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15 .TH ZFS-MODULE-PARAMETERS 5 "Sept 28, 2017"
16 .SH NAME
17 zfs\-module\-parameters \- ZFS module parameters
18 .SH DESCRIPTION
19 .sp
20 .LP
21 Description of the different parameters to the ZFS module.
22
23 .SS "Module parameters"
24 .sp
25 .LP
26
27 .sp
28 .ne 2
29 .na
30 \fBignore_hole_birth\fR (int)
31 .ad
32 .RS 12n
33 When set, the hole_birth optimization will not be used, and all holes will
34 always be sent on zfs send. Useful if you suspect your datasets are affected
35 by a bug in hole_birth.
36 .sp
37 Use \fB1\fR for on (default) and \fB0\fR for off.
38 .RE
39
40 .sp
41 .ne 2
42 .na
43 \fBl2arc_feed_again\fR (int)
44 .ad
45 .RS 12n
46 Turbo L2ARC warm-up. When the L2ARC is cold the fill interval will be set as
47 fast as possible.
48 .sp
49 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR to disable.
50 .RE
51
52 .sp
53 .ne 2
54 .na
55 \fBl2arc_feed_min_ms\fR (ulong)
56 .ad
57 .RS 12n
58 Min feed interval in milliseconds. Requires \fBl2arc_feed_again=1\fR and only
59 applicable in related situations.
60 .sp
61 Default value: \fB200\fR.
62 .RE
63
64 .sp
65 .ne 2
66 .na
67 \fBl2arc_feed_secs\fR (ulong)
68 .ad
69 .RS 12n
70 Seconds between L2ARC writing
71 .sp
72 Default value: \fB1\fR.
73 .RE
74
75 .sp
76 .ne 2
77 .na
78 \fBl2arc_headroom\fR (ulong)
79 .ad
80 .RS 12n
81 How far through the ARC lists to search for L2ARC cacheable content, expressed
82 as a multiplier of \fBl2arc_write_max\fR
83 .sp
84 Default value: \fB2\fR.
85 .RE
86
87 .sp
88 .ne 2
89 .na
90 \fBl2arc_headroom_boost\fR (ulong)
91 .ad
92 .RS 12n
93 Scales \fBl2arc_headroom\fR by this percentage when L2ARC contents are being
94 successfully compressed before writing. A value of 100 disables this feature.
95 .sp
96 Default value: \fB200\fR.
97 .RE
98
99 .sp
100 .ne 2
101 .na
102 \fBl2arc_nocompress\fR (int)
103 .ad
104 .RS 12n
105 Skip compressing L2ARC buffers
106 .sp
107 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
108 .RE
109
110 .sp
111 .ne 2
112 .na
113 \fBl2arc_noprefetch\fR (int)
114 .ad
115 .RS 12n
116 Do not write buffers to L2ARC if they were prefetched but not used by
117 applications
118 .sp
119 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR to disable.
120 .RE
121
122 .sp
123 .ne 2
124 .na
125 \fBl2arc_norw\fR (int)
126 .ad
127 .RS 12n
128 No reads during writes
129 .sp
130 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
131 .RE
132
133 .sp
134 .ne 2
135 .na
136 \fBl2arc_write_boost\fR (ulong)
137 .ad
138 .RS 12n
139 Cold L2ARC devices will have \fBl2arc_write_max\fR increased by this amount
140 while they remain cold.
141 .sp
142 Default value: \fB8,388,608\fR.
143 .RE
144
145 .sp
146 .ne 2
147 .na
148 \fBl2arc_write_max\fR (ulong)
149 .ad
150 .RS 12n
151 Max write bytes per interval
152 .sp
153 Default value: \fB8,388,608\fR.
154 .RE
155
156 .sp
157 .ne 2
158 .na
159 \fBmetaslab_aliquot\fR (ulong)
160 .ad
161 .RS 12n
162 Metaslab granularity, in bytes. This is roughly similar to what would be
163 referred to as the "stripe size" in traditional RAID arrays. In normal
164 operation, ZFS will try to write this amount of data to a top-level vdev
165 before moving on to the next one.
