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-rw-r--r--Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ext4.rst821
1 files changed, 391 insertions, 430 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ext4.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ext4.rst
index 9d4368d591fa..e2b6bb7c2730 100644
--- a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ext4.rst
+++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ext4.rst
@@ -101,269 +101,256 @@ Options
When mounting an ext4 filesystem, the following option are accepted:
(*) == default
-======================= =======================================================
-Mount Option Description
-======================= =======================================================
-ro Mount filesystem read only. Note that ext4 will
- replay the journal (and thus write to the
- partition) even when mounted "read only". The
- mount options "ro,noload" can be used to prevent
- writes to the filesystem.
-
-journal_checksum Enable checksumming of the journal transactions.
- This will allow the recovery code in e2fsck and the
- kernel to detect corruption in the kernel. It is a
- compatible change and will be ignored by older kernels.
-
-journal_async_commit Commit block can be written to disk without waiting
- for descriptor blocks. If enabled older kernels cannot
- mount the device. This will enable 'journal_checksum'
- internally.
-
-journal_path=path
-journal_dev=devnum When the external journal device's major/minor numbers
- have changed, these options allow the user to specify
- the new journal location. The journal device is
- identified through either its new major/minor numbers
- encoded in devnum, or via a path to the device.
-
-norecovery Don't load the journal on mounting. Note that
-noload if the filesystem was not unmounted cleanly,
- skipping the journal replay will lead to the
- filesystem containing inconsistencies that can
- lead to any number of problems.
-
-data=journal All data are committed into the journal prior to being
- written into the main file system. Enabling
- this mode will disable delayed allocation and
- O_DIRECT support.
-
-data=ordered (*) All data are forced directly out to the main file
- system prior to its metadata being committed to the
- journal.
-
-data=writeback Data ordering is not preserved, data may be written
- into the main file system after its metadata has been
- committed to the journal.
-
-commit=nrsec (*) Ext4 can be told to sync all its data and metadata
- every 'nrsec' seconds. The default value is 5 seconds.
- This means that if you lose your power, you will lose
- as much as the latest 5 seconds of work (your
- filesystem will not be damaged though, thanks to the
- journaling). This default value (or any low value)
- will hurt performance, but it's good for data-safety.
- Setting it to 0 will have the same effect as leaving
- it at the default (5 seconds).
- Setting it to very large values will improve
- performance.
-
-barrier=<0|1(*)> This enables/disables the use of write barriers in
-barrier(*) the jbd code. barrier=0 disables, barrier=1 enables.
-nobarrier This also requires an IO stack which can support
- barriers, and if jbd gets an error on a barrier
- write, it will disable again with a warning.
- Write barriers enforce proper on-disk ordering
- of journal commits, making volatile disk write caches
- safe to use, at some performance penalty. If
- your disks are battery-backed in one way or another,
- disabling barriers may safely improve performance.
- The mount options "barrier" and "nobarrier" can
- also be used to enable or disable barriers, for
- consistency with other ext4 mount options.
-
-inode_readahead_blks=n This tuning parameter controls the maximum
- number of inode table blocks that ext4's inode
- table readahead algorithm will pre-read into
- the buffer cache. The default value is 32 blocks.
-
-nouser_xattr Disables Extended User Attributes. See the
- attr(5) manual page for more information about
- extended attributes.
-
-noacl This option disables POSIX Access Control List
- support. If ACL support is enabled in the kernel
- configuration (CONFIG_EXT4_FS_POSIX_ACL), ACL is
- enabled by default on mount. See the acl(5) manual
- page for more information about acl.
-
-bsddf (*) Make 'df' act like BSD.
-minixdf Make 'df' act like Minix.
-
-debug Extra debugging information is sent to syslog.
-
-abort Simulate the effects of calling ext4_abort() for
- debugging purposes. This is normally used while
- remounting a filesystem which is already mounted.
-
-errors=remount-ro Remount the filesystem read-only on an error.
-errors=continue Keep going on a filesystem error.
-errors=panic Panic and halt the machine if an error occurs.
- (These mount options override the errors behavior
- specified in the superblock, which can be configured
- using tune2fs)
-
-data_err=ignore(*) Just print an error message if an error occurs
- in a file data buffer in ordered mode.
