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GSTRIPE(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual GSTRIPE(8)
NAME
gstripe - control utility for striped devices
SYNOPSIS
gstripe create [-v] [-s stripesize] name prov prov ...
gstripe destroy [-fv] name ...
gstripe label [-hv] [-s stripesize] name prov prov ...
gstripe stop [-fv] name ...
gstripe clear [-v] prov ...
gstripe dump prov ...
gstripe list
gstripe status
gstripe load
gstripe unload
DESCRIPTION
The gstripe utility is used for setting up a stripe on two or more disks.
The striped device can be configured using two different methods:
"manual" or "automatic". When using the "manual" method, no metadata are
stored on the devices, so the striped device has to be configured by hand
every time it is needed. The "automatic" method uses on-disk metadata to
detect devices. Once devices are labeled, they will be automatically
detected and configured.
The first argument to gstripe indicates an action to be performed:
create Set up a striped device from the given devices with specified
name. This is the "manual" method and the stripe will not exist
after a reboot (see DESCRIPTION above). The kernel module
geom_stripe.ko will be loaded if it is not loaded already.
label Set up a striped device from the given devices with the
specified name. This is the "automatic" method, where metadata
are stored in every device's last sector. The kernel module
geom_stripe.ko will be loaded if it is not loaded already.
stop Turn off an existing striped device by its name. This command
does not touch on-disk metadata!
destroy Same as stop.
clear Clear metadata on the given devices.
dump Dump metadata stored on the given devices.
list See geom(8).
status See geom(8).
load See geom(8).
unload See geom(8).
Additional options:
-f Force the removal of the specified striped device.
SYSCTL VARIABLES
The following sysctl(8) variables can be used to control the behavior of
the STRIPE GEOM class. The default value is shown next to each variable.
kern.geom.stripe.debug: 0
Debug level of the STRIPE GEOM class. This can be set to a
number between 0 and 3 inclusive. If set to 0 minimal debug
information is printed, and if set to 3 the maximum amount of
debug information is printed.
kern.geom.stripe.fast: 0
If set to a non-zero value enable "fast mode" instead of the
normal "economic mode". Compared to "economic mode", "fast mode"
uses more memory, but it is much faster for smaller stripe sizes.
If enough memory cannot be allocated, STRIPE will fall back to
"economic mode".
kern.geom.stripe.maxmem: 13107200
Maximum amount of memory that can be consumed by "fast mode" (in
bytes). This sysctl(8) variable is read-only and can only be set
as a tunable in loader.conf(5).
kern.geom.stripe.fast_failed
A count of how many times "fast mode" has failed due to an
insufficient amount of memory. If this value is large, you
should consider increasing the kern.geom.stripe.maxmem value.
EXIT STATUS
Exit status is 0 on success, and 1 if the command fails.
EXAMPLES
The following example shows how to set up a striped device from four
disks with a 128KB stripe size for automatic configuration, create a file
system on it, and mount it:
gstripe label -v -s 131072 data /dev/da0 /dev/da1 /dev/da2 /dev/da3
newfs /dev/stripe/data
mount /dev/stripe/data /mnt
[...]
umount /mnt
gstripe stop data
gstripe unload
COMPATIBILITY
The gstripe interleave is in number of bytes, unlike ccdconfig(8) which
use the number of sectors. A ccdconfig(8) ileave of `128' is 64 KB (128
512B sectors). The same stripe interleave would be specified as `65536'
for gstripe.
SEE ALSO
geom(4), loader.conf(5), ccdconfig(8), geom(8), gvinum(8), mount(8),
newfs(8), sysctl(8), umount(8)
HISTORY
The gstripe utility appeared in FreeBSD 5.3.
AUTHORS
Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@FreeBSD.org>