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1'\" te
2.\" Copyright (c) 2007, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
d96eb2b1 3.\" Copyright 2011 Nexenta Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
f3a7f661 4.\" Copyright (c) 2013 by Delphix. All rights reserved.
df831108 5.\" Copyright (c) 2012 Cyril Plisko. All Rights Reserved.
9ae529ec
CS
6.\" The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development
7.\" and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except
8.\" in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy of the license at
9.\" usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing.
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15.\" CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your
16.\" own identifying information:
17.\" Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
6a107f41 18.TH zpool 8 "May 11, 2016" "ZFS pool 28, filesystem 5" "System Administration Commands"
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19.SH NAME
20zpool \- configures ZFS storage pools
21.SH SYNOPSIS
22.LP
23.nf
24\fBzpool\fR [\fB-?\fR]
25.fi
26
27.LP
28.nf
a77f29f9 29\fBzpool add\fR [\fB-fgLnP\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIvdev\fR ...
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30.fi
31
32.LP
33.nf
df831108 34\fBzpool attach\fR [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR \fInew_device\fR
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35.fi
36
37.LP
38.nf
39\fBzpool clear\fR \fIpool\fR [\fIdevice\fR]
40.fi
41
42.LP
43.nf
e4010f27 44\fBzpool create\fR [\fB-fnd\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] ... [\fB-o\fR feature@\fIfeature=value\fR]
45 ... [\fB-O\fR \fIfile-system-property=value\fR] ... [\fB-m\fR \fImountpoint\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR]
46 ... [\fB-t\fR \fItname\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIvdev\fR ...
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47.fi
48
49.LP
50.nf
51\fBzpool destroy\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fIpool\fR
52.fi
53
54.LP
55.nf
56\fBzpool detach\fR \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR
57.fi
58
d050c627
TF
59.LP
60.nf
61\fBzpool events\fR [\fB-vHfc\fR] [\fIpool\fR] ...
62.fi
63
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64.LP
65.nf
859735c0 66\fBzpool export\fR [\fB-a\fR] [\fB-f\fR] \fIpool\fR ...
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67.fi
68
69.LP
70.nf
2a8b84b7 71\fBzpool get\fR [\fB-Hp\fR] [\fB-o \fR\fIfield\fR[,...]] "\fIall\fR" | \fIproperty\fR[,...] \fIpool\fR ...
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72.fi
73
74.LP
75.nf
76\fBzpool history\fR [\fB-il\fR] [\fIpool\fR] ...
77.fi
78
79.LP
80.nf
81\fBzpool import\fR [\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR] [\fB-D\fR]
82.fi
83
84.LP
85.nf
7f9d9946 86\fBzpool import\fR [\fB-o \fImntopts\fR\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] ... [\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR | \fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR]
7d11e37e 87 [\fB-D\fR] [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-m\fR] [\fB-N\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR] [\fB-F\fR [\fB-n\fR] [\fB-X\fR\] [\fB-T\fR\]] [\fB-s\fR] \fB-a\fR
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88.fi
89
90.LP
91.nf
92\fBzpool import\fR [\fB-o \fImntopts\fR\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] ... [\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR | \fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR]
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93 [\fB-D\fR] [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-m\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR] [\fB-F\fR [\fB-n\fR] [\fB-X\fR] [\fB-T\fR\]] [\fB-t\fR]] [\fB-s\fR]
94 \fIpool\fR | \fIid\fR [\fInewpool\fR]
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95.fi
96
97.LP
98.nf
d6418de0 99\fB\fBzpool iostat\fR [[[\fB-c\fR \fBSCRIPT\fR] [\fB-lq\fR]] | \fB-rw\fR] [\fB-T\fR \fBd\fR | \fBu\fR] [\fB-ghHLpPvy\fR]
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100 [[\fIpool\fR ...]|[\fIpool vdev\fR ...]|[\fIvdev\fR ...]] [\fIinterval\fR[\fIcount\fR]]\fR
101
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102.fi
103
131cc95c
DK
104.LP
105.nf
106\fBzpool labelclear\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fIdevice\fR
107.fi
108
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109.LP
110.nf
2a8b84b7 111\fBzpool list\fR [\fB-T\fR d | u ] [\fB-HgLpPv\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR[,...]] [\fIpool\fR] ...
2e2ddc30 112 [\fIinterval\fR[\fIcount\fR]]
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113.fi
114
115.LP
116.nf
117\fBzpool offline\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR ...
118.fi
119
120.LP
121.nf
122\fBzpool online\fR \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR ...
123.fi
124
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GA
125.LP
126.nf
127\fBzpool reguid\fR \fIpool\fR
128.fi
129
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GW
130.LP
131.nf
132\fBzpool reopen\fR \fIpool\fR
133.fi
134
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135.LP
136.nf
137\fBzpool remove\fR \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR ...
138.fi
139
140.LP
141.nf
628668a3 142\fBzpool replace\fR [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR [\fInew_device\fR]
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143.fi
144
145.LP
146.nf
147\fBzpool scrub\fR [\fB-s\fR] \fIpool\fR ...
148.fi
149
150.LP
151.nf
152\fBzpool set\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR \fIpool\fR
153.fi
154
fb827006
SB
155.LP
156.nf
a77f29f9 157\fBzpool split\fR [\fB-gLnP\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIaltroot\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fInewpool\fR [\fIdevice\fR ...]
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158.fi
159
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160.LP
161.nf
d6418de0 162\fBzpool status\fR [\fB-c\fR \fBSCRIPT\fR] [\fB-gLPvxD\fR] [\fB-T\fR d | u] [\fIpool\fR] ... [\fIinterval\fR [\fIcount\fR]]
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163.fi
164
165.LP
166.nf
6b4e21c6 167\fBzpool upgrade\fR
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168.fi
169
170.LP
171.nf
172\fBzpool upgrade\fR \fB-v\fR
173.fi
174
175.LP
176.nf
177\fBzpool upgrade\fR [\fB-V\fR \fIversion\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIpool\fR ...
178.fi
179
180.SH DESCRIPTION
181.sp
182.LP
183The \fBzpool\fR command configures \fBZFS\fR storage pools. A storage pool is a collection of devices that provides physical storage and data replication for \fBZFS\fR datasets.
184.sp
185.LP
2d1b7b0b 186All datasets within a storage pool share the same space. See \fBzfs\fR(8) for information on managing datasets.
db4ed565 187.SS "Virtual Devices (vdevs)"
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188.sp
189.LP
190A "virtual device" describes a single device or a collection of devices organized according to certain performance and fault characteristics. The following virtual devices are supported:
191.sp
192.ne 2
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193.na
194\fB\fBdisk\fR\fR
195.ad
196.RS 10n
25d4782b 197A block device, typically located under \fB/dev\fR. \fBZFS\fR can use individual partitions, though the recommended mode of operation is to use whole disks. A disk can be specified by a full path, or it can be a shorthand name (the relative portion of the path under "/dev"). For example, "sda" is equivalent to "/dev/sda". A whole disk can be specified by omitting the partition designation. When given a whole disk, \fBZFS\fR automatically labels the disk, if necessary.
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198.RE
199
200.sp
201.ne 2
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202.na
203\fB\fBfile\fR\fR
204.ad
205.RS 10n
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206A regular file. The use of files as a backing store is strongly discouraged. It is designed primarily for experimental purposes, as the fault tolerance of a file is only as good as the file system of which it is a part. A file must be specified by a full path.
207.RE
208
209.sp
210.ne 2
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211.na
212\fB\fBmirror\fR\fR
213.ad
214.RS 10n
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215A mirror of two or more devices. Data is replicated in an identical fashion across all components of a mirror. A mirror with \fIN\fR disks of size \fIX\fR can hold \fIX\fR bytes and can withstand (\fIN-1\fR) devices failing before data integrity is compromised.
216.RE
217
218.sp
219.ne 2
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220.na
221\fB\fBraidz\fR\fR
222.ad
223.br
224.na
225\fB\fBraidz1\fR\fR
226.ad
227.br
228.na
229\fB\fBraidz2\fR\fR
230.ad
231.br
232.na
233\fB\fBraidz3\fR\fR
234.ad
235.RS 10n
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236A variation on \fBRAID-5\fR that allows for better distribution of parity and eliminates the "\fBRAID-5\fR write hole" (in which data and parity become inconsistent after a power loss). Data and parity is striped across all disks within a \fBraidz\fR group.
237.sp
238A \fBraidz\fR group can have single-, double- , or triple parity, meaning that the \fBraidz\fR group can sustain one, two, or three failures, respectively, without losing any data. The \fBraidz1\fR \fBvdev\fR type specifies a single-parity \fBraidz\fR group; the \fBraidz2\fR \fBvdev\fR type specifies a double-parity \fBraidz\fR group; and the \fBraidz3\fR \fBvdev\fR type specifies a triple-parity \fBraidz\fR group. The \fBraidz\fR \fBvdev\fR type is an alias for \fBraidz1\fR.
239.sp
240A \fBraidz\fR group with \fIN\fR disks of size \fIX\fR with \fIP\fR parity disks can hold approximately (\fIN-P\fR)*\fIX\fR bytes and can withstand \fIP\fR device(s) failing before data integrity is compromised. The minimum number of devices in a \fBraidz\fR group is one more than the number of parity disks. The recommended number is between 3 and 9 to help increase performance.
241.RE
242
243.sp
244.ne 2
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245.na
246\fB\fBspare\fR\fR
247.ad
248.RS 10n
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249A special pseudo-\fBvdev\fR which keeps track of available hot spares for a pool. For more information, see the "Hot Spares" section.
250.RE
251
252.sp
253.ne 2
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254.na
255\fB\fBlog\fR\fR
256.ad
257.RS 10n
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258A separate-intent log device. If more than one log device is specified, then writes are load-balanced between devices. Log devices can be mirrored. However, \fBraidz\fR \fBvdev\fR types are not supported for the intent log. For more information, see the "Intent Log" section.
259.RE
260
261.sp
262.ne 2
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263.na
264\fB\fBcache\fR\fR
265.ad
266.RS 10n
15313c5e 267A device used to cache storage pool data. A cache device cannot be configured as a mirror or \fBraidz\fR group. For more information, see the "Cache Devices" section.
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268.RE
269
270.sp
271.LP
272Virtual devices cannot be nested, so a mirror or \fBraidz\fR virtual device can only contain files or disks. Mirrors of mirrors (or other combinations) are not allowed.
273.sp
274.LP
275A pool can have any number of virtual devices at the top of the configuration (known as "root vdevs"). Data is dynamically distributed across all top-level devices to balance data among devices. As new virtual devices are added, \fBZFS\fR automatically places data on the newly available devices.
276.sp
277.LP
278Virtual devices are specified one at a time on the command line, separated by whitespace. The keywords "mirror" and "raidz" are used to distinguish where a group ends and another begins. For example, the following creates two root vdevs, each a mirror of two disks:
279.sp
280.in +2
281.nf
54e5f226 282# \fBzpool create mypool mirror sda sdb mirror sdc sdd\fR
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283.fi
284.in -2
285.sp
286
287.SS "Device Failure and Recovery"
288.sp
289.LP
290\fBZFS\fR supports a rich set of mechanisms for handling device failure and data corruption. All metadata and data is checksummed, and \fBZFS\fR automatically repairs bad data from a good copy when corruption is detected.
291.sp
292.LP
293In order to take advantage of these features, a pool must make use of some form of redundancy, using either mirrored or \fBraidz\fR groups. While \fBZFS\fR supports running in a non-redundant configuration, where each root vdev is simply a disk or file, this is strongly discouraged. A single case of bit corruption can render some or all of your data unavailable.
294.sp
295.LP
6b4e21c6 296A pool's health status is described by one of three states: online, degraded, or faulted. An online pool has all devices operating normally. A degraded pool is one in which one or more devices have failed, but the data is still available due to a redundant configuration. A faulted pool has corrupted metadata, or one or more faulted devices, and insufficient replicas to continue functioning.
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297.sp
298.LP
299The health of the top-level vdev, such as mirror or \fBraidz\fR device, is potentially impacted by the state of its associated vdevs, or component devices. A top-level vdev or component device is in one of the following states:
300.sp
301.ne 2
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302.na
303\fB\fBDEGRADED\fR\fR
304.ad
305.RS 12n
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306One or more top-level vdevs is in the degraded state because one or more component devices are offline. Sufficient replicas exist to continue functioning.
307.sp
308One or more component devices is in the degraded or faulted state, but sufficient replicas exist to continue functioning. The underlying conditions are as follows:
309.RS +4
310.TP
311.ie t \(bu
312.el o
313The number of checksum errors exceeds acceptable levels and the device is degraded as an indication that something may be wrong. \fBZFS\fR continues to use the device as necessary.
314.RE
315.RS +4
316.TP
317.ie t \(bu
318.el o
319The number of I/O errors exceeds acceptable levels. The device could not be marked as faulted because there are insufficient replicas to continue functioning.
320.RE
321.RE
322
323.sp
324.ne 2
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325.na
326\fB\fBFAULTED\fR\fR
327.ad
328.RS 12n
6b4e21c6 329One or more top-level vdevs is in the faulted state because one or more component devices are offline. Insufficient replicas exist to continue functioning.
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330.sp
331One or more component devices is in the faulted state, and insufficient replicas exist to continue functioning. The underlying conditions are as follows:
332.RS +4
333.TP
334.ie t \(bu
335.el o
6b4e21c6 336The device could be opened, but the contents did not match expected values.
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337.RE
338.RS +4
339.TP
340.ie t \(bu
341.el o
342The number of I/O errors exceeds acceptable levels and the device is faulted to prevent further use of the device.
343.RE
344.RE
345
346.sp
347.ne 2
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348.na
349\fB\fBOFFLINE\fR\fR
350.ad
351.RS 12n
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352The device was explicitly taken offline by the "\fBzpool offline\fR" command.
353.RE
354
355.sp
356.ne 2
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357.na
358\fB\fBONLINE\fR\fR
359.ad
360.RS 12n
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361The device is online and functioning.
362.RE
363
364.sp
365.ne 2
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366.na
367\fB\fBREMOVED\fR\fR
368.ad
369.RS 12n
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370The device was physically removed while the system was running. Device removal detection is hardware-dependent and may not be supported on all platforms.
371.RE
372
373.sp
374.ne 2
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375.na
376\fB\fBUNAVAIL\fR\fR
377.ad
378.RS 12n
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379The device could not be opened. If a pool is imported when a device was unavailable, then the device will be identified by a unique identifier instead of its path since the path was never correct in the first place.
380.RE
381
382.sp
383.LP
384If a device is removed and later re-attached to the system, \fBZFS\fR attempts to put the device online automatically. Device attach detection is hardware-dependent and might not be supported on all platforms.
385.SS "Hot Spares"
386.sp
387.LP
6b4e21c6 388\fBZFS\fR allows devices to be associated with pools as "hot spares". These devices are not actively used in the pool, but when an active device fails, it is automatically replaced by a hot spare. To create a pool with hot spares, specify a "spare" \fBvdev\fR with any number of devices. For example,
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389.sp
390.in +2
391.nf
54e5f226 392# zpool create pool mirror sda sdb spare sdc sdd
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393.fi
394.in -2
395.sp
396
397.sp
398.LP
0d122e21 399Spares can be shared across multiple pools, and can be added with the "\fBzpool add\fR" command and removed with the "\fBzpool remove\fR" command. Once a spare replacement is initiated, a new "spare" \fBvdev\fR is created within the configuration that will remain there until the original device is replaced. At this point, the hot spare becomes available again.
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400.sp
401.LP
402If a pool has a shared spare that is currently being used, the pool can not be exported since other pools may use this shared spare, which may lead to potential data corruption.
403.sp
404.LP
405An in-progress spare replacement can be cancelled by detaching the hot spare. If the original faulted device is detached, then the hot spare assumes its place in the configuration, and is removed from the spare list of all active pools.
406.sp
407.LP
408Spares cannot replace log devices.
409.SS "Intent Log"
410.sp
411.LP
412The \fBZFS\fR Intent Log (\fBZIL\fR) satisfies \fBPOSIX\fR requirements for synchronous transactions. For instance, databases often require their transactions to be on stable storage devices when returning from a system call. \fBNFS\fR and other applications can also use \fBfsync\fR() to ensure data stability. By default, the intent log is allocated from blocks within the main pool. However, it might be possible to get better performance using separate intent log devices such as \fBNVRAM\fR or a dedicated disk. For example:
413.sp
414.in +2
415.nf
54e5f226 416\fB# zpool create pool sda sdb log sdc\fR
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417.fi
418.in -2
419.sp
420
421.sp
422.LP
423Multiple log devices can also be specified, and they can be mirrored. See the EXAMPLES section for an example of mirroring multiple log devices.
424.sp
425.LP
426Log devices can be added, replaced, attached, detached, and imported and exported as part of the larger pool. Mirrored log devices can be removed by specifying the top-level mirror for the log.
427.SS "Cache Devices"
428.sp
429.LP
430Devices can be added to a storage pool as "cache devices." These devices provide an additional layer of caching between main memory and disk. For read-heavy workloads, where the working set size is much larger than what can be cached in main memory, using cache devices allow much more of this working set to be served from low latency media. Using cache devices provides the greatest performance improvement for random read-workloads of mostly static content.
431.sp
432.LP
433To create a pool with cache devices, specify a "cache" \fBvdev\fR with any number of devices. For example:
434.sp
435.in +2
436.nf
54e5f226 437\fB# zpool create pool sda sdb cache sdc sdd\fR
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438.fi
439.in -2
440.sp
441
442.sp
443.LP
444Cache devices cannot be mirrored or part of a \fBraidz\fR configuration. If a read error is encountered on a cache device, that read \fBI/O\fR is reissued to the original storage pool device, which might be part of a mirrored or \fBraidz\fR configuration.
445.sp
446.LP
447The content of the cache devices is considered volatile, as is the case with other system caches.
448.SS "Properties"
449.sp
450.LP
451Each pool has several properties associated with it. Some properties are read-only statistics while others are configurable and change the behavior of the pool. The following are read-only properties:
452.sp
453.ne 2
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454.na
455\fB\fBavailable\fR\fR
456.ad
457.RS 20n
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458Amount of storage available within the pool. This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, "avail".
459.RE
460
461.sp
462.ne 2
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BB
463.na
464\fB\fBcapacity\fR\fR
465.ad
466.RS 20n
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467Percentage of pool space used. This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, "cap".
468.RE
469
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DM
470.sp
471.ne 2
d96eb2b1 472.na
9ae529ec 473\fB\fBexpandsize\fR\fR
d96eb2b1
DM
474.ad
475.RS 20n
9ae529ec
CS
476Amount of uninitialized space within the pool or device that can be used to
477increase the total capacity of the pool. Uninitialized space consists of
478any space on an EFI labeled vdev which has not been brought online
479(i.e. zpool online -e). This space occurs when a LUN is dynamically expanded.
d96eb2b1
DM
480.RE
481
f3a7f661
GW
482.sp
483.ne 2
f3a7f661
GW
484.na
485\fB\fBfragmentation\fR\fR
486.ad
487.RS 20n
f3a7f661
GW
488The amount of fragmentation in the pool.
489.RE
490
058ac9ba
BB
491.sp
492.ne 2
058ac9ba 493.na
9ae529ec 494\fB\fBfree\fR\fR
1bd201e7
CS
495.ad
496.RS 20n
9ae529ec
CS
497The amount of free space available in the pool.
498.RE
499
500.sp
501.ne 2
502.na
503\fB\fBfreeing\fR\fR
504.ad
505.RS 20n
506After a file system or snapshot is destroyed, the space it was using is
507returned to the pool asynchronously. \fB\fBfreeing\fR\fR is the amount of
508space remaining to be reclaimed. Over time \fB\fBfreeing\fR\fR will decrease
509while \fB\fBfree\fR\fR increases.
1bd201e7
CS
510.RE
511
512.sp
513.ne 2
514.na
058ac9ba
BB
515\fB\fBhealth\fR\fR
516.ad
517.RS 20n
058ac9ba
BB
518The current health of the pool. Health can be "\fBONLINE\fR", "\fBDEGRADED\fR", "\fBFAULTED\fR", " \fBOFFLINE\fR", "\fBREMOVED\fR", or "\fBUNAVAIL\fR".
519.RE
520
521.sp
522.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
523.na
524\fB\fBguid\fR\fR
525.ad
526.RS 20n
058ac9ba
BB
527A unique identifier for the pool.
528.RE
529
530.sp
531.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
532.na
533\fB\fBsize\fR\fR
534.ad
535.RS 20n
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BB
536Total size of the storage pool.
537.RE
538
9ae529ec
CS
539.sp
540.ne 2
541.na
542\fB\fBunsupported@\fR\fIfeature_guid\fR\fR
543.ad
544.RS 20n
1567e075 545.sp
9ae529ec
CS
546Information about unsupported features that are enabled on the pool. See
547\fBzpool-features\fR(5) for details.
548.RE
549
058ac9ba
BB
550.sp
551.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
552.na
553\fB\fBused\fR\fR
554.ad
555.RS 20n
058ac9ba
BB
556Amount of storage space used within the pool.
557.RE
558
559.sp
560.LP
9ae529ec 561The space usage properties report actual physical space available to the storage pool. The physical space can be different from the total amount of space that any contained datasets can actually use. The amount of space used in a \fBraidz\fR configuration depends on the characteristics of the data being written. In addition, \fBZFS\fR reserves some space for internal accounting that the \fBzfs\fR(8) command takes into account, but the \fBzpool\fR command does not. For non-full pools of a reasonable size, these effects should be invisible. For small pools, or pools that are close to being completely full, these discrepancies may become more noticeable.
df30f566
CK
562
563.sp
564.LP
565The following property can be set at creation time:
566.sp
567.ne 2
df30f566 568.na
8fd888ba 569\fB\fBashift\fR=\fIashift\fR\fR
df30f566
CK
570.ad
571.sp .6
572.RS 4n
8fd888ba 573Pool sector size exponent, to the power of 2 (internally referred to as "ashift"). Values from 9 to 13, inclusive, are valid; also, the special value 0 (the default) means to auto-detect using the kernel's block layer and a ZFS internal exception list. I/O operations will be aligned to the specified size boundaries. Additionally, the minimum (disk) write size will be set to the specified size, so this represents a space vs. performance trade-off. The typical case for setting this property is when performance is important and the underlying disks use 4KiB sectors but report 512B sectors to the OS (for compatibility reasons); in that case, set \fBashift=12\fR (which is 1<<12 = 4096).
df30f566
CK
574.LP
575For optimal performance, the pool sector size should be greater than or equal to the sector size of the underlying disks. Since the property cannot be changed after pool creation, if in a given pool, you \fIever\fR want to use drives that \fIreport\fR 4KiB sectors, you must set \fBashift=12\fR at pool creation time.
022f7bf6
TF
576.LP
577Keep in mind is that the \fBashift\fR is \fIvdev\fR specific and is not a \fIpool\fR global. This means that when adding new vdevs to an existing pool you may need to specify the \fBashift\fR.
df30f566
CK
578.RE
579
058ac9ba
BB
580.sp
581.LP
582The following property can be set at creation time and import time:
583.sp
584.ne 2
058ac9ba 585.na
d919da83 586\fB\fBaltroot\fR=(unset) | \fIpath\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
587.ad
588.sp .6
589.RS 4n
57746821 590Alternate root directory. If set, this directory is prepended to any mount points within the pool. This can be used when examining an unknown pool where the mount points cannot be trusted, or in an alternate boot environment, where the typical paths are not valid. \fBaltroot\fR is not a persistent property. It is valid only while the system is up. Setting \fBaltroot\fR defaults to using \fBcachefile\fR=none, though this may be overridden using an explicit setting.
058ac9ba
BB
591.RE
592
52dd454d
TC
593.sp
594.LP
595The following property can only be set at import time:
596.sp
597.ne 2
52dd454d 598.na
d919da83 599\fB\fBreadonly\fR=\fBoff\fR | \fBon\fR\fR
52dd454d
TC
600.ad
601.sp .6
602.RS 4n
603If set to \fBon\fR, the pool will be imported in read-only mode: Synchronous data in the intent log will not be accessible, properties of the pool can not be changed and datasets of the pool can only be mounted read-only. The \fBreadonly\fR property of its datasets will be implicitly set to \fBon\fR.
604
605It can also be specified by its column name of \fBrdonly\fR.
606
607To write to a read-only pool, a export and import of the pool is required.
608.RE
609
058ac9ba
BB
610.sp
611.LP
612The following properties can be set at creation time and import time, and later changed with the \fBzpool set\fR command:
613.sp
614.ne 2
058ac9ba 615.na
d919da83 616\fB\fBautoexpand\fR=\fBoff\fR | \fBon\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
617.ad
618.sp .6
619.RS 4n
620Controls automatic pool expansion when the underlying LUN is grown. If set to \fBon\fR, the pool will be resized according to the size of the expanded device. If the device is part of a mirror or \fBraidz\fR then all devices within that mirror/\fBraidz\fR group must be expanded before the new space is made available to the pool. The default behavior is \fBoff\fR. This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, \fBexpand\fR.
621.RE
622
623.sp
624.ne 2
058ac9ba 625.na
d919da83 626\fB\fBautoreplace\fR=\fBoff\fR | \fBon\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
627.ad
628.sp .6
629.RS 4n
6078881a 630Controls automatic device replacement. If set to "\fBoff\fR", device replacement must be initiated by the administrator by using the "\fBzpool replace\fR" command. If set to "\fBon\fR", any new device, found in the same physical location as a device that previously belonged to the pool, is automatically formatted and replaced. The default behavior is "\fBoff\fR". This property can also be referred to by its shortened column name, "replace". Autoreplace can also be used with virtual disks (like device mapper) provided that you use the /dev/disk/by-vdev paths setup by vdev_id.conf. See the vdev_id.conf man page for more details. Autoreplace and autoonline require libudev to be present at build time. If you're using device mapper disks, you must have libdevmapper installed at build time as well.
058ac9ba
BB
631.RE
632
633.sp
634.ne 2
058ac9ba 635.na
d919da83 636\fB\fBbootfs\fR=(unset) | \fIpool\fR/\fIdataset\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
637.ad
638.sp .6
639.RS 4n
6a107f41 640Identifies the default bootable dataset for the root pool. This property is expected to be set mainly by the installation and upgrade programs. Not all Linux distribution boot processes use the \fBbootfs\fR property.
058ac9ba
BB
641.RE
642
643.sp
644.ne 2
058ac9ba 645.na
9ef3906a 646\fB\fBcachefile\fR=\fBnone\fR | \fIpath\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
647.ad
648.sp .6
649.RS 4n
6b4e21c6 650Controls the location of where the pool configuration is cached. Discovering all pools on system startup requires a cached copy of the configuration data that is stored on the root file system. All pools in this cache are automatically imported when the system boots. Some environments, such as install and clustering, need to cache this information in a different location so that pools are not automatically imported. Setting this property caches the pool configuration in a different location that can later be imported with "\fBzpool import -c\fR". Setting it to the special value "\fBnone\fR" creates a temporary pool that is never cached, and the special value \fB\&''\fR (empty string) uses the default location.
058ac9ba
BB
651.sp
652Multiple pools can share the same cache file. Because the kernel destroys and recreates this file when pools are added and removed, care should be taken when attempting to access this file. When the last pool using a \fBcachefile\fR is exported or destroyed, the file is removed.
653.RE
654
9ae529ec
CS
655.sp
656.ne 2
9ae529ec 657.na
d919da83 658\fB\fBcomment\fR=(unset) | \fB\fItext\fR\fR
9ae529ec
CS
659.ad
660.sp .6
661.RS 4n
662A text string consisting of printable ASCII characters that will be stored such that it is available even if the pool becomes faulted. An administrator can provide additional information about a pool using this property.
663.RE
664
b1d13a60
TC
665.sp
666.ne 2
b1d13a60
TC
667.na
668\fB\fBdedupditto\fR=\fB\fInumber\fR\fR
669.ad
670.sp .6
671.RS 4n
8c5edae9 672Threshold for the number of block ditto copies. If the reference count for a deduplicated block increases above this number, a new ditto copy of this block is automatically stored. The default setting is 0 which causes no ditto copies to be created for deduplicated blocks. The minimum valid nonzero setting is 100.
b1d13a60
TC
673.RE
674
058ac9ba
BB
675.sp
676.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
677.na
678\fB\fBdelegation\fR=\fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR\fR
679.ad
680.sp .6
681.RS 4n
2d1b7b0b 682Controls whether a non-privileged user is granted access based on the dataset permissions defined on the dataset. See \fBzfs\fR(8) for more information on \fBZFS\fR delegated administration.
058ac9ba
BB
683.RE
684
685.sp
686.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
687.na
688\fB\fBfailmode\fR=\fBwait\fR | \fBcontinue\fR | \fBpanic\fR\fR
689.ad
690.sp .6
691.RS 4n
692Controls the system behavior in the event of catastrophic pool failure. This condition is typically a result of a loss of connectivity to the underlying storage device(s) or a failure of all devices within the pool. The behavior of such an event is determined as follows:
693.sp
694.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
695.na
696\fB\fBwait\fR\fR
697.ad
698.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
699Blocks all \fBI/O\fR access until the device connectivity is recovered and the errors are cleared. This is the default behavior.
700.RE
701
702.sp
703.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
704.na
705\fB\fBcontinue\fR\fR
706.ad
707.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
708Returns \fBEIO\fR to any new write \fBI/O\fR requests but allows reads to any of the remaining healthy devices. Any write requests that have yet to be committed to disk would be blocked.
709.RE
710
711.sp
712.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
713.na
714\fB\fBpanic\fR\fR
715.ad
716.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
717Prints out a message to the console and generates a system crash dump.
718.RE
719
720.RE
721
9ae529ec
CS
722.sp
723.ne 2
724.na
725\fB\fBfeature@\fR\fIfeature_name\fR=\fBenabled\fR\fR
726.ad
727.RS 4n
728The value of this property is the current state of \fIfeature_name\fR. The
729only valid value when setting this property is \fBenabled\fR which moves
730\fIfeature_name\fR to the enabled state. See \fBzpool-features\fR(5) for
731details on feature states.
732.RE
733
058ac9ba
BB
734.sp
735.ne 2
058ac9ba 736.na
8fd888ba 737\fB\fBlistsnapshots\fR=on | off\fR
058ac9ba
BB
738.ad
739.sp .6
740.RS 4n
741Controls whether information about snapshots associated with this pool is output when "\fBzfs list\fR" is run without the \fB-t\fR option. The default value is "off".
8fd888ba
RL
742.sp
743This property can also be referred to by its shortened name, \fBlistsnaps\fR.
058ac9ba
BB
744.RE
745
746.sp
747.ne 2
058ac9ba 748.na
d919da83 749\fB\fBversion\fR=(unset) | \fIversion\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
750.ad
751.sp .6
752.RS 4n
9ae529ec 753The current on-disk version of the pool. This can be increased, but never decreased. The preferred method of updating pools is with the "\fBzpool upgrade\fR" command, though this property can be used when a specific version is needed for backwards compatibility. Once feature flags are enabled on a pool this property will no longer have a value.
058ac9ba
BB
754.RE
755
756.SS "Subcommands"
757.sp
758.LP
759All subcommands that modify state are logged persistently to the pool in their original form.
760.sp
761.LP
762The \fBzpool\fR command provides subcommands to create and destroy storage pools, add capacity to storage pools, and provide information about the storage pools. The following subcommands are supported:
763.sp
764.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
765.na
766\fB\fBzpool\fR \fB-?\fR\fR
767.ad
768.sp .6
769.RS 4n
770Displays a help message.
771.RE
772
773.sp
774.ne 2
058ac9ba 775.na
a77f29f9 776\fB\fBzpool add\fR [\fB-fgLnP\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIvdev\fR ...\fR
058ac9ba
BB
777.ad
778.sp .6
779.RS 4n
780Adds the specified virtual devices to the given pool. The \fIvdev\fR specification is described in the "Virtual Devices" section. The behavior of the \fB-f\fR option, and the device checks performed are described in the "zpool create" subcommand.
781.sp
782.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
783.na
784\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
785.ad
786.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
787Forces use of \fBvdev\fRs, even if they appear in use or specify a conflicting replication level. Not all devices can be overridden in this manner.
788.RE
789
d2f3e292
RY
790.sp
791.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
792.na
793\fB\fB-g\fR\fR
794.ad
795.RS 6n
d2f3e292
RY
796Display vdev GUIDs instead of the normal device names. These GUIDs can be used in place of device names for the zpool detach/offline/remove/replace commands.
797.RE
798
799.sp
800.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
801.na
802\fB\fB-L\fR\fR
803.ad
804.RS 6n
d2f3e292
RY
805Display real paths for vdevs resolving all symbolic links. This can be used to look up the current block device name regardless of the /dev/disk/ path used to open it.
806.RE
807
058ac9ba
BB
808.sp
809.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
810.na
811\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
812.ad
813.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
814Displays the configuration that would be used without actually adding the \fBvdev\fRs. The actual pool creation can still fail due to insufficient privileges or device sharing.
815.RE
816
d2f3e292
RY
817.sp
818.ne 2
d2f3e292 819.na
a77f29f9 820\fB\fB-P\fR\fR
d2f3e292
RY
821.ad
822.RS 6n
d2f3e292
RY
823Display full paths for vdevs instead of only the last component of the path. This can be used in conjunction with the \fB-L\fR flag.
824.RE
825
df831108
CP
826.sp
827.ne 2
df831108
CP
828.na
829\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR
830.ad
831.sp .6
832.RS 4n
022f7bf6 833Sets the given pool properties. See the "Properties" section for a list of valid properties that can be set. The only property supported at the moment is \fBashift\fR. \fBDo note\fR that some properties (among them \fBashift\fR) are \fInot\fR inherited from a previous vdev. They are vdev specific, not pool specific.
df831108
CP
834.RE
835
058ac9ba
BB
836Do not add a disk that is currently configured as a quorum device to a zpool. After a disk is in the pool, that disk can then be configured as a quorum device.
837.RE
838
839.sp
840.ne 2
058ac9ba 841.na
df831108 842\fB\fBzpool attach\fR [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR \fInew_device\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
843.ad
844.sp .6
845.RS 4n
846Attaches \fInew_device\fR to an existing \fBzpool\fR device. The existing device cannot be part of a \fBraidz\fR configuration. If \fIdevice\fR is not currently part of a mirrored configuration, \fIdevice\fR automatically transforms into a two-way mirror of \fIdevice\fR and \fInew_device\fR. If \fIdevice\fR is part of a two-way mirror, attaching \fInew_device\fR creates a three-way mirror, and so on. In either case, \fInew_device\fR begins to resilver immediately.
847.sp
848.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
849.na
850\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
851.ad
852.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
853Forces use of \fInew_device\fR, even if its appears to be in use. Not all devices can be overridden in this manner.
854.RE
855
df831108
CP
856.sp
857.ne 2
df831108
CP
858.na
859\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR
860.ad
861.sp .6
862.RS 4n
863Sets the given pool properties. See the "Properties" section for a list of valid properties that can be set. The only property supported at the moment is "ashift".
864.RE
865
058ac9ba
BB
866.RE
867
868.sp
869.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
870.na
871\fB\fBzpool clear\fR \fIpool\fR [\fIdevice\fR] ...\fR
872.ad
873.sp .6
874.RS 4n
875Clears device errors in a pool. If no arguments are specified, all device errors within the pool are cleared. If one or more devices is specified, only those errors associated with the specified device or devices are cleared.
876.RE
877
878.sp
879.ne 2
058ac9ba 880.na
e4010f27 881\fB\fBzpool create\fR [\fB-fnd\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] ... [\fB-o\fR feature@\fIfeature=value\fR] ... [\fB-O\fR \fIfile-system-property=value\fR] ... [\fB-m\fR \fImountpoint\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR] [\fB-t\fR \fItname\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIvdev\fR ...\fR
058ac9ba
BB
882.ad
883.sp .6
884.RS 4n
e6101ea8 885Creates a new storage pool containing the virtual devices specified on the command line. The pool name must begin with a letter, and can only contain alphanumeric characters as well as underscore ("_"), dash ("-"), period ("."), colon (":"), and space (" "). The pool names "mirror", "raidz", "spare" and "log" are reserved, as are names beginning with the pattern "c[0-9]". The \fBvdev\fR specification is described in the "Virtual Devices" section.
058ac9ba
BB
886.sp
887The command verifies that each device specified is accessible and not currently in use by another subsystem. There are some uses, such as being currently mounted, or specified as the dedicated dump device, that prevents a device from ever being used by \fBZFS\fR. Other uses, such as having a preexisting \fBUFS\fR file system, can be overridden with the \fB-f\fR option.
888.sp
889The command also checks that the replication strategy for the pool is consistent. An attempt to combine redundant and non-redundant storage in a single pool, or to mix disks and files, results in an error unless \fB-f\fR is specified. The use of differently sized devices within a single \fBraidz\fR or mirror group is also flagged as an error unless \fB-f\fR is specified.
890.sp
891Unless the \fB-R\fR option is specified, the default mount point is "/\fIpool\fR". The mount point must not exist or must be empty, or else the root dataset cannot be mounted. This can be overridden with the \fB-m\fR option.
892.sp
9ae529ec
CS
893By default all supported features are enabled on the new pool unless the \fB-d\fR option is specified.
894.sp
058ac9ba 895.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
896.na
897\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
898.ad
899.sp .6
900.RS 4n
901Forces use of \fBvdev\fRs, even if they appear in use or specify a conflicting replication level. Not all devices can be overridden in this manner.
902.RE
903
904.sp
905.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
906.na
907\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
908.ad
909.sp .6
910.RS 4n
911Displays the configuration that would be used without actually creating the pool. The actual pool creation can still fail due to insufficient privileges or device sharing.
912.RE
913
914.sp
915.ne 2
058ac9ba 916.na
9ae529ec
CS
917\fB\fB-d\fR\fR
918.ad
919.sp .6
920.RS 4n
921Do not enable any features on the new pool. Individual features can be enabled by setting their corresponding properties to \fBenabled\fR with the \fB-o\fR option. See \fBzpool-features\fR(5) for details about feature properties.
922.RE
923
924.sp
925.ne 2
926.na
058ac9ba
BB
927\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] ...\fR
928.ad
929.sp .6
930.RS 4n
931Sets the given pool properties. See the "Properties" section for a list of valid properties that can be set.
932.RE
933
e4010f27 934.sp
935.ne 2
936.na
937\fB\fB-o\fR feature@\fIfeature=value\fR [\fB-o\fR feature@\fIfeature=value\fR] ...\fR
938.ad
939.sp .6
940.RS 4n
941Sets the given pool feature. See \fBzpool-features(5)\fR for a list of valid features that can be set.
942.sp
943Value can be either \fBdisabled\fR or \fBenabled\fR.
944.RE
945
058ac9ba
BB
946.sp
947.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
948.na
949\fB\fB-O\fR \fIfile-system-property=value\fR\fR
950.ad
951.br
952.na
953\fB[\fB-O\fR \fIfile-system-property=value\fR] ...\fR
954.ad
955.sp .6
956.RS 4n
2d1b7b0b 957Sets the given file system properties in the root file system of the pool. See the "Properties" section of \fBzfs\fR(8) for a list of valid properties that can be set.
058ac9ba
BB
958.RE
959
960.sp
961.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
962.na
963\fB\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR\fR
964.ad
965.sp .6
966.RS 4n
967Equivalent to "-o cachefile=none,altroot=\fIroot\fR"
968.RE
969
970.sp
971.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
972.na
973\fB\fB-m\fR \fImountpoint\fR\fR
974.ad
975.sp .6
976.RS 4n
2d1b7b0b 977Sets the mount point for the root dataset. The default mount point is "/\fIpool\fR" or "\fBaltroot\fR/\fIpool\fR" if \fBaltroot\fR is specified. The mount point must be an absolute path, "\fBlegacy\fR", or "\fBnone\fR". For more information on dataset mount points, see \fBzfs\fR(8).
058ac9ba
BB
978.RE
979
83e9986f
RY
980.sp
981.ne 2
83e9986f
RY
982.na
983\fB\fB-t\fR \fItname\fR\fR
984.ad
985.sp .6
986.RS 4n
987Sets the in-core pool name to "\fBtname\fR" while the on-disk name will be the name specified as the pool name "\fBpool\fR". This will set the default cachefile property to none. This is intended to handle name space collisions when creating pools for other systems, such as virtual machines or physical machines whose pools live on network block devices.
988.RE
989
058ac9ba
BB
990.RE
991
992.sp
993.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
994.na
995\fB\fBzpool destroy\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fIpool\fR\fR
996.ad
997.sp .6
998.RS 4n
999Destroys the given pool, freeing up any devices for other use. This command tries to unmount any active datasets before destroying the pool.
1000.sp
1001.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1002.na
1003\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1004.ad
1005.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
1006Forces any active datasets contained within the pool to be unmounted.
1007.RE
1008
1009.RE
1010
1011.sp
1012.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1013.na
1014\fB\fBzpool detach\fR \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR\fR
1015.ad
1016.sp .6
1017.RS 4n
65ee05ac 1018Detaches \fIdevice\fR from a mirror. The operation is refused if there are no other valid replicas of the data. If \fIdevice\fR may be re-added to the pool later on then consider the "\fBzpool offline\fR" command instead.
058ac9ba
BB
1019.RE
1020
859735c0
TF
1021.RE
1022
d050c627
TF
1023.sp
1024.ne 2
d050c627
TF
1025.na
1026\fBzpool events\fR [\fB-vHfc\fR] [\fIpool\fR] ...
1027.ad
1028.sp .6
1029.RS 4n
1030Description of the different events generated by the ZFS kernel modules. See \fBzfs-events\fR(5) for more information about the subclasses and event payloads that can be generated.
1031
1032.sp
1033.ne 2
d050c627
TF
1034.na
1035\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
1036.ad
1037.RS 6n
d050c627
TF
1038Get a full detail of the events and what information is available about it.
1039.RE
1040
1041.sp
1042.ne 2
d050c627
TF
1043.na
1044\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
1045.ad
1046.RS 6n
d050c627
TF
1047Scripted mode. Do not display headers, and separate fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary space.
1048.RE
1049
1050.sp
1051.ne 2
d050c627
TF
1052.na
1053\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1054.ad
1055.RS 6n
d050c627
TF
1056Follow mode.
1057.RE
1058
1059.sp
1060.ne 2
d050c627
TF
1061.na
1062\fB\fB-c\fR\fR
1063.ad
1064.RS 6n
d050c627
TF
1065Clear all previous events.
1066.RE
1067
1068.RE
1069
058ac9ba
BB
1070.sp
1071.ne 2
058ac9ba 1072.na
859735c0 1073\fB\fBzpool export\fR [\fB-a\fR] [\fB-f\fR] \fIpool\fR ...\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1074.ad
1075.sp .6
1076.RS 4n
1077Exports the given pools from the system. All devices are marked as exported, but are still considered in use by other subsystems. The devices can be moved between systems (even those of different endianness) and imported as long as a sufficient number of devices are present.
1078.sp
1079Before exporting the pool, all datasets within the pool are unmounted. A pool can not be exported if it has a shared spare that is currently being used.
1080.sp
25d4782b 1081For pools to be portable, you must give the \fBzpool\fR command whole disks, not just partitions, so that \fBZFS\fR can label the disks with portable \fBEFI\fR labels. Otherwise, disk drivers on platforms of different endianness will not recognize the disks.
859735c0
TF
1082.sp
1083.ne 2
859735c0
TF
1084.na
1085\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
1086.ad
1087.RS 6n
859735c0
TF
1088Exports all pools imported on the system.
1089.RE
1090
058ac9ba
BB
1091.sp
1092.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1093.na
1094\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1095.ad
1096.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
1097Forcefully unmount all datasets, using the "\fBunmount -f\fR" command.
1098.sp
1099This command will forcefully export the pool even if it has a shared spare that is currently being used. This may lead to potential data corruption.
1100.RE
1101
1102.RE
1103
1104.sp
1105.ne 2
058ac9ba 1106.na
2a8b84b7
AS
1107\fB\fBzpool get\fR [\fB-Hp\fR] [\fB-o \fR\fIfield\fR[,...]] "\fIall\fR" | \fIproperty\fR[,...]
1108\fIpool\fR ...\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1109.ad
1110.sp .6
1111.RS 4n
1112Retrieves the given list of properties (or all properties if "\fBall\fR" is used) for the specified storage pool(s). These properties are displayed with the following fields:
1113.sp
1114.in +2
1115.nf
2a8b84b7 1116 name Name of storage pool
058ac9ba
BB
1117 property Property name
1118 value Property value
1119 source Property source, either 'default' or 'local'.
1120.fi
1121.in -2
1122.sp
1123
1124See the "Properties" section for more information on the available pool properties.
2a8b84b7 1125
d65e7381
RE
1126.sp
1127.ne 2
d65e7381 1128.na
2a8b84b7 1129\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
d65e7381
RE
1130.ad
1131.RS 6n
2a8b84b7 1132Scripted mode. Do not display headers, and separate fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary space.
d65e7381
RE
1133.RE
1134
79eb71dc
TF
1135.sp
1136.ne 2
79eb71dc 1137.na
2a8b84b7 1138\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
79eb71dc
TF
1139.ad
1140.RS 6n
3491d6eb 1141Display numbers in parsable (exact) values.
79eb71dc
TF
1142.RE
1143
2a8b84b7
AS
1144.sp
1145.ne 2
2a8b84b7
AS
1146.na
1147\fB\fB-o\fR \fIfield\fR\fR
1148.ad
1149.RS 12n
2a8b84b7
AS
1150A comma-separated list of columns to display. \fBname,property,value,source\fR
1151is the default value.
1152.RE
058ac9ba
BB
1153.RE
1154
1155.sp
1156.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1157.na
1158\fB\fBzpool history\fR [\fB-il\fR] [\fIpool\fR] ...\fR
1159.ad
1160.sp .6
1161.RS 4n
1162Displays the command history of the specified pools or all pools if no pool is specified.
1163.sp
1164.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1165.na
1166\fB\fB-i\fR\fR
1167.ad
1168.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
1169Displays internally logged \fBZFS\fR events in addition to user initiated events.
1170.RE
1171
1172.sp
1173.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1174.na
1175\fB\fB-l\fR\fR
1176.ad
1177.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
1178Displays log records in long format, which in addition to standard format includes, the user name, the hostname, and the zone in which the operation was performed.
1179.RE
1180
1181.RE
1182
1183.sp
1184.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1185.na
1186\fB\fBzpool import\fR [\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR | \fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR] [\fB-D\fR]\fR
1187.ad
1188.sp .6
1189.RS 4n
6b4e21c6 1190Lists pools available to import. If the \fB-d\fR option is not specified, this command searches for devices in "/dev". The \fB-d\fR option can be specified multiple times, and all directories are searched. If the device appears to be part of an exported pool, this command displays a summary of the pool with the name of the pool, a numeric identifier, as well as the \fIvdev\fR layout and current health of the device for each device or file. Destroyed pools, pools that were previously destroyed with the "\fBzpool destroy\fR" command, are not listed unless the \fB-D\fR option is specified.
058ac9ba
BB
1191.sp
1192The numeric identifier is unique, and can be used instead of the pool name when multiple exported pools of the same name are available.
1193.sp
1194.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1195.na
1196\fB\fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR\fR
1197.ad
1198.RS 16n
058ac9ba
BB
1199Reads configuration from the given \fBcachefile\fR that was created with the "\fBcachefile\fR" pool property. This \fBcachefile\fR is used instead of searching for devices.
1200.RE
1201
1202.sp
1203.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1204.na
1205\fB\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR\fR
1206.ad
1207.RS 16n
6b4e21c6 1208Searches for devices or files in \fIdir\fR. The \fB-d\fR option can be specified multiple times.
058ac9ba
BB
1209.RE
1210
1211.sp
1212.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1213.na
1214\fB\fB-D\fR\fR
1215.ad
1216.RS 16n
058ac9ba
BB
1217Lists destroyed pools only.
1218.RE
1219
1220.RE
1221
1222.sp
1223.ne 2
058ac9ba 1224.na
7d11e37e 1225\fB\fBzpool import\fR [\fB-o\fR \fImntopts\fR] [ \fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... [\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR | \fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR] [\fB-D\fR] [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-m\fR] [\fB-N\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR] [\fB-F\fR [\fB-n\fR]] [\fB-s\fR] \fB-a\fR\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1226.ad
1227.sp .6
1228.RS 4n
1229Imports all pools found in the search directories. Identical to the previous command, except that all pools with a sufficient number of devices available are imported. Destroyed pools, pools that were previously destroyed with the "\fBzpool destroy\fR" command, will not be imported unless the \fB-D\fR option is specified.
1230.sp
1231.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1232.na
1233\fB\fB-o\fR \fImntopts\fR\fR
1234.ad
1235.RS 21n
2d1b7b0b 1236Comma-separated list of mount options to use when mounting datasets within the pool. See \fBzfs\fR(8) for a description of dataset properties and mount options.
058ac9ba
BB
1237.RE
1238
1239.sp
1240.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1241.na
1242\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR\fR
1243.ad
1244.RS 21n
058ac9ba
BB
1245Sets the specified property on the imported pool. See the "Properties" section for more information on the available pool properties.
1246.RE
1247
1248.sp
1249.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1250.na
1251\fB\fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR\fR
1252.ad
1253.RS 21n
058ac9ba
BB
1254Reads configuration from the given \fBcachefile\fR that was created with the "\fBcachefile\fR" pool property. This \fBcachefile\fR is used instead of searching for devices.
1255.RE
1256
1257.sp
1258.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1259.na
1260\fB\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR\fR
1261.ad
1262.RS 21n
058ac9ba
BB
1263Searches for devices or files in \fIdir\fR. The \fB-d\fR option can be specified multiple times. This option is incompatible with the \fB-c\fR option.
1264.RE
1265
1266.sp
1267.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1268.na
1269\fB\fB-D\fR\fR
1270.ad
1271.RS 21n
058ac9ba
BB
1272Imports destroyed pools only. The \fB-f\fR option is also required.
1273.RE
1274
1275.sp
1276.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1277.na
1278\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1279.ad
1280.RS 21n
058ac9ba
BB
1281Forces import, even if the pool appears to be potentially active.
1282.RE
1283
7f9d9946
BB
1284.sp
1285.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1286.na
1287\fB\fB-F\fR\fR
1288.ad
1289.RS 21n
1290Recovery mode for a non-importable pool. Attempt to return the pool to an importable state by discarding the last few transactions. Not all damaged pools can be recovered by using this option. If successful, the data from the discarded transactions is irretrievably lost. This option is ignored if the pool is importable or already imported.
1291.RE
1292
058ac9ba
BB
1293.sp
1294.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1295.na
1296\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
1297.ad
1298.RS 21n
6b4e21c6 1299Searches for and imports all pools found.
058ac9ba
BB
1300.RE
1301
7f9d9946
BB
1302.sp
1303.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1304.na
1305\fB\fB-m\fR\fR
1306.ad
1307.RS 21n
1308Allows a pool to import when there is a missing log device.
1309.RE
1310
058ac9ba
BB
1311.sp
1312.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1313.na
1314\fB\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR\fR
1315.ad
1316.RS 21n
058ac9ba
BB
1317Sets the "\fBcachefile\fR" property to "\fBnone\fR" and the "\fIaltroot\fR" property to "\fIroot\fR".
1318.RE
1319
7f9d9946
BB
1320.sp
1321.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1322.na
1323\fB\fB-N\fR\fR
1324.ad
1325.RS 21n
1326Import the pool without mounting any file systems.
1327.RE
1328
1329.sp
1330.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1331.na
1332\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
1333.ad
1334.RS 21n
1335Used with the \fB-F\fR recovery option. Determines whether a non-importable pool can be made importable again, but does not actually perform the pool recovery. For more details about pool recovery mode, see the \fB-F\fR option, above.
1336.RE
1337
21b446a7
TF
1338.sp
1339.ne 2
21b446a7
TF
1340.na
1341\fB\fB-X\fR\fR
1342.ad
1343.RS 21n
1344Used with the \fB-F\fR recovery option. Determines whether extreme measures to find a valid txg should take place. This allows the pool to be rolled back to a txg which is no longer guaranteed to be consistent. Pools imported at an inconsistent txg may contain uncorrectable checksum errors. For more details about pool recovery mode, see the \fB-F\fR option, above.
1345\fBWARNING\fR: This option can be extremely hazardous to the health of your pool and should only be used as a last resort.
1346.RE
1347
1348.sp
1349.ne 2
21b446a7
TF
1350.na
1351\fB\fB-T\fR\fR
1352.ad
1353.RS 21n
1354Specify the txg to use for rollback. Implies \fB-FX\fR. For more details about pool recovery mode, see the \fB-X\fR option, above.
1355\fBWARNING\fR: This option can be extremely hazardous to the health of your pool and should only be used as a last resort.
1356.RE
1357
7d11e37e
BB
1358.sp
1359.ne 2
7d11e37e
BB
1360.na
1361\fB\fB-s\fR
1362.ad
1363.RS 21n
7d11e37e
BB
1364Scan using the default search path, the libblkid cache will not be consulted. A custom search path may be specified by setting the \fBZPOOL_IMPORT_PATH\fR environment variable.
1365.RE
1366
058ac9ba
BB
1367.RE
1368
1369.sp
1370.ne 2
058ac9ba 1371.na
7d11e37e 1372\fB\fBzpool import\fR [\fB-o\fR \fImntopts\fR] [ \fB-o\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR] ... [\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR | \fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR] [\fB-D\fR] [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-m\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR] [\fB-F\fR [\fB-n\fR]] [\fB-t\fR]] [\fB-s\fR] \fIpool\fR | \fIid\fR [\fInewpool\fR]\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1373.ad
1374.sp .6
1375.RS 4n
1376Imports a specific pool. A pool can be identified by its name or the numeric identifier. If \fInewpool\fR is specified, the pool is imported using the name \fInewpool\fR. Otherwise, it is imported with the same name as its exported name.
1377.sp
1378If a device is removed from a system without running "\fBzpool export\fR" first, the device appears as potentially active. It cannot be determined if this was a failed export, or whether the device is really in use from another host. To import a pool in this state, the \fB-f\fR option is required.
1379.sp
1380.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1381.na
1382\fB\fB-o\fR \fImntopts\fR\fR
1383.ad
1384.sp .6
1385.RS 4n
2d1b7b0b 1386Comma-separated list of mount options to use when mounting datasets within the pool. See \fBzfs\fR(8) for a description of dataset properties and mount options.
058ac9ba
BB
1387.RE
1388
1389.sp
1390.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1391.na
1392\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR\fR
1393.ad
1394.sp .6
1395.RS 4n
1396Sets the specified property on the imported pool. See the "Properties" section for more information on the available pool properties.
1397.RE
1398
1399.sp
1400.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1401.na
1402\fB\fB-c\fR \fIcachefile\fR\fR
1403.ad
1404.sp .6
1405.RS 4n
1406Reads configuration from the given \fBcachefile\fR that was created with the "\fBcachefile\fR" pool property. This \fBcachefile\fR is used instead of searching for devices.
1407.RE
1408
1409.sp
1410.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1411.na
1412\fB\fB-d\fR \fIdir\fR\fR
1413.ad
1414.sp .6
1415.RS 4n
1416Searches for devices or files in \fIdir\fR. The \fB-d\fR option can be specified multiple times. This option is incompatible with the \fB-c\fR option.
1417.RE
1418
1419.sp
1420.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1421.na
1422\fB\fB-D\fR\fR
1423.ad
1424.sp .6
1425.RS 4n
1426Imports destroyed pool. The \fB-f\fR option is also required.
1427.RE
1428
1429.sp
1430.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1431.na
1432\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1433.ad
1434.sp .6
1435.RS 4n
1436Forces import, even if the pool appears to be potentially active.
1437.RE
1438
7f9d9946
BB
1439.sp
1440.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1441.na
1442\fB\fB-F\fR\fR
1443.ad
1444.sp .6
1445.RS 4n
1446Recovery mode for a non-importable pool. Attempt to return the pool to an importable state by discarding the last few transactions. Not all damaged pools can be recovered by using this option. If successful, the data from the discarded transactions is irretrievably lost. This option is ignored if the pool is importable or already imported.
1447.RE
1448
058ac9ba
BB
1449.sp
1450.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1451.na
1452\fB\fB-R\fR \fIroot\fR\fR
1453.ad
1454.sp .6
1455.RS 4n
1456Sets the "\fBcachefile\fR" property to "\fBnone\fR" and the "\fIaltroot\fR" property to "\fIroot\fR".
1457.RE
1458
7f9d9946
BB
1459.sp
1460.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1461.na
1462\fB\fB-n\fR\fR
1463.ad
1464.sp .6
1465.RS 4n
1466Used with the \fB-F\fR recovery option. Determines whether a non-importable pool can be made importable again, but does not actually perform the pool recovery. For more details about pool recovery mode, see the \fB-F\fR option, above.
1467.RE
1468
21b446a7
TF
1469.sp
1470.ne 2
21b446a7
TF
1471.na
1472\fB\fB-X\fR\fR
1473.ad
1474.sp .6
1475.RS 4n
1476Used with the \fB-F\fR recovery option. Determines whether extreme measures to find a valid txg should take place. This allows the pool to be rolled back to a txg which is no longer guaranteed to be consistent. Pools imported at an inconsistent txg may contain uncorrectable checksum errors. For more details about pool recovery mode, see the \fB-F\fR option, above.
1477\fBWARNING\fR: This option can be extremely hazardous to the health of your pool and should only be used as a last resort.
1478.RE
1479
1480.sp
1481.ne 2
21b446a7
TF
1482.na
1483\fB\fB-T\fR\fR
1484.ad
1485.sp .6
1486.RS 4n
1487Specify the txg to use for rollback. Implies \fB-FX\fR. For more details about pool recovery mode, see the \fB-X\fR option, above.
1488\fBWARNING\fR: This option can be extremely hazardous to the health of your pool and should only be used as a last resort.
1489.RE
1490
26b42f3f
RY
1491.sp
1492.ne 2
26b42f3f
RY
1493.na
1494\fB\fB-t\fR\fR
1495.ad
1496.sp .6
1497.RS 4n
00d2a8c9 1498Used with "\fBnewpool\fR". Specifies that "\fBnewpool\fR" is temporary. Temporary pool names last until export. Ensures that the original pool name will be used in all label updates and therefore is retained upon export. Will also set -o cachefile=none when not explicitly specified.
26b42f3f
RY
1499.RE
1500
7f9d9946
BB
1501.sp
1502.ne 2
7f9d9946
BB
1503.na
1504\fB\fB-m\fR\fR
1505.ad
1506.sp .6
1507.RS 4n
1508Allows a pool to import when there is a missing log device.
1509.RE
1510
7d11e37e
BB
1511.sp
1512.ne 2
7d11e37e
BB
1513.na
1514\fB\fB-s\fR
1515.ad
1516.sp .6
1517.RS 4n
1518Scan using the default search path, the libblkid cache will not be consulted. A custom search path may be specified by setting the \fBZPOOL_IMPORT_PATH\fR environment variable.
1519.RE
1520
058ac9ba
BB
1521.RE
1522
1523.sp
1524.ne 2
058ac9ba 1525.na
d6418de0 1526\fB\fBzpool iostat\fR [[[\fB-c\fR \fBSCRIPT\fR] [\fB-lq\fR]] | \fB-rw\fR] [\fB-T\fR \fBd\fR | \fBu\fR] [\fB-ghHLpPvy\fR] [[\fIpool\fR ...]|[\fIpool vdev\fR ...]|[\fIvdev\fR ...]] [\fIinterval\fR[\fIcount\fR]]\fR
193a37cb 1527
058ac9ba
BB
1528.ad
1529.sp .6
1530.RS 4n
193a37cb
TH
1531Displays \fBI/O\fR statistics for the given \fIpool\fRs/\fIvdev\fRs. You can
1532pass in a list of \fIpool\fRs, a \fIpool\fR and list of \fIvdev\fRs in that
1533\fIpool\fR, or a list of any \fIvdev\fRs from any \fIpool\fR. If no items are
1534specified, statistics for every pool in the system are shown. When given an
1535interval, the statistics are printed every \fIinterval\fR seconds until
1536\fBCtrl-C\fR is pressed. If \fIcount\fR is specified, the command exits after
1537\fIcount\fR reports are printed. The first report printed is always the
1538statistics since boot regardless of whether \fIinterval\fR and \fIcount\fR
1539are passed. However, this behavior can be suppressed with the -y flag. Also
1540note that the units of 'K', 'M', 'G'... that are printed in the report are in
1541base 1024. To get the raw values, use the \fB-p\fR flag.
8720e9e7
TH
1542.sp
1543.ne 2
1544.na
d6418de0 1545\fB\fB-c\fR \fB[SCRIPT1,SCRIPT2,...]\fR
8720e9e7
TH
1546.ad
1547.RS 12n
d6418de0 1548Run a script (or scripts) on each vdev and include the output in zpool iostat
8720e9e7 1549.sp
d6418de0
TH
1550The \fB-c\fR option allows you to run script(s) for each vdev and display the
1551output in zpool iostat. For security reasons, a user can only execute scripts
1552found in the /<etc>/zfs/zpool.d directory as an unprivileged user. However, a
1553privileged user can run \fB-c\fR if they have the ZPOOL_SCRIPTS_AS_ROOT
1554environment variable set. If a script requires the use of a privileged
1555command (like smartctl) then it's recommended you allow the user access to it in
1556/etc/sudoers. For example, to allow user "zfsuser" access to "smartctl -a", add
1557the following to /etc/sudoers:
1558
1559zfsuser ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/smartctl -a /dev/sd[a-z]*, NOEXEC: /usr/sbin/smartctl -a /dev/sd[a-z]*`
1560
1561If \fB-c\fR is passed without a script name, it prints a list of all scripts.
1562\fB-c\fR also sets verbose mode (\fB-v\fR).
1563
1564Script output should be in the form of "name=value". The column name is
1565set to "name" and the value is set to "value". Multiple lines can be used to
1566output multiple columns. The first line of output not in the "name=value"
1567format is displayed without a column title, and no more output after that is
1568displayed. This can be useful for printing error messages. Blank or NULL
1569values are printed as a '-' to make output awk-able.
1570
1571The following environment variables are set before running each script:
b291029e
TH
1572.sp
1573\fB$VDEV_PATH\fR: Full path to the vdev.
1574.LP
1575\fB$VDEV_UPATH\fR: "Underlying path" to the vdev. For device mapper, multipath, or
1576partitioned vdevs, \fBVDEV_UPATH\fR is the actual underlying /dev/sd* disk.
1577This can be useful if the command you're running requires a /dev/sd* device.
1578.LP
1579\fB$VDEV_ENC_SYSFS_PATH\fR: The sysfs path to the vdev's enclosure LEDs (if any).
8720e9e7
TH
1580.RE
1581
058ac9ba
BB
1582.sp
1583.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1584.na
1585\fB\fB-T\fR \fBu\fR | \fBd\fR\fR
1586.ad
1587.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
1588Display a time stamp.
1589.sp
1590Specify \fBu\fR for a printed representation of the internal representation of time. See \fBtime\fR(2). Specify \fBd\fR for standard date format. See \fBdate\fR(1).
1591.RE
1592
d2f3e292
RY
1593.sp
1594.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
1595.na
1596\fB\fB-g\fR\fR
1597.ad
1598.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
1599Display vdev GUIDs instead of the normal device names. These GUIDs can be used in place of device names for the zpool detach/offline/remove/replace commands.
1600.RE
1601
193a37cb
TH
1602.sp
1603.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1604.na
1605\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
1606.ad
1607.RS 12n
193a37cb
TH
1608Scripted mode. Do not display headers, and separate fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary space.
1609.RE
1610
d2f3e292
RY
1611.sp
1612.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
1613.na
1614\fB\fB-L\fR\fR
1615.ad
1616.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
1617Display real paths for vdevs resolving all symbolic links. This can be used to look up the current block device name regardless of the /dev/disk/ path used to open it.
1618.RE
1619
193a37cb
TH
1620.sp
1621.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1622.na
1623\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1624.ad
1625.RS 12n
3491d6eb 1626Display numbers in parsable (exact) values. Time values are in nanoseconds.
193a37cb
TH
1627.RE
1628
d2f3e292
RY
1629.sp
1630.ne 2
d2f3e292 1631.na
a77f29f9 1632\fB\fB-P\fR\fR
d2f3e292
RY
1633.ad
1634.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
1635Display full paths for vdevs instead of only the last component of the path. This can be used in conjunction with the \fB-L\fR flag.
1636.RE
1637
7e945072
TH
1638.sp
1639.ne 2
1640.na
1641\fB\fB-r\fR\fR
1642.ad
1643.RS 12n
1644Print request size histograms for the leaf ZIOs. This includes histograms of
1645individual ZIOs ("ind") and aggregate ZIOs ("agg"). These stats can be useful
1646for seeing how well the ZFS IO aggregator is working. Do not confuse these
1647request size stats with the block layer requests; it's possible ZIOs can
1648be broken up before being sent to the block device.
1649.RE
1650
058ac9ba
BB
1651.sp
1652.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1653.na
1654\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
1655.ad
1656.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
1657Verbose statistics. Reports usage statistics for individual \fIvdevs\fR within the pool, in addition to the pool-wide statistics.
1658.RE
1659
41092124
HM
1660.sp
1661.ne 2
41092124
HM
1662.na
1663\fB\fB-y\fR\fR
1664.ad
1665.RS 12n
41092124
HM
1666Omit statistics since boot. Normally the first line of output reports the statistics since boot. This option suppresses that first line of output.
1667.RE
193a37cb
TH
1668.sp
1669.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1670.na
1671\fB\fB-w\fR\fR
1672.ad
1673.RS 12n
193a37cb
TH
1674Display latency histograms:
1675
1676.sp
1677.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1678.na
1679total_wait:
1680.ad
1681.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1682Total IO time (queuing + disk IO time).
1683.RE
1684.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1685.na
1686disk_wait:
1687.ad
1688.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1689Disk IO time (time reading/writing the disk).
1690.RE
1691.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1692.na
1693syncq_wait:
1694.ad
1695.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1696Amount of time IO spent in synchronous priority queues. Does not include
1697disk time.
1698.RE
1699.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1700.na
1701asyncq_wait:
1702.ad
1703.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1704Amount of time IO spent in asynchronous priority queues. Does not include
1705disk time.
1706.RE
1707.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1708.na
1709scrub:
1710.ad
1711.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1712Amount of time IO spent in scrub queue. Does not include disk time.
1713
1714
1715.RE
1716
1717All histogram buckets are power-of-two sized. The time labels are the end
1718ranges of the buckets, so for example, a 15ns bucket stores latencies from
17198-15ns. The last bucket is also a catch-all for latencies higher than the
1720maximum.
1721.RE
1722.sp
1723.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1724.na
1725\fB\fB-l\fR\fR
1726.ad
1727.RS 12n
193a37cb
TH
1728Include average latency statistics:
1729
1730.sp
1731.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1732.na
1733total_wait:
1734.ad
1735.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1736Average total IO time (queuing + disk IO time).
1737.RE
1738.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1739.na
1740disk_wait:
1741.ad
1742.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1743Average disk IO time (time reading/writing the disk).
1744.RE
1745.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1746.na
1747syncq_wait:
1748.ad
1749.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1750Average amount of time IO spent in synchronous priority queues. Does not
1751include disk time.
1752.RE
1753.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1754.na
1755asyncq_wait:
1756.ad
1757.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1758Average amount of time IO spent in asynchronous priority queues. Does not
1759include disk time.
1760.RE
1761.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1762.na
1763scrub:
1764.ad
1765.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1766Average queuing time in scrub queue. Does not include disk time.
1767.RE
41092124 1768
193a37cb
TH
1769.RE
1770.sp
1771.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1772.na
1773\fB\fB-q\fR\fR
1774.ad
1775.RS 12n
193a37cb
TH
1776Include active queue statistics. Each priority queue has both pending ("pend")
1777and active ("activ") IOs. Pending IOs are waiting to be issued to the disk, and
1778active IOs have been issued to disk and are waiting for completion. These stats
1779are broken out by priority queue:
1780.sp
1781.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1782.na
1783syncq_read/write:
1784.ad
1785.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1786Current number of entries in synchronous priority queues.
1787.RE
1788.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1789.na
1790asyncq_read/write:
1791.ad
1792.RS 20n
193a37cb
TH
1793Current number of entries in asynchronous priority queues.
1794.RE
1795.ne 2
193a37cb
TH
1796.na
1797scrubq_read:
1798.ad
1799.RS 20n
193a37cb 1800Current number of entries in scrub queue.
058ac9ba
BB
1801.RE
1802
193a37cb
TH
1803All queue statistics are instantaneous measurements of the number of entries
1804in the queues. If you specify an interval, the measurements will be sampled
1805from the end of the interval.
1806.RE
1c911612
HJ
1807
1808.RE
1809
131cc95c
DK
1810.sp
1811.ne 2
131cc95c
DK
1812.na
1813\fB\fBzpool labelclear\fR [\fB-f\fR] \fIdevice\fR
1814.ad
1815.sp .6
1816.RS 4n
1817Removes ZFS label information from the specified device. The device must not be part of an active pool configuration.
1818.sp
1819.ne 2
131cc95c
DK
1820.na
1821\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
1822.ad
1823.RS 12n
131cc95c
DK
1824Treat exported or foreign devices as inactive.
1825.RE
1826
1827.RE
1828
058ac9ba
BB
1829.sp
1830.ne 2
058ac9ba 1831.na
2a8b84b7 1832\fB\fBzpool list\fR [\fB-T\fR \fBd\fR | \fBu\fR] [\fB-HgLpPv\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIprops\fR[,...]] [\fIpool\fR] ... [\fIinterval\fR[\fIcount\fR]]\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1833.ad
1834.sp .6
1835.RS 4n
6e1b9d03 1836Lists the given pools along with a health status and space usage. If no \fIpools\fR are specified, all pools in the system are listed. When given an \fIinterval\fR, the information is printed every \fIinterval\fR seconds until \fBCtrl-C\fR is pressed. If \fIcount\fR is specified, the command exits after \fIcount\fR reports are printed.
058ac9ba
BB
1837.sp
1838.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1839.na
1840\fB\fB-H\fR\fR
1841.ad
1842.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
1843Scripted mode. Do not display headers, and separate fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary space.
1844.RE
1845
d2f3e292
RY
1846.sp
1847.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
1848.na
1849\fB\fB-g\fR\fR
1850.ad
1851.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
1852Display vdev GUIDs instead of the normal device names. These GUIDs can be used in place of device names for the zpool detach/offline/remove/replace commands.
1853.RE
1854
1855.sp
1856.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
1857.na
1858\fB\fB-L\fR\fR
1859.ad
1860.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
1861Display real paths for vdevs resolving all symbolic links. This can be used to look up the current block device name regardless of the /dev/disk/ path used to open it.
1862.RE
1863
2a8b84b7
AS
1864.sp
1865.ne 2
2a8b84b7
AS
1866.na
1867\fB\fB-p\fR\fR
1868.ad
1869.RS 12n
2a8b84b7
AS
1870Display numbers in parsable (exact) values.
1871.RE
1872
d2f3e292
RY
1873.sp
1874.ne 2
d2f3e292 1875.na
a77f29f9 1876\fB\fB-P\fR\fR
d2f3e292
RY
1877.ad
1878.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
1879Display full paths for vdevs instead of only the last component of the path. This can be used in conjunction with the \fB-L\fR flag.
1880.RE
1881
2a8b84b7 1882.sp
6e1b9d03 1883.ne 2
6e1b9d03 1884.na
2e2ddc30 1885\fB\fB-T\fR \fBd\fR | \fBu\fR\fR
6e1b9d03
CE
1886.ad
1887.RS 12n
6e1b9d03
CE
1888Display a time stamp.
1889.sp
1890Specify \fBu\fR for a printed representation of the internal representation of time. See \fBtime\fR(2). Specify \fBd\fR for standard date format. See \fBdate\fR(1).
1891.RE
1892
058ac9ba
BB
1893.sp
1894.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1895.na
1896\fB\fB-o\fR \fIprops\fR\fR
1897.ad
1898.RS 12n
d4567085 1899Comma-separated list of properties to display. See the "Properties" section for a list of valid properties. The default list is "name, size, alloc, free, fragmentation, expandsize, capacity, dedupratio, health, altroot"
1bd201e7
CS
1900.RE
1901
1902.sp
1903.ne 2
1bd201e7
CS
1904.na
1905\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
1906.ad
1907.RS 12n
1bd201e7 1908Verbose statistics. Reports usage statistics for individual \fIvdevs\fR within the pool, in addition to the pool-wise statistics.
058ac9ba
BB
1909.RE
1910
1911.RE
1912
1913.sp
1914.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1915.na
1916\fB\fBzpool offline\fR [\fB-t\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR ...\fR
1917.ad
1918.sp .6
1919.RS 4n
1920Takes the specified physical device offline. While the \fIdevice\fR is offline, no attempt is made to read or write to the device.
1921.sp
1922This command is not applicable to spares or cache devices.
1923.sp
1924.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1925.na
1926\fB\fB-t\fR\fR
1927.ad
1928.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
1929Temporary. Upon reboot, the specified physical device reverts to its previous state.
1930.RE
1931
1932.RE
1933
1934.sp
1935.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1936.na
1937\fB\fBzpool online\fR [\fB-e\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR...\fR
1938.ad
1939.sp .6
1940.RS 4n
1941Brings the specified physical device online.
1942.sp
1943This command is not applicable to spares or cache devices.
1944.sp
1945.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
1946.na
1947\fB\fB-e\fR\fR
1948.ad
1949.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
1950Expand the device to use all available space. If the device is part of a mirror or \fBraidz\fR then all devices must be expanded before the new space will become available to the pool.
1951.RE
1952
1953.RE
1954
1955.sp
1956.ne 2
058ac9ba 1957.na
3541dc6d
GA
1958\fB\fBzpool reguid\fR \fIpool\fR
1959.ad
1960.sp .6
1961.RS 4n
5853fe79
GW
1962Generates a new unique identifier for the pool. You must ensure that all
1963devices in this pool are online and healthy before performing this action.
1964.RE
1965
1966.sp
1967.ne 2
1968.na
1969\fB\fBzpool reopen\fR \fIpool\fR
1970.ad
1971.sp .6
1972.RS 4n
1973Reopen all the vdevs associated with the pool.
3541dc6d
GA
1974.RE
1975
1976.sp
1977.ne 2
1978.na
058ac9ba
BB
1979\fB\fBzpool remove\fR \fIpool\fR \fIdevice\fR ...\fR
1980.ad
1981.sp .6
1982.RS 4n
1983Removes the specified device from the pool. This command currently only supports removing hot spares, cache, and log devices. A mirrored log device can be removed by specifying the top-level mirror for the log. Non-log devices that are part of a mirrored configuration can be removed using the \fBzpool detach\fR command. Non-redundant and \fBraidz\fR devices cannot be removed from a pool.
1984.RE
1985
1986.sp
1987.ne 2
058ac9ba 1988.na
628668a3 1989\fB\fBzpool replace\fR [\fB-f\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fIold_device\fR [\fInew_device\fR]\fR
058ac9ba
BB
1990.ad
1991.sp .6
1992.RS 4n
1993Replaces \fIold_device\fR with \fInew_device\fR. This is equivalent to attaching \fInew_device\fR, waiting for it to resilver, and then detaching \fIold_device\fR.
1994.sp
1995The size of \fInew_device\fR must be greater than or equal to the minimum size of all the devices in a mirror or \fBraidz\fR configuration.
1996.sp
1fe2e237 1997\fInew_device\fR is required if the pool is not redundant. If \fInew_device\fR is not specified, it defaults to \fIold_device\fR. This form of replacement is useful after an existing disk has failed and has been physically replaced. In this case, the new disk may have the same \fB/dev\fR path as the old device, even though it is actually a different disk. \fBZFS\fR recognizes this.
058ac9ba
BB
1998.sp
1999.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2000.na
2001\fB\fB-f\fR\fR
2002.ad
2003.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
2004Forces use of \fInew_device\fR, even if its appears to be in use. Not all devices can be overridden in this manner.
2005.RE
2006
628668a3
TF
2007.sp
2008.ne 2
628668a3
TF
2009.na
2010\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR
2011.ad
2012.sp .6n
2013.RS 6n
2014Sets the given pool properties. See the "Properties" section for a list of valid properties that can be set. The only property supported at the moment is \fBashift\fR. \fBDo note\fR that some properties (among them \fBashift\fR) are \fInot\fR inherited from a previous vdev. They are vdev specific, not pool specific.
2015.RE
2016
058ac9ba
BB
2017.RE
2018
2019.sp
2020.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2021.na
2022\fB\fBzpool scrub\fR [\fB-s\fR] \fIpool\fR ...\fR
2023.ad
2024.sp .6
2025.RS 4n
2026Begins a scrub. The scrub examines all data in the specified pools to verify that it checksums correctly. For replicated (mirror or \fBraidz\fR) devices, \fBZFS\fR automatically repairs any damage discovered during the scrub. The "\fBzpool status\fR" command reports the progress of the scrub and summarizes the results of the scrub upon completion.
2027.sp
2028Scrubbing and resilvering are very similar operations. The difference is that resilvering only examines data that \fBZFS\fR knows to be out of date (for example, when attaching a new device to a mirror or replacing an existing device), whereas scrubbing examines all data to discover silent errors due to hardware faults or disk failure.
2029.sp
2030Because scrubbing and resilvering are \fBI/O\fR-intensive operations, \fBZFS\fR only allows one at a time. If a scrub is already in progress, the "\fBzpool scrub\fR" command terminates it and starts a new scrub. If a resilver is in progress, \fBZFS\fR does not allow a scrub to be started until the resilver completes.
2031.sp
2032.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2033.na
2034\fB\fB-s\fR\fR
2035.ad
2036.RS 6n
058ac9ba
BB
2037Stop scrubbing.
2038.RE
2039
2040.RE
2041
2042.sp
2043.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2044.na
2045\fB\fBzpool set\fR \fIproperty\fR=\fIvalue\fR \fIpool\fR\fR
2046.ad
2047.sp .6
2048.RS 4n
2049Sets the given property on the specified pool. See the "Properties" section for more information on what properties can be set and acceptable values.
2050.RE
2051
fb827006
SB
2052.sp
2053.ne 2
fb827006 2054.na
a77f29f9 2055\fBzpool split\fR [\fB-gLnP\fR] [\fB-R\fR \fIaltroot\fR] [\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR] \fIpool\fR \fInewpool\fR [\fIdevice\fR ...]
fb827006
SB
2056.ad
2057.sp .6
2058.RS 4n
52e68edc
TC
2059Split devices off \fIpool\fR creating \fInewpool\fR. All \fBvdev\fRs in \fIpool\fR must be mirrors and the pool must not be in the process of resilvering. At the time of the split, \fInewpool\fR will be a replica of \fIpool\fR. By default, the last device in each mirror is split from \fIpool\fR to create \fInewpool\fR.
2060
2061The optional \fIdevice\fR specification causes the specified device(s) to be included in the new pool and, should any devices remain unspecified, the last device in each mirror is used as would be by default.
fb827006 2062
d2f3e292
RY
2063.sp
2064.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
2065.na
2066\fB\fB-g\fR\fR
2067.ad
2068.RS 6n
d2f3e292
RY
2069Display vdev GUIDs instead of the normal device names. These GUIDs can be used in place of device names for the zpool detach/offline/remove/replace commands.
2070.RE
2071
2072.sp
2073.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
2074.na
2075\fB\fB-L\fR\fR
2076.ad
2077.RS 6n
d2f3e292
RY
2078Display real paths for vdevs resolving all symbolic links. This can be used to look up the current block device name regardless of the /dev/disk/ path used to open it.
2079.RE
2080
fb827006
SB
2081.sp
2082.ne 2
fb827006
SB
2083.na
2084\fB\fB-n\fR \fR
2085.ad
2086.sp .6
2087.RS 4n
2088Do dry run, do not actually perform the split. Print out the expected configuration of \fInewpool\fR.
2089.RE
2090
d2f3e292
RY
2091.sp
2092.ne 2
d2f3e292 2093.na
a77f29f9 2094\fB\fB-P\fR\fR
d2f3e292
RY
2095.ad
2096.RS 6n
d2f3e292
RY
2097Display full paths for vdevs instead of only the last component of the path. This can be used in conjunction with the \fB-L\fR flag.
2098.RE
2099
fb827006
SB
2100.sp
2101.ne 2
fb827006
SB
2102.na
2103\fB\fB-R\fR \fIaltroot\fR \fR
2104.ad
2105.sp .6
2106.RS 4n
6b4e21c6 2107Set \fIaltroot\fR for \fInewpool\fR and automatically import it. This can be useful to avoid mountpoint collisions if \fInewpool\fR is imported on the same filesystem as \fIpool\fR.
fb827006
SB
2108.RE
2109
2110.sp
2111.ne 2
fb827006
SB
2112.na
2113\fB\fB-o\fR \fIproperty=value\fR \fR
2114.ad
2115.sp .6
2116.RS 4n
2117Sets the specified property for \fInewpool\fR. See the “Properties” section for more information on the available pool properties.
2118.RE
2119
2120.RE
2121
058ac9ba
BB
2122.sp
2123.ne 2
058ac9ba 2124.na
d6418de0 2125\fBzpool status\fR [\fB-c\fR \fB[SCRIPT1,SCRIPT2,...] \fR] [\fB-gLPvxD\fR] [\fB-T\fR d | u] [\fIpool\fR] ... [\fIinterval\fR [\fIcount\fR]]
058ac9ba
BB
2126.ad
2127.sp .6
2128.RS 4n
2129Displays the detailed health status for the given pools. If no \fIpool\fR is specified, then the status of each pool in the system is displayed. For more information on pool and device health, see the "Device Failure and Recovery" section.
2130.sp
2131If a scrub or resilver is in progress, this command reports the percentage done and the estimated time to completion. Both of these are only approximate, because the amount of data in the pool and the other workloads on the system can change.
d2f3e292 2132
8720e9e7
TH
2133.sp
2134.ne 2
2135.na
d6418de0 2136\fB\fB-c\fR \fB[SCRIPT1,SCRIPT2,...]\fR
8720e9e7
TH
2137.ad
2138.RS 12n
d6418de0 2139Run a script (or scripts) on each vdev and include the output in zpool status
8720e9e7 2140.sp
d6418de0
TH
2141The \fB-c\fR option allows you to run script(s) for each vdev and display the
2142output in zpool iostat. For security reasons, a user can only execute scripts
2143found in the /<etc>/zfs/zpool.d directory as an unprivileged user. However, a
2144privileged user can run \fB-c\fR if they have the ZPOOL_SCRIPTS_AS_ROOT
2145environment variable set. If a script requires the use of a privileged
2146command (like smartctl) then it's recommended you allow the user access to it in
2147/etc/sudoers. For example, to allow user "zfsuser" access to "smartctl -a", add
2148the following to /etc/sudoers:
2149
2150zfsuser ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/smartctl -a /dev/sd[a-z]*, NOEXEC: /usr/sbin/smartctl -a /dev/sd[a-z]*`
2151
2152If \fB-c\fR is passed without a script name, it prints a list of all scripts.
2153
2154Script output should be in the form of "name=value". The column name is
2155set to "name" and the value is set to "value". Multiple lines can be used to
2156output multiple columns. The first line of output not in the "name=value"
2157format is displayed without a column title, and no more output after that is
2158displayed. This can be useful for printing error messages. Blank or NULL
2159values are printed as a '-' to make output awk-able.
2160
2161The following environment variables are set before running each command:
b291029e
TH
2162.sp
2163\fB$VDEV_PATH\fR: Full path to the vdev.
2164.LP
2165\fB$VDEV_UPATH\fR: "Underlying path" to the vdev. For device mapper, multipath, or
2166partitioned vdevs, \fBVDEV_UPATH\fR is the actual underlying /dev/sd* disk.
2167This can be useful if the command you're running requires a /dev/sd* device.
2168.LP
2169\fB$VDEV_ENC_SYSFS_PATH\fR: The sysfs path to the vdev's enclosure LEDs (if any).
8720e9e7
TH
2170.RE
2171
058ac9ba
BB
2172.sp
2173.ne 2
058ac9ba 2174.na
d2f3e292 2175\fB\fB-g\fR\fR
058ac9ba 2176.ad
2e2ddc30 2177.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
2178Display vdev GUIDs instead of the normal device names. These GUIDs can be used innplace of device names for the zpool detach/offline/remove/replace commands.
2179.RE
2180
2181.sp
2182.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
2183.na
2184\fB\fB-L\fR\fR
2185.ad
2186.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
2187Display real paths for vdevs resolving all symbolic links. This can be used to look up the current block device name regardless of the /dev/disk/ path used to open it.
2188.RE
2189
2190.sp
2191.ne 2
d2f3e292 2192.na
a77f29f9 2193\fB\fB-P\fR\fR
d2f3e292
RY
2194.ad
2195.RS 12n
d2f3e292 2196Display full paths for vdevs instead of only the last component of the path. This can be used in conjunction with the \fB-L\fR flag.
058ac9ba
BB
2197.RE
2198
2199.sp
2200.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2201.na
2202\fB\fB-v\fR\fR
2203.ad
2e2ddc30 2204.RS 12n
058ac9ba
BB
2205Displays verbose data error information, printing out a complete list of all data errors since the last complete pool scrub.
2206.RE
2207
d2f3e292
RY
2208.sp
2209.ne 2
d2f3e292
RY
2210.na
2211\fB\fB-x\fR\fR
2212.ad
2213.RS 12n
d2f3e292
RY
2214Only display status for pools that are exhibiting errors or are otherwise unavailable. Warnings about pools not using the latest on-disk format will not be included.
2215.RE
2216
2e2ddc30
TC
2217.sp
2218.ne 2
2e2ddc30
TC
2219.na
2220\fB\fB-D\fR\fR
2221.ad
2222.RS 12n
2e2ddc30
TC
2223Display a histogram of deduplication statistics, showing the allocated (physically present on disk) and
2224referenced (logically referenced in the pool) block counts and sizes by reference count.
2225.RE
2226
2227.sp
2228.ne 2
2e2ddc30
TC
2229.na
2230\fB\fB-T\fR \fBd\fR | \fBu\fR\fR
2231.ad
2232.RS 12n
2e2ddc30
TC
2233Display a time stamp.
2234.sp
2235Specify \fBu\fR for a printed representation of the internal representation of time. See \fBtime\fR(2). Specify \fBd\fR for standard date format. See \fBdate\fR(1).
058ac9ba
BB
2236.RE
2237
53e03135 2238.RE
2239
058ac9ba
BB
2240.sp
2241.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2242.na
2243\fB\fBzpool upgrade\fR\fR
2244.ad
2245.sp .6
2246.RS 4n
b9b24bb4 2247Displays pools which do not have all supported features enabled and pools formatted using a legacy ZFS version number. These pools can continue to be used, but some features may not be available. Use "\fBzpool upgrade -a\fR" to enable all features on all pools.
058ac9ba
BB
2248.RE
2249
2250.sp
2251.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2252.na
2253\fB\fBzpool upgrade\fR \fB-v\fR\fR
2254.ad
2255.sp .6
2256.RS 4n
b9b24bb4 2257Displays legacy \fBZFS\fR versions supported by the current software. See \fBzfs-features\fR(5) for a description of feature flags features supported by the current software.
058ac9ba
BB
2258.RE
2259
2260.sp
2261.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2262.na
2263\fB\fBzpool upgrade\fR [\fB-V\fR \fIversion\fR] \fB-a\fR | \fIpool\fR ...\fR
2264.ad
2265.sp .6
2266.RS 4n
8f343973 2267Enables all supported features on the given pool. Once this is done, the pool will no longer be accessible on systems that do not support feature flags. See \fBzfs-features\fR(5) for details on compatibility with systems that support feature flags, but do not support all features enabled on the pool.
058ac9ba
BB
2268.sp
2269.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2270.na
2271\fB\fB-a\fR\fR
2272.ad
2273.RS 14n
b9b24bb4 2274Enables all supported features on all pools.
058ac9ba
BB
2275.RE
2276
2277.sp
2278.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2279.na
2280\fB\fB-V\fR \fIversion\fR\fR
2281.ad
2282.RS 14n
b9b24bb4 2283Upgrade to the specified legacy version. If the \fB-V\fR flag is specified, no features will be enabled on the pool. This option can only be used to increase the version number up to the last supported legacy version number.
058ac9ba
BB
2284.RE
2285
2286.RE
2287
2288.SH EXAMPLES
2289.LP
2290\fBExample 1 \fRCreating a RAID-Z Storage Pool
2291.sp
2292.LP
2293The following command creates a pool with a single \fBraidz\fR root \fIvdev\fR that consists of six disks.
2294
2295.sp
2296.in +2
2297.nf
54e5f226 2298# \fBzpool create tank raidz sda sdb sdc sdd sde sdf\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2299.fi
2300.in -2
2301.sp
2302
2303.LP
2304\fBExample 2 \fRCreating a Mirrored Storage Pool
2305.sp
2306.LP
2307The following command creates a pool with two mirrors, where each mirror contains two disks.
2308
2309.sp
2310.in +2
2311.nf
54e5f226 2312# \fBzpool create tank mirror sda sdb mirror sdc sdd\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2313.fi
2314.in -2
2315.sp
2316
2317.LP
54e5f226 2318\fBExample 3 \fRCreating a ZFS Storage Pool by Using Partitions
058ac9ba
BB
2319.sp
2320.LP
54e5f226 2321The following command creates an unmirrored pool using two disk partitions.
058ac9ba
BB
2322
2323.sp
2324.in +2
2325.nf
54e5f226 2326# \fBzpool create tank sda1 sdb2\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2327.fi
2328.in -2
2329.sp
2330
2331.LP
2332\fBExample 4 \fRCreating a ZFS Storage Pool by Using Files
2333.sp
2334.LP
2335The following command creates an unmirrored pool using files. While not recommended, a pool based on files can be useful for experimental purposes.
2336
2337.sp
2338.in +2
2339.nf
2340# \fBzpool create tank /path/to/file/a /path/to/file/b\fR
2341.fi
2342.in -2
2343.sp
2344
2345.LP
2346\fBExample 5 \fRAdding a Mirror to a ZFS Storage Pool
2347.sp
2348.LP
6b92390f 2349The following command adds two mirrored disks to the pool \fItank\fR, assuming the pool is already made up of two-way mirrors. The additional space is immediately available to any datasets within the pool.
058ac9ba
BB
2350
2351.sp
2352.in +2
2353.nf
54e5f226 2354# \fBzpool add tank mirror sda sdb\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2355.fi
2356.in -2
2357.sp
2358
2359.LP
2360\fBExample 6 \fRListing Available ZFS Storage Pools
2361.sp
2362.LP
2363The following command lists all available pools on the system. In this case, the pool \fIzion\fR is faulted due to a missing device.
2364
2365.sp
2366.LP
2367The results from this command are similar to the following:
2368
2369.sp
2370.in +2
2371.nf
2372# \fBzpool list\fR
f3a7f661
GW
2373NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE FRAG EXPANDSZ CAP DEDUP HEALTH ALTROOT
2374rpool 19.9G 8.43G 11.4G 33% - 42% 1.00x ONLINE -
2375tank 61.5G 20.0G 41.5G 48% - 32% 1.00x ONLINE -
2376zion - - - - - - - FAULTED -
058ac9ba
BB
2377.fi
2378.in -2
2379.sp
2380
2381.LP
2382\fBExample 7 \fRDestroying a ZFS Storage Pool
2383.sp
2384.LP
6b92390f 2385The following command destroys the pool \fItank\fR and any datasets contained within.
058ac9ba
BB
2386
2387.sp
2388.in +2
2389.nf
2390# \fBzpool destroy -f tank\fR
2391.fi
2392.in -2
2393.sp
2394
2395.LP
2396\fBExample 8 \fRExporting a ZFS Storage Pool
2397.sp
2398.LP
2399The following command exports the devices in pool \fItank\fR so that they can be relocated or later imported.
2400
2401.sp
2402.in +2
2403.nf
2404# \fBzpool export tank\fR
2405.fi
2406.in -2
2407.sp
2408
2409.LP
2410\fBExample 9 \fRImporting a ZFS Storage Pool
2411.sp
2412.LP
6b92390f 2413The following command displays available pools, and then imports the pool \fItank\fR for use on the system.
058ac9ba
BB
2414
2415.sp
2416.LP
2417The results from this command are similar to the following:
2418
2419.sp
2420.in +2
2421.nf
2422# \fBzpool import\fR
2423 pool: tank
2424 id: 15451357997522795478
2425 state: ONLINE
2426action: The pool can be imported using its name or numeric identifier.
2427config:
2428
2429 tank ONLINE
2430 mirror ONLINE
54e5f226
RL
2431 sda ONLINE
2432 sdb ONLINE
058ac9ba
BB
2433
2434# \fBzpool import tank\fR
2435.fi
2436.in -2
2437.sp
2438
2439.LP
2440\fBExample 10 \fRUpgrading All ZFS Storage Pools to the Current Version
2441.sp
2442.LP
2443The following command upgrades all ZFS Storage pools to the current version of the software.
2444
2445.sp
2446.in +2
2447.nf
2448# \fBzpool upgrade -a\fR
251eb26d 2449This system is currently running ZFS pool version 28.
058ac9ba
BB
2450.fi
2451.in -2
2452.sp
2453
2454.LP
2455\fBExample 11 \fRManaging Hot Spares
2456.sp
2457.LP
2458The following command creates a new pool with an available hot spare:
2459
2460.sp
2461.in +2
2462.nf
54e5f226 2463# \fBzpool create tank mirror sda sdb spare sdc\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2464.fi
2465.in -2
2466.sp
2467
2468.sp
2469.LP
2470If one of the disks were to fail, the pool would be reduced to the degraded state. The failed device can be replaced using the following command:
2471
2472.sp
2473.in +2
2474.nf
54e5f226 2475# \fBzpool replace tank sda sdd\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2476.fi
2477.in -2
2478.sp
2479
2480.sp
2481.LP
0d122e21 2482Once the data has been resilvered, the spare is automatically removed and is made available for use should another device fails. The hot spare can be permanently removed from the pool using the following command:
058ac9ba
BB
2483
2484.sp
2485.in +2
2486.nf
54e5f226 2487# \fBzpool remove tank sdc\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2488.fi
2489.in -2
2490.sp
2491
2492.LP
2493\fBExample 12 \fRCreating a ZFS Pool with Mirrored Separate Intent Logs
2494.sp
2495.LP
2496The following command creates a ZFS storage pool consisting of two, two-way mirrors and mirrored log devices:
2497
2498.sp
2499.in +2
2500.nf
54e5f226
RL
2501# \fBzpool create pool mirror sda sdb mirror sdc sdd log mirror \e
2502 sde sdf\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2503.fi
2504.in -2
2505.sp
2506
2507.LP
2508\fBExample 13 \fRAdding Cache Devices to a ZFS Pool
2509.sp
2510.LP
2511The following command adds two disks for use as cache devices to a ZFS storage pool:
2512
2513.sp
2514.in +2
2515.nf
54e5f226 2516# \fBzpool add pool cache sdc sdd\fR
058ac9ba
BB
2517.fi
2518.in -2
2519.sp
2520
2521.sp
2522.LP
6b4e21c6 2523Once added, the cache devices gradually fill with content from main memory. Depending on the size of your cache devices, it could take over an hour for them to fill. Capacity and reads can be monitored using the \fBiostat\fR option as follows:
058ac9ba
BB
2524
2525.sp
2526.in +2
2527.nf
2528# \fBzpool iostat -v pool 5\fR
2529.fi
2530.in -2
2531.sp
2532
2533.LP
2534\fBExample 14 \fRRemoving a Mirrored Log Device
2535.sp
2536.LP
2537The following command removes the mirrored log device \fBmirror-2\fR.
2538
2539.sp
2540.LP
2541Given this configuration:
2542
2543.sp
2544.in +2
2545.nf
2546 pool: tank
2547 state: ONLINE
2548 scrub: none requested
2549config:
2550
2551 NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM
2552 tank ONLINE 0 0 0
2553 mirror-0 ONLINE 0 0 0
54e5f226
RL
2554 sda ONLINE 0 0 0
2555 sdb ONLINE 0 0 0
058ac9ba 2556 mirror-1 ONLINE 0 0 0
54e5f226
RL
2557 sdc ONLINE 0 0 0
2558 sdd ONLINE 0 0 0
058ac9ba
BB
2559 logs
2560 mirror-2 ONLINE 0 0 0
54e5f226
RL
2561 sde ONLINE 0 0 0
2562 sdf ONLINE 0 0 0
058ac9ba
BB
2563.fi
2564.in -2
2565.sp
2566
2567.sp
2568.LP
2569The command to remove the mirrored log \fBmirror-2\fR is:
2570
2571.sp
2572.in +2
2573.nf
2574# \fBzpool remove tank mirror-2\fR
2575.fi
2576.in -2
2577.sp
2578
1bd201e7
CS
2579.LP
2580\fBExample 15 \fRDisplaying expanded space on a device
2581.sp
2582.LP
f3a7f661 2583The following command displays the detailed information for the \fIdata\fR
1bd201e7 2584pool. This pool is comprised of a single \fIraidz\fR vdev where one of its
6b4e21c6 2585devices increased its capacity by 10GB. In this example, the pool will not
1bd201e7
CS
2586be able to utilized this extra capacity until all the devices under the
2587\fIraidz\fR vdev have been expanded.
2588
2589.sp
2590.in +2
2591.nf
2592# \fBzpool list -v data\fR
f3a7f661
GW
2593NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE FRAG EXPANDSZ CAP DEDUP HEALTH ALTROOT
2594data 23.9G 14.6G 9.30G 48% - 61% 1.00x ONLINE -
2595 raidz1 23.9G 14.6G 9.30G 48% -
2596 c1t1d0 - - - - -
2597 c1t2d0 - - - - 10G
2598 c1t3d0 - - - - -
1bd201e7
CS
2599.fi
2600.in -2
8720e9e7
TH
2601.sp
2602
2603.LP
2604\fBExample 16 \fRRunning commands in zpool status and zpool iostat with -c
2605.sp
2606.LP
8720e9e7
TH
2607.sp
2608.in +2
2609.nf
d6418de0
TH
2610# zpool status -c vendor,model,size,enc
2611...
2612NAME STATE READ WRITE CKSUM vendor model size enc
2613tank ONLINE 0 0 0
8720e9e7 2614 mirror-0 ONLINE 0 0 0
d6418de0
TH
2615 U1 ONLINE 0 0 0 SEAGATE ST8000NM0075 7.3T 0:0:0:0
2616 U10 ONLINE 0 0 0 SEAGATE ST8000NM0075 7.3T 0:0:0:0
2617 U11 ONLINE 0 0 0 SEAGATE ST8000NM0075 7.3T 0:0:0:0
2618 U12 ONLINE 0 0 0 SEAGATE ST8000NM0075 7.3T 0:0:0:0
2619 U13 ONLINE 0 0 0 SEAGATE ST8000NM0075 7.3T 0:0:0:0
2620 U14 ONLINE 0 0 0 SEAGATE ST8000NM0075 7.3T 0:0:0:0
8720e9e7
TH
2621.fi
2622.in -2
2623
2624.sp
2625.in +2
2626.nf
d6418de0
TH
2627# zpool iostat -vc slaves,locate_led
2628 capacity operations bandwidth
2629pool alloc free read write read write slaves locate_led
2630---------- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- --------- ----------
2631tank 20.4G 7.23T 26 152 20.7M 21.6M
2632 mirror 20.4G 7.23T 26 152 20.7M 21.6M
2633 U1 - - 0 31 1.46K 20.6M sdb sdff 0
2634 U10 - - 0 1 3.77K 13.3K sdas sdgw 0
2635 U11 - - 0 1 288K 13.3K sdat sdgx 1
2636 U12 - - 0 1 78.4K 13.3K sdau sdgy 0
2637 U13 - - 0 1 128K 13.3K sdav sdgz 0
2638 U14 - - 0 1 63.2K 13.3K sdfk sdg 0
8720e9e7
TH
2639.fi
2640.in -2
1bd201e7 2641
058ac9ba
BB
2642.SH EXIT STATUS
2643.sp
2644.LP
2645The following exit values are returned:
2646.sp
2647.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2648.na
2649\fB\fB0\fR\fR
2650.ad
2651.RS 5n
6b4e21c6 2652Successful completion.
058ac9ba
BB
2653.RE
2654
2655.sp
2656.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2657.na
2658\fB\fB1\fR\fR
2659.ad
2660.RS 5n
058ac9ba
BB
2661An error occurred.
2662.RE
2663
2664.sp
2665.ne 2
058ac9ba
BB
2666.na
2667\fB\fB2\fR\fR
2668.ad
2669.RS 5n
058ac9ba
BB
2670Invalid command line options were specified.
2671.RE
2672
71bd0645
TF
2673.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
2674.TP
2675.B "ZFS_ABORT
2676Cause \fBzpool\fR to dump core on exit for the purposes of running \fB::findleaks\fR.
2677.TP
2678.B "ZPOOL_IMPORT_PATH"
2679The search path for devices or files to use with the pool. This is a colon-separated list of directories in which \fBzpool\fR looks for device nodes and files.
2680Similar to the \fB-d\fR option in \fIzpool import\fR.
d2f3e292
RY
2681.TP
2682.B "ZPOOL_VDEV_NAME_GUID"
2683Cause \fBzpool\fR subcommands to output vdev guids by default. This behavior
2684is identical to the \fBzpool status -g\fR command line option.
2685.TP
2686.B "ZPOOL_VDEV_NAME_FOLLOW_LINKS"
2687Cause \fBzpool\fR subcommands to follow links for vdev names by default. This behavior is identical to the \fBzpool status -L\fR command line option.
2688.TP
2689.B "ZPOOL_VDEV_NAME_PATH"
2690Cause \fBzpool\fR subcommands to output full vdev path names by default. This
2691behavior is identical to the \fBzpool status -p\fR command line option.
39fc0cb5
DB
2692.TP
2693.B "ZFS_VDEV_DEVID_OPT_OUT"
2694Older ZFS on Linux implementations had issues when attempting to display pool
2695config VDEV names if a "devid" NVP value is present in the pool's config.
2696
2697For example, a pool that originated on illumos platform would have a devid
2698value in the config and \fBzpool status\fR would fail when listing the config.
2699This would also be true for future Linux based pools.
2700
2701A pool can be stripped of any "devid" values on import or prevented from adding
2702them on \fBzpool create\fR or \fBzpool add\fR by setting ZFS_VDEV_DEVID_OPT_OUT.
d6418de0
TH
2703.TP
2704.B "ZPOOL_SCRIPTS_AS_ROOT"
2705Allow a privilaged user to run the \fBzpool status/iostat\fR with the \fB-c\fR
2706option. Normally, only unprivilaged users are allowed to run \fB-c\fR.
71bd0645 2707
058ac9ba
BB
2708.SH SEE ALSO
2709.sp
2710.LP
83426735 2711\fBzfs\fR(8), \fBzpool-features\fR(5), \fBzfs-events\fR(5), \fBzfs-module-parameters\fR(5)