-data_err=abort Abort the journal if an error occurs in a file
- data buffer in ordered mode.
-
-grpid New objects have the group ID of their parent.
-bsdgroups
-
-nogrpid (*) New objects have the group ID of their creator.
-sysvgroups
-
-resgid=n The group ID which may use the reserved blocks.
-
-resuid=n The user ID which may use the reserved blocks.
-
-sb=n Use alternate superblock at this location.
-
-quota These options are ignored by the filesystem. They
-noquota are used only by quota tools to recognize volumes
-grpquota where quota should be turned on. See documentation
-usrquota in the quota-tools package for more details
- (http://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxquota).
-
-jqfmt=<quota type> These options tell filesystem details about quota
-usrjquota=<file> so that quota information can be properly updated
-grpjquota=<file> during journal replay. They replace the above
- quota options. See documentation in the quota-tools
- package for more details
- (http://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxquota).
-
-stripe=n Number of filesystem blocks that mballoc will try
- to use for allocation size and alignment. For RAID5/6
- systems this should be the number of data
- disks * RAID chunk size in file system blocks.
-
-delalloc (*) Defer block allocation until just before ext4
- writes out the block(s) in question. This
- allows ext4 to better allocation decisions
- more efficiently.
-nodelalloc Disable delayed allocation. Blocks are allocated
- when the data is copied from userspace to the
- page cache, either via the write(2) system call
- or when an mmap'ed page which was previously
- unallocated is written for the first time.
-
-max_batch_time=usec Maximum amount of time ext4 should wait for
- additional filesystem operations to be batch
- together with a synchronous write operation.
- Since a synchronous write operation is going to
- force a commit and then a wait for the I/O
- complete, it doesn't cost much, and can be a
- huge throughput win, we wait for a small amount
- of time to see if any other transactions can
- piggyback on the synchronous write. The
- algorithm used is designed to automatically tune
- for the speed of the disk, by measuring the
- amount of time (on average) that it takes to
- finish committing a transaction. Call this time
- the "commit time". If the time that the
- transaction has been running is less than the
- commit time, ext4 will try sleeping for the
- commit time to see if other operations will join
- the transaction. The commit time is capped by
- the max_batch_time, which defaults to 15000us
- (15ms). This optimization can be turned off
- entirely by setting max_batch_time to 0.
-
-min_batch_time=usec This parameter sets the commit time (as
- described above) to be at least min_batch_time.
- It defaults to zero microseconds. Increasing
- this parameter may improve the throughput of
- multi-threaded, synchronous workloads on very
- fast disks, at the cost of increasing latency.
-
-journal_ioprio=prio The I/O priority (from 0 to 7, where 0 is the
- highest priority) which should be used for I/O
- operations submitted by kjournald2 during a
- commit operation. This defaults to 3, which is
- a slightly higher priority than the default I/O
- priority.
-
-auto_da_alloc(*) Many broken applications don't use fsync() when
-noauto_da_alloc replacing existing files via patterns such as
- fd = open("foo.new")/write(fd,..)/close(fd)/
- rename("foo.new", "foo"), or worse yet,
- fd = open("foo", O_TRUNC)/write(fd,..)/close(fd).
- If auto_da_alloc is enabled, ext4 will detect
- the replace-via-rename and replace-via-truncate
- patterns and force that any delayed allocation
- blocks are allocated such that at the next
- journal commit, in the default data=ordered
- mode, the data blocks of the new file are forced
- to disk before the rename() operation is
- committed. This provides roughly the same level
- of guarantees as ext3, and avoids the
- "zero-length" problem that can happen when a
- system crashes before the delayed allocation
- blocks are forced to disk.
-
-noinit_itable Do not initialize any uninitialized inode table
- blocks in the background. This feature may be
- used by installation CD's so that the install
- process can complete as quickly as possible; the
- inode table initialization process would then be
- deferred until the next time the file system
- is unmounted.
-
-init_itable=n The lazy itable init code will wait n times the
- number of milliseconds it took to zero out the
- previous block group's inode table. This
- minimizes the impact on the system performance
- while file system's inode table is being initialized.
