NAME¶
fstrim - discard unused blocks on a mounted filesystem
SYNOPSIS¶
fstrim [
-a] [
-o offset] [
-l length]
[
-m minimum-size] [
-v]
mountpoint
DESCRIPTION¶
fstrim is used on a mounted filesystem to discard (or "trim")
blocks which are not in use by the filesystem. This is useful for solid-state
drives (SSDs) and thinly-provisioned storage.
By default,
fstrim will discard all unused blocks in the filesystem.
Options may be used to modify this behavior based on range or size, as
explained below.
The
mountpoint argument is the pathname of the directory where the
filesystem is mounted.
Running
fstrim frequently, or even using
mount -o discard, might
negatively affect the lifetime of poor-quality SSD devices. For most desktop
and server systems the sufficient trimming frequency is once a week. Note that
not all devices support a queued trim, so each trim command incurs a
performance penalty on whatever else might be trying to use the disk at the
time.
OPTIONS¶
The
offset,
length, and
minimum-size arguments may be
followed by the multiplicative suffixes KiB (=1024), MiB (=1024*1024), and so
on for GiB, TiB, PiB, EiB, ZiB and YiB (the "iB" is optional, e.g.,
"K" has the same meaning as "KiB") or the suffixes KB
(=1000), MB (=1000*1000), and so on for GB, TB, PB, EB, ZB and YB.
- -a, --all
- Trim all mounted filesystems on devices that support the discard
operation. The other supplied options, like --offset,
--length and --minimum, are applied to all these devices.
Errors from filesystems that do not support the discard operation are
silently ignored.
- -o, --offset offset
- Byte offset in the filesystem from which to begin searching for free
blocks to discard. The default value is zero, starting at the beginning of
the filesystem.
- -l, --length length
- The number of bytes (after the starting point) to search for free blocks
to discard. If the specified value extends past the end of the filesystem,
fstrim will stop at the filesystem size boundary. The default value
extends to the end of the filesystem.
- -m, --minimum minimum-size
- Minimum contiguous free range to discard, in bytes. (This value is
internally rounded up to a multiple of the filesystem block size). Free
ranges smaller than this will be ignored. By increasing this value, the
fstrim operation will complete more quickly for filesystems with badly
fragmented freespace, although not all blocks will be discarded. Default
value is zero, discard every free block.
- -v, --verbose
- Verbose execution. With this option fstrim will output the number
of bytes passed from the filesystem down the block stack to the device for
potential discard. This number is a maximum discard amount from the
storage device's perspective, because FITRIM ioctl called repeated
will keep sending the same sectors for discard repeatedly.
fstrim will report the same potential discard bytes each time, but
only sectors which had been written to between the discards would actually
be discarded by the storage device. Further, the kernel block layer
reserves the right to adjust the discard ranges to fit raid stripe
geometry, non-trim capable devices in a LVM setup, etc. These reductions
would not be reflected in fstrim_range.len (the --length
option).
- -V, --version
- Display version information and exit.
- -h, --help
- Display help text and exit.
RETURN CODES¶
- 0
- success
- 1
- failure
- 32
- all failed
- 64
- some filesystem discards have succeeded, some failed
The command
fstrim --all returns 0 (all succeeded), 32 (all failed) or 64
(some failed, some succeeded).
AUTHOR¶
Lukas Czerner <lczerner@redhat.com>
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
SEE ALSO¶
mount(8)
AVAILABILITY¶
The fstrim command is part of the util-linux package and is available from
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.