s
- Manually specify array block size. Block size will be set equal to
least common multiple of all component's sector sizes and specified
value. Note that array sector size calculated as multiple of block
size and number of regular data components. Big values may decrease
performance and compatibility, as all I/O requests have to be multiple
of sector size.
-w
- Use verify reading feature. When reading from a device in a complete
state, also read data from the parity component and verify the data by
comparing XORed regular data with parity data. If verification fails,
an
EIO
error is returned and the value of the
kern.geom.raid3.stat.parity_mismatch sysctl is
increased. One cannot use this option if the
-r
option is also specified.
clear
- Clear metadata on the given providers.
configure
- Configure the given device.
Additional options include:
-a
- Turn on autosynchronization of stale components.
-d
- Do not hardcode providers' names in metadata.
-f
- Synchronize device after a power failure or system crash.
-F
- Do not synchronize after a power failure or system crash. Assumes
device is in consistent state.
-h
- Hardcode providers' names in metadata.
-n
- Turn off autosynchronization of stale components.
-r
- Turn on round-robin reading.
-R
- Turn off round-robin reading.
-w
- Turn on verify reading.
-W
- Turn off verify reading.
rebuild
- Rebuild the given component forcibly. If autosynchronization was not
turned off for the given device, this command should be unnecessary.
insert
- Add the given component to the existing array, if one of the components
was removed previously with the
remove
command or
if one component is missing and will not be connected again. If no number
is given, new component will be added instead of first missed component.
Additional options include:
-h
- Hardcode providers' names in metadata.
remove
- Remove the given component from the given array and clear metadata on
it.
stop
- Stop the given arrays.
Additional options include:
-f
- Stop the given array even if it is opened.
list
- See
geom(8).
status
- See
geom(8).
load
- See
geom(8).
unload
- See
geom(8).
Additional options include:
-v
- Be more verbose.
Exit status is 0 on success, and 1 if the command fails.
Use 3 disks to setup a RAID3 array (with the round-robin reading feature).
Create a file system, mount it, then unmount it and stop device:
graid3 label -v -r data da0 da1 da2
newfs /dev/raid3/data
mount /dev/raid3/data /mnt
...
umount /mnt
graid3 stop data
graid3 unload
Create a RAID3 array, but do not use the automatic synchronization
feature. Rebuild parity component:
graid3 label -n data da0 da1 da2
graid3 rebuild data da2
Replace one data disk with a brand new one:
graid3 remove -n 0 data
graid3 insert -n 0 data da5
The graid3
utility appeared in FreeBSD
5.3.
There should be a section with an implementation description.
Documentation for sysctls kern.geom.raid3.*
is missing.