-
-discard Controls whether ext4 should issue discard/TRIM
-nodiscard(*) commands to the underlying block device when
- blocks are freed. This is useful for SSD devices
- and sparse/thinly-provisioned LUNs, but it is off
- by default until sufficient testing has been done.
-
-nouid32 Disables 32-bit UIDs and GIDs. This is for
- interoperability with older kernels which only
- store and expect 16-bit values.
-
-block_validity(*) These options enable or disable the in-kernel
-noblock_validity facility for tracking filesystem metadata blocks
- within internal data structures. This allows multi-
- block allocator and other routines to notice
- bugs or corrupted allocation bitmaps which cause
- blocks to be allocated which overlap with
- filesystem metadata blocks.
-
-dioread_lock Controls whether or not ext4 should use the DIO read
-dioread_nolock locking. If the dioread_nolock option is specified
- ext4 will allocate uninitialized extent before buffer
- write and convert the extent to initialized after IO
- completes. This approach allows ext4 code to avoid
- using inode mutex, which improves scalability on high
- speed storages. However this does not work with
- data journaling and dioread_nolock option will be
- ignored with kernel warning. Note that dioread_nolock
- code path is only used for extent-based files.
- Because of the restrictions this options comprises
- it is off by default (e.g. dioread_lock).
-
-max_dir_size_kb=n This limits the size of directories so that any
- attempt to expand them beyond the specified
- limit in kilobytes will cause an ENOSPC error.
- This is useful in memory constrained
- environments, where a very large directory can
- cause severe performance problems or even
- provoke the Out Of Memory killer. (For example,
- if there is only 512mb memory available, a 176mb
- directory may seriously cramp the system's style.)
-
-i_version Enable 64-bit inode version support. This option is
- off by default.
-
-dax Use direct access (no page cache). See
- Documentation/filesystems/dax.txt. Note that
- this option is incompatible with data=journal.
-======================= =======================================================
+ ro
+ Mount filesystem read only. Note that ext4 will replay the journal (and
+ thus write to the partition) even when mounted "read only". The mount
+ options "ro,noload" can be used to prevent writes to the filesystem.
+
+ journal_checksum
+ Enable checksumming of the journal transactions. This will allow the
+ recovery code in e2fsck and the kernel to detect corruption in the
+ kernel. It is a compatible change and will be ignored by older
+ kernels.
+
+ journal_async_commit
+ Commit block can be written to disk without waiting for descriptor
+ blocks. If enabled older kernels cannot mount the device. This will
+ enable 'journal_checksum' internally.
+
+ journal_path=path, journal_dev=devnum
+ When the external journal device's major/minor numbers have changed,
+ these options allow the user to specify the new journal location. The
+ journal device is identified through either its new major/minor numbers
+ encoded in devnum, or via a path to the device.
+
+ norecovery, noload
+ Don't load the journal on mounting. Note that if the filesystem was
+ not unmounted cleanly, skipping the journal replay will lead to the
+ filesystem containing inconsistencies that can lead to any number of
+ problems.
+
+ data=journal
+ All data are committed into the journal prior to being written into the
+ main file system. Enabling this mode will disable delayed allocation
+ and O_DIRECT support.
+
+ data=ordered (*)
+ All data are forced directly out to the main file system prior to its
+ metadata being committed to the journal.
+
+ data=writeback
+ Data ordering is not preserved, data may be written into the main file
+ system after its metadata has been committed to the journal.
+
+ commit=nrsec (*)
+ Ext4 can be told to sync all its data and metadata every 'nrsec'
+ seconds. The default value is 5 seconds. This means that if you lose
+ your power, you will lose as much as the latest 5 seconds of work (your
+ filesystem will not be damaged though, thanks to the journaling). This
+ default value (or any low value) will hurt performance, but it's good
+ for data-safety. Setting it to 0 will have the same effect as leaving
+ it at the default (5 seconds). Setting it to very large values will
+ improve performance.
+
+ barrier=<0|1(*)>, barrier(*), nobarrier
+ This enables/disables the use of write barriers in the jbd code.
