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18 .Dd July 21, 2023
19 .Dt ZFS 4
20 .Os
21 .
22 .Sh NAME
23 .Nm zfs
24 .Nd tuning of the ZFS kernel module
25 .
26 .Sh DESCRIPTION
27 The ZFS module supports these parameters:
28 .Bl -tag -width Ds
29 .It Sy dbuf_cache_max_bytes Ns = Ns Sy UINT64_MAX Ns B Pq u64
30 Maximum size in bytes of the dbuf cache.
31 The target size is determined by the MIN versus
32 .No 1/2^ Ns Sy dbuf_cache_shift Pq 1/32nd
33 of the target ARC size.
34 The behavior of the dbuf cache and its associated settings
35 can be observed via the
36 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/dbufstats
37 kstat.
38 .
39 .It Sy dbuf_metadata_cache_max_bytes Ns = Ns Sy UINT64_MAX Ns B Pq u64
40 Maximum size in bytes of the metadata dbuf cache.
41 The target size is determined by the MIN versus
42 .No 1/2^ Ns Sy dbuf_metadata_cache_shift Pq 1/64th
43 of the target ARC size.
44 The behavior of the metadata dbuf cache and its associated settings
45 can be observed via the
46 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/dbufstats
47 kstat.
48 .
49 .It Sy dbuf_cache_hiwater_pct Ns = Ns Sy 10 Ns % Pq uint
50 The percentage over
51 .Sy dbuf_cache_max_bytes
52 when dbufs must be evicted directly.
53 .
54 .It Sy dbuf_cache_lowater_pct Ns = Ns Sy 10 Ns % Pq uint
55 The percentage below
56 .Sy dbuf_cache_max_bytes
57 when the evict thread stops evicting dbufs.
58 .
59 .It Sy dbuf_cache_shift Ns = Ns Sy 5 Pq uint
60 Set the size of the dbuf cache
61 .Pq Sy dbuf_cache_max_bytes
62 to a log2 fraction of the target ARC size.
63 .
64 .It Sy dbuf_metadata_cache_shift Ns = Ns Sy 6 Pq uint
65 Set the size of the dbuf metadata cache
66 .Pq Sy dbuf_metadata_cache_max_bytes
67 to a log2 fraction of the target ARC size.
68 .
69 .It Sy dbuf_mutex_cache_shift Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
70 Set the size of the mutex array for the dbuf cache.
71 When set to
72 .Sy 0
73 the array is dynamically sized based on total system memory.
74 .
75 .It Sy dmu_object_alloc_chunk_shift Ns = Ns Sy 7 Po 128 Pc Pq uint
76 dnode slots allocated in a single operation as a power of 2.
77 The default value minimizes lock contention for the bulk operation performed.
78 .
79 .It Sy dmu_prefetch_max Ns = Ns Sy 134217728 Ns B Po 128 MiB Pc Pq uint
80 Limit the amount we can prefetch with one call to this amount in bytes.
81 This helps to limit the amount of memory that can be used by prefetching.
82 .
83 .It Sy ignore_hole_birth Pq int
84 Alias for
85 .Sy send_holes_without_birth_time .
86 .
87 .It Sy l2arc_feed_again Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
88 Turbo L2ARC warm-up.
89 When the L2ARC is cold the fill interval will be set as fast as possible.
90 .
91 .It Sy l2arc_feed_min_ms Ns = Ns Sy 200 Pq u64
92 Min feed interval in milliseconds.
93 Requires
94 .Sy l2arc_feed_again Ns = Ns Ar 1
95 and only applicable in related situations.
96 .
97 .It Sy l2arc_feed_secs Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq u64
98 Seconds between L2ARC writing.
99 .
100 .It Sy l2arc_headroom Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq u64
101 How far through the ARC lists to search for L2ARC cacheable content,
102 expressed as a multiplier of
103 .Sy l2arc_write_max .
104 ARC persistence across reboots can be achieved with persistent L2ARC
105 by setting this parameter to
106 .Sy 0 ,
107 allowing the full length of ARC lists to be searched for cacheable content.
108 .
109 .It Sy l2arc_headroom_boost Ns = Ns Sy 200 Ns % Pq u64
110 Scales
111 .Sy l2arc_headroom
112 by this percentage when L2ARC contents are being successfully compressed
113 before writing.
114 A value of
115 .Sy 100
116 disables this feature.
117 .
118 .It Sy l2arc_exclude_special Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
119 Controls whether buffers present on special vdevs are eligible for caching
120 into L2ARC.
121 If set to 1, exclude dbufs on special vdevs from being cached to L2ARC.
122 .
123 .It Sy l2arc_mfuonly Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
124 Controls whether only MFU metadata and data are cached from ARC into L2ARC.
125 This may be desired to avoid wasting space on L2ARC when reading/writing large
126 amounts of data that are not expected to be accessed more than once.
127 .Pp
128 The default is off,
129 meaning both MRU and MFU data and metadata are cached.
130 When turning off this feature, some MRU buffers will still be present
131 in ARC and eventually cached on L2ARC.
132 .No If Sy l2arc_noprefetch Ns = Ns Sy 0 ,
133 some prefetched buffers will be cached to L2ARC, and those might later
134 transition to MRU, in which case the
135 .Sy l2arc_mru_asize No arcstat will not be Sy 0 .
136 .Pp
137 Regardless of
138 .Sy l2arc_noprefetch ,
139 some MFU buffers might be evicted from ARC,
140 accessed later on as prefetches and transition to MRU as prefetches.
141 If accessed again they are counted as MRU and the
142 .Sy l2arc_mru_asize No arcstat will not be Sy 0 .
143 .Pp
144 The ARC status of L2ARC buffers when they were first cached in
145 L2ARC can be seen in the
146 .Sy l2arc_mru_asize , Sy l2arc_mfu_asize , No and Sy l2arc_prefetch_asize
147 arcstats when importing the pool or onlining a cache
148 device if persistent L2ARC is enabled.
149 .Pp
150 The
151 .Sy evict_l2_eligible_mru
152 arcstat does not take into account if this option is enabled as the information
153 provided by the
154 .Sy evict_l2_eligible_m[rf]u
155 arcstats can be used to decide if toggling this option is appropriate
156 for the current workload.
157 .
158 .It Sy l2arc_meta_percent Ns = Ns Sy 33 Ns % Pq uint
159 Percent of ARC size allowed for L2ARC-only headers.
160 Since L2ARC buffers are not evicted on memory pressure,
161 too many headers on a system with an irrationally large L2ARC
162 can render it slow or unusable.
163 This parameter limits L2ARC writes and rebuilds to achieve the target.
164 .
165 .It Sy l2arc_trim_ahead Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns % Pq u64
166 Trims ahead of the current write size
167 .Pq Sy l2arc_write_max
168 on L2ARC devices by this percentage of write size if we have filled the device.
169 If set to
170 .Sy 100
171 we TRIM twice the space required to accommodate upcoming writes.
172 A minimum of
173 .Sy 64 MiB
174 will be trimmed.
175 It also enables TRIM of the whole L2ARC device upon creation
176 or addition to an existing pool or if the header of the device is
177 invalid upon importing a pool or onlining a cache device.
178 A value of
179 .Sy 0
180 disables TRIM on L2ARC altogether and is the default as it can put significant
181 stress on the underlying storage devices.
182 This will vary depending of how well the specific device handles these commands.
183 .
184 .It Sy l2arc_noprefetch Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
185 Do not write buffers to L2ARC if they were prefetched but not used by
186 applications.
187 In case there are prefetched buffers in L2ARC and this option
188 is later set, we do not read the prefetched buffers from L2ARC.
189 Unsetting this option is useful for caching sequential reads from the
190 disks to L2ARC and serve those reads from L2ARC later on.
191 This may be beneficial in case the L2ARC device is significantly faster
192 in sequential reads than the disks of the pool.
193 .Pp
194 Use
195 .Sy 1
196 to disable and
197 .Sy 0
198 to enable caching/reading prefetches to/from L2ARC.
199 .
200 .It Sy l2arc_norw Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
201 No reads during writes.
202 .
203 .It Sy l2arc_write_boost Ns = Ns Sy 8388608 Ns B Po 8 MiB Pc Pq u64
204 Cold L2ARC devices will have
205 .Sy l2arc_write_max
206 increased by this amount while they remain cold.
207 .
208 .It Sy l2arc_write_max Ns = Ns Sy 8388608 Ns B Po 8 MiB Pc Pq u64
209 Max write bytes per interval.
210 .
211 .It Sy l2arc_rebuild_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
212 Rebuild the L2ARC when importing a pool (persistent L2ARC).
213 This can be disabled if there are problems importing a pool
214 or attaching an L2ARC device (e.g. the L2ARC device is slow
215 in reading stored log metadata, or the metadata
216 has become somehow fragmented/unusable).
217 .
218 .It Sy l2arc_rebuild_blocks_min_l2size Ns = Ns Sy 1073741824 Ns B Po 1 GiB Pc Pq u64
219 Mininum size of an L2ARC device required in order to write log blocks in it.
220 The log blocks are used upon importing the pool to rebuild the persistent L2ARC.
221 .Pp
222 For L2ARC devices less than 1 GiB, the amount of data
223 .Fn l2arc_evict
224 evicts is significant compared to the amount of restored L2ARC data.
225 In this case, do not write log blocks in L2ARC in order not to waste space.
226 .
227 .It Sy metaslab_aliquot Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq u64
228 Metaslab granularity, in bytes.
229 This is roughly similar to what would be referred to as the "stripe size"
230 in traditional RAID arrays.
231 In normal operation, ZFS will try to write this amount of data to each disk
232 before moving on to the next top-level vdev.
233 .
234 .It Sy metaslab_bias_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
235 Enable metaslab group biasing based on their vdevs' over- or under-utilization
236 relative to the pool.
237 .
238 .It Sy metaslab_force_ganging Ns = Ns Sy 16777217 Ns B Po 16 MiB + 1 B Pc Pq u64
239 Make some blocks above a certain size be gang blocks.
240 This option is used by the test suite to facilitate testing.
241 .
242 .It Sy metaslab_force_ganging_pct Ns = Ns Sy 3 Ns % Pq uint
243 For blocks that could be forced to be a gang block (due to
244 .Sy metaslab_force_ganging ) ,
245 force this many of them to be gang blocks.
246 .
247 .It Sy zfs_ddt_zap_default_bs Ns = Ns Sy 15 Po 32 KiB Pc Pq int
248 Default DDT ZAP data block size as a power of 2. Note that changing this after
249 creating a DDT on the pool will not affect existing DDTs, only newly created
250 ones.
251 .
252 .It Sy zfs_ddt_zap_default_ibs Ns = Ns Sy 15 Po 32 KiB Pc Pq int
253 Default DDT ZAP indirect block size as a power of 2. Note that changing this
254 after creating a DDT on the pool will not affect existing DDTs, only newly
255 created ones.
256 .
257 .It Sy zfs_default_bs Ns = Ns Sy 9 Po 512 B Pc Pq int
258 Default dnode block size as a power of 2.
259 .
260 .It Sy zfs_default_ibs Ns = Ns Sy 17 Po 128 KiB Pc Pq int
261 Default dnode indirect block size as a power of 2.
262 .
263 .It Sy zfs_history_output_max Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq u64
264 When attempting to log an output nvlist of an ioctl in the on-disk history,
265 the output will not be stored if it is larger than this size (in bytes).
266 This must be less than
267 .Sy DMU_MAX_ACCESS Pq 64 MiB .
268 This applies primarily to
269 .Fn zfs_ioc_channel_program Pq cf. Xr zfs-program 8 .
270 .
271 .It Sy zfs_keep_log_spacemaps_at_export Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
272 Prevent log spacemaps from being destroyed during pool exports and destroys.
273 .
274 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_segment_weight_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
275 Enable/disable segment-based metaslab selection.
276 .
277 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_switch_threshold Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq int
278 When using segment-based metaslab selection, continue allocating
279 from the active metaslab until this option's
280 worth of buckets have been exhausted.
281 .
282 .It Sy metaslab_debug_load Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
283 Load all metaslabs during pool import.
284 .
285 .It Sy metaslab_debug_unload Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
286 Prevent metaslabs from being unloaded.
287 .
288 .It Sy metaslab_fragmentation_factor_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
289 Enable use of the fragmentation metric in computing metaslab weights.
290 .
291 .It Sy metaslab_df_max_search Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Ns B Po 16 MiB Pc Pq uint
292 Maximum distance to search forward from the last offset.
293 Without this limit, fragmented pools can see
294 .Em >100`000
295 iterations and
296 .Fn metaslab_block_picker
297 becomes the performance limiting factor on high-performance storage.
298 .Pp
299 With the default setting of
300 .Sy 16 MiB ,
301 we typically see less than
302 .Em 500
303 iterations, even with very fragmented
304 .Sy ashift Ns = Ns Sy 9
305 pools.
306 The maximum number of iterations possible is
307 .Sy metaslab_df_max_search / 2^(ashift+1) .
308 With the default setting of
309 .Sy 16 MiB
310 this is
311 .Em 16*1024 Pq with Sy ashift Ns = Ns Sy 9
312 or
313 .Em 2*1024 Pq with Sy ashift Ns = Ns Sy 12 .
314 .
315 .It Sy metaslab_df_use_largest_segment Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
316 If not searching forward (due to
317 .Sy metaslab_df_max_search , metaslab_df_free_pct ,
318 .No or Sy metaslab_df_alloc_threshold ) ,
319 this tunable controls which segment is used.
320 If set, we will use the largest free segment.
321 If unset, we will use a segment of at least the requested size.
322 .
323 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_max_size_cache_sec Ns = Ns Sy 3600 Ns s Po 1 hour Pc Pq u64
324 When we unload a metaslab, we cache the size of the largest free chunk.
325 We use that cached size to determine whether or not to load a metaslab
326 for a given allocation.
327 As more frees accumulate in that metaslab while it's unloaded,
328 the cached max size becomes less and less accurate.
329 After a number of seconds controlled by this tunable,
330 we stop considering the cached max size and start
331 considering only the histogram instead.
332 .
333 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_mem_limit Ns = Ns Sy 25 Ns % Pq uint
334 When we are loading a new metaslab, we check the amount of memory being used
335 to store metaslab range trees.
