DMSETUP
Section: MAINTENANCE COMMANDS (8)
Updated: Apr 06 2006
Page Index
NAME
dmsetup --- low level logical volume management
SYNOPSIS
-
dmsetup
clear
device_name
-
dmsetup
create
device_name
[-u|--uuid
uuid]
[--addnodeoncreate|--addnodeonresume]
[-n|--notable|--table
table|table_file]
[--readahead
[+]sectors|auto|none]
-
dmsetup
create
--concise
[concise_device_specification]
-
dmsetup
deps
[-o
options]
[device_name...]
-
dmsetup
help
[-c|-C|--columns]
-
dmsetup
info
[device_name...]
-
dmsetup
info
-c|-C|--columns
[--count
count]
[--interval
seconds]
[--nameprefixes]
[--noheadings]
[-o
fields]
[-O|--sort
sort_fields]
[--separator
separator]
[device_name]
-
dmsetup
load
device_name
[--table
table|table_file]
-
dmsetup
ls
[--target
target_type]
[--exec
command]
[--tree]
[-o
options]
-
dmsetup
mangle
[device_name...]
-
dmsetup
message
device_name
sector
message
-
dmsetup
mknodes
[device_name...]
-
dmsetup
reload
device_name
[--table
table|table_file]
-
dmsetup
remove
[-f|--force]
[--retry]
[--deferred]
device_name...
-
dmsetup
remove_all
[-f|--force]
[--deferred]
-
dmsetup
rename
device_name
new_name
-
dmsetup
rename
device_name
--setuuid
uuid
-
dmsetup
resume
device_name...
[--addnodeoncreate|--addnodeonresume]
[--noflush]
[--nolockfs]
[--readahead
[+]sectors|auto|none]
-
dmsetup
setgeometry
device_name
cyl
head
sect
start
-
dmsetup
splitname
device_name
[subsystem]
-
dmsetup
stats
command
[options]
-
dmsetup
status
[--target
target_type]
[--noflush]
[device_name...]
-
dmsetup
suspend
[--nolockfs]
[--noflush]
device_name...
-
dmsetup
table
[--concise]
[--target
target_type]
[--showkeys]
[device_name...]
-
dmsetup
targets
-
dmsetup
udevcomplete
cookie
-
dmsetup
udevcomplete_all
[age_in_minutes]
-
dmsetup
udevcookie
-
dmsetup
udevcreatecookie
-
dmsetup
udevflags
cookie
-
dmsetup
udevreleasecookie
[cookie]
-
dmsetup
version
-
dmsetup
wait
[--noflush]
device_name
[event_nr]
-
dmsetup
wipe_table
device_name...
[-f|--force]
[--noflush]
[--nolockfs]
-
devmap_name major minor
-
devmap_name major:minor
DESCRIPTION
dmsetup manages logical devices that use the device-mapper driver.
Devices are created by loading a table that specifies a target for
each sector (512 bytes) in the logical device.
The first argument to dmsetup is a command.
The second argument is the logical device name or uuid.
Invoking the dmsetup tool as devmap_name
(which is not normally distributed and is supported
only for historical reasons) is equivalent to
dmsetup info -c --noheadings -j major -m minor.
OPTIONS
-
--addnodeoncreate
-
- Ensure /dev/mapper node exists after dmsetup create.
-
--addnodeonresume
-
- Ensure /dev/mapper node exists after dmsetup resume (default with udev).
-
--checks
-
- Perform additional checks on the operations requested and report
potential problems. Useful when debugging scripts.
In some cases these checks may slow down operations noticeably.
-
-c|-C|--columns
-
- Display output in columns rather than as Field: Value lines.
-
--count
count
-
- Specify the number of times to repeat a report. Set this to zero
continue until interrupted. The default interval is one second.
-
-f|--force
-
- Try harder to complete operation.
-
-h|--help
-
- Outputs a summary of the commands available, optionally including
the list of report fields (synonym with help command).
-
--inactive
-
- When returning any table information from the kernel report on the
inactive table instead of the live table.
Requires kernel driver version 4.16.0 or above.
-
--interval
seconds
-
- Specify the interval in seconds between successive iterations for
repeating reports. If --interval is specified but --count
is not, reports will continue to repeat until interrupted.
The default interval is one second.
-
--manglename
auto|hex|none
-
- Mangle any character not on a whitelist using mangling_mode when
processing device-mapper device names and UUIDs. The names and UUIDs
are mangled on input and unmangled on output where the mangling mode
is one of:
auto (only do the mangling if not mangled yet, do nothing
if already mangled, error on mixed),
hex (always do the mangling) and
none (no mangling).
Default mode is auto.
Character whitelist: 0-9, A-Z, a-z, #+-.:=@_. This whitelist is
also supported by udev. Any character not on a whitelist is replaced
with its hex value (two digits) prefixed by \x.
Mangling mode could be also set through
DM_DEFAULT_NAME_MANGLING_MODE
environment variable.
-
-j|--major
major
-
- Specify the major number.
-
-m|--minor
minor
-
- Specify the minor number.
-
-n|--notable
-
- When creating a device, don't load any table.
-
--nameprefixes
-
- Add a "DM_" prefix plus the field name to the output. Useful with
--noheadings to produce a list of
field=value pairs that can be used to set environment variables
(for example, in
udev(7)
rules).
-
--noheadings
- Suppress the headings line when using columnar output.
-
--noflush
- Do not flush outstading I/O when suspending a device, or do not
commit thin-pool metadata when obtaining thin-pool status.
-
--nolockfs
-
- Do not attempt to synchronize filesystem eg, when suspending a device.
-
--noopencount
-
- Tell the kernel not to supply the open reference count for the device.
-
--noudevrules
-
- Do not allow udev to manage nodes for devices in device-mapper directory.
-
--noudevsync
-
- Do not synchronise with udev when creating, renaming or removing devices.
-
-o|--options
options
-
- Specify which fields to display.
-
--readahead
[+]sectors|auto|none
-
- Specify read ahead size in units of sectors.
The default value is auto which allows the kernel to choose
a suitable value automatically. The + prefix lets you
specify a minimum value which will not be used if it is
smaller than the value chosen by the kernel.
The value none is equivalent to specifying zero.
-
-r|--readonly
-
- Set the table being loaded read-only.
-
-S|--select
selection
-
- Process only items that match selection criteria. If the command is
producing report output, adding the "selected" column (-o
selected) displays all rows and shows 1 if the row matches the
selection and 0 otherwise. The selection criteria are defined by
specifying column names and their valid values while making use of supported
comparison operators. As a quick help and to see full list of column names that
can be used in selection and the set of supported selection operators, check
the output of dmsetup info -c -S help command.
-
--table
table
-
- Specify a one-line table directly on the command line.
See below for more information on the table format.
-
--udevcookie
cookie
-
- Use cookie for udev synchronisation.
Note: Same cookie should be used for same type of operations i.e. creation of
multiple different devices. It's not adviced to combine different
operations on the single device.
-
-u|--uuid
-
- Specify the uuid.
-
-y|--yes
-
- Answer yes to all prompts automatically.
-
-v|--verbose
[-v|--verbose]
-
- Produce additional output.
-
--verifyudev
-
- If udev synchronisation is enabled, verify that udev operations get performed
correctly and try to fix up the device nodes afterwards if not.
-
--version
-
- Display the library and kernel driver version.
COMMANDS
-
clear
device_name
-
- Destroys the table in the inactive table slot for device_name.
-
create
device_name
[-u|--uuid
uuid]
[--addnodeoncreate|--addnodeonresume]
[-n|--notable|--table
table|table_file]
[--readahead
[+]sectors|auto|none]
-
- Creates a device with the given name.
If table or table_file is supplied, the table is loaded and made live.
Otherwise a table is read from standard input unless --notable is used.
The optional uuid can be used in place of
device_name in subsequent dmsetup commands.
If successful the device will appear in table and for live
device the node /dev/mapper/device_name is created.
See below for more information on the table format.
-
create
--concise
[concise_device_specification]
-
- Creates one or more devices from a concise device specification.
Each device is specified by a comma-separated list: name, uuid, minor number, flags, comma-separated table lines.
Flags defaults to read-write (rw) or may be read-only (ro).
Uuid, minor number and flags are optional so those fields may be empty.
A semi-colon separates specifications of different devices.
Use a backslash to escape the following character, for example a comma or semi-colon in a name or table. See also CONCISE FORMAT below.
-
deps
[-o
options]
[device_name...]
-
- Outputs a list of devices referenced by the live table for the specified
device. Device names on output can be customised by following options:
devno (major and minor pair, used by default),
blkdevname (block device name),
devname (map name for device-mapper devices, equal to blkdevname otherwise).