+ barrier=0 disables, barrier=1 enables. This also requires an IO stack
+ which can support barriers, and if jbd gets an error on a barrier
+ write, it will disable again with a warning. Write barriers enforce
+ proper on-disk ordering of journal commits, making volatile disk write
+ caches safe to use, at some performance penalty. If your disks are
+ battery-backed in one way or another, disabling barriers may safely
+ improve performance. The mount options "barrier" and "nobarrier" can
+ also be used to enable or disable barriers, for consistency with other
+ ext4 mount options.
+
+ inode_readahead_blks=n
+ This tuning parameter controls the maximum number of inode table blocks
+ that ext4's inode table readahead algorithm will pre-read into the
+ buffer cache. The default value is 32 blocks.
+
+ nouser_xattr
+ Disables Extended User Attributes. See the attr(5) manual page for
+ more information about extended attributes.
+
+ noacl
+ This option disables POSIX Access Control List support. If ACL support
+ is enabled in the kernel configuration (CONFIG_EXT4_FS_POSIX_ACL), ACL
+ is enabled by default on mount. See the acl(5) manual page for more
+ information about acl.
+
+ bsddf (*)
+ Make 'df' act like BSD.
+
+ minixdf
+ Make 'df' act like Minix.
+
+ debug
+ Extra debugging information is sent to syslog.
+
+ abort
+ Simulate the effects of calling ext4_abort() for debugging purposes.
+ This is normally used while remounting a filesystem which is already
+ mounted.
+
+ errors=remount-ro
+ Remount the filesystem read-only on an error.
+
+ errors=continue
+ Keep going on a filesystem error.
+
+ errors=panic
+ Panic and halt the machine if an error occurs. (These mount options
+ override the errors behavior specified in the superblock, which can be
+ configured using tune2fs)
+
+ data_err=ignore(*)
+ Just print an error message if an error occurs in a file data buffer in
+ ordered mode.
+ data_err=abort
+ Abort the journal if an error occurs in a file data buffer in ordered
+ mode.
+
+ grpid | bsdgroups
+ New objects have the group ID of their parent.
+
+ nogrpid (*) | sysvgroups
+ New objects have the group ID of their creator.
+
+ resgid=n
+ The group ID which may use the reserved blocks.
+
+ resuid=n
+ The user ID which may use the reserved blocks.
+
+ sb=
+ Use alternate superblock at this location.
+
+ quota, noquota, grpquota, usrquota
+ These options are ignored by the filesystem. They are used only by
+ quota tools to recognize volumes where quota should be turned on. See
+ documentation in the quota-tools package for more details
+ (http://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxquota).
+
+ jqfmt=<quota type>, usrjquota=<file>, grpjquota=<file>
+ These options tell filesystem details about quota so that quota
+ information can be properly updated during journal replay. They replace
+ the above quota options. See documentation in the quota-tools package
+ for more details (http://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxquota).
+
+ stripe=n
+ Number of filesystem blocks that mballoc will try to use for allocation
+ size and alignment. For RAID5/6 systems this should be the number of
+ data disks * RAID chunk size in file system blocks.
+
+ delalloc (*)
+ Defer block allocation until just before ext4 writes out the block(s)
+ in question. This allows ext4 to better allocation decisions more
+ efficiently.
+
+ nodelalloc
+ Disable delayed allocation. Blocks are allocated when the data is
+ copied from userspace to the page cache, either via the write(2) system
+ call or when an mmap'ed page which was previously unallocated is
+ written for the first time.
+
+ max_batch_time=usec
+ Maximum amount of time ext4 should wait for additional filesystem
+ operations to be batch together with a synchronous write operation.
+ Since a synchronous write operation is going to force a commit and then
+ a wait for the I/O complete, it doesn't cost much, and can be a huge
+ throughput win, we wait for a small amount of time to see if any other
+ transactions can piggyback on the synchronous write. The algorithm
+ used is designed to automatically tune for the speed of the disk, by
+ measuring the amount of time (on average) that it takes to finish
+ committing a transaction. Call this time the "commit time". If the
+ time that the transaction has been running is less than the commit
+ time, ext4 will try sleeping for the commit time to see if other
+ operations will join the transaction. The commit time is capped by
+ the max_batch_time, which defaults to 15000us (15ms). This
+ optimization can be turned off entirely by setting max_batch_time to 0.