166 .sp
167 Default value: \fB524,288\fR.
168 .RE
169
170 .sp
171 .ne 2
172 .na
173 \fBmetaslab_bias_enabled\fR (int)
174 .ad
175 .RS 12n
176 Enable metaslab group biasing based on its vdev's over- or under-utilization
177 relative to the pool.
178 .sp
179 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR for no.
180 .RE
181
182 .sp
183 .ne 2
184 .na
185 \fBzfs_metaslab_segment_weight_enabled\fR (int)
186 .ad
187 .RS 12n
188 Enable/disable segment-based metaslab selection.
189 .sp
190 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR for no.
191 .RE
192
193 .sp
194 .ne 2
195 .na
196 \fBzfs_metaslab_switch_threshold\fR (int)
197 .ad
198 .RS 12n
199 When using segment-based metaslab selection, continue allocating
200 from the active metaslab until \fBzfs_metaslab_switch_threshold\fR
201 worth of buckets have been exhausted.
202 .sp
203 Default value: \fB2\fR.
204 .RE
205
206 .sp
207 .ne 2
208 .na
209 \fBmetaslab_debug_load\fR (int)
210 .ad
211 .RS 12n
212 Load all metaslabs during pool import.
213 .sp
214 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
215 .RE
216
217 .sp
218 .ne 2
219 .na
220 \fBmetaslab_debug_unload\fR (int)
221 .ad
222 .RS 12n
223 Prevent metaslabs from being unloaded.
224 .sp
225 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
226 .RE
227
228 .sp
229 .ne 2
230 .na
231 \fBmetaslab_fragmentation_factor_enabled\fR (int)
232 .ad
233 .RS 12n
234 Enable use of the fragmentation metric in computing metaslab weights.
235 .sp
236 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR for no.
237 .RE
238
239 .sp
240 .ne 2
241 .na
242 \fBmetaslabs_per_vdev\fR (int)
243 .ad
244 .RS 12n
245 When a vdev is added, it will be divided into approximately (but no more than) this number of metaslabs.
246 .sp
247 Default value: \fB200\fR.
248 .RE
249
250 .sp
251 .ne 2
252 .na
253 \fBmetaslab_preload_enabled\fR (int)
254 .ad
255 .RS 12n
256 Enable metaslab group preloading.
257 .sp
258 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR for no.
259 .RE
260
261 .sp
262 .ne 2
263 .na
264 \fBmetaslab_lba_weighting_enabled\fR (int)
265 .ad
266 .RS 12n
267 Give more weight to metaslabs with lower LBAs, assuming they have
268 greater bandwidth as is typically the case on a modern constant
269 angular velocity disk drive.
270 .sp
271 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR for no.
272 .RE
273
274 .sp
275 .ne 2
276 .na
277 \fBspa_config_path\fR (charp)
278 .ad
279 .RS 12n
280 SPA config file
281 .sp
282 Default value: \fB/etc/zfs/zpool.cache\fR.
283 .RE
284
285 .sp
286 .ne 2
287 .na
288 \fBspa_asize_inflation\fR (int)
289 .ad
290 .RS 12n
291 Multiplication factor used to estimate actual disk consumption from the
292 size of data being written. The default value is a worst case estimate,
293 but lower values may be valid for a given pool depending on its
294 configuration. Pool administrators who understand the factors involved
295 may wish to specify a more realistic inflation factor, particularly if
296 they operate close to quota or capacity limits.
297 .sp
298 Default value: \fB24\fR.
299 .RE
300
301 .sp
302 .ne 2
303 .na
304 \fBspa_load_verify_data\fR (int)
305 .ad
306 .RS 12n
307 Whether to traverse data blocks during an "extreme rewind" (\fB-X\fR)
308 import. Use 0 to disable and 1 to enable.
