Provided by: gfs2-utils_3.6.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       gfs2 - GFS2 reference guide

SYNOPSIS

       Overview of the GFS2 filesystem

DESCRIPTION

       GFS2  is  a  clustered filesystem, designed for sharing data between multiple nodes connected to a common
       shared storage device. It can also be used as a local filesystem on a  single  node,  however  since  the
       design  is  aimed  at  clusters,  that  will  usually result in lower performance than using a filesystem
       designed specifically for single node use.

       GFS2 is a journaling filesystem and one journal is required for each node that will mount the filesystem.
       The one exception to that is spectator mounts which are equivalent to mounting a read-only  block  device
       and  as  such  can  neither  recover  a  journal  or write to the filesystem, so do not require a journal
       assigned to them.

       The GFS2 documentation has been split into a number of sections:

       mkfs.gfs2(8) Create a GFS2 filesystem
       fsck.gfs2(8) The GFS2 filesystem checker
       gfs2_grow(8) Growing a GFS2 filesystem
       gfs2_jadd(8) Adding a journal to a GFS2 filesystem
       tunegfs2(8) Tool to manipulate GFS2 superblocks
       gfs2_edit(8) A GFS2 debug tool (use with caution)

MOUNT OPTIONS

       lockproto=LockProtoName
              This specifies which inter-node lock protocol is used by  the  GFS2  filesystem  for  this  mount,
              overriding the default lock protocol name stored in the filesystem's on-disk superblock.

              The  LockProtoName must be one of the supported locking protocols, currently these are lock_nolock
              and lock_dlm.

              The default lock protocol name is written to disk initially  when  creating  the  filesystem  with
              mkfs.gfs2(8), -p option.  It can be changed on-disk by using the tunegfs2(8) command.

              The  lockproto  mount  option should be used only under special circumstances in which you want to
              temporarily use a different  lock  protocol  without  changing  the  on-disk  default.  Using  the
              incorrect  lock  protocol  on  a  cluster  filesystem  mounted from more than one node will almost
              certainly result in filesystem corruption.

       locktable=LockTableName
              This specifies the identity of the cluster and of the filesystem for this  mount,  overriding  the
              default   cluster/filesystem   identify  stored  in  the  filesystem's  on-disk  superblock.   The
              cluster/filesystem name is recognized globally throughout the cluster, and  establishes  a  unique
              namespace for the inter-node locking system, enabling the mounting of multiple GFS2 filesystems.

              The   format   of   LockTableName   is   lock-module-specific.    For   lock_dlm,  the  format  is
              clustername:fsname.  For lock_nolock, the field is ignored.

              The default cluster/filesystem name is written to disk initially when creating the filesystem with
              mkfs.gfs2(8), -t option.  It can be changed on-disk by using the tunegfs2(8) command.

              The locktable mount option should be used only under special circumstances in which  you  want  to
              mount  the  filesystem in a different cluster, or mount it as a different filesystem name, without
              changing the on-disk default.

       localflocks
              This flag tells GFS2 that it is running as a local (not clustered) filesystem, so it can allow the
              kernel VFS layer to do all flock and fcntl file locking.  When running in cluster mode, these file
              locks require inter-node locks, and require the support of GFS2.   When  running  locally,  better
              performance is achieved by letting VFS handle the whole job.

              This is turned on automatically by the lock_nolock module.

       errors=[panic|withdraw]
              Setting errors=panic causes GFS2 to oops when encountering an error that would otherwise cause the
              mount  to  withdraw  or  print  an assertion warning. The default setting is errors=withdraw. This
              option should not be used in a production system.  It replaces the earlier debug option on  kernel
              versions 2.6.31 and above.

       acl    Enables POSIX Access Control List acl(5) support within GFS2.

       spectator
              Mount  this filesystem using a special form of read-only mount.  The mount does not use one of the
              filesystem's journals. The node is unable to recover journals for other nodes.

       norecovery
              A synonym for spectator

       suiddir
              Sets owner of any newly created file or directory to  be  that  of  parent  directory,  if  parent
              directory  has  S_ISUID  permission  attribute bit set.  Sets S_ISUID in any new directory, if its
              parent directory's S_ISUID is set.  Strips all execution bits on a new file, if  parent  directory
              owner  is different from owner of process creating the file.  Set this option only if you know why
              you are setting it.

       quota=[off/account/quiet/on]
              Turns quotas on or off for a filesystem.  Setting the quotas to be in the "account"  state  causes
              the  per  UID/GID  usage  statistics  to be correctly maintained by the filesystem, limit and warn
              values are ignored.  The "quiet" state is equivalent to "on", without writing warnings about  soft
              and hard quota limits to the system log.  The default value is "off".

       discard
              Causes GFS2 to generate "discard" I/O requests for blocks which have been freed. These can be used
              by suitable hardware to implement thin-provisioning and similar schemes. This feature is supported
              in kernel version 2.6.30 and above.

       barrier
              This option, which defaults to on, causes GFS2 to send I/O barriers when flushing the journal. The
              option  is  automatically  turned  off  if the underlying device does not support I/O barriers. We
              highly recommend the use of I/O barriers with GFS2  at  all  times  unless  the  block  device  is
              designed  so  that it cannot lose its write cache content (e.g. its on a UPS, or it doesn't have a
              write cache)

       commit=secs
              This is similar to the ext3 commit= option in that it sets the maximum number of  seconds  between
              journal  commits  if there is dirty data in the journal. The default is 60 seconds. This option is
              only provided in kernel versions 2.6.31 and above.

       data=[ordered|writeback]
              When data=ordered is set, the user data modified by a transaction is flushed to  the  disk  before
              the  transaction  is  committed  to  disk.  This should prevent the user from seeing uninitialized
              blocks in a file after a crash.  Data=writeback mode writes the user data to the disk at any  time
              after  it's  dirtied.  This doesn't provide the same consistency guarantee as ordered mode, but it
              should be slightly faster for some workloads.  The default is ordered mode.

       meta   This option results in selecting the meta filesystem root rather than the normal filesystem  root.
              This  option  is  normally  only used by the GFS2 utility functions. Altering any file on the GFS2
              meta filesystem may render the filesystem unusable, so only experts in  the  GFS2  on-disk  layout
              should use this option.

       quota_quantum=secs
              This  sets  the  number of seconds for which a change in the quota information may sit on one node
              before being written to the quota file. This is the preferred way to set this parameter. The value
              is an integer number of seconds greater than zero. The default is  60  seconds.  Shorter  settings
              result  in  faster  updates of the lazy quota information and less likelihood of someone exceeding
              their quota.  Longer  settings  make  filesystem  operations  involving  quotas  faster  and  more
              efficient.

       statfs_quantum=secs
              Setting  statfs_quantum  to  0 is the preferred way to set the slow version of statfs. The default
              value is 30 secs which sets the maximum time period before statfs changes will  be  syned  to  the
              master  statfs  file.   This  can  be adjusted to allow for faster, less accurate statfs values or
              slower more accurate values. When set to 0, statfs will always report the true values.

       statfs_percent=value
              This setting provides a bound on the maximum percentage change in  the  statfs  information  on  a
              local  basis  before  it is synced back to the master statfs file, even if the time period has not
              expired. If the setting of statfs_quantum is 0, then this setting is ignored.

       rgrplvb
              This flag tells gfs2 to look for information about a resource  group's  free  space  and  unlinked
              inodes  in  its  glock lock value block. This keeps gfs2 from having to read in the resource group
              data from disk, speeding up allocations in some cases.  This option was added  in  the  3.6  Linux
              kernel.  Prior to this kernel, no information was saved to the resource group lvb. Note: To safely
              turn on this option, all nodes mounting the filesystem must  be  running  at  least  a  3.6  Linux
              kernel.  If  any  nodes  had previously mounted the filesystem using older kernels, the filesystem
              must be unmounted on all nodes before it can be mounted with this option enabled. This option does
              not need to be enabled on all nodes using a filesystem.

       loccookie
              This flag tells gfs2 to use location based readdir cookies, instead of  its  usual  filename  hash
              readdir  cookies.  The filename hash cookies are not guaranteed to be unique, and as the number of
              files in a directory increases, so does the likelihood  of  a  collision.   NFS  requires  readdir
              cookies  to  be unique, which can cause problems with very large directories (over 100,000 files).
              With this flag set, gfs2 will try to give out location based cookies.   Since  the  cookie  is  31
              bits,  gfs2  will  eventually run out of unique cookies, and will fail back to using hash cookies.
              The maximum number of files that could  have  unique  location  cookies  assuming  perfectly  even
              hashing  and  names of 8 or fewer characters is 1,073,741,824. An average directory should be able
              to give out well over half a billion location based cookies. This option  was  added  in  the  4.5
              Linux kernel. Prior to this kernel, gfs2 did not add directory entries in a way that allowed it to
              use  location  based readdir cookies.  Note: To safely turn on this option, all nodes mounting the
              filesystem must be running at least a 4.5 Linux kernel. If this option is only enabled on some  of
              the nodes mounting a filesystem, the cookies returned by nodes using this option will not be valid
              on nodes that are not using this option, and vice versa.  Finally, when first enabling this option
              on  a filesystem that had been previously mounted without it, you must make sure that there are no
              outstanding cookies being cached by other software, such as NFS.

SETUP

       GFS2 clustering is driven by the dlm, which depends on dlm_controld to provide clustering from userspace.
       dlm_controld clustering is built on corosync cluster/group membership and messaging. GFS2  also  requires
       clustered lvm which is provided by lvmlockd or, previously, clvmd. Refer to the documentation for each of
       these  components  and ensure that they are configured before setting up a GFS2 filesystem. Also refer to
       your distribution's documentation for any specific support requirements.

       Ensure that gfs2-utils is installed on all nodes which  mount  the  filesystem  as  it  provides  scripts
       required for correct withdraw event response.

       1. Create the gfs2 filesystem

       mkfs.gfs2 -p lock_dlm -t cluster_name:fs_name -j num /path/to/storage

       The cluster_name must match the name configured in corosync (and thus dlm).  The fs_name must be a unique
       name for the filesystem in the cluster.  The -j option is the number of journals to create; there must be
       one for each node that will mount the filesystem.

       2. Mount the gfs2 filesystem

       If  you  are  using  a  clustered  resource manager, see its documentation for enabling a gfs2 filesystem
       resource. Otherwise, run:

       mount /path/to/storage /mountpoint

       Run "dlm_tool ls" to verify the nodes that have each fs mounted.

       3. Shut down

       If you are using a clustered resource manager, see its documentation  for  disabling  a  gfs2  filesystem
       resource. Otherwise, run:

       umount -a -t gfs2

SEE ALSO

       mount(8)  and umount(8) for general mount information, chmod(1) and chmod(2) for access permission flags,
       acl(5) for access control lists, lvm(8) for volume management, dlm_controld(8), dlm_tool(8), dlm.conf(5),
       corosync(8), corosync.conf(5),

                                                                                                         gfs2(5)