+
+ min_batch_time=usec
+ This parameter sets the commit time (as described above) to be at least
+ min_batch_time. It defaults to zero microseconds. Increasing this
+ parameter may improve the throughput of multi-threaded, synchronous
+ workloads on very fast disks, at the cost of increasing latency.
+
+ journal_ioprio=prio
+ The I/O priority (from 0 to 7, where 0 is the highest priority) which
+ should be used for I/O operations submitted by kjournald2 during a
+ commit operation. This defaults to 3, which is a slightly higher
+ priority than the default I/O priority.
+
+ auto_da_alloc(*), noauto_da_alloc
+ Many broken applications don't use fsync() when replacing existing
+ files via patterns such as fd = open("foo.new")/write(fd,..)/close(fd)/
+ rename("foo.new", "foo"), or worse yet, fd = open("foo",
+ O_TRUNC)/write(fd,..)/close(fd). If auto_da_alloc is enabled, ext4
+ will detect the replace-via-rename and replace-via-truncate patterns
+ and force that any delayed allocation blocks are allocated such that at
+ the next journal commit, in the default data=ordered mode, the data
+ blocks of the new file are forced to disk before the rename() operation
+ is committed. This provides roughly the same level of guarantees as
+ ext3, and avoids the "zero-length" problem that can happen when a
+ system crashes before the delayed allocation blocks are forced to disk.
+
+ noinit_itable
+ Do not initialize any uninitialized inode table blocks in the
+ background. This feature may be used by installation CD's so that the
+ install process can complete as quickly as possible; the inode table
+ initialization process would then be deferred until the next time the
+ file system is unmounted.
+
+ init_itable=n
+ The lazy itable init code will wait n times the number of milliseconds
+ it took to zero out the previous block group's inode table. This
+ minimizes the impact on the system performance while file system's
+ inode table is being initialized.
+
+ discard, nodiscard(*)
+ Controls whether ext4 should issue discard/TRIM commands to the
+ underlying block device when blocks are freed. This is useful for SSD
+ devices and sparse/thinly-provisioned LUNs, but it is off by default
+ until sufficient testing has been done.
+
+ nouid32
+ Disables 32-bit UIDs and GIDs. This is for interoperability with
+ older kernels which only store and expect 16-bit values.
+
+ block_validity(*), noblock_validity
+ These options enable or disable the in-kernel facility for tracking
+ filesystem metadata blocks within internal data structures. This
+ allows multi- block allocator and other routines to notice bugs or
+ corrupted allocation bitmaps which cause blocks to be allocated which
+ overlap with filesystem metadata blocks.
+
+ dioread_lock, dioread_nolock
+ Controls whether or not ext4 should use the DIO read locking. If the
+ dioread_nolock option is specified ext4 will allocate uninitialized
+ extent before buffer write and convert the extent to initialized after
+ IO completes. This approach allows ext4 code to avoid using inode
+ mutex, which improves scalability on high speed storages. However this
+ does not work with data journaling and dioread_nolock option will be
+ ignored with kernel warning. Note that dioread_nolock code path is only
+ used for extent-based files. Because of the restrictions this options
+ comprises it is off by default (e.g. dioread_lock).
+
+ max_dir_size_kb=n
+ This limits the size of directories so that any attempt to expand them
+ beyond the specified limit in kilobytes will cause an ENOSPC error.
+ This is useful in memory constrained environments, where a very large
+ directory can cause severe performance problems or even provoke the Out
+ Of Memory killer. (For example, if there is only 512mb memory
+ available, a 176mb directory may seriously cramp the system's style.)
+
+ i_version
+ Enable 64-bit inode version support. This option is off by default.
+
+ dax
+ Use direct access (no page cache). See
+ Documentation/filesystems/dax.txt. Note that this option is
+ incompatible with data=journal.
Data Mode
=========
@@ -407,11 +394,8 @@ in table below.