309
310 An extreme rewind import normally performs a full traversal of all
311 blocks in the pool for verification. If this parameter is set to 0,
312 the traversal skips non-metadata blocks. It can be toggled once the
313 import has started to stop or start the traversal of non-metadata blocks.
314 .sp
315 Default value: \fB1\fR.
316 .RE
317
318 .sp
319 .ne 2
320 .na
321 \fBspa_load_verify_metadata\fR (int)
322 .ad
323 .RS 12n
324 Whether to traverse blocks during an "extreme rewind" (\fB-X\fR)
325 pool import. Use 0 to disable and 1 to enable.
326
327 An extreme rewind import normally performs a full traversal of all
328 blocks in the pool for verification. If this parameter is set to 0,
329 the traversal is not performed. It can be toggled once the import has
330 started to stop or start the traversal.
331 .sp
332 Default value: \fB1\fR.
333 .RE
334
335 .sp
336 .ne 2
337 .na
338 \fBspa_load_verify_maxinflight\fR (int)
339 .ad
340 .RS 12n
341 Maximum concurrent I/Os during the traversal performed during an "extreme
342 rewind" (\fB-X\fR) pool import.
343 .sp
344 Default value: \fB10000\fR.
345 .RE
346
347 .sp
348 .ne 2
349 .na
350 \fBspa_slop_shift\fR (int)
351 .ad
352 .RS 12n
353 Normally, we don't allow the last 3.2% (1/(2^spa_slop_shift)) of space
354 in the pool to be consumed. This ensures that we don't run the pool
355 completely out of space, due to unaccounted changes (e.g. to the MOS).
356 It also limits the worst-case time to allocate space. If we have
357 less than this amount of free space, most ZPL operations (e.g. write,
358 create) will return ENOSPC.
359 .sp
360 Default value: \fB5\fR.
361 .RE
362
363 .sp
364 .ne 2
365 .na
366 \fBzfetch_array_rd_sz\fR (ulong)
367 .ad
368 .RS 12n
369 If prefetching is enabled, disable prefetching for reads larger than this size.
370 .sp
371 Default value: \fB1,048,576\fR.
372 .RE
373
374 .sp
375 .ne 2
376 .na
377 \fBzfetch_max_distance\fR (uint)
378 .ad
379 .RS 12n
380 Max bytes to prefetch per stream (default 8MB).
381 .sp
382 Default value: \fB8,388,608\fR.
383 .RE
384
385 .sp
386 .ne 2
387 .na
388 \fBzfetch_max_streams\fR (uint)
389 .ad
390 .RS 12n
391 Max number of streams per zfetch (prefetch streams per file).
392 .sp
393 Default value: \fB8\fR.
394 .RE
395
396 .sp
397 .ne 2
398 .na
399 \fBzfetch_min_sec_reap\fR (uint)
400 .ad
401 .RS 12n
402 Min time before an active prefetch stream can be reclaimed
403 .sp
404 Default value: \fB2\fR.
405 .RE
406
407 .sp
408 .ne 2
409 .na
410 \fBzfs_arc_dnode_limit\fR (ulong)
411 .ad
412 .RS 12n
413 When the number of bytes consumed by dnodes in the ARC exceeds this number of
414 bytes, try to unpin some of it in response to demand for non-metadata. This
415 value acts as a ceiling to the amount of dnode metadata, and defaults to 0 which
416 indicates that a percent which is based on \fBzfs_arc_dnode_limit_percent\fR of
417 the ARC meta buffers that may be used for dnodes.
418
419 See also \fBzfs_arc_meta_prune\fR which serves a similar purpose but is used
420 when the amount of metadata in the ARC exceeds \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit\fR rather
421 than in response to overall demand for non-metadata.