336 If it is over a threshold, we attempt to unload the least recently used metaslab
337 to prevent the system from clogging all of its memory with range trees.
338 This tunable sets the percentage of total system memory that is the threshold.
339 .
340 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_try_hard_before_gang Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
341 .Bl -item -compact
342 .It
343 If unset, we will first try normal allocation.
344 .It
345 If that fails then we will do a gang allocation.
346 .It
347 If that fails then we will do a "try hard" gang allocation.
348 .It
349 If that fails then we will have a multi-layer gang block.
350 .El
351 .Pp
352 .Bl -item -compact
353 .It
354 If set, we will first try normal allocation.
355 .It
356 If that fails then we will do a "try hard" allocation.
357 .It
358 If that fails we will do a gang allocation.
359 .It
360 If that fails we will do a "try hard" gang allocation.
361 .It
362 If that fails then we will have a multi-layer gang block.
363 .El
364 .
365 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_find_max_tries Ns = Ns Sy 100 Pq uint
366 When not trying hard, we only consider this number of the best metaslabs.
367 This improves performance, especially when there are many metaslabs per vdev
368 and the allocation can't actually be satisfied
369 (so we would otherwise iterate all metaslabs).
370 .
371 .It Sy zfs_vdev_default_ms_count Ns = Ns Sy 200 Pq uint
372 When a vdev is added, target this number of metaslabs per top-level vdev.
373 .
374 .It Sy zfs_vdev_default_ms_shift Ns = Ns Sy 29 Po 512 MiB Pc Pq uint
375 Default lower limit for metaslab size.
376 .
377 .It Sy zfs_vdev_max_ms_shift Ns = Ns Sy 34 Po 16 GiB Pc Pq uint
378 Default upper limit for metaslab size.
379 .
380 .It Sy zfs_vdev_max_auto_ashift Ns = Ns Sy 14 Pq uint
381 Maximum ashift used when optimizing for logical \[->] physical sector size on
382 new
383 top-level vdevs.
384 May be increased up to
385 .Sy ASHIFT_MAX Po 16 Pc ,
386 but this may negatively impact pool space efficiency.
387 .
388 .It Sy zfs_vdev_min_auto_ashift Ns = Ns Sy ASHIFT_MIN Po 9 Pc Pq uint
389 Minimum ashift used when creating new top-level vdevs.
390 .
391 .It Sy zfs_vdev_min_ms_count Ns = Ns Sy 16 Pq uint
392 Minimum number of metaslabs to create in a top-level vdev.
393 .
394 .It Sy vdev_validate_skip Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
395 Skip label validation steps during pool import.
396 Changing is not recommended unless you know what you're doing
397 and are recovering a damaged label.
398 .
399 .It Sy zfs_vdev_ms_count_limit Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Po 128k Pc Pq uint
400 Practical upper limit of total metaslabs per top-level vdev.
401 .
402 .It Sy metaslab_preload_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
403 Enable metaslab group preloading.
404 .
405 .It Sy metaslab_lba_weighting_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
406 Give more weight to metaslabs with lower LBAs,
407 assuming they have greater bandwidth,
408 as is typically the case on a modern constant angular velocity disk drive.
409 .
410 .It Sy metaslab_unload_delay Ns = Ns Sy 32 Pq uint
411 After a metaslab is used, we keep it loaded for this many TXGs, to attempt to
412 reduce unnecessary reloading.
413 Note that both this many TXGs and
414 .Sy metaslab_unload_delay_ms
415 milliseconds must pass before unloading will occur.
416 .
417 .It Sy metaslab_unload_delay_ms Ns = Ns Sy 600000 Ns ms Po 10 min Pc Pq uint
418 After a metaslab is used, we keep it loaded for this many milliseconds,
419 to attempt to reduce unnecessary reloading.
420 Note, that both this many milliseconds and
421 .Sy metaslab_unload_delay
422 TXGs must pass before unloading will occur.
423 .
424 .It Sy reference_history Ns = Ns Sy 3 Pq uint
425 Maximum reference holders being tracked when reference_tracking_enable is
426 active.
427 .
428 .It Sy reference_tracking_enable Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
429 Track reference holders to
430 .Sy refcount_t
431 objects (debug builds only).
432 .
433 .It Sy send_holes_without_birth_time Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
434 When set, the
435 .Sy hole_birth
436 optimization will not be used, and all holes will always be sent during a
437 .Nm zfs Cm send .
438 This is useful if you suspect your datasets are affected by a bug in
439 .Sy hole_birth .
440 .
441 .It Sy spa_config_path Ns = Ns Pa /etc/zfs/zpool.cache Pq charp
442 SPA config file.
443 .
444 .It Sy spa_asize_inflation Ns = Ns Sy 24 Pq uint
445 Multiplication factor used to estimate actual disk consumption from the
446 size of data being written.
447 The default value is a worst case estimate,
448 but lower values may be valid for a given pool depending on its configuration.
449 Pool administrators who understand the factors involved
450 may wish to specify a more realistic inflation factor,
451 particularly if they operate close to quota or capacity limits.
452 .
453 .It Sy spa_load_print_vdev_tree Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
454 Whether to print the vdev tree in the debugging message buffer during pool
455 import.
456 .
457 .It Sy spa_load_verify_data Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
458 Whether to traverse data blocks during an "extreme rewind"
459 .Pq Fl X
460 import.
461 .Pp
462 An extreme rewind import normally performs a full traversal of all
463 blocks in the pool for verification.
464 If this parameter is unset, the traversal skips non-metadata blocks.
465 It can be toggled once the
466 import has started to stop or start the traversal of non-metadata blocks.
467 .
468 .It Sy spa_load_verify_metadata Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
469 Whether to traverse blocks during an "extreme rewind"
470 .Pq Fl X
471 pool import.
472 .Pp
473 An extreme rewind import normally performs a full traversal of all
474 blocks in the pool for verification.
475 If this parameter is unset, the traversal is not performed.
476 It can be toggled once the import has started to stop or start the traversal.
477 .
478 .It Sy spa_load_verify_shift Ns = Ns Sy 4 Po 1/16th Pc Pq uint
479 Sets the maximum number of bytes to consume during pool import to the log2
480 fraction of the target ARC size.
481 .
482 .It Sy spa_slop_shift Ns = Ns Sy 5 Po 1/32nd Pc Pq int
483 Normally, we don't allow the last
484 .Sy 3.2% Pq Sy 1/2^spa_slop_shift
485 of space in the pool to be consumed.
486 This ensures that we don't run the pool completely out of space,
487 due to unaccounted changes (e.g. to the MOS).
488 It also limits the worst-case time to allocate space.
489 If we have less than this amount of free space,
490 most ZPL operations (e.g. write, create) will return
491 .Sy ENOSPC .
492 .
493 .It Sy spa_upgrade_errlog_limit Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
494 Limits the number of on-disk error log entries that will be converted to the
495 new format when enabling the
496 .Sy head_errlog
497 feature.
498 The default is to convert all log entries.
499 .
500 .It Sy vdev_removal_max_span Ns = Ns Sy 32768 Ns B Po 32 KiB Pc Pq uint
501 During top-level vdev removal, chunks of data are copied from the vdev
502 which may include free space in order to trade bandwidth for IOPS.
503 This parameter determines the maximum span of free space, in bytes,
504 which will be included as "unnecessary" data in a chunk of copied data.
505 .Pp
506 The default value here was chosen to align with
507 .Sy zfs_vdev_read_gap_limit ,
508 which is a similar concept when doing
509 regular reads (but there's no reason it has to be the same).
510 .
511 .It Sy vdev_file_logical_ashift Ns = Ns Sy 9 Po 512 B Pc Pq u64
512 Logical ashift for file-based devices.
513 .
514 .It Sy vdev_file_physical_ashift Ns = Ns Sy 9 Po 512 B Pc Pq u64
515 Physical ashift for file-based devices.
516 .
517 .It Sy zap_iterate_prefetch Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
518 If set, when we start iterating over a ZAP object,
519 prefetch the entire object (all leaf blocks).
520 However, this is limited by
521 .Sy dmu_prefetch_max .
522 .
523 .It Sy zap_micro_max_size Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Ns B Po 128 KiB Pc Pq int
524 Maximum micro ZAP size.
525 A micro ZAP is upgraded to a fat ZAP, once it grows beyond the specified size.
526 .
527 .It Sy zfetch_min_distance Ns = Ns Sy 4194304 Ns B Po 4 MiB Pc Pq uint
528 Min bytes to prefetch per stream.
529 Prefetch distance starts from the demand access size and quickly grows to
530 this value, doubling on each hit.
531 After that it may grow further by 1/8 per hit, but only if some prefetch
532 since last time haven't completed in time to satisfy demand request, i.e.
533 prefetch depth didn't cover the read latency or the pool got saturated.
534 .
535 .It Sy zfetch_max_distance Ns = Ns Sy 67108864 Ns B Po 64 MiB Pc Pq uint
536 Max bytes to prefetch per stream.
537 .
538 .It Sy zfetch_max_idistance Ns = Ns Sy 67108864 Ns B Po 64 MiB Pc Pq uint
539 Max bytes to prefetch indirects for per stream.
540 .
541 .It Sy zfetch_max_streams Ns = Ns Sy 8 Pq uint
542 Max number of streams per zfetch (prefetch streams per file).
543 .
544 .It Sy zfetch_min_sec_reap Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
545 Min time before inactive prefetch stream can be reclaimed
546 .
547 .It Sy zfetch_max_sec_reap Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
548 Max time before inactive prefetch stream can be deleted
549 .
550 .It Sy zfs_abd_scatter_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
551 Enables ARC from using scatter/gather lists and forces all allocations to be
552 linear in kernel memory.
553 Disabling can improve performance in some code paths
554 at the expense of fragmented kernel memory.
555 .
556 .It Sy zfs_abd_scatter_max_order Ns = Ns Sy MAX_ORDER\-1 Pq uint
557 Maximum number of consecutive memory pages allocated in a single block for
558 scatter/gather lists.
559 .Pp
560 The value of
561 .Sy MAX_ORDER
562 depends on kernel configuration.
563 .
564 .It Sy zfs_abd_scatter_min_size Ns = Ns Sy 1536 Ns B Po 1.5 KiB Pc Pq uint
565 This is the minimum allocation size that will use scatter (page-based) ABDs.
566 Smaller allocations will use linear ABDs.
567 .
568 .It Sy zfs_arc_dnode_limit Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns B Pq u64
569 When the number of bytes consumed by dnodes in the ARC exceeds this number of
570 bytes, try to unpin some of it in response to demand for non-metadata.
571 This value acts as a ceiling to the amount of dnode metadata, and defaults to
572 .Sy 0 ,
573 which indicates that a percent which is based on
574 .Sy zfs_arc_dnode_limit_percent
575 of the ARC meta buffers that may be used for dnodes.
576 .It Sy zfs_arc_dnode_limit_percent Ns = Ns Sy 10 Ns % Pq u64
577 Percentage that can be consumed by dnodes of ARC meta buffers.
578 .Pp
579 See also
580 .Sy zfs_arc_dnode_limit ,
581 which serves a similar purpose but has a higher priority if nonzero.
582 .
583 .It Sy zfs_arc_dnode_reduce_percent Ns = Ns Sy 10 Ns % Pq u64
584 Percentage of ARC dnodes to try to scan in response to demand for non-metadata
585 when the number of bytes consumed by dnodes exceeds
586 .Sy zfs_arc_dnode_limit .
587 .
588 .It Sy zfs_arc_average_blocksize Ns = Ns Sy 8192 Ns B Po 8 KiB Pc Pq uint
589 The ARC's buffer hash table is sized based on the assumption of an average
590 block size of this value.
591 This works out to roughly 1 MiB of hash table per 1 GiB of physical memory
592 with 8-byte pointers.
593 For configurations with a known larger average block size,
594 this value can be increased to reduce the memory footprint.
595 .
596 .It Sy zfs_arc_eviction_pct Ns = Ns Sy 200 Ns % Pq uint
597 When
598 .Fn arc_is_overflowing ,
599 .Fn arc_get_data_impl
600 waits for this percent of the requested amount of data to be evicted.
601 For example, by default, for every
602 .Em 2 KiB
603 that's evicted,
604 .Em 1 KiB
605 of it may be "reused" by a new allocation.
606 Since this is above
607 .Sy 100 Ns % ,
608 it ensures that progress is made towards getting
609 .Sy arc_size No under Sy arc_c .
610 Since this is finite, it ensures that allocations can still happen,
611 even during the potentially long time that
612 .Sy arc_size No is more than Sy arc_c .
613 .
614 .It Sy zfs_arc_evict_batch_limit Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
615 Number ARC headers to evict per sub-list before proceeding to another sub-list.
616 This batch-style operation prevents entire sub-lists from being evicted at once
617 but comes at a cost of additional unlocking and locking.
618 .
619 .It Sy zfs_arc_grow_retry Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns s Pq uint
620 If set to a non zero value, it will replace the
621 .Sy arc_grow_retry
622 value with this value.
623 The
624 .Sy arc_grow_retry
625 .No value Pq default Sy 5 Ns s
626 is the number of seconds the ARC will wait before
627 trying to resume growth after a memory pressure event.
628 .
629 .It Sy zfs_arc_lotsfree_percent Ns = Ns Sy 10 Ns % Pq int
630 Throttle I/O when free system memory drops below this percentage of total
631 system memory.
632 Setting this value to
633 .Sy 0
634 will disable the throttle.
635 .
636 .It Sy zfs_arc_max Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns B Pq u64
637 Max size of ARC in bytes.
638 If
639 .Sy 0 ,
640 then the max size of ARC is determined by the amount of system memory installed.
641 Under Linux, half of system memory will be used as the limit.
642 Under
643 .Fx ,
644 the larger of
645 .Sy all_system_memory No \- Sy 1 GiB
646 and
647 .Sy 5/8 No \(mu Sy all_system_memory
648 will be used as the limit.
649 This value must be at least
650 .Sy 67108864 Ns B Pq 64 MiB .
651 .Pp
652 This value can be changed dynamically, with some caveats.
653 It cannot be set back to
654 .Sy 0
655 while running, and reducing it below the current ARC size will not cause
656 the ARC to shrink without memory pressure to induce shrinking.
657 .
658 .It Sy zfs_arc_meta_balance Ns = Ns Sy 500 Pq uint
659 Balance between metadata and data on ghost hits.
660 Values above 100 increase metadata caching by proportionally reducing effect
661 of ghost data hits on target data/metadata rate.
662 .
663 .It Sy zfs_arc_min Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns B Pq u64
664 Min size of ARC in bytes.
665 .No If set to Sy 0 , arc_c_min
666 will default to consuming the larger of
667 .Sy 32 MiB
668 and
669 .Sy all_system_memory No / Sy 32 .
670 .
671 .It Sy zfs_arc_min_prefetch_ms Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns ms Ns Po Ns ≡ Ns 1s Pc Pq uint
672 Minimum time prefetched blocks are locked in the ARC.
673 .
674 .It Sy zfs_arc_min_prescient_prefetch_ms Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns ms Ns Po Ns ≡ Ns 6s Pc Pq uint
675 Minimum time "prescient prefetched" blocks are locked in the ARC.
676 These blocks are meant to be prefetched fairly aggressively ahead of
677 the code that may use them.
678 .
679 .It Sy zfs_arc_prune_task_threads Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq int
680 Number of arc_prune threads.
681 .Fx
682 does not need more than one.
683 Linux may theoretically use one per mount point up to number of CPUs,
684 but that was not proven to be useful.
685 .
686 .It Sy zfs_max_missing_tvds Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
687 Number of missing top-level vdevs which will be allowed during
688 pool import (only in read-only mode).
689 .
690 .It Sy zfs_max_nvlist_src_size Ns = Sy 0 Pq u64
691 Maximum size in bytes allowed to be passed as
692 .Sy zc_nvlist_src_size
693 for ioctls on
694 .Pa /dev/zfs .
695 This prevents a user from causing the kernel to allocate
696 an excessive amount of memory.
697 When the limit is exceeded, the ioctl fails with
698 .Sy EINVAL
699 and a description of the error is sent to the
700 .Pa zfs-dbgmsg
701 log.
702 This parameter should not need to be touched under normal circumstances.
703 If
704 .Sy 0 ,
705 equivalent to a quarter of the user-wired memory limit under
706 .Fx
707 and to
708 .Sy 134217728 Ns B Pq 128 MiB
709 under Linux.
710 .
711 .It Sy zfs_multilist_num_sublists Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
712 To allow more fine-grained locking, each ARC state contains a series
713 of lists for both data and metadata objects.
714 Locking is performed at the level of these "sub-lists".
715 This parameters controls the number of sub-lists per ARC state,
716 and also applies to other uses of the multilist data structure.
717 .Pp
718 If
719 .Sy 0 ,
720 equivalent to the greater of the number of online CPUs and
721 .Sy 4 .
722 .
723 .It Sy zfs_arc_overflow_shift Ns = Ns Sy 8 Pq int
724 The ARC size is considered to be overflowing if it exceeds the current
725 ARC target size
726 .Pq Sy arc_c
727 by thresholds determined by this parameter.
728 Exceeding by
729 .Sy ( arc_c No >> Sy zfs_arc_overflow_shift ) No / Sy 2
730 starts ARC reclamation process.
731 If that appears insufficient, exceeding by
732 .Sy ( arc_c No >> Sy zfs_arc_overflow_shift ) No \(mu Sy 1.5
733 blocks new buffer allocation until the reclaim thread catches up.
734 Started reclamation process continues till ARC size returns below the
735 target size.
736 .Pp
737 The default value of
738 .Sy 8
739 causes the ARC to start reclamation if it exceeds the target size by
740 .Em 0.2%
741 of the target size, and block allocations by
742 .Em 0.6% .
743 .
744 .It Sy zfs_arc_shrink_shift Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
745 If nonzero, this will update
746 .Sy arc_shrink_shift Pq default Sy 7
747 with the new value.
748 .
749 .It Sy zfs_arc_pc_percent Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns % Po off Pc Pq uint
750 Percent of pagecache to reclaim ARC to.
751 .Pp
752 This tunable allows the ZFS ARC to play more nicely
753 with the kernel's LRU pagecache.
754 It can guarantee that the ARC size won't collapse under scanning
755 pressure on the pagecache, yet still allows the ARC to be reclaimed down to
756 .Sy zfs_arc_min
757 if necessary.
758 This value is specified as percent of pagecache size (as measured by
759 .Sy NR_FILE_PAGES ) ,
760 where that percent may exceed
761 .Sy 100 .
762 This
763 only operates during memory pressure/reclaim.
764 .
765 .It Sy zfs_arc_shrinker_limit Ns = Ns Sy 10000 Pq int
766 This is a limit on how many pages the ARC shrinker makes available for
767 eviction in response to one page allocation attempt.
768 Note that in practice, the kernel's shrinker can ask us to evict
769 up to about four times this for one allocation attempt.
770 .Pp
771 The default limit of
772 .Sy 10000 Pq in practice, Em 160 MiB No per allocation attempt with 4 KiB pages
773 limits the amount of time spent attempting to reclaim ARC memory to
774 less than 100 ms per allocation attempt,
775 even with a small average compressed block size of ~8 KiB.
776 .Pp
777 The parameter can be set to 0 (zero) to disable the limit,
778 and only applies on Linux.
779 .
780 .It Sy zfs_arc_sys_free Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns B Pq u64
781 The target number of bytes the ARC should leave as free memory on the system.
782 If zero, equivalent to the bigger of
783 .Sy 512 KiB No and Sy all_system_memory/64 .
784 .
785 .It Sy zfs_autoimport_disable Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
786 Disable pool import at module load by ignoring the cache file
787 .Pq Sy spa_config_path .
788 .
789 .It Sy zfs_checksum_events_per_second Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns /s Pq uint
790 Rate limit checksum events to this many per second.
791 Note that this should not be set below the ZED thresholds
792 (currently 10 checksums over 10 seconds)
793 or else the daemon may not trigger any action.
794 .
795 .It Sy zfs_commit_timeout_pct Ns = Ns Sy 5 Ns % Pq uint
796 This controls the amount of time that a ZIL block (lwb) will remain "open"
797 when it isn't "full", and it has a thread waiting for it to be committed to
798 stable storage.
799 The timeout is scaled based on a percentage of the last lwb
800 latency to avoid significantly impacting the latency of each individual
801 transaction record (itx).
802 .
803 .It Sy zfs_condense_indirect_commit_entry_delay_ms Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns ms Pq int
804 Vdev indirection layer (used for device removal) sleeps for this many
805 milliseconds during mapping generation.
806 Intended for use with the test suite to throttle vdev removal speed.
807 .
808 .It Sy zfs_condense_indirect_obsolete_pct Ns = Ns Sy 25 Ns % Pq uint
809 Minimum percent of obsolete bytes in vdev mapping required to attempt to
810 condense
811 .Pq see Sy zfs_condense_indirect_vdevs_enable .
812 Intended for use with the test suite
813 to facilitate triggering condensing as needed.
814 .
815 .It Sy zfs_condense_indirect_vdevs_enable Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
816 Enable condensing indirect vdev mappings.
817 When set, attempt to condense indirect vdev mappings
818 if the mapping uses more than
819 .Sy zfs_condense_min_mapping_bytes
820 bytes of memory and if the obsolete space map object uses more than
821 .Sy zfs_condense_max_obsolete_bytes
822 bytes on-disk.
823 The condensing process is an attempt to save memory by removing obsolete
824 mappings.
825 .
826 .It Sy zfs_condense_max_obsolete_bytes Ns = Ns Sy 1073741824 Ns B Po 1 GiB Pc Pq u64
827 Only attempt to condense indirect vdev mappings if the on-disk size
828 of the obsolete space map object is greater than this number of bytes
829 .Pq see Sy zfs_condense_indirect_vdevs_enable .
830 .
831 .It Sy zfs_condense_min_mapping_bytes Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Ns B Po 128 KiB Pc Pq u64
832 Minimum size vdev mapping to attempt to condense
833 .Pq see Sy zfs_condense_indirect_vdevs_enable .
834 .
835 .It Sy zfs_dbgmsg_enable Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
836 Internally ZFS keeps a small log to facilitate debugging.
837 The log is enabled by default, and can be disabled by unsetting this option.
838 The contents of the log can be accessed by reading
839 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/dbgmsg .
840 Writing
841 .Sy 0
842 to the file clears the log.
843 .Pp
844 This setting does not influence debug prints due to
845 .Sy zfs_flags .
846 .
847 .It Sy zfs_dbgmsg_maxsize Ns = Ns Sy 4194304 Ns B Po 4 MiB Pc Pq uint
848 Maximum size of the internal ZFS debug log.
849 .
850 .It Sy zfs_dbuf_state_index Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
851 Historically used for controlling what reporting was available under
852 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs .
853 No effect.
854 .
855 .It Sy zfs_deadman_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
856 When a pool sync operation takes longer than
857 .Sy zfs_deadman_synctime_ms ,
858 or when an individual I/O operation takes longer than
859 .Sy zfs_deadman_ziotime_ms ,
860 then the operation is considered to be "hung".
861 If
862 .Sy zfs_deadman_enabled
863 is set, then the deadman behavior is invoked as described by
864 .Sy zfs_deadman_failmode .
865 By default, the deadman is enabled and set to
866 .Sy wait
867 which results in "hung" I/O operations only being logged.
868 The deadman is automatically disabled when a pool gets suspended.
869 .
870 .It Sy zfs_deadman_failmode Ns = Ns Sy wait Pq charp
871 Controls the failure behavior when the deadman detects a "hung" I/O operation.
872 Valid values are:
873 .Bl -tag -compact -offset 4n -width "continue"
874 .It Sy wait
875 Wait for a "hung" operation to complete.
876 For each "hung" operation a "deadman" event will be posted
877 describing that operation.
878 .It Sy continue
879 Attempt to recover from a "hung" operation by re-dispatching it
880 to the I/O pipeline if possible.
881 .It Sy panic
882 Panic the system.
883 This can be used to facilitate automatic fail-over
884 to a properly configured fail-over partner.
885 .El
886 .
887 .It Sy zfs_deadman_checktime_ms Ns = Ns Sy 60000 Ns ms Po 1 min Pc Pq u64
888 Check time in milliseconds.
889 This defines the frequency at which we check for hung I/O requests
890 and potentially invoke the
891 .Sy zfs_deadman_failmode
892 behavior.
893 .
894 .It Sy zfs_deadman_synctime_ms Ns = Ns Sy 600000 Ns ms Po 10 min Pc Pq u64
895 Interval in milliseconds after which the deadman is triggered and also
896 the interval after which a pool sync operation is considered to be "hung".
897 Once this limit is exceeded the deadman will be invoked every
898 .Sy zfs_deadman_checktime_ms
899 milliseconds until the pool sync completes.
900 .
901 .It Sy zfs_deadman_ziotime_ms Ns = Ns Sy 300000 Ns ms Po 5 min Pc Pq u64
902 Interval in milliseconds after which the deadman is triggered and an
903 individual I/O operation is considered to be "hung".
904 As long as the operation remains "hung",
905 the deadman will be invoked every
906 .Sy zfs_deadman_checktime_ms
907 milliseconds until the operation completes.
908 .
909 .It Sy zfs_dedup_prefetch Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
910 Enable prefetching dedup-ed blocks which are going to be freed.
911 .
912 .It Sy zfs_delay_min_dirty_percent Ns = Ns Sy 60 Ns % Pq uint
913 Start to delay each transaction once there is this amount of dirty data,
914 expressed as a percentage of
915 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max .
916 This value should be at least
917 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent .
918 .No See Sx ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY .
919 .
920 .It Sy zfs_delay_scale Ns = Ns Sy 500000 Pq int
921 This controls how quickly the transaction delay approaches infinity.
922 Larger values cause longer delays for a given amount of dirty data.
923 .Pp
924 For the smoothest delay, this value should be about 1 billion divided
925 by the maximum number of operations per second.
926 This will smoothly handle between ten times and a tenth of this number.
927 .No See Sx ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY .
928 .Pp
929 .Sy zfs_delay_scale No \(mu Sy zfs_dirty_data_max Em must No be smaller than Sy 2^64 .
930 .
931 .It Sy zfs_disable_ivset_guid_check Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
932 Disables requirement for IVset GUIDs to be present and match when doing a raw
933 receive of encrypted datasets.
934 Intended for users whose pools were created with
935 OpenZFS pre-release versions and now have compatibility issues.
936 .
937 .It Sy zfs_key_max_salt_uses Ns = Ns Sy 400000000 Po 4*10^8 Pc Pq ulong
938 Maximum number of uses of a single salt value before generating a new one for
939 encrypted datasets.
940 The default value is also the maximum.
941 .
942 .It Sy zfs_object_mutex_size Ns = Ns Sy 64 Pq uint
943 Size of the znode hashtable used for holds.
944 .Pp
945 Due to the need to hold locks on objects that may not exist yet, kernel mutexes
946 are not created per-object and instead a hashtable is used where collisions
947 will result in objects waiting when there is not actually contention on the
948 same object.
949 .
950 .It Sy zfs_slow_io_events_per_second Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns /s Pq int
951 Rate limit delay and deadman zevents (which report slow I/O operations) to this
952 many per
953 second.
954 .
955 .It Sy zfs_unflushed_max_mem_amt Ns = Ns Sy 1073741824 Ns B Po 1 GiB Pc Pq u64
956 Upper-bound limit for unflushed metadata changes to be held by the
957 log spacemap in memory, in bytes.
958 .
959 .It Sy zfs_unflushed_max_mem_ppm Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Ns ppm Po 0.1% Pc Pq u64
960 Part of overall system memory that ZFS allows to be used
961 for unflushed metadata changes by the log spacemap, in millionths.
962 .
963 .It Sy zfs_unflushed_log_block_max Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Po 128k Pc Pq u64
964 Describes the maximum number of log spacemap blocks allowed for each pool.
965 The default value means that the space in all the log spacemaps
966 can add up to no more than
967 .Sy 131072
968 blocks (which means
969 .Em 16 GiB
970 of logical space before compression and ditto blocks,
971 assuming that blocksize is
972 .Em 128 KiB ) .
973 .Pp
974 This tunable is important because it involves a trade-off between import
975 time after an unclean export and the frequency of flushing metaslabs.
976 The higher this number is, the more log blocks we allow when the pool is
977 active which means that we flush metaslabs less often and thus decrease
978 the number of I/O operations for spacemap updates per TXG.
979 At the same time though, that means that in the event of an unclean export,
980 there will be more log spacemap blocks for us to read, inducing overhead
981 in the import time of the pool.
982 The lower the number, the amount of flushing increases, destroying log
983 blocks quicker as they become obsolete faster, which leaves less blocks
984 to be read during import time after a crash.
985 .Pp
986 Each log spacemap block existing during pool import leads to approximately
987 one extra logical I/O issued.
988 This is the reason why this tunable is exposed in terms of blocks rather
989 than space used.
990 .
991 .It Sy zfs_unflushed_log_block_min Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Pq u64
992 If the number of metaslabs is small and our incoming rate is high,
993 we could get into a situation that we are flushing all our metaslabs every TXG.
994 Thus we always allow at least this many log blocks.
995 .
996 .It Sy zfs_unflushed_log_block_pct Ns = Ns Sy 400 Ns % Pq u64
997 Tunable used to determine the number of blocks that can be used for
998 the spacemap log, expressed as a percentage of the total number of
999 unflushed metaslabs in the pool.
1000 .
1001 .It Sy zfs_unflushed_log_txg_max Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Pq u64
1002 Tunable limiting maximum time in TXGs any metaslab may remain unflushed.
1003 It effectively limits maximum number of unflushed per-TXG spacemap logs
1004 that need to be read after unclean pool export.
1005 .
1006 .It Sy zfs_unlink_suspend_progress Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
1007 When enabled, files will not be asynchronously removed from the list of pending
1008 unlinks and the space they consume will be leaked.
1009 Once this option has been disabled and the dataset is remounted,
1010 the pending unlinks will be processed and the freed space returned to the pool.
1011 This option is used by the test suite.
1012 .
1013 .It Sy zfs_delete_blocks Ns = Ns Sy 20480 Pq ulong
1014 This is the used to define a large file for the purposes of deletion.
1015 Files containing more than
1016 .Sy zfs_delete_blocks
1017 will be deleted asynchronously, while smaller files are deleted synchronously.
1018 Decreasing this value will reduce the time spent in an
1019 .Xr unlink 2
1020 system call, at the expense of a longer delay before the freed space is
1021 available.
1022 This only applies on Linux.
1023 .
1024 .It Sy zfs_dirty_data_max Ns = Pq int
1025 Determines the dirty space limit in bytes.
1026 Once this limit is exceeded, new writes are halted until space frees up.
1027 This parameter takes precedence over
1028 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_percent .
1029 .No See Sx ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY .
1030 .Pp
1031 Defaults to
1032 .Sy physical_ram/10 ,
1033 capped at
1034 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_max .
1035 .
1036 .It Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_max Ns = Pq int
1037 Maximum allowable value of
1038 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max ,
1039 expressed in bytes.
1040 This limit is only enforced at module load time, and will be ignored if
1041 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max
1042 is later changed.
1043 This parameter takes precedence over
1044 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_max_percent .
1045 .No See Sx ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY .
1046 .Pp
1047 Defaults to
1048 .Sy min(physical_ram/4, 4GiB) ,
1049 or
1050 .Sy min(physical_ram/4, 1GiB)
1051 for 32-bit systems.
1052 .
1053 .It Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_max_percent Ns = Ns Sy 25 Ns % Pq uint
1054 Maximum allowable value of
1055 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max ,
1056 expressed as a percentage of physical RAM.
1057 This limit is only enforced at module load time, and will be ignored if
1058 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max
1059 is later changed.
1060 The parameter
1061 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_max
1062 takes precedence over this one.
1063 .No See Sx ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY .
1064 .
1065 .It Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_percent Ns = Ns Sy 10 Ns % Pq uint
1066 Determines the dirty space limit, expressed as a percentage of all memory.
1067 Once this limit is exceeded, new writes are halted until space frees up.
1068 The parameter
1069 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max
1070 takes precedence over this one.
1071 .No See Sx ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY .
1072 .Pp
1073 Subject to
1074 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max_max .
1075 .
1076 .It Sy zfs_dirty_data_sync_percent Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns % Pq uint
1077 Start syncing out a transaction group if there's at least this much dirty data
1078 .Pq as a percentage of Sy zfs_dirty_data_max .
1079 This should be less than
1080 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent .
1081 .
1082 .It Sy zfs_wrlog_data_max Ns = Pq int
1083 The upper limit of write-transaction zil log data size in bytes.
1084 Write operations are throttled when approaching the limit until log data is
1085 cleared out after transaction group sync.
1086 Because of some overhead, it should be set at least 2 times the size of
1087 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max
1088 .No to prevent harming normal write throughput .
1089 It also should be smaller than the size of the slog device if slog is present.
1090 .Pp
1091 Defaults to
1092 .Sy zfs_dirty_data_max*2
1093 .
1094 .It Sy zfs_fallocate_reserve_percent Ns = Ns Sy 110 Ns % Pq uint
1095 Since ZFS is a copy-on-write filesystem with snapshots, blocks cannot be
1096 preallocated for a file in order to guarantee that later writes will not
1097 run out of space.
1098 Instead,
1099 .Xr fallocate 2
1100 space preallocation only checks that sufficient space is currently available
1101 in the pool or the user's project quota allocation,
1102 and then creates a sparse file of the requested size.
1103 The requested space is multiplied by
1104 .Sy zfs_fallocate_reserve_percent
1105 to allow additional space for indirect blocks and other internal metadata.
1106 Setting this to
1107 .Sy 0
1108 disables support for
1109 .Xr fallocate 2
1110 and causes it to return
1111 .Sy EOPNOTSUPP .
1112 .
1113 .It Sy zfs_fletcher_4_impl Ns = Ns Sy fastest Pq string
1114 Select a fletcher 4 implementation.
1115 .Pp
1116 Supported selectors are:
1117 .Sy fastest , scalar , sse2 , ssse3 , avx2 , avx512f , avx512bw ,
1118 .No and Sy aarch64_neon .
1119 All except
1120 .Sy fastest No and Sy scalar
1121 require instruction set extensions to be available,
1122 and will only appear if ZFS detects that they are present at runtime.
1123 If multiple implementations of fletcher 4 are available, the
1124 .Sy fastest
1125 will be chosen using a micro benchmark.
1126 Selecting
1127 .Sy scalar
1128 results in the original CPU-based calculation being used.
1129 Selecting any option other than
1130 .Sy fastest No or Sy scalar
1131 results in vector instructions
1132 from the respective CPU instruction set being used.
1133 .
1134 .It Sy zfs_blake3_impl Ns = Ns Sy fastest Pq string
1135 Select a BLAKE3 implementation.
1136 .Pp
1137 Supported selectors are:
1138 .Sy cycle , fastest , generic , sse2 , sse41 , avx2 , avx512 .
1139 All except
1140 .Sy cycle , fastest No and Sy generic
1141 require instruction set extensions to be available,
1142 and will only appear if ZFS detects that they are present at runtime.
1143 If multiple implementations of BLAKE3 are available, the
1144 .Sy fastest will be chosen using a micro benchmark. You can see the
1145 benchmark results by reading this kstat file:
1146 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/chksum_bench .
1147 .
1148 .It Sy zfs_free_bpobj_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1149 Enable/disable the processing of the free_bpobj object.
1150 .
1151 .It Sy zfs_async_block_max_blocks Ns = Ns Sy UINT64_MAX Po unlimited Pc Pq u64
1152 Maximum number of blocks freed in a single TXG.
1153 .
1154 .It Sy zfs_max_async_dedup_frees Ns = Ns Sy 100000 Po 10^5 Pc Pq u64
1155 Maximum number of dedup blocks freed in a single TXG.
1156 .
1157 .It Sy zfs_vdev_async_read_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 3 Pq uint
1158 Maximum asynchronous read I/O operations active to each device.
1159 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1160 .
1161 .It Sy zfs_vdev_async_read_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1162 Minimum asynchronous read I/O operation active to each device.
1163 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1164 .
1165 .It Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent Ns = Ns Sy 60 Ns % Pq uint
1166 When the pool has more than this much dirty data, use
1167 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_max_active
1168 to limit active async writes.
1169 If the dirty data is between the minimum and maximum,
1170 the active I/O limit is linearly interpolated.
1171 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1172 .
1173 .It Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent Ns = Ns Sy 30 Ns % Pq uint
1174 When the pool has less than this much dirty data, use
1175 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_min_active
1176 to limit active async writes.
1177 If the dirty data is between the minimum and maximum,
1178 the active I/O limit is linearly
1179 interpolated.
1180 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1181 .
1182 .It Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
1183 Maximum asynchronous write I/O operations active to each device.
1184 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1185 .
1186 .It Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
1187 Minimum asynchronous write I/O operations active to each device.
1188 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1189 .Pp
1190 Lower values are associated with better latency on rotational media but poorer
1191 resilver performance.
1192 The default value of
1193 .Sy 2
1194 was chosen as a compromise.
1195 A value of
1196 .Sy 3
1197 has been shown to improve resilver performance further at a cost of
1198 further increasing latency.
1199 .
1200 .It Sy zfs_vdev_initializing_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1201 Maximum initializing I/O operations active to each device.
1202 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1203 .
1204 .It Sy zfs_vdev_initializing_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1205 Minimum initializing I/O operations active to each device.
1206 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1207 .
1208 .It Sy zfs_vdev_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Pq uint
1209 The maximum number of I/O operations active to each device.
1210 Ideally, this will be at least the sum of each queue's
1211 .Sy max_active .
1212 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1213 .
1214 .It Sy zfs_vdev_open_timeout_ms Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Pq uint
1215 Timeout value to wait before determining a device is missing
1216 during import.
1217 This is helpful for transient missing paths due
1218 to links being briefly removed and recreated in response to
1219 udev events.
1220 .
1221 .It Sy zfs_vdev_rebuild_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 3 Pq uint
1222 Maximum sequential resilver I/O operations active to each device.
1223 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1224 .
1225 .It Sy zfs_vdev_rebuild_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1226 Minimum sequential resilver I/O operations active to each device.
1227 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1228 .
1229 .It Sy zfs_vdev_removal_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
1230 Maximum removal I/O operations active to each device.
1231 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1232 .
1233 .It Sy zfs_vdev_removal_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1234 Minimum removal I/O operations active to each device.
1235 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1236 .
1237 .It Sy zfs_vdev_scrub_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
1238 Maximum scrub I/O operations active to each device.
1239 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1240 .
1241 .It Sy zfs_vdev_scrub_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1242 Minimum scrub I/O operations active to each device.
1243 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1244 .
1245 .It Sy zfs_vdev_sync_read_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
1246 Maximum synchronous read I/O operations active to each device.
1247 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1248 .
1249 .It Sy zfs_vdev_sync_read_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
1250 Minimum synchronous read I/O operations active to each device.
1251 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1252 .
1253 .It Sy zfs_vdev_sync_write_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
1254 Maximum synchronous write I/O operations active to each device.
1255 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1256 .
1257 .It Sy zfs_vdev_sync_write_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
1258 Minimum synchronous write I/O operations active to each device.
1259 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1260 .
1261 .It Sy zfs_vdev_trim_max_active Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
1262 Maximum trim/discard I/O operations active to each device.
1263 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1264 .
1265 .It Sy zfs_vdev_trim_min_active Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1266 Minimum trim/discard I/O operations active to each device.
1267 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1268 .
1269 .It Sy zfs_vdev_nia_delay Ns = Ns Sy 5 Pq uint
1270 For non-interactive I/O (scrub, resilver, removal, initialize and rebuild),
1271 the number of concurrently-active I/O operations is limited to
1272 .Sy zfs_*_min_active ,
1273 unless the vdev is "idle".
1274 When there are no interactive I/O operations active (synchronous or otherwise),
1275 and
1276 .Sy zfs_vdev_nia_delay
1277 operations have completed since the last interactive operation,
1278 then the vdev is considered to be "idle",
1279 and the number of concurrently-active non-interactive operations is increased to
1280 .Sy zfs_*_max_active .
1281 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1282 .
1283 .It Sy zfs_vdev_nia_credit Ns = Ns Sy 5 Pq uint
1284 Some HDDs tend to prioritize sequential I/O so strongly, that concurrent
1285 random I/O latency reaches several seconds.
1286 On some HDDs this happens even if sequential I/O operations
1287 are submitted one at a time, and so setting
1288 .Sy zfs_*_max_active Ns = Sy 1
1289 does not help.
1290 To prevent non-interactive I/O, like scrub,
1291 from monopolizing the device, no more than
1292 .Sy zfs_vdev_nia_credit operations can be sent
1293 while there are outstanding incomplete interactive operations.
1294 This enforced wait ensures the HDD services the interactive I/O
1295 within a reasonable amount of time.
1296 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
1297 .
1298 .It Sy zfs_vdev_queue_depth_pct Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Ns % Pq uint
1299 Maximum number of queued allocations per top-level vdev expressed as
1300 a percentage of
1301 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_max_active ,
1302 which allows the system to detect devices that are more capable
1303 of handling allocations and to allocate more blocks to those devices.
1304 This allows for dynamic allocation distribution when devices are imbalanced,
1305 as fuller devices will tend to be slower than empty devices.
1306 .Pp
1307 Also see
1308 .Sy zio_dva_throttle_enabled .
1309 .
1310 .It Sy zfs_vdev_def_queue_depth Ns = Ns Sy 32 Pq uint
1311 Default queue depth for each vdev IO allocator.
1312 Higher values allow for better coalescing of sequential writes before sending
1313 them to the disk, but can increase transaction commit times.
1314 .
1315 .It Sy zfs_vdev_failfast_mask Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
1316 Defines if the driver should retire on a given error type.
1317 The following options may be bitwise-ored together:
1318 .TS
1319 box;
1320 lbz r l l .
1321 Value Name Description
1322 _
1323 1 Device No driver retries on device errors
1324 2 Transport No driver retries on transport errors.
1325 4 Driver No driver retries on driver errors.
1326 .TE
1327 .
1328 .It Sy zfs_expire_snapshot Ns = Ns Sy 300 Ns s Pq int
1329 Time before expiring
1330 .Pa .zfs/snapshot .
1331 .
1332 .It Sy zfs_admin_snapshot Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1333 Allow the creation, removal, or renaming of entries in the
1334 .Sy .zfs/snapshot
1335 directory to cause the creation, destruction, or renaming of snapshots.
1336 When enabled, this functionality works both locally and over NFS exports
1337 which have the
1338 .Em no_root_squash
1339 option set.
1340 .
1341 .It Sy zfs_flags Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
1342 Set additional debugging flags.
1343 The following flags may be bitwise-ored together:
1344 .TS
1345 box;
1346 lbz r l l .
1347 Value Name Description
1348 _
1349 1 ZFS_DEBUG_DPRINTF Enable dprintf entries in the debug log.
1350 * 2 ZFS_DEBUG_DBUF_VERIFY Enable extra dbuf verifications.
1351 * 4 ZFS_DEBUG_DNODE_VERIFY Enable extra dnode verifications.
1352 8 ZFS_DEBUG_SNAPNAMES Enable snapshot name verification.
1353 * 16 ZFS_DEBUG_MODIFY Check for illegally modified ARC buffers.
1354 64 ZFS_DEBUG_ZIO_FREE Enable verification of block frees.
1355 128 ZFS_DEBUG_HISTOGRAM_VERIFY Enable extra spacemap histogram verifications.
1356 256 ZFS_DEBUG_METASLAB_VERIFY Verify space accounting on disk matches in-memory \fBrange_trees\fP.
1357 512 ZFS_DEBUG_SET_ERROR Enable \fBSET_ERROR\fP and dprintf entries in the debug log.
1358 1024 ZFS_DEBUG_INDIRECT_REMAP Verify split blocks created by device removal.
1359 2048 ZFS_DEBUG_TRIM Verify TRIM ranges are always within the allocatable range tree.
1360 4096 ZFS_DEBUG_LOG_SPACEMAP Verify that the log summary is consistent with the spacemap log
1361 and enable \fBzfs_dbgmsgs\fP for metaslab loading and flushing.
1362 .TE
1363 .Sy \& * No Requires debug build .
1364 .
1365 .It Sy zfs_btree_verify_intensity Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
1366 Enables btree verification.
1367 The following settings are culminative:
1368 .TS
1369 box;
1370 lbz r l l .
1371 Value Description
1372
1373 1 Verify height.
1374 2 Verify pointers from children to parent.
1375 3 Verify element counts.
1376 4 Verify element order. (expensive)
1377 * 5 Verify unused memory is poisoned. (expensive)
1378 .TE
1379 .Sy \& * No Requires debug build .
1380 .
1381 .It Sy zfs_free_leak_on_eio Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1382 If destroy encounters an
1383 .Sy EIO
1384 while reading metadata (e.g. indirect blocks),
1385 space referenced by the missing metadata can not be freed.
1386 Normally this causes the background destroy to become "stalled",
1387 as it is unable to make forward progress.
1388 While in this stalled state, all remaining space to free
1389 from the error-encountering filesystem is "temporarily leaked".
1390 Set this flag to cause it to ignore the
1391 .Sy EIO ,
1392 permanently leak the space from indirect blocks that can not be read,
1393 and continue to free everything else that it can.
1394 .Pp
1395 The default "stalling" behavior is useful if the storage partially
1396 fails (i.e. some but not all I/O operations fail), and then later recovers.
1397 In this case, we will be able to continue pool operations while it is
1398 partially failed, and when it recovers, we can continue to free the
1399 space, with no leaks.
1400 Note, however, that this case is actually fairly rare.
1401 .Pp
1402 Typically pools either
1403 .Bl -enum -compact -offset 4n -width "1."
1404 .It
1405 fail completely (but perhaps temporarily,
1406 e.g. due to a top-level vdev going offline), or
1407 .It
1408 have localized, permanent errors (e.g. disk returns the wrong data
1409 due to bit flip or firmware bug).
1410 .El
1411 In the former case, this setting does not matter because the
1412 pool will be suspended and the sync thread will not be able to make
1413 forward progress regardless.
1414 In the latter, because the error is permanent, the best we can do
1415 is leak the minimum amount of space,
1416 which is what setting this flag will do.
1417 It is therefore reasonable for this flag to normally be set,
1418 but we chose the more conservative approach of not setting it,
1419 so that there is no possibility of
1420 leaking space in the "partial temporary" failure case.
1421 .
1422 .It Sy zfs_free_min_time_ms Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Ns ms Po 1s Pc Pq uint
1423 During a
1424 .Nm zfs Cm destroy
1425 operation using the
1426 .Sy async_destroy
1427 feature,
1428 a minimum of this much time will be spent working on freeing blocks per TXG.
1429 .
1430 .It Sy zfs_obsolete_min_time_ms Ns = Ns Sy 500 Ns ms Pq uint
1431 Similar to
1432 .Sy zfs_free_min_time_ms ,
1433 but for cleanup of old indirection records for removed vdevs.
1434 .
1435 .It Sy zfs_immediate_write_sz Ns = Ns Sy 32768 Ns B Po 32 KiB Pc Pq s64
1436 Largest data block to write to the ZIL.
1437 Larger blocks will be treated as if the dataset being written to had the
1438 .Sy logbias Ns = Ns Sy throughput
1439 property set.
1440 .
1441 .It Sy zfs_initialize_value Ns = Ns Sy 16045690984833335022 Po 0xDEADBEEFDEADBEEE Pc Pq u64
1442 Pattern written to vdev free space by
1443 .Xr zpool-initialize 8 .
1444 .
1445 .It Sy zfs_initialize_chunk_size Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq u64
1446 Size of writes used by
1447 .Xr zpool-initialize 8 .
1448 This option is used by the test suite.
1449 .
1450 .It Sy zfs_livelist_max_entries Ns = Ns Sy 500000 Po 5*10^5 Pc Pq u64
1451 The threshold size (in block pointers) at which we create a new sub-livelist.
1452 Larger sublists are more costly from a memory perspective but the fewer
1453 sublists there are, the lower the cost of insertion.
1454 .
1455 .It Sy zfs_livelist_min_percent_shared Ns = Ns Sy 75 Ns % Pq int
1456 If the amount of shared space between a snapshot and its clone drops below
1457 this threshold, the clone turns off the livelist and reverts to the old
1458 deletion method.
1459 This is in place because livelists no long give us a benefit
1460 once a clone has been overwritten enough.
1461 .
1462 .It Sy zfs_livelist_condense_new_alloc Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
1463 Incremented each time an extra ALLOC blkptr is added to a livelist entry while
1464 it is being condensed.
1465 This option is used by the test suite to track race conditions.
1466 .
1467 .It Sy zfs_livelist_condense_sync_cancel Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
1468 Incremented each time livelist condensing is canceled while in
1469 .Fn spa_livelist_condense_sync .
1470 This option is used by the test suite to track race conditions.
1471 .
1472 .It Sy zfs_livelist_condense_sync_pause Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1473 When set, the livelist condense process pauses indefinitely before
1474 executing the synctask \(em
1475 .Fn spa_livelist_condense_sync .
1476 This option is used by the test suite to trigger race conditions.
1477 .
1478 .It Sy zfs_livelist_condense_zthr_cancel Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
1479 Incremented each time livelist condensing is canceled while in
1480 .Fn spa_livelist_condense_cb .
1481 This option is used by the test suite to track race conditions.
1482 .
1483 .It Sy zfs_livelist_condense_zthr_pause Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1484 When set, the livelist condense process pauses indefinitely before
1485 executing the open context condensing work in
1486 .Fn spa_livelist_condense_cb .
1487 This option is used by the test suite to trigger race conditions.
1488 .
1489 .It Sy zfs_lua_max_instrlimit Ns = Ns Sy 100000000 Po 10^8 Pc Pq u64
1490 The maximum execution time limit that can be set for a ZFS channel program,
1491 specified as a number of Lua instructions.
1492 .
1493 .It Sy zfs_lua_max_memlimit Ns = Ns Sy 104857600 Po 100 MiB Pc Pq u64
1494 The maximum memory limit that can be set for a ZFS channel program, specified
1495 in bytes.
1496 .
1497 .It Sy zfs_max_dataset_nesting Ns = Ns Sy 50 Pq int
1498 The maximum depth of nested datasets.
1499 This value can be tuned temporarily to
1500 fix existing datasets that exceed the predefined limit.
1501 .
1502 .It Sy zfs_max_log_walking Ns = Ns Sy 5 Pq u64
1503 The number of past TXGs that the flushing algorithm of the log spacemap
1504 feature uses to estimate incoming log blocks.
1505 .
1506 .It Sy zfs_max_logsm_summary_length Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq u64
1507 Maximum number of rows allowed in the summary of the spacemap log.
1508 .
1509 .It Sy zfs_max_recordsize Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Po 16 MiB Pc Pq uint
1510 We currently support block sizes from
1511 .Em 512 Po 512 B Pc No to Em 16777216 Po 16 MiB Pc .
1512 The benefits of larger blocks, and thus larger I/O,
1513 need to be weighed against the cost of COWing a giant block to modify one byte.
1514 Additionally, very large blocks can have an impact on I/O latency,
1515 and also potentially on the memory allocator.
1516 Therefore, we formerly forbade creating blocks larger than 1M.
1517 Larger blocks could be created by changing it,
1518 and pools with larger blocks can always be imported and used,
1519 regardless of this setting.
1520 .
1521 .It Sy zfs_allow_redacted_dataset_mount Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1522 Allow datasets received with redacted send/receive to be mounted.
1523 Normally disabled because these datasets may be missing key data.
1524 .
1525 .It Sy zfs_min_metaslabs_to_flush Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq u64
1526 Minimum number of metaslabs to flush per dirty TXG.
1527 .
1528 .It Sy zfs_metaslab_fragmentation_threshold Ns = Ns Sy 70 Ns % Pq uint
1529 Allow metaslabs to keep their active state as long as their fragmentation
1530 percentage is no more than this value.
1531 An active metaslab that exceeds this threshold
1532 will no longer keep its active status allowing better metaslabs to be selected.
1533 .
1534 .It Sy zfs_mg_fragmentation_threshold Ns = Ns Sy 95 Ns % Pq uint
1535 Metaslab groups are considered eligible for allocations if their
1536 fragmentation metric (measured as a percentage) is less than or equal to
1537 this value.
1538 If a metaslab group exceeds this threshold then it will be
1539 skipped unless all metaslab groups within the metaslab class have also
1540 crossed this threshold.
1541 .
1542 .It Sy zfs_mg_noalloc_threshold Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns % Pq uint
1543 Defines a threshold at which metaslab groups should be eligible for allocations.
1544 The value is expressed as a percentage of free space
1545 beyond which a metaslab group is always eligible for allocations.
1546 If a metaslab group's free space is less than or equal to the
1547 threshold, the allocator will avoid allocating to that group
1548 unless all groups in the pool have reached the threshold.
1549 Once all groups have reached the threshold, all groups are allowed to accept
1550 allocations.
1551 The default value of
1552 .Sy 0
1553 disables the feature and causes all metaslab groups to be eligible for
1554 allocations.
1555 .Pp
1556 This parameter allows one to deal with pools having heavily imbalanced
1557 vdevs such as would be the case when a new vdev has been added.
1558 Setting the threshold to a non-zero percentage will stop allocations
1559 from being made to vdevs that aren't filled to the specified percentage
1560 and allow lesser filled vdevs to acquire more allocations than they
1561 otherwise would under the old
1562 .Sy zfs_mg_alloc_failures
1563 facility.
1564 .
1565 .It Sy zfs_ddt_data_is_special Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1566 If enabled, ZFS will place DDT data into the special allocation class.
1567 .
1568 .It Sy zfs_user_indirect_is_special Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1569 If enabled, ZFS will place user data indirect blocks
1570 into the special allocation class.
1571 .
1572 .It Sy zfs_multihost_history Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
1573 Historical statistics for this many latest multihost updates will be available
1574 in
1575 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/ Ns Ao Ar pool Ac Ns Pa /multihost .
1576 .
1577 .It Sy zfs_multihost_interval Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Ns ms Po 1 s Pc Pq u64
1578 Used to control the frequency of multihost writes which are performed when the
1579 .Sy multihost
1580 pool property is on.
1581 This is one of the factors used to determine the
1582 length of the activity check during import.
1583 .Pp
1584 The multihost write period is
1585 .Sy zfs_multihost_interval No / Sy leaf-vdevs .
1586 On average a multihost write will be issued for each leaf vdev
1587 every
1588 .Sy zfs_multihost_interval
1589 milliseconds.
1590 In practice, the observed period can vary with the I/O load
1591 and this observed value is the delay which is stored in the uberblock.
1592 .
1593 .It Sy zfs_multihost_import_intervals Ns = Ns Sy 20 Pq uint
1594 Used to control the duration of the activity test on import.
1595 Smaller values of
1596 .Sy zfs_multihost_import_intervals
1597 will reduce the import time but increase
1598 the risk of failing to detect an active pool.
1599 The total activity check time is never allowed to drop below one second.
1600 .Pp
1601 On import the activity check waits a minimum amount of time determined by
1602 .Sy zfs_multihost_interval No \(mu Sy zfs_multihost_import_intervals ,
1603 or the same product computed on the host which last had the pool imported,
1604 whichever is greater.
1605 The activity check time may be further extended if the value of MMP
1606 delay found in the best uberblock indicates actual multihost updates happened
1607 at longer intervals than
1608 .Sy zfs_multihost_interval .
1609 A minimum of
1610 .Em 100 ms
1611 is enforced.
1612 .Pp
1613 .Sy 0 No is equivalent to Sy 1 .
1614 .
1615 .It Sy zfs_multihost_fail_intervals Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
1616 Controls the behavior of the pool when multihost write failures or delays are
1617 detected.
1618 .Pp
1619 When
1620 .Sy 0 ,
1621 multihost write failures or delays are ignored.
1622 The failures will still be reported to the ZED which depending on
1623 its configuration may take action such as suspending the pool or offlining a
1624 device.
1625 .Pp
1626 Otherwise, the pool will be suspended if
1627 .Sy zfs_multihost_fail_intervals No \(mu Sy zfs_multihost_interval
1628 milliseconds pass without a successful MMP write.
1629 This guarantees the activity test will see MMP writes if the pool is imported.
1630 .Sy 1 No is equivalent to Sy 2 ;
1631 this is necessary to prevent the pool from being suspended
1632 due to normal, small I/O latency variations.
1633 .
1634 .It Sy zfs_no_scrub_io Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1635 Set to disable scrub I/O.
1636 This results in scrubs not actually scrubbing data and
1637 simply doing a metadata crawl of the pool instead.
1638 .
1639 .It Sy zfs_no_scrub_prefetch Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1640 Set to disable block prefetching for scrubs.
1641 .
1642 .It Sy zfs_nocacheflush Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1643 Disable cache flush operations on disks when writing.
1644 Setting this will cause pool corruption on power loss
1645 if a volatile out-of-order write cache is enabled.
1646 .
1647 .It Sy zfs_nopwrite_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1648 Allow no-operation writes.
1649 The occurrence of nopwrites will further depend on other pool properties
1650 .Pq i.a. the checksumming and compression algorithms .
1651 .
1652 .It Sy zfs_dmu_offset_next_sync Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1653 Enable forcing TXG sync to find holes.
1654 When enabled forces ZFS to sync data when
1655 .Sy SEEK_HOLE No or Sy SEEK_DATA
1656 flags are used allowing holes in a file to be accurately reported.
1657 When disabled holes will not be reported in recently dirtied files.
1658 .
1659 .It Sy zfs_pd_bytes_max Ns = Ns Sy 52428800 Ns B Po 50 MiB Pc Pq int
1660 The number of bytes which should be prefetched during a pool traversal, like
1661 .Nm zfs Cm send
1662 or other data crawling operations.
1663 .
1664 .It Sy zfs_traverse_indirect_prefetch_limit Ns = Ns Sy 32 Pq uint
1665 The number of blocks pointed by indirect (non-L0) block which should be
1666 prefetched during a pool traversal, like
1667 .Nm zfs Cm send
1668 or other data crawling operations.
1669 .
1670 .It Sy zfs_per_txg_dirty_frees_percent Ns = Ns Sy 30 Ns % Pq u64
1671 Control percentage of dirtied indirect blocks from frees allowed into one TXG.
1672 After this threshold is crossed, additional frees will wait until the next TXG.
1673 .Sy 0 No disables this throttle .
1674 .
1675 .It Sy zfs_prefetch_disable Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1676 Disable predictive prefetch.
1677 Note that it leaves "prescient" prefetch
1678 .Pq for, e.g., Nm zfs Cm send
1679 intact.
1680 Unlike predictive prefetch, prescient prefetch never issues I/O
1681 that ends up not being needed, so it can't hurt performance.
1682 .
1683 .It Sy zfs_qat_checksum_disable Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1684 Disable QAT hardware acceleration for SHA256 checksums.
1685 May be unset after the ZFS modules have been loaded to initialize the QAT
1686 hardware as long as support is compiled in and the QAT driver is present.
1687 .
1688 .It Sy zfs_qat_compress_disable Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1689 Disable QAT hardware acceleration for gzip compression.
1690 May be unset after the ZFS modules have been loaded to initialize the QAT
1691 hardware as long as support is compiled in and the QAT driver is present.
1692 .
1693 .It Sy zfs_qat_encrypt_disable Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1694 Disable QAT hardware acceleration for AES-GCM encryption.
1695 May be unset after the ZFS modules have been loaded to initialize the QAT
1696 hardware as long as support is compiled in and the QAT driver is present.
1697 .
1698 .It Sy zfs_vnops_read_chunk_size Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq u64
1699 Bytes to read per chunk.
1700 .
1701 .It Sy zfs_read_history Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
1702 Historical statistics for this many latest reads will be available in
1703 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/ Ns Ao Ar pool Ac Ns Pa /reads .
1704 .
1705 .It Sy zfs_read_history_hits Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1706 Include cache hits in read history
1707 .
1708 .It Sy zfs_rebuild_max_segment Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq u64
1709 Maximum read segment size to issue when sequentially resilvering a
1710 top-level vdev.
1711 .
1712 .It Sy zfs_rebuild_scrub_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1713 Automatically start a pool scrub when the last active sequential resilver
1714 completes in order to verify the checksums of all blocks which have been
1715 resilvered.
1716 This is enabled by default and strongly recommended.
1717 .
1718 .It Sy zfs_rebuild_vdev_limit Ns = Ns Sy 67108864 Ns B Po 64 MiB Pc Pq u64
1719 Maximum amount of I/O that can be concurrently issued for a sequential
1720 resilver per leaf device, given in bytes.
1721 .
1722 .It Sy zfs_reconstruct_indirect_combinations_max Ns = Ns Sy 4096 Pq int
1723 If an indirect split block contains more than this many possible unique
1724 combinations when being reconstructed, consider it too computationally
1725 expensive to check them all.
1726 Instead, try at most this many randomly selected
1727 combinations each time the block is accessed.
1728 This allows all segment copies to participate fairly
1729 in the reconstruction when all combinations
1730 cannot be checked and prevents repeated use of one bad copy.
1731 .
1732 .It Sy zfs_recover Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1733 Set to attempt to recover from fatal errors.
1734 This should only be used as a last resort,
1735 as it typically results in leaked space, or worse.
1736 .
1737 .It Sy zfs_removal_ignore_errors Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1738 Ignore hard I/O errors during device removal.
1739 When set, if a device encounters a hard I/O error during the removal process
1740 the removal will not be cancelled.
1741 This can result in a normally recoverable block becoming permanently damaged
1742 and is hence not recommended.
1743 This should only be used as a last resort when the
1744 pool cannot be returned to a healthy state prior to removing the device.
1745 .
1746 .It Sy zfs_removal_suspend_progress Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
1747 This is used by the test suite so that it can ensure that certain actions
1748 happen while in the middle of a removal.
1749 .
1750 .It Sy zfs_remove_max_segment Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Ns B Po 16 MiB Pc Pq uint
1751 The largest contiguous segment that we will attempt to allocate when removing
1752 a device.
1753 If there is a performance problem with attempting to allocate large blocks,
1754 consider decreasing this.
1755 The default value is also the maximum.
1756 .
1757 .It Sy zfs_resilver_disable_defer Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1758 Ignore the
1759 .Sy resilver_defer
1760 feature, causing an operation that would start a resilver to
1761 immediately restart the one in progress.
1762 .
1763 .It Sy zfs_resilver_min_time_ms Ns = Ns Sy 3000 Ns ms Po 3 s Pc Pq uint
1764 Resilvers are processed by the sync thread.
1765 While resilvering, it will spend at least this much time
1766 working on a resilver between TXG flushes.
1767 .
1768 .It Sy zfs_scan_ignore_errors Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1769 If set, remove the DTL (dirty time list) upon completion of a pool scan (scrub),
1770 even if there were unrepairable errors.
1771 Intended to be used during pool repair or recovery to
1772 stop resilvering when the pool is next imported.
1773 .
1774 .It Sy zfs_scrub_min_time_ms Ns = Ns Sy 1000 Ns ms Po 1 s Pc Pq uint
1775 Scrubs are processed by the sync thread.
1776 While scrubbing, it will spend at least this much time
1777 working on a scrub between TXG flushes.
1778 .
1779 .It Sy zfs_scrub_error_blocks_per_txg Ns = Ns Sy 4096 Pq uint
1780 Error blocks to be scrubbed in one txg.
1781 .
1782 .It Sy zfs_scan_checkpoint_intval Ns = Ns Sy 7200 Ns s Po 2 hour Pc Pq uint
1783 To preserve progress across reboots, the sequential scan algorithm periodically
1784 needs to stop metadata scanning and issue all the verification I/O to disk.
1785 The frequency of this flushing is determined by this tunable.
1786 .
1787 .It Sy zfs_scan_fill_weight Ns = Ns Sy 3 Pq uint
1788 This tunable affects how scrub and resilver I/O segments are ordered.
1789 A higher number indicates that we care more about how filled in a segment is,
1790 while a lower number indicates we care more about the size of the extent without
1791 considering the gaps within a segment.
1792 This value is only tunable upon module insertion.
1793 Changing the value afterwards will have no effect on scrub or resilver
1794 performance.
1795 .
1796 .It Sy zfs_scan_issue_strategy Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
1797 Determines the order that data will be verified while scrubbing or resilvering:
1798 .Bl -tag -compact -offset 4n -width "a"
1799 .It Sy 1
1800 Data will be verified as sequentially as possible, given the
1801 amount of memory reserved for scrubbing
1802 .Pq see Sy zfs_scan_mem_lim_fact .
1803 This may improve scrub performance if the pool's data is very fragmented.
1804 .It Sy 2
1805 The largest mostly-contiguous chunk of found data will be verified first.
1806 By deferring scrubbing of small segments, we may later find adjacent data
1807 to coalesce and increase the segment size.
1808 .It Sy 0
1809 .No Use strategy Sy 1 No during normal verification
1810 .No and strategy Sy 2 No while taking a checkpoint .
1811 .El
1812 .
1813 .It Sy zfs_scan_legacy Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1814 If unset, indicates that scrubs and resilvers will gather metadata in
1815 memory before issuing sequential I/O.
1816 Otherwise indicates that the legacy algorithm will be used,
1817 where I/O is initiated as soon as it is discovered.
1818 Unsetting will not affect scrubs or resilvers that are already in progress.
1819 .
1820 .It Sy zfs_scan_max_ext_gap Ns = Ns Sy 2097152 Ns B Po 2 MiB Pc Pq int
1821 Sets the largest gap in bytes between scrub/resilver I/O operations
1822 that will still be considered sequential for sorting purposes.
1823 Changing this value will not
1824 affect scrubs or resilvers that are already in progress.
1825 .
1826 .It Sy zfs_scan_mem_lim_fact Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns ^-1 Pq uint
1827 Maximum fraction of RAM used for I/O sorting by sequential scan algorithm.
1828 This tunable determines the hard limit for I/O sorting memory usage.
1829 When the hard limit is reached we stop scanning metadata and start issuing
1830 data verification I/O.
1831 This is done until we get below the soft limit.
1832 .
1833 .It Sy zfs_scan_mem_lim_soft_fact Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns ^-1 Pq uint
1834 The fraction of the hard limit used to determined the soft limit for I/O sorting
1835 by the sequential scan algorithm.
1836 When we cross this limit from below no action is taken.
1837 When we cross this limit from above it is because we are issuing verification
1838 I/O.
1839 In this case (unless the metadata scan is done) we stop issuing verification I/O
1840 and start scanning metadata again until we get to the hard limit.
1841 .
1842 .It Sy zfs_scan_report_txgs Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
1843 When reporting resilver throughput and estimated completion time use the
1844 performance observed over roughly the last
1845 .Sy zfs_scan_report_txgs
1846 TXGs.
1847 When set to zero performance is calculated over the time between checkpoints.
1848 .
1849 .It Sy zfs_scan_strict_mem_lim Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1850 Enforce tight memory limits on pool scans when a sequential scan is in progress.
1851 When disabled, the memory limit may be exceeded by fast disks.
1852 .
1853 .It Sy zfs_scan_suspend_progress Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1854 Freezes a scrub/resilver in progress without actually pausing it.
1855 Intended for testing/debugging.
1856 .
1857 .It Sy zfs_scan_vdev_limit Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Ns B Po 16 MiB Pc Pq int
1858 Maximum amount of data that can be concurrently issued at once for scrubs and
1859 resilvers per leaf device, given in bytes.
1860 .
1861 .It Sy zfs_send_corrupt_data Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
1862 Allow sending of corrupt data (ignore read/checksum errors when sending).
1863 .
1864 .It Sy zfs_send_unmodified_spill_blocks Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
1865 Include unmodified spill blocks in the send stream.
1866 Under certain circumstances, previous versions of ZFS could incorrectly
1867 remove the spill block from an existing object.
1868 Including unmodified copies of the spill blocks creates a backwards-compatible
1869 stream which will recreate a spill block if it was incorrectly removed.
1870 .
1871 .It Sy zfs_send_no_prefetch_queue_ff Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns ^\-1 Pq uint
1872 The fill fraction of the
1873 .Nm zfs Cm send
1874 internal queues.
1875 The fill fraction controls the timing with which internal threads are woken up.
1876 .
1877 .It Sy zfs_send_no_prefetch_queue_length Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq uint
1878 The maximum number of bytes allowed in
1879 .Nm zfs Cm send Ns 's
1880 internal queues.
1881 .
1882 .It Sy zfs_send_queue_ff Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns ^\-1 Pq uint
1883 The fill fraction of the
1884 .Nm zfs Cm send
1885 prefetch queue.
1886 The fill fraction controls the timing with which internal threads are woken up.
1887 .
1888 .It Sy zfs_send_queue_length Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Ns B Po 16 MiB Pc Pq uint
1889 The maximum number of bytes allowed that will be prefetched by
1890 .Nm zfs Cm send .
1891 This value must be at least twice the maximum block size in use.
1892 .
1893 .It Sy zfs_recv_queue_ff Ns = Ns Sy 20 Ns ^\-1 Pq uint
1894 The fill fraction of the
1895 .Nm zfs Cm receive
1896 queue.
1897 The fill fraction controls the timing with which internal threads are woken up.
1898 .
1899 .It Sy zfs_recv_queue_length Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Ns B Po 16 MiB Pc Pq uint
1900 The maximum number of bytes allowed in the
1901 .Nm zfs Cm receive
1902 queue.
1903 This value must be at least twice the maximum block size in use.
1904 .
1905 .It Sy zfs_recv_write_batch_size Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq uint
1906 The maximum amount of data, in bytes, that
1907 .Nm zfs Cm receive
1908 will write in one DMU transaction.
1909 This is the uncompressed size, even when receiving a compressed send stream.
1910 This setting will not reduce the write size below a single block.
1911 Capped at a maximum of
1912 .Sy 32 MiB .
1913 .
1914 .It Sy zfs_recv_best_effort_corrective Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
1915 When this variable is set to non-zero a corrective receive:
1916 .Bl -enum -compact -offset 4n -width "1."
1917 .It
1918 Does not enforce the restriction of source & destination snapshot GUIDs
1919 matching.
1920 .It
1921 If there is an error during healing, the healing receive is not
1922 terminated instead it moves on to the next record.
1923 .El
1924 .
1925 .It Sy zfs_override_estimate_recordsize Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
1926 Setting this variable overrides the default logic for estimating block
1927 sizes when doing a
1928 .Nm zfs Cm send .
1929 The default heuristic is that the average block size
1930 will be the current recordsize.
1931 Override this value if most data in your dataset is not of that size
1932 and you require accurate zfs send size estimates.
1933 .
1934 .It Sy zfs_sync_pass_deferred_free Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
1935 Flushing of data to disk is done in passes.
1936 Defer frees starting in this pass.
1937 .
1938 .It Sy zfs_spa_discard_memory_limit Ns = Ns Sy 16777216 Ns B Po 16 MiB Pc Pq int
1939 Maximum memory used for prefetching a checkpoint's space map on each
1940 vdev while discarding the checkpoint.
1941 .
1942 .It Sy zfs_special_class_metadata_reserve_pct Ns = Ns Sy 25 Ns % Pq uint
1943 Only allow small data blocks to be allocated on the special and dedup vdev
1944 types when the available free space percentage on these vdevs exceeds this
1945 value.
1946 This ensures reserved space is available for pool metadata as the
1947 special vdevs approach capacity.
1948 .
1949 .It Sy zfs_sync_pass_dont_compress Ns = Ns Sy 8 Pq uint
1950 Starting in this sync pass, disable compression (including of metadata).
1951 With the default setting, in practice, we don't have this many sync passes,
1952 so this has no effect.
1953 .Pp
1954 The original intent was that disabling compression would help the sync passes
1955 to converge.
1956 However, in practice, disabling compression increases
1957 the average number of sync passes; because when we turn compression off,
1958 many blocks' size will change, and thus we have to re-allocate
1959 (not overwrite) them.
1960 It also increases the number of
1961 .Em 128 KiB
1962 allocations (e.g. for indirect blocks and spacemaps)
1963 because these will not be compressed.
1964 The
1965 .Em 128 KiB
1966 allocations are especially detrimental to performance
1967 on highly fragmented systems, which may have very few free segments of this
1968 size,
1969 and may need to load new metaslabs to satisfy these allocations.
1970 .
1971 .It Sy zfs_sync_pass_rewrite Ns = Ns Sy 2 Pq uint
1972 Rewrite new block pointers starting in this pass.
1973 .
1974 .It Sy zfs_sync_taskq_batch_pct Ns = Ns Sy 75 Ns % Pq int
1975 This controls the number of threads used by
1976 .Sy dp_sync_taskq .
1977 The default value of
1978 .Sy 75%
1979 will create a maximum of one thread per CPU.
1980 .
1981 .It Sy zfs_trim_extent_bytes_max Ns = Ns Sy 134217728 Ns B Po 128 MiB Pc Pq uint
1982 Maximum size of TRIM command.
1983 Larger ranges will be split into chunks no larger than this value before
1984 issuing.
1985 .
1986 .It Sy zfs_trim_extent_bytes_min Ns = Ns Sy 32768 Ns B Po 32 KiB Pc Pq uint
1987 Minimum size of TRIM commands.
1988 TRIM ranges smaller than this will be skipped,
1989 unless they're part of a larger range which was chunked.
1990 This is done because it's common for these small TRIMs
1991 to negatively impact overall performance.
1992 .
1993 .It Sy zfs_trim_metaslab_skip Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
1994 Skip uninitialized metaslabs during the TRIM process.
1995 This option is useful for pools constructed from large thinly-provisioned
1996 devices
1997 where TRIM operations are slow.
1998 As a pool ages, an increasing fraction of the pool's metaslabs
1999 will be initialized, progressively degrading the usefulness of this option.
2000 This setting is stored when starting a manual TRIM and will
2001 persist for the duration of the requested TRIM.
2002 .
2003 .It Sy zfs_trim_queue_limit Ns = Ns Sy 10 Pq uint
2004 Maximum number of queued TRIMs outstanding per leaf vdev.
2005 The number of concurrent TRIM commands issued to the device is controlled by
2006 .Sy zfs_vdev_trim_min_active No and Sy zfs_vdev_trim_max_active .
2007 .
2008 .It Sy zfs_trim_txg_batch Ns = Ns Sy 32 Pq uint
2009 The number of transaction groups' worth of frees which should be aggregated
2010 before TRIM operations are issued to the device.
2011 This setting represents a trade-off between issuing larger,
2012 more efficient TRIM operations and the delay
2013 before the recently trimmed space is available for use by the device.
2014 .Pp
2015 Increasing this value will allow frees to be aggregated for a longer time.
2016 This will result is larger TRIM operations and potentially increased memory
2017 usage.
2018 Decreasing this value will have the opposite effect.
2019 The default of
2020 .Sy 32
2021 was determined to be a reasonable compromise.
2022 .
2023 .It Sy zfs_txg_history Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
2024 Historical statistics for this many latest TXGs will be available in
2025 .Pa /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/ Ns Ao Ar pool Ac Ns Pa /TXGs .
2026 .
2027 .It Sy zfs_txg_timeout Ns = Ns Sy 5 Ns s Pq uint
2028 Flush dirty data to disk at least every this many seconds (maximum TXG
2029 duration).
2030 .
2031 .It Sy zfs_vdev_aggregation_limit Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq uint
2032 Max vdev I/O aggregation size.
2033 .
2034 .It Sy zfs_vdev_aggregation_limit_non_rotating Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Ns B Po 128 KiB Pc Pq uint
2035 Max vdev I/O aggregation size for non-rotating media.
2036 .
2037 .It Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_inc Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
2038 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
2039 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member when an I/O operation
2040 immediately follows its predecessor on rotational vdevs
2041 for the purpose of making decisions based on load.
2042 .
2043 .It Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_inc Ns = Ns Sy 5 Pq int
2044 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
2045 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member when an I/O operation
2046 lacks locality as defined by
2047 .Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_offset .
2048 Operations within this that are not immediately following the previous operation
2049 are incremented by half.
2050 .
2051 .It Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_offset Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Ns B Po 1 MiB Pc Pq int
2052 The maximum distance for the last queued I/O operation in which
2053 the balancing algorithm considers an operation to have locality.
2054 .No See Sx ZFS I/O SCHEDULER .
2055 .
2056 .It Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_non_rotating_inc Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq int
2057 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
2058 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member on non-rotational vdevs
2059 when I/O operations do not immediately follow one another.
2060 .
2061 .It Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_non_rotating_seek_inc Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq int
2062 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
2063 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member when an I/O operation
2064 lacks
2065 locality as defined by the
2066 .Sy zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_offset .
2067 Operations within this that are not immediately following the previous operation
2068 are incremented by half.
2069 .
2070 .It Sy zfs_vdev_read_gap_limit Ns = Ns Sy 32768 Ns B Po 32 KiB Pc Pq uint
2071 Aggregate read I/O operations if the on-disk gap between them is within this
2072 threshold.
2073 .
2074 .It Sy zfs_vdev_write_gap_limit Ns = Ns Sy 4096 Ns B Po 4 KiB Pc Pq uint
2075 Aggregate write I/O operations if the on-disk gap between them is within this
2076 threshold.
2077 .
2078 .It Sy zfs_vdev_raidz_impl Ns = Ns Sy fastest Pq string
2079 Select the raidz parity implementation to use.
2080 .Pp
2081 Variants that don't depend on CPU-specific features
2082 may be selected on module load, as they are supported on all systems.
2083 The remaining options may only be set after the module is loaded,
2084 as they are available only if the implementations are compiled in
2085 and supported on the running system.
2086 .Pp
2087 Once the module is loaded,
2088 .Pa /sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_vdev_raidz_impl
2089 will show the available options,
2090 with the currently selected one enclosed in square brackets.
2091 .Pp
2092 .TS
2093 lb l l .
2094 fastest selected by built-in benchmark
2095 original original implementation
2096 scalar scalar implementation
2097 sse2 SSE2 instruction set 64-bit x86
2098 ssse3 SSSE3 instruction set 64-bit x86
2099 avx2 AVX2 instruction set 64-bit x86
2100 avx512f AVX512F instruction set 64-bit x86
2101 avx512bw AVX512F & AVX512BW instruction sets 64-bit x86
2102 aarch64_neon NEON Aarch64/64-bit ARMv8
2103 aarch64_neonx2 NEON with more unrolling Aarch64/64-bit ARMv8
2104 powerpc_altivec Altivec PowerPC
2105 .TE
2106 .
2107 .It Sy zfs_vdev_scheduler Pq charp
2108 .Sy DEPRECATED .
2109 Prints warning to kernel log for compatibility.
2110 .
2111 .It Sy zfs_zevent_len_max Ns = Ns Sy 512 Pq uint
2112 Max event queue length.
2113 Events in the queue can be viewed with
2114 .Xr zpool-events 8 .
2115 .
2116 .It Sy zfs_zevent_retain_max Ns = Ns Sy 2000 Pq int
2117 Maximum recent zevent records to retain for duplicate checking.
2118 Setting this to
2119 .Sy 0
2120 disables duplicate detection.
2121 .
2122 .It Sy zfs_zevent_retain_expire_secs Ns = Ns Sy 900 Ns s Po 15 min Pc Pq int
2123 Lifespan for a recent ereport that was retained for duplicate checking.
2124 .
2125 .It Sy zfs_zil_clean_taskq_maxalloc Ns = Ns Sy 1048576 Pq int
2126 The maximum number of taskq entries that are allowed to be cached.
2127 When this limit is exceeded transaction records (itxs)
2128 will be cleaned synchronously.
2129 .
2130 .It Sy zfs_zil_clean_taskq_minalloc Ns = Ns Sy 1024 Pq int
2131 The number of taskq entries that are pre-populated when the taskq is first
2132 created and are immediately available for use.
2133 .
2134 .It Sy zfs_zil_clean_taskq_nthr_pct Ns = Ns Sy 100 Ns % Pq int
2135 This controls the number of threads used by
2136 .Sy dp_zil_clean_taskq .
2137 The default value of
2138 .Sy 100%
2139 will create a maximum of one thread per cpu.
2140 .
2141 .It Sy zil_maxblocksize Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Ns B Po 128 KiB Pc Pq uint
2142 This sets the maximum block size used by the ZIL.
2143 On very fragmented pools, lowering this
2144 .Pq typically to Sy 36 KiB
2145 can improve performance.
2146 .
2147 .It Sy zil_min_commit_timeout Ns = Ns Sy 5000 Pq u64
2148 This sets the minimum delay in nanoseconds ZIL care to delay block commit,
2149 waiting for more records.
2150 If ZIL writes are too fast, kernel may not be able sleep for so short interval,
2151 increasing log latency above allowed by
2152 .Sy zfs_commit_timeout_pct .
2153 .
2154 .It Sy zil_nocacheflush Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
2155 Disable the cache flush commands that are normally sent to disk by
2156 the ZIL after an LWB write has completed.
2157 Setting this will cause ZIL corruption on power loss
2158 if a volatile out-of-order write cache is enabled.
2159 .
2160 .It Sy zil_replay_disable Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
2161 Disable intent logging replay.
2162 Can be disabled for recovery from corrupted ZIL.
2163 .
2164 .It Sy zil_slog_bulk Ns = Ns Sy 786432 Ns B Po 768 KiB Pc Pq u64
2165 Limit SLOG write size per commit executed with synchronous priority.
2166 Any writes above that will be executed with lower (asynchronous) priority
2167 to limit potential SLOG device abuse by single active ZIL writer.
2168 .
2169 .It Sy zfs_zil_saxattr Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
2170 Setting this tunable to zero disables ZIL logging of new
2171 .Sy xattr Ns = Ns Sy sa
2172 records if the
2173 .Sy org.openzfs:zilsaxattr
2174 feature is enabled on the pool.
2175 This would only be necessary to work around bugs in the ZIL logging or replay
2176 code for this record type.
2177 The tunable has no effect if the feature is disabled.
2178 .
2179 .It Sy zfs_embedded_slog_min_ms Ns = Ns Sy 64 Pq uint
2180 Usually, one metaslab from each normal-class vdev is dedicated for use by
2181 the ZIL to log synchronous writes.
2182 However, if there are fewer than
2183 .Sy zfs_embedded_slog_min_ms
2184 metaslabs in the vdev, this functionality is disabled.
2185 This ensures that we don't set aside an unreasonable amount of space for the
2186 ZIL.
2187 .
2188 .It Sy zstd_earlyabort_pass Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
2189 Whether heuristic for detection of incompressible data with zstd levels >= 3
2190 using LZ4 and zstd-1 passes is enabled.
2191 .
2192 .It Sy zstd_abort_size Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Pq uint
2193 Minimal uncompressed size (inclusive) of a record before the early abort
2194 heuristic will be attempted.
2195 .
2196 .It Sy zio_deadman_log_all Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
2197 If non-zero, the zio deadman will produce debugging messages
2198 .Pq see Sy zfs_dbgmsg_enable
2199 for all zios, rather than only for leaf zios possessing a vdev.
2200 This is meant to be used by developers to gain
2201 diagnostic information for hang conditions which don't involve a mutex
2202 or other locking primitive: typically conditions in which a thread in
2203 the zio pipeline is looping indefinitely.
2204 .
2205 .It Sy zio_slow_io_ms Ns = Ns Sy 30000 Ns ms Po 30 s Pc Pq int
2206 When an I/O operation takes more than this much time to complete,
2207 it's marked as slow.
2208 Each slow operation causes a delay zevent.
2209 Slow I/O counters can be seen with
2210 .Nm zpool Cm status Fl s .
2211 .
2212 .It Sy zio_dva_throttle_enabled Ns = Ns Sy 1 Ns | Ns 0 Pq int
2213 Throttle block allocations in the I/O pipeline.
2214 This allows for dynamic allocation distribution when devices are imbalanced.
2215 When enabled, the maximum number of pending allocations per top-level vdev
2216 is limited by
2217 .Sy zfs_vdev_queue_depth_pct .
2218 .
2219 .It Sy zfs_xattr_compat Ns = Ns 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
2220 Control the naming scheme used when setting new xattrs in the user namespace.
2221 If
2222 .Sy 0
2223 .Pq the default on Linux ,
2224 user namespace xattr names are prefixed with the namespace, to be backwards
2225 compatible with previous versions of ZFS on Linux.
2226 If
2227 .Sy 1
2228 .Pq the default on Fx ,
2229 user namespace xattr names are not prefixed, to be backwards compatible with
2230 previous versions of ZFS on illumos and
2231 .Fx .
2232 .Pp
2233 Either naming scheme can be read on this and future versions of ZFS, regardless
2234 of this tunable, but legacy ZFS on illumos or
2235 .Fx
2236 are unable to read user namespace xattrs written in the Linux format, and
2237 legacy versions of ZFS on Linux are unable to read user namespace xattrs written
2238 in the legacy ZFS format.
2239 .Pp
2240 An existing xattr with the alternate naming scheme is removed when overwriting
2241 the xattr so as to not accumulate duplicates.
2242 .
2243 .It Sy zio_requeue_io_start_cut_in_line Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq int
2244 Prioritize requeued I/O.
2245 .
2246 .It Sy zio_taskq_batch_pct Ns = Ns Sy 80 Ns % Pq uint
2247 Percentage of online CPUs which will run a worker thread for I/O.
2248 These workers are responsible for I/O work such as compression and
2249 checksum calculations.
2250 Fractional number of CPUs will be rounded down.
2251 .Pp
2252 The default value of
2253 .Sy 80%
2254 was chosen to avoid using all CPUs which can result in
2255 latency issues and inconsistent application performance,
2256 especially when slower compression and/or checksumming is enabled.
2257 .
2258 .It Sy zio_taskq_batch_tpq Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
2259 Number of worker threads per taskq.
2260 Lower values improve I/O ordering and CPU utilization,
2261 while higher reduces lock contention.
2262 .Pp
2263 If
2264 .Sy 0 ,
2265 generate a system-dependent value close to 6 threads per taskq.
2266 .
2267 .It Sy zvol_inhibit_dev Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
2268 Do not create zvol device nodes.
2269 This may slightly improve startup time on
2270 systems with a very large number of zvols.
2271 .
2272 .It Sy zvol_major Ns = Ns Sy 230 Pq uint
2273 Major number for zvol block devices.
2274 .
2275 .It Sy zvol_max_discard_blocks Ns = Ns Sy 16384 Pq long
2276 Discard (TRIM) operations done on zvols will be done in batches of this
2277 many blocks, where block size is determined by the
2278 .Sy volblocksize
2279 property of a zvol.
2280 .
2281 .It Sy zvol_prefetch_bytes Ns = Ns Sy 131072 Ns B Po 128 KiB Pc Pq uint
2282 When adding a zvol to the system, prefetch this many bytes
2283 from the start and end of the volume.
2284 Prefetching these regions of the volume is desirable,
2285 because they are likely to be accessed immediately by
2286 .Xr blkid 8
2287 or the kernel partitioner.
2288 .
2289 .It Sy zvol_request_sync Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
2290 When processing I/O requests for a zvol, submit them synchronously.
2291 This effectively limits the queue depth to
2292 .Em 1
2293 for each I/O submitter.
2294 When unset, requests are handled asynchronously by a thread pool.
2295 The number of requests which can be handled concurrently is controlled by
2296 .Sy zvol_threads .
2297 .Sy zvol_request_sync
2298 is ignored when running on a kernel that supports block multiqueue
2299 .Pq Li blk-mq .
2300 .
2301 .It Sy zvol_threads Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
2302 The number of system wide threads to use for processing zvol block IOs.
2303 If
2304 .Sy 0
2305 (the default) then internally set
2306 .Sy zvol_threads
2307 to the number of CPUs present or 32 (whichever is greater).
2308 .
2309 .It Sy zvol_blk_mq_threads Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
2310 The number of threads per zvol to use for queuing IO requests.
2311 This parameter will only appear if your kernel supports
2312 .Li blk-mq
2313 and is only read and assigned to a zvol at zvol load time.
2314 If
2315 .Sy 0
2316 (the default) then internally set
2317 .Sy zvol_blk_mq_threads
2318 to the number of CPUs present.
2319 .
2320 .It Sy zvol_use_blk_mq Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
2321 Set to
2322 .Sy 1
2323 to use the
2324 .Li blk-mq
2325 API for zvols.
2326 Set to
2327 .Sy 0
2328 (the default) to use the legacy zvol APIs.
2329 This setting can give better or worse zvol performance depending on
2330 the workload.
2331 This parameter will only appear if your kernel supports
2332 .Li blk-mq
2333 and is only read and assigned to a zvol at zvol load time.
2334 .
2335 .It Sy zvol_blk_mq_blocks_per_thread Ns = Ns Sy 8 Pq uint
2336 If
2337 .Sy zvol_use_blk_mq
2338 is enabled, then process this number of
2339 .Sy volblocksize Ns -sized blocks per zvol thread.
2340 This tunable can be use to favor better performance for zvol reads (lower
2341 values) or writes (higher values).
2342 If set to
2343 .Sy 0 ,
2344 then the zvol layer will process the maximum number of blocks
2345 per thread that it can.
2346 This parameter will only appear if your kernel supports
2347 .Li blk-mq
2348 and is only applied at each zvol's load time.
2349 .
2350 .It Sy zvol_blk_mq_queue_depth Ns = Ns Sy 0 Pq uint
2351 The queue_depth value for the zvol
2352 .Li blk-mq
2353 interface.
2354 This parameter will only appear if your kernel supports
2355 .Li blk-mq
2356 and is only applied at each zvol's load time.
2357 If
2358 .Sy 0
2359 (the default) then use the kernel's default queue depth.
2360 Values are clamped to the kernel's
2361 .Dv BLKDEV_MIN_RQ
2362 and
2363 .Dv BLKDEV_MAX_RQ Ns / Ns Dv BLKDEV_DEFAULT_RQ
2364 limits.
2365 .
2366 .It Sy zvol_volmode Ns = Ns Sy 1 Pq uint
2367 Defines zvol block devices behaviour when
2368 .Sy volmode Ns = Ns Sy default :
2369 .Bl -tag -compact -offset 4n -width "a"
2370 .It Sy 1
2371 .No equivalent to Sy full
2372 .It Sy 2
2373 .No equivalent to Sy dev
2374 .It Sy 3
2375 .No equivalent to Sy none
2376 .El
2377 .
2378 .It Sy zvol_enforce_quotas Ns = Ns Sy 0 Ns | Ns 1 Pq uint
2379 Enable strict ZVOL quota enforcement.
2380 The strict quota enforcement may have a performance impact.
2381 .El
2382 .
2383 .Sh ZFS I/O SCHEDULER
2384 ZFS issues I/O operations to leaf vdevs to satisfy and complete I/O operations.
2385 The scheduler determines when and in what order those operations are issued.
2386 The scheduler divides operations into five I/O classes,
2387 prioritized in the following order: sync read, sync write, async read,
2388 async write, and scrub/resilver.
2389 Each queue defines the minimum and maximum number of concurrent operations
2390 that may be issued to the device.
2391 In addition, the device has an aggregate maximum,
2392 .Sy zfs_vdev_max_active .
2393 Note that the sum of the per-queue minima must not exceed the aggregate maximum.
2394 If the sum of the per-queue maxima exceeds the aggregate maximum,
2395 then the number of active operations may reach
2396 .Sy zfs_vdev_max_active ,
2397 in which case no further operations will be issued,
2398 regardless of whether all per-queue minima have been met.
2399 .Pp
2400 For many physical devices, throughput increases with the number of
2401 concurrent operations, but latency typically suffers.
2402 Furthermore, physical devices typically have a limit
2403 at which more concurrent operations have no
2404 effect on throughput or can actually cause it to decrease.
2405 .Pp
2406 The scheduler selects the next operation to issue by first looking for an
2407 I/O class whose minimum has not been satisfied.
2408 Once all are satisfied and the aggregate maximum has not been hit,
2409 the scheduler looks for classes whose maximum has not been satisfied.
2410 Iteration through the I/O classes is done in the order specified above.
2411 No further operations are issued
2412 if the aggregate maximum number of concurrent operations has been hit,
2413 or if there are no operations queued for an I/O class that has not hit its
2414 maximum.
2415 Every time an I/O operation is queued or an operation completes,
2416 the scheduler looks for new operations to issue.
2417 .Pp
2418 In general, smaller
2419 .Sy max_active Ns s
2420 will lead to lower latency of synchronous operations.
2421 Larger
2422 .Sy max_active Ns s
2423 may lead to higher overall throughput, depending on underlying storage.
2424 .Pp
2425 The ratio of the queues'
2426 .Sy max_active Ns s
2427 determines the balance of performance between reads, writes, and scrubs.
2428 For example, increasing
2429 .Sy zfs_vdev_scrub_max_active
2430 will cause the scrub or resilver to complete more quickly,
2431 but reads and writes to have higher latency and lower throughput.
2432 .Pp
2433 All I/O classes have a fixed maximum number of outstanding operations,
2434 except for the async write class.
2435 Asynchronous writes represent the data that is committed to stable storage
2436 during the syncing stage for transaction groups.
2437 Transaction groups enter the syncing state periodically,
2438 so the number of queued async writes will quickly burst up
2439 and then bleed down to zero.
2440 Rather than servicing them as quickly as possible,
2441 the I/O scheduler changes the maximum number of active async write operations
2442 according to the amount of dirty data in the pool.
2443 Since both throughput and latency typically increase with the number of
2444 concurrent operations issued to physical devices, reducing the
2445 burstiness in the number of simultaneous operations also stabilizes the
2446 response time of operations from other queues, in particular synchronous ones.
2447 In broad strokes, the I/O scheduler will issue more concurrent operations
2448 from the async write queue as there is more dirty data in the pool.
2449 .
2450 .Ss Async Writes
2451 The number of concurrent operations issued for the async write I/O class
2452 follows a piece-wise linear function defined by a few adjustable points:
2453 .Bd -literal
2454 | o---------| <-- \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_max_active\fP
2455 ^ | /^ |
2456 | | / | |
2457 active | / | |
2458 I/O | / | |
2459 count | / | |
2460 | / | |
2461 |-------o | | <-- \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_min_active\fP
2462 0|_______^______|_________|
2463 0% | | 100% of \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fP
2464 | |
2465 | `-- \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent\fP
2466 `--------- \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent\fP
2467 .Ed
2468 .Pp
2469 Until the amount of dirty data exceeds a minimum percentage of the dirty
2470 data allowed in the pool, the I/O scheduler will limit the number of
2471 concurrent operations to the minimum.
2472 As that threshold is crossed, the number of concurrent operations issued
2473 increases linearly to the maximum at the specified maximum percentage
2474 of the dirty data allowed in the pool.
2475 .Pp
2476 Ideally, the amount of dirty data on a busy pool will stay in the sloped
2477 part of the function between
2478 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent
2479 and
2480 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent .
2481 If it exceeds the maximum percentage,
2482 this indicates that the rate of incoming data is
2483 greater than the rate that the backend storage can handle.
2484 In this case, we must further throttle incoming writes,
2485 as described in the next section.
2486 .
2487 .Sh ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY
2488 We delay transactions when we've determined that the backend storage
2489 isn't able to accommodate the rate of incoming writes.
2490 .Pp
2491 If there is already a transaction waiting, we delay relative to when
2492 that transaction will finish waiting.
2493 This way the calculated delay time
2494 is independent of the number of threads concurrently executing transactions.
2495 .Pp
2496 If we are the only waiter, wait relative to when the transaction started,
2497 rather than the current time.
2498 This credits the transaction for "time already served",
2499 e.g. reading indirect blocks.
2500 .Pp
2501 The minimum time for a transaction to take is calculated as
2502 .D1 min_time = min( Ns Sy zfs_delay_scale No \(mu Po Sy dirty No \- Sy min Pc / Po Sy max No \- Sy dirty Pc , 100ms)
2503 .Pp
2504 The delay has two degrees of freedom that can be adjusted via tunables.
2505 The percentage of dirty data at which we start to delay is defined by
2506 .Sy zfs_delay_min_dirty_percent .
2507 This should typically be at or above
2508 .Sy zfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent ,
2509 so that we only start to delay after writing at full speed
2510 has failed to keep up with the incoming write rate.
2511 The scale of the curve is defined by
2512 .Sy zfs_delay_scale .
2513 Roughly speaking, this variable determines the amount of delay at the midpoint
2514 of the curve.
2515 .Bd -literal
2516 delay
2517 10ms +-------------------------------------------------------------*+
2518 | *|
2519 9ms + *+
2520 | *|
2521 8ms + *+
2522 | * |
2523 7ms + * +
2524 | * |
2525 6ms + * +
2526 | * |
2527 5ms + * +
2528 | * |
2529 4ms + * +
2530 | * |
2531 3ms + * +
2532 | * |
2533 2ms + (midpoint) * +
2534 | | ** |
2535 1ms + v *** +
2536 | \fBzfs_delay_scale\fP ----------> ******** |
2537 0 +-------------------------------------*********----------------+
2538 0% <- \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fP -> 100%
2539 .Ed
2540 .Pp
2541 Note, that since the delay is added to the outstanding time remaining on the
2542 most recent transaction it's effectively the inverse of IOPS.
2543 Here, the midpoint of
2544 .Em 500 us
2545 translates to
2546 .Em 2000 IOPS .
2547 The shape of the curve
2548 was chosen such that small changes in the amount of accumulated dirty data
2549 in the first three quarters of the curve yield relatively small differences
2550 in the amount of delay.
2551 .Pp
2552 The effects can be easier to understand when the amount of delay is
2553 represented on a logarithmic scale:
2554 .Bd -literal
2555 delay
2556 100ms +-------------------------------------------------------------++
2557 + +
2558 | |
2559 + *+
2560 10ms + *+
2561 + ** +
2562 | (midpoint) ** |
2563 + | ** +
2564 1ms + v **** +
2565 + \fBzfs_delay_scale\fP ----------> ***** +
2566 | **** |
2567 + **** +
2568 100us + ** +
2569 + * +
2570 | * |
2571 + * +
2572 10us + * +
2573 + +
2574 | |
2575 + +
2576 +--------------------------------------------------------------+
2577 0% <- \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fP -> 100%
2578 .Ed
2579 .Pp
2580 Note here that only as the amount of dirty data approaches its limit does
2581 the delay start to increase rapidly.
2582 The goal of a properly tuned system should be to keep the amount of dirty data
2583 out of that range by first ensuring that the appropriate limits are set
2584 for the I/O scheduler to reach optimal throughput on the back-end storage,
2585 and then by changing the value of
2586 .Sy zfs_delay_scale
2587 to increase the steepness of the curve.