Files in /proc/fs/ext4/<devname>
-================ =======
- File Content
-================ =======
- mb_groups details of multiblock allocator buddy cache of free blocks
-================ =======
+ mb_groups
+ details of multiblock allocator buddy cache of free blocks
/sys entries
============
@@ -426,74 +410,71 @@ Files in /sys/fs/ext4/<devname>:
(see also Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-fs-ext4)
-============================= =================================================
-File Content
-============================= =================================================
- delayed_allocation_blocks This file is read-only and shows the number of
- blocks that are dirty in the page cache, but
- which do not have their location in the
- filesystem allocated yet.
-
-inode_goal Tuning parameter which (if non-zero) controls
- the goal inode used by the inode allocator in
- preference to all other allocation heuristics.
- This is intended for debugging use only, and
- should be 0 on production systems.
-
-inode_readahead_blks Tuning parameter which controls the maximum
- number of inode table blocks that ext4's inode
- table readahead algorithm will pre-read into
- the buffer cache
-
-lifetime_write_kbytes This file is read-only and shows the number of
- kilobytes of data that have been written to this
- filesystem since it was created.
-
- max_writeback_mb_bump The maximum number of megabytes the writeback
- code will try to write out before move on to
- another inode.
-
- mb_group_prealloc The multiblock allocator will round up allocation
- requests to a multiple of this tuning parameter if
- the stripe size is not set in the ext4 superblock
-
- mb_max_to_scan The maximum number of extents the multiblock
- allocator will search to find the best extent
-
- mb_min_to_scan The minimum number of extents the multiblock
- allocator will search to find the best extent
-
- mb_order2_req Tuning parameter which controls the minimum size
- for requests (as a power of 2) where the buddy
- cache is used
-
- mb_stats Controls whether the multiblock allocator should
- collect statistics, which are shown during the
- unmount. 1 means to collect statistics, 0 means
- not to collect statistics
-
- mb_stream_req Files which have fewer blocks than this tunable
- parameter will have their blocks allocated out
- of a block group specific preallocation pool, so
- that small files are packed closely together.
- Each large file will have its blocks allocated
- out of its own unique preallocation pool.
-
- session_write_kbytes This file is read-only and shows the number of
- kilobytes of data that have been written to this
- filesystem since it was mounted.
-
- reserved_clusters This is RW file and contains number of reserved
- clusters in the file system which will be used
- in the specific situations to avoid costly
- zeroout, unexpected ENOSPC, or possible data
- loss. The default is 2% or 4096 clusters,
- whichever is smaller and this can be changed
- however it can never exceed number of clusters
- in the file system. If there is not enough space
- for the reserved space when mounting the file
- mount will _not_ fail.
-============================= =================================================
+ delayed_allocation_blocks
+ This file is read-only and shows the number of blocks that are dirty in
+ the page cache, but which do not have their location in the filesystem
+ allocated yet.
+
+ inode_goal
+ Tuning parameter which (if non-zero) controls the goal inode used by
+ the inode allocator in preference to all other allocation heuristics.
+ This is intended for debugging use only, and should be 0 on production
+ systems.
+
+ inode_readahead_blks
+ Tuning parameter which controls the maximum number of inode table
+ blocks that ext4's inode table readahead algorithm will pre-read into
+ the buffer cache.
+
+ lifetime_write_kbytes
+ This file is read-only and shows the number of kilobytes of data that
+ have been written to this filesystem since it was created.
+
+ max_writeback_mb_bump
+ The maximum number of megabytes the writeback code will try to write
+ out before move on to another inode.
+
+ mb_group_prealloc
+ The multiblock allocator will round up allocation requests to a
+ multiple of this tuning parameter if the stripe size is not set in the
+ ext4 superblock
+
+ mb_max_to_scan
+ The maximum number of extents the multiblock allocator will search to
+ find the best extent.
+
+ mb_min_to_scan
+ The minimum number of extents the multiblock allocator will search to
+ find the best extent.
+
+ mb_order2_req
+ Tuning parameter which controls the minimum size for requests (as a
+ power of 2) where the buddy cache is used.
+
+ mb_stats
+ Controls whether the multiblock allocator should collect statistics,
+ which are shown during the unmount. 1 means to collect statistics, 0
+ means not to collect statistics.
+
+ mb_stream_req
+ Files which have fewer blocks than this tunable parameter will have
+ their blocks allocated out of a block group specific preallocation
+ pool, so that small files are packed closely together. Each large file
+ will have its blocks allocated out of its own unique preallocation
+ pool.
+
+ session_write_kbytes
+ This file is read-only and shows the number of kilobytes of data that
+ have been written to this filesystem since it was mounted.
+
+ reserved_clusters
+ This is RW file and contains number of reserved clusters in the file
+ system which will be used in the specific situations to avoid costly
+ zeroout, unexpected ENOSPC, or possible data loss. The default is 2% or
+ 4096 clusters, whichever is smaller and this can be changed however it
+ can never exceed number of clusters in the file system. If there is not
+ enough space for the reserved space when mounting the file mount will
+ _not_ fail.
Ioctls
======
@@ -504,100 +485,80 @@ shown in the table below.
Table of Ext4 specific ioctls
-============================= =================================================
-Ioctl Description
-============================= =================================================
- EXT4_IOC_GETFLAGS Get additional attributes associated with inode.
- The ioctl argument is an integer bitfield, with
- bit values described in ext4.h. This ioctl is an
- alias for FS_IOC_GETFLAGS.
-
- EXT4_IOC_SETFLAGS Set additional attributes associated with inode.
- The ioctl argument is an integer bitfield, with
- bit values described in ext4.h. This ioctl is an
- alias for FS_IOC_SETFLAGS.
-
- EXT4_IOC_GETVERSION
- EXT4_IOC_GETVERSION_OLD
- Get the inode i_generation number stored for
- each inode. The i_generation number is normally
- changed only when new inode is created and it is
- particularly useful for network filesystems. The
- '_OLD' version of this ioctl is an alias for
- FS_IOC_GETVERSION.
-
- EXT4_IOC_SETVERSION
- EXT4_IOC_SETVERSION_OLD
- Set the inode i_generation number stored for
- each inode. The '_OLD' version of this ioctl
- is an alias for FS_IOC_SETVERSION.
-
- EXT4_IOC_GROUP_EXTEND This ioctl has the same purpose as the resize
- mount option. It allows to resize filesystem
- to the end of the last existing block group,
- further resize has to be done with resize2fs,
- either online, or offline. The argument points
- to the unsigned logn number representing the
- filesystem new block count.
-
- EXT4_IOC_MOVE_EXT Move the block extents from orig_fd (the one
- this ioctl is pointing to) to the donor_fd (the
- one specified in move_extent structure passed
- as an argument to this ioctl). Then, exchange
- inode metadata between orig_fd and donor_fd.
- This is especially useful for online
- defragmentation, because the allocator has the
- opportunity to allocate moved blocks better,
- ideally into one contiguous extent.
-
- EXT4_IOC_GROUP_ADD Add a new group descriptor to an existing or
- new group descriptor block. The new group
- descriptor is described by ext4_new_group_input
- structure, which is passed as an argument to
- this ioctl. This is especially useful in
- conjunction with EXT4_IOC_GROUP_EXTEND,
- which allows online resize of the filesystem
- to the end of the last existing block group.
- Those two ioctls combined is used in userspace
- online resize tool (e.g. resize2fs).
-
- EXT4_IOC_MIGRATE This ioctl operates on the filesystem itself.
- It converts (migrates) ext3 indirect block mapped
- inode to ext4 extent mapped inode by walking
- through indirect block mapping of the original
- inode and converting contiguous block ranges
- into ext4 extents of the temporary inode. Then,
- inodes are swapped. This ioctl might help, when
- migrating from ext3 to ext4 filesystem, however
- suggestion is to create fresh ext4 filesystem
- and copy data from the backup. Note, that
- filesystem has to support extents for this ioctl
- to work.
-
- EXT4_IOC_ALLOC_DA_BLKS Force all of the delay allocated blocks to be
- allocated to preserve application-expected ext3
- behaviour. Note that this will also start
- triggering a write of the data blocks, but this
- behaviour may change in the future as it is
- not necessary and has been done this way only
- for sake of simplicity.
-
- EXT4_IOC_RESIZE_FS Resize the filesystem to a new size. The number
- of blocks of resized filesystem is passed in via
- 64 bit integer argument. The kernel allocates
- bitmaps and inode table, the userspace tool thus
- just passes the new number of blocks.