422
423 .sp
424 Default value: \fB0\fR.
425 .RE
426
427 .sp
428 .ne 2
429 .na
430 \fBzfs_arc_dnode_limit_percent\fR (ulong)
431 .ad
432 .RS 12n
433 Percentage that can be consumed by dnodes of ARC meta buffers.
434 .sp
435 See also \fBzfs_arc_dnode_limit\fR which serves a similar purpose but has a
436 higher priority if set to nonzero value.
437 .sp
438 Default value: \fB10\fR.
439 .RE
440
441 .sp
442 .ne 2
443 .na
444 \fBzfs_arc_dnode_reduce_percent\fR (ulong)
445 .ad
446 .RS 12n
447 Percentage of ARC dnodes to try to scan in response to demand for non-metadata
448 when the number of bytes consumed by dnodes exceeds \fBzfs_arc_dnode_limit\fR.
449
450 .sp
451 Default value: \fB10% of the number of dnodes in the ARC\fR.
452 .RE
453
454 .sp
455 .ne 2
456 .na
457 \fBzfs_arc_average_blocksize\fR (int)
458 .ad
459 .RS 12n
460 The ARC's buffer hash table is sized based on the assumption of an average
461 block size of \fBzfs_arc_average_blocksize\fR (default 8K). This works out
462 to roughly 1MB of hash table per 1GB of physical memory with 8-byte pointers.
463 For configurations with a known larger average block size this value can be
464 increased to reduce the memory footprint.
465
466 .sp
467 Default value: \fB8192\fR.
468 .RE
469
470 .sp
471 .ne 2
472 .na
473 \fBzfs_arc_evict_batch_limit\fR (int)
474 .ad
475 .RS 12n
476 Number ARC headers to evict per sub-list before proceeding to another sub-list.
477 This batch-style operation prevents entire sub-lists from being evicted at once
478 but comes at a cost of additional unlocking and locking.
479 .sp
480 Default value: \fB10\fR.
481 .RE
482
483 .sp
484 .ne 2
485 .na
486 \fBzfs_arc_grow_retry\fR (int)
487 .ad
488 .RS 12n
489 After a memory pressure event the ARC will wait this many seconds before trying
490 to resume growth
491 .sp
492 Default value: \fB5\fR.
493 .RE
494
495 .sp
496 .ne 2
497 .na
498 \fBzfs_arc_lotsfree_percent\fR (int)
499 .ad
500 .RS 12n
501 Throttle I/O when free system memory drops below this percentage of total
502 system memory. Setting this value to 0 will disable the throttle.
503 .sp
504 Default value: \fB10\fR.
505 .RE
506
507 .sp
508 .ne 2
509 .na
510 \fBzfs_arc_max\fR (ulong)
511 .ad
512 .RS 12n
513 Max arc size of ARC in bytes. If set to 0 then it will consume 1/2 of system
514 RAM. This value must be at least 67108864 (64 megabytes).
515 .sp
516 This value can be changed dynamically with some caveats. It cannot be set back
517 to 0 while running and reducing it below the current ARC size will not cause
518 the ARC to shrink without memory pressure to induce shrinking.
519 .sp
520 Default value: \fB0\fR.
521 .RE
522
523 .sp
524 .ne 2
525 .na
526 \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit\fR (ulong)
527 .ad
528 .RS 12n
529 The maximum allowed size in bytes that meta data buffers are allowed to
530 consume in the ARC. When this limit is reached meta data buffers will
531 be reclaimed even if the overall arc_c_max has not been reached. This
532 value defaults to 0 which indicates that a percent which is based on
533 \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit_percent\fR of the ARC may be used for meta data.
534 .sp
535 This value my be changed dynamically except that it cannot be set back to 0
536 for a specific percent of the ARC; it must be set to an explicit value.