-
help
[-c|-C|--columns]
-
- Outputs a summary of the commands available, optionally including
the list of report fields.
-
info
[device_name...]
-
- Outputs some brief information about the device in the form:
-
-
State: SUSPENDED|ACTIVE, READ-ONLY
Tables present: LIVE and/or INACTIVE
Open reference count
Last event sequence number (used by wait)
Major and minor device number
Number of targets in the live table
UUID
-
info
-c|-C|--columns
[--count
count]
[--interval
seconds]
[--nameprefixes]
[--noheadings]
[-o
fields]
[-O|--sort
sort_fields]
[--separator
separator]
[device_name]
-
- Output you can customise.
Fields are comma-separated and chosen from the following list:
name,
major,
minor,
attr,
open,
segments,
events,
uuid.
Attributes are:
(L)ive,
(I)nactive,
(s)uspended,
(r)ead-only,
read-(w)rite.
Precede the list with '+' to append
to the default selection of columns instead of replacing it.
Precede any sort field with '-' for a reverse sort on that column.
-
ls
[--target
target_type]
[--exec
command]
[--tree]
[-o
options]
-
- List device names. Optionally only list devices that have at least
one target of the specified type. Optionally execute a command for
each device. The device name is appended to the supplied command.
Device names on output can be customised by following options:
devno (major and minor pair, used by default),
blkdevname (block device name),
devname (map name for device-mapper devices, equal to blkdevname otherwise).
--tree displays dependencies between devices as a tree.
It accepts a comma-separate list of options.
Some specify the information displayed against each node:
device/nodevice;
blkdevname;
active, open, rw, uuid.
Others specify how the tree is displayed:
ascii, utf, vt100;
compact, inverted, notrunc.
-
load|
reload
device_name
[--table
table|table_file]
-
- Loads table or table_file into the inactive table slot for device_name.
If neither is supplied, reads a table from standard input.
-
mangle
[device_name...]
-
- Ensure existing device-mapper device_name and UUID is in the correct mangled
form containing only whitelisted characters (supported by udev) and do
a rename if necessary. Any character not on the whitelist will be mangled
based on the --manglename setting. Automatic rename works only for device
names and not for device UUIDs because the kernel does not allow changing
the UUID of active devices. Any incorrect UUIDs are reported only and they
must be manually corrected by deactivating the device first and then
reactivating it with proper mangling mode used (see also --manglename).
-
message
device_name
sector
message
-
- Send message to target. If sector not needed use 0.
-
mknodes
[device_name...]
-
- Ensure that the node in /dev/mapper for device_name is correct.
If no device_name is supplied, ensure that all nodes in /dev/mapper
correspond to mapped devices currently loaded by the device-mapper kernel
driver, adding, changing or removing nodes as necessary.
-
remove
[-f|--force]
[--retry]
[--deferred]
device_name...
-
- Removes a device. It will no longer be visible to dmsetup. Open devices
cannot be removed, but adding --force will replace the table with one
that fails all I/O. --deferred will enable deferred removal of open
devices - the device will be removed when the last user closes it. The deferred
removal feature is supported since version 4.27.0 of the device-mapper
driver available in upstream kernel version 3.13. (Use dmsetup version
to check this.) If an attempt to remove a device fails, perhaps because a process run
from a quick udev rule temporarily opened the device, the --retry
option will cause the operation to be retried for a few seconds before failing.
Do NOT combine
--force and --udevcookie, as udev may start to process udev
rules in the middle of error target replacement and result in nondeterministic
result.
-
remove_all
[-f|--force]
[--deferred]
-
- Attempts to remove all device definitions i.e. reset the driver. This also runs
mknodes afterwards. Use with care! Open devices cannot be removed, but
adding --force will replace the table with one that fails all I/O.
--deferred will enable deferred removal of open devices - the device
will be removed when the last user closes it. The deferred removal feature is
supported since version 4.27.0 of the device-mapper driver available in
upstream kernel version 3.13.
-
rename
device_name
new_name
-
- Renames a device.
-
rename
device_name
--setuuid
uuid
-
- Sets the uuid of a device that was created without a uuid.
After a uuid has been set it cannot be changed.
-
resume
device_name...
[--addnodeoncreate|--addnodeonresume]
[--noflush]
[--nolockfs]
[--readahead
[+]sectors|auto|none]
-
- Un-suspends a device.
If an inactive table has been loaded, it becomes live.
Postponed I/O then gets re-queued for processing.
-
setgeometry
device_name
cyl
head
sect
start
-
- Sets the device geometry to C/H/S.
-
splitname
device_name
[subsystem]
-
- Splits given device name into subsystem constituents.
The default subsystem is LVM.
LVM currently generates device names by concatenating the names of the Volume
Group, Logical Volume and any internal Layer with a hyphen as separator.
Any hyphens within the names are doubled to escape them.
The precise encoding might change without notice in any future
release, so we recommend you always decode using the current version of
this command.
-
stats
command
[options]
-
- Manages IO statistics regions for devices.
See
dmstats(8)
for more details.
-
status
[--target
target_type]
[--noflush]
[device_name...]
-
- Outputs status information for each of the device's targets.
With --target, only information relating to the specified target type
any is displayed. With --noflush, the thin target (from version 1.3.0)
doesn't commit any outstanding changes to disk before reporting its statistics.
-
suspend
[--nolockfs]
[--noflush]
device_name...
-
- Suspends a device. Any I/O that has already been mapped by the device
but has not yet completed will be flushed. Any further I/O to that
device will be postponed for as long as the device is suspended.
If there's a filesystem on the device which supports the operation,
an attempt will be made to sync it first unless --nolockfs is specified.
Some targets such as recent (October 2006) versions of multipath may support
the --noflush option. This lets outstanding I/O that has not yet reached the
device to remain unflushed.
-
table
[--concise]
[--target
target_type]
[--showkeys]
[device_name...]
-
- Outputs the current table for the device in a format that can be fed
back in using the create or load commands.
With --target, only information relating to the specified target type
is displayed.
Real encryption keys are suppressed in the table output for crypt and integrity
targets unless the --showkeys parameter is supplied. Kernel key
references prefixed with : are not affected by the parameter and get
displayed always (crypt target only).
With --concise, the output is presented concisely on a single line.
Commas then separate the name, uuid, minor device number, flags ('ro' or 'rw')
and the table (if present). Semi-colons separate devices. Backslashes escape
any commas, semi-colons or backslashes. See CONCISE FORMAT below.
-
targets
-
- Displays the names and versions of the currently-loaded targets.
-
udevcomplete
cookie
-
- Wake any processes that are waiting for udev to complete processing the specified cookie.
-
udevcomplete_all
[age_in_minutes]
-
- Remove all cookies older than the specified number of minutes.
Any process waiting on a cookie will be resumed immediately.
-
udevcookie
-
- List all existing cookies. Cookies are system-wide semaphores with keys
prefixed by two predefined bytes (0x0D4D).
-
udevcreatecookie
-
- Creates a new cookie to synchronize actions with udev processing.
The output is a cookie value. Normally we don't need to create cookies since
dmsetup creates and destroys them for each action automatically. However, we can
generate one explicitly to group several actions together and use only one
cookie instead. We can define a cookie to use for each relevant command by using
--udevcookie option. Alternatively, we can export this value into the environment
of the dmsetup process as DM_UDEV_COOKIE variable and it will be used automatically
with all subsequent commands until it is unset.
Invoking this command will create system-wide semaphore that needs to be cleaned
up explicitly by calling udevreleasecookie command.
-
udevflags
cookie
-
- Parses given cookie value and extracts any udev control flags encoded.
The output is in environment key format that is suitable for use in udev
rules. If the flag has its symbolic name assigned then the output is
DM_UDEV_FLAG_<flag_name> = '1', DM_UDEV_FLAG<flag_position> = '1' otherwise.
Subsystem udev flags don't have symbolic names assigned and these ones are
always reported as DM_SUBSYSTEM_UDEV_FLAG<flag_position> = '1'. There are
16 udev flags altogether.
-
udevreleasecookie
[cookie]
-
- Waits for all pending udev processing bound to given cookie value and clean up
the cookie with underlying semaphore. If the cookie is not given directly,
the command will try to use a value defined by DM_UDEV_COOKIE environment variable.
-
version
-
- Outputs version information.
-
wait
[--noflush]
device_name
[event_nr]
-
- Sleeps until the event counter for device_name exceeds event_nr.
Use -v to see the event number returned.
To wait until the next event is triggered, use info to find
the last event number.
With --noflush, the thin target (from version 1.3.0) doesn't commit
any outstanding changes to disk before reporting its statistics.
-
wipe_table
device_name...
[-f|--force]
[--noflush]
[--nolockfs]
-
- Wait for any I/O in-flight through the device to complete, then
replace the table with a new table that fails any new I/O
sent to the device. If successful, this should release any devices
held open by the device's table(s).
TABLE FORMAT
Each line of the table specifies a single target and is of the form:
logical_start_sector num_sectors
target_type
target_args
Simple target types and target args include:
- linear destination_device start_sector
-
The traditional linear mapping.
- striped num_stripes chunk_size [destination start_sector]...
-
Creates a striped area.
e.g. striped 2 32 /dev/hda1 0 /dev/hdb1 0
will map the first chunk (16k) as follows:
-
-
LV chunk 1-> hda1, chunk 1
LV chunk 2-> hdb1, chunk 1
LV chunk 3-> hda1, chunk 2
LV chunk 4-> hdb1, chunk 2
etc.
- error
-
Errors any I/O that goes to this area. Useful for testing or
for creating devices with holes in them.
- zero
-
Returns blocks of zeroes on reads. Any data written is discarded silently.
This is a block-device equivalent of the /dev/zero
character-device data sink described in null(4).
More complex targets include:
- cache
-
Improves performance of a block device (eg, a spindle) by dynamically
migrating some of its data to a faster smaller device (eg, an SSD).
- crypt
-
Transparent encryption of block devices using the kernel crypto API.
- delay
-
Delays reads and/or writes to different devices. Useful for testing.
- flakey
-
Creates a similar mapping to the linear target but
exhibits unreliable behaviour periodically.
Useful for simulating failing devices when testing.
- mirror
-
Mirrors data across two or more devices.
- multipath
-
Mediates access through multiple paths to the same device.
- raid
-
Offers an interface to the kernel's software raid driver, md.
- snapshot
-
Supports snapshots of devices.
- thin, thin-pool
-
Supports thin provisioning of devices and also provides a better snapshot support.
To find out more about the various targets and their table formats and status
lines, please read the files in the Documentation/device-mapper directory in
the kernel source tree.
(Your distribution might include a copy of this information in the
documentation directory for the device-mapper package.)
EXAMPLES
# A table to join two disks together
0 1028160 linear /dev/hda 0
1028160 3903762 linear /dev/hdb 0
# A table to stripe across the two disks,
# and add the spare space from
# hdb to the back of the volume
0 2056320 striped 2 32 /dev/hda 0 /dev/hdb 0
2056320 2875602 linear /dev/hdb 1028160
CONCISE FORMAT
A concise representation of one of more devices.
- A comma separates the fields of each device.
- A semi-colon separates devices.
- The representation of a device takes the form:
-
<name>,<uuid>,<minor>,<flags>,<table>[,<table>+][;<dev_name>,<uuid>,<minor>,<flags>,<table>[,<table>+]]
- The fields are:
-
- name
-
The name of the device.
- uuid
-
The UUID of the device (or empty).
- minor
-
The minor number of the device. If empty, the kernel assigns a suitable minor number.
- flags
-
Supported flags are:
ro
Sets the table being loaded for the device read-only
rw
Sets the table being loaded for the device read-write (default)
- table
-
One line of the table. See TABLE FORMAT above.
EXAMPLES
# A simple linear read-only device
test-linear-small,,,ro,0 2097152 linear /dev/loop0 0, 2097152 2097152 linear /dev/loop1 0
# Two linear devices
test-linear-small,,,,0 2097152 linear /dev/loop0 0;test-linear-large,,,, 0 2097152 linear /dev/loop1 0, 2097152 2097152 linear /dev/loop2 0
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
- DM_DEV_DIR
-
The device directory name.
Defaults to "/dev" and must be an absolute path.
- DM_UDEV_COOKIE
-
A cookie to use for all relevant commands to synchronize with udev processing.
It is an alternative to using --udevcookie option.
- DM_DEFAULT_NAME_MANGLING_MODE
-
A default mangling mode. Defaults to "auto"
and it is an alternative to using --manglename option.
AUTHORS
Original version: Joe Thornber <thornber@redhat.com>
SEE ALSO
dmstats(8),
udev(7),
udevadm(8)
LVM2 resource page: https://www.sourceware.org/lvm2/
Device-mapper resource page: http://sources.redhat.com/dm/