-
- EXT4_IOC_SWAP_BOOT Swap i_blocks and associated attributes
- (like i_blocks, i_size, i_flags, ...) from
- the specified inode with inode
- EXT4_BOOT_LOADER_INO (#5). This is typically
- used to store a boot loader in a secure part of
- the filesystem, where it can't be changed by a
- normal user by accident.
- The data blocks of the previous boot loader
- will be associated with the given inode.
-============================= =================================================
+ EXT4_IOC_GETFLAGS
+ Get additional attributes associated with inode. The ioctl argument is
+ an integer bitfield, with bit values described in ext4.h. This ioctl is
+ an alias for FS_IOC_GETFLAGS.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_SETFLAGS
+ Set additional attributes associated with inode. The ioctl argument is
+ an integer bitfield, with bit values described in ext4.h. This ioctl is
+ an alias for FS_IOC_SETFLAGS.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_GETVERSION, EXT4_IOC_GETVERSION_OLD
+ Get the inode i_generation number stored for each inode. The
+ i_generation number is normally changed only when new inode is created
+ and it is particularly useful for network filesystems. The '_OLD'
+ version of this ioctl is an alias for FS_IOC_GETVERSION.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_SETVERSION, EXT4_IOC_SETVERSION_OLD
+ Set the inode i_generation number stored for each inode. The '_OLD'
+ version of this ioctl is an alias for FS_IOC_SETVERSION.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_GROUP_EXTEND
+ This ioctl has the same purpose as the resize mount option. It allows
+ to resize filesystem to the end of the last existing block group,
+ further resize has to be done with resize2fs, either online, or
+ offline. The argument points to the unsigned logn number representing
+ the filesystem new block count.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_MOVE_EXT
+ Move the block extents from orig_fd (the one this ioctl is pointing to)
+ to the donor_fd (the one specified in move_extent structure passed as
+ an argument to this ioctl). Then, exchange inode metadata between
+ orig_fd and donor_fd. This is especially useful for online
+ defragmentation, because the allocator has the opportunity to allocate
+ moved blocks better, ideally into one contiguous extent.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_GROUP_ADD
+ Add a new group descriptor to an existing or new group descriptor
+ block. The new group descriptor is described by ext4_new_group_input
+ structure, which is passed as an argument to this ioctl. This is
+ especially useful in conjunction with EXT4_IOC_GROUP_EXTEND, which
+ allows online resize of the filesystem to the end of the last existing
+ block group. Those two ioctls combined is used in userspace online
+ resize tool (e.g. resize2fs).
+
+ EXT4_IOC_MIGRATE
+ This ioctl operates on the filesystem itself. It converts (migrates)
+ ext3 indirect block mapped inode to ext4 extent mapped inode by walking
+ through indirect block mapping of the original inode and converting
+ contiguous block ranges into ext4 extents of the temporary inode. Then,
+ inodes are swapped. This ioctl might help, when migrating from ext3 to
+ ext4 filesystem, however suggestion is to create fresh ext4 filesystem
+ and copy data from the backup. Note, that filesystem has to support
+ extents for this ioctl to work.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_ALLOC_DA_BLKS
+ Force all of the delay allocated blocks to be allocated to preserve
+ application-expected ext3 behaviour. Note that this will also start
+ triggering a write of the data blocks, but this behaviour may change in
+ the future as it is not necessary and has been done this way only for
+ sake of simplicity.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_RESIZE_FS
+ Resize the filesystem to a new size. The number of blocks of resized
+ filesystem is passed in via 64 bit integer argument. The kernel
+ allocates bitmaps and inode table, the userspace tool thus just passes
+ the new number of blocks.
+
+ EXT4_IOC_SWAP_BOOT
+ Swap i_blocks and associated attributes (like i_blocks, i_size,
+ i_flags, ...) from the specified inode with inode EXT4_BOOT_LOADER_INO
+ (#5). This is typically used to store a boot loader in a secure part of
+ the filesystem, where it can't be changed by a normal user by accident.
+ The data blocks of the previous boot loader will be associated with the
+ given inode.
References
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