537 .sp
538 Default value: \fB0\fR.
539 .RE
540
541 .sp
542 .ne 2
543 .na
544 \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit_percent\fR (ulong)
545 .ad
546 .RS 12n
547 Percentage of ARC buffers that can be used for meta data.
548
549 See also \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit\fR which serves a similar purpose but has a
550 higher priority if set to nonzero value.
551
552 .sp
553 Default value: \fB75\fR.
554 .RE
555
556 .sp
557 .ne 2
558 .na
559 \fBzfs_arc_meta_min\fR (ulong)
560 .ad
561 .RS 12n
562 The minimum allowed size in bytes that meta data buffers may consume in
563 the ARC. This value defaults to 0 which disables a floor on the amount
564 of the ARC devoted meta data.
565 .sp
566 Default value: \fB0\fR.
567 .RE
568
569 .sp
570 .ne 2
571 .na
572 \fBzfs_arc_meta_prune\fR (int)
573 .ad
574 .RS 12n
575 The number of dentries and inodes to be scanned looking for entries
576 which can be dropped. This may be required when the ARC reaches the
577 \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit\fR because dentries and inodes can pin buffers
578 in the ARC. Increasing this value will cause to dentry and inode caches
579 to be pruned more aggressively. Setting this value to 0 will disable
580 pruning the inode and dentry caches.
581 .sp
582 Default value: \fB10,000\fR.
583 .RE
584
585 .sp
586 .ne 2
587 .na
588 \fBzfs_arc_meta_adjust_restarts\fR (ulong)
589 .ad
590 .RS 12n
591 The number of restart passes to make while scanning the ARC attempting
592 the free buffers in order to stay below the \fBzfs_arc_meta_limit\fR.
593 This value should not need to be tuned but is available to facilitate
594 performance analysis.
595 .sp
596 Default value: \fB4096\fR.
597 .RE
598
599 .sp
600 .ne 2
601 .na
602 \fBzfs_arc_min\fR (ulong)
603 .ad
604 .RS 12n
605 Min arc size
606 .sp
607 Default value: \fB100\fR.
608 .RE
609
610 .sp
611 .ne 2
612 .na
613 \fBzfs_arc_min_prefetch_lifespan\fR (int)
614 .ad
615 .RS 12n
616 Minimum time prefetched blocks are locked in the ARC, specified in jiffies.
617 A value of 0 will default to 1 second.
618 .sp
619 Default value: \fB0\fR.
620 .RE
621
622 .sp
623 .ne 2
624 .na
625 \fBzfs_multilist_num_sublists\fR (int)
626 .ad
627 .RS 12n
628 To allow more fine-grained locking, each ARC state contains a series
629 of lists for both data and meta data objects. Locking is performed at
630 the level of these "sub-lists". This parameters controls the number of
631 sub-lists per ARC state, and also applies to other uses of the
632 multilist data structure.
633 .sp
634 Default value: \fB4\fR or the number of online CPUs, whichever is greater
635 .RE
636
637 .sp
638 .ne 2
639 .na
640 \fBzfs_arc_overflow_shift\fR (int)
641 .ad
642 .RS 12n
643 The ARC size is considered to be overflowing if it exceeds the current
644 ARC target size (arc_c) by a threshold determined by this parameter.
645 The threshold is calculated as a fraction of arc_c using the formula
646 "arc_c >> \fBzfs_arc_overflow_shift\fR".
647
648 The default value of 8 causes the ARC to be considered to be overflowing
649 if it exceeds the target size by 1/256th (0.3%) of the target size.
650
651 When the ARC is overflowing, new buffer allocations are stalled until
652 the reclaim thread catches up and the overflow condition no longer exists.
653 .sp
654 Default value: \fB8\fR.
655 .RE
656
657 .sp
658 .ne 2
659 .na
660
661 \fBzfs_arc_p_min_shift\fR (int)
662 .ad
663 .RS 12n
664 arc_c shift to calc min/max arc_p
665 .sp
666 Default value: \fB4\fR.
667 .RE
668
669 .sp
670 .ne 2
671 .na
672 \fBzfs_arc_p_aggressive_disable\fR (int)
673 .ad
674 .RS 12n
675 Disable aggressive arc_p growth
676 .sp
677 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR to disable.
