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DRBDMETA(8) System Administration DRBDMETA(8)

NAME

drbdmeta - Manipulate the DRBD on-disk metadata

SYNOPSIS

drbdmeta [--force] [--ignore-sanity-checks] {device} {v06 minor | v07 meta_dev index | v08 meta_dev index | v09 meta_dev index} {command} [cmd args...]

DESCRIPTION

The drbdmeta utility is used for creating, displaying, and modifying DRBD's on-disk metadata. Users usually interact with the drbdadm utility, which provides a more high-level interface to DRBD than drbdmeta. (See drbdadm's --dry-run option to see how drbdadm uses drbdmeta.)

This utility can only be used on devices which are not currently in use by the kernel.

The first argument (device) specifies the drbd device associated with a volume, or “-” if no device is associated with that volume. If the drbd device is specified, the drbdmeta utility makes sure that the drbd device does not currently have a volume attached to prevent meta-data of an active volume from being destroyed.

The second argument specifies the metadata version to use (v06, v07, v08, v09). In most metadata versions, the third argument (meta_dev) specifies the device which contains the metadata; this argument can be the same as device. The fourth argument (index) can be one of the keywords internal (for internal metadata), flex-internal (in v07 for variable-sized metadata; v07 otherwise defaults to fixed-size internal metadata), flex-external (for variable-sized external metadata), or a numeric matadata index (for fixed-size external metadata). See the meta-disk parameter in drbd.conf(5).

OPTIONS

--force

Assume yes as the answer to all questions drbdmeta would ask.

--ignore-sanity-checks

Normally, drbdmeta performs some sanity checks before writing to the metadata device: for example, if the device appears to contain a file system, it refuses to destroy the file system by writing into it. Use this option to ignore these checks.

COMMANDS

create-md [--peer-max-bio-size=val] (metadata versions v06, v07, and v08),
create-md {number-of-bitmap-slots} [--peer-max-bio-size=val] [--al-stripes=val] [--al-stripe-size-kB=val] (metadata version v09)

Initialize the metadata. This is necessary before a DRBD resource can be attached. If drbdmeta finds an older version of DRBD metadata on the device, it asks if the format should be converted.

When drbdadm calls drbdmeta's create-md command for a device, it sets the number-of-bitmap-slots argument to the number of peers in the resource. To reserve additional bitmap slots (which allows to add more peers in the future), call drbdmeta directly instead.

When a device is used before being connected to its peers the first time, DRBD assumes that peers can only handle 4 KiB requests by default. The --peer-max-bio-size option allows to set more optimistic values; use this if the versions of DRBD that this device will connect to are known. DRBD supports a maximum bio size of 32 KiB since version 8.3.8, of 128 KiB since version 8.3.9, and of 1 MiB since version 8.4.0.

If you want to use more than 6433 activity log extents, or live on top of a spriped RAID, you may specify the number of stripes (--al-stripes, default 1), and the stripe size (--al-stripe-size-kB, default 32). To just use a larger linear on-disk ring-buffer, leave the number of stripes at 1, and increase the size only:

drbdmeta 0 v08 /dev/vg23/lv42 internal create-md --al-stripe-size 1M

To avoid a single "spindle" from becoming a bottleneck, increase the number of stripes, to achieve an interleaved layout of the on-disk activity-log transactions. What you give as "stripe-size" should be what is a.k.a. "chunk size" or "granularity" or "strip unit": the minimum skip to the next "spindle".

drbdmeta 0 v08 /dev/vg23/lv42 internal create-md --al-stripes 7 --al-stripe-size 64

get-gi [--node-id=id]

Show the data generation identifiers for a device on a particular connection. DRBD version 9.0.0 and beyond support multiple peers; use the node-id option to define which peer's data generation identifiers to show.

show-gi [--node-id=id]

Similar to get-gi, but with explanatory information.

dump-md

Dump the metadata of a device in text form, including the bitmap and activity log.

outdate

Mark the data on a lower-level device as outdated. See drbdsetup(8) for details.

dstate

Show the current disk state of a lower-level device.

check-resize

Examine the device size of a lower-level device and its last known device size (saved in /var/lib/drbd/drbd-minor-minor.lkbd by drbdsetup check-resize). For internal metadata, if the size of the lower-level device has changed and the metadata can be found at the previous position, move the metadata to the new position at the end of the block device.

apply-al

Apply the activity log of the specified device. This is necessary before the device can be attached by the kernel again.

EXPERT COMMANDS

The drbdmeta utility can be used to fine tune metdata. Please note that this can lead to destroyed metadata or even silent data corruption; use with great care only.

set-gi gi [--node-id=id]

Set the generation identifiers. The gi argument is a generation counter for the v06 and v07 formats, and a set of UUIDs for v08 and beyond. Accepts the same syntax as in the get-gi output. DRBD version 9.0.0 and beyond support multiple peers; use the --node-id option to define which peer's data generation identifiers to set.

restore-md dump_file

Replace the metadata on the device with the contents of dump_file. The dump file format is defined by the output of the dump-md command.

VERSION

This document was revised for version 9.0.0 of the DRBD distribution.

AUTHOR

Written by Philipp Reisner <philipp.reisner@linbit.com> and Lars Ellenberg <lars.ellenberg@linbit.com>.

REPORTING BUGS

Report bugs to <drbd-user@lists.linbit.com>.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2001-2008,2012 LINBIT Information Technologies, Philipp Reisner, Lars Ellenberg. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

SEE ALSO

drbdadm(8) drbd.conf(5)
6 December 2012 DRBD 9.0.0