678 .RE
679
680 .sp
681 .ne 2
682 .na
683 \fBzfs_arc_p_dampener_disable\fR (int)
684 .ad
685 .RS 12n
686 Disable arc_p adapt dampener
687 .sp
688 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR to disable.
689 .RE
690
691 .sp
692 .ne 2
693 .na
694 \fBzfs_arc_shrink_shift\fR (int)
695 .ad
696 .RS 12n
697 log2(fraction of arc to reclaim)
698 .sp
699 Default value: \fB5\fR.
700 .RE
701
702 .sp
703 .ne 2
704 .na
705 \fBzfs_arc_pc_percent\fR (uint)
706 .ad
707 .RS 12n
708 Percent of pagecache to reclaim arc to
709
710 This tunable allows ZFS arc to play more nicely with the kernel's LRU
711 pagecache. It can guarantee that the arc size won't collapse under scanning
712 pressure on the pagecache, yet still allows arc to be reclaimed down to
713 zfs_arc_min if necessary. This value is specified as percent of pagecache
714 size (as measured by NR_FILE_PAGES) where that percent may exceed 100. This
715 only operates during memory pressure/reclaim.
716 .sp
717 Default value: \fB0\fR (disabled).
718 .RE
719
720 .sp
721 .ne 2
722 .na
723 \fBzfs_arc_sys_free\fR (ulong)
724 .ad
725 .RS 12n
726 The target number of bytes the ARC should leave as free memory on the system.
727 Defaults to the larger of 1/64 of physical memory or 512K. Setting this
728 option to a non-zero value will override the default.
729 .sp
730 Default value: \fB0\fR.
731 .RE
732
733 .sp
734 .ne 2
735 .na
736 \fBzfs_autoimport_disable\fR (int)
737 .ad
738 .RS 12n
739 Disable pool import at module load by ignoring the cache file (typically \fB/etc/zfs/zpool.cache\fR).
740 .sp
741 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR for no.
742 .RE
743
744 .sp
745 .ne 2
746 .na
747 \fBzfs_dbgmsg_enable\fR (int)
748 .ad
749 .RS 12n
750 Internally ZFS keeps a small log to facilitate debugging. By default the log
751 is disabled, to enable it set this option to 1. The contents of the log can
752 be accessed by reading the /proc/spl/kstat/zfs/dbgmsg file. Writing 0 to
753 this proc file clears the log.
754 .sp
755 Default value: \fB0\fR.
756 .RE
757
758 .sp
759 .ne 2
760 .na
761 \fBzfs_dbgmsg_maxsize\fR (int)
762 .ad
763 .RS 12n
764 The maximum size in bytes of the internal ZFS debug log.
765 .sp
766 Default value: \fB4M\fR.
767 .RE
768
769 .sp
770 .ne 2
771 .na
772 \fBzfs_dbuf_state_index\fR (int)
773 .ad
774 .RS 12n
775 This feature is currently unused. It is normally used for controlling what
776 reporting is available under /proc/spl/kstat/zfs.
777 .sp
778 Default value: \fB0\fR.
779 .RE
780
781 .sp
782 .ne 2
783 .na
784 \fBzfs_deadman_enabled\fR (int)
785 .ad
786 .RS 12n
787 When a pool sync operation takes longer than \fBzfs_deadman_synctime_ms\fR
788 milliseconds, a "slow spa_sync" message is logged to the debug log
789 (see \fBzfs_dbgmsg_enable\fR). If \fBzfs_deadman_enabled\fR is set,
790 all pending IO operations are also checked and if any haven't completed
791 within \fBzfs_deadman_synctime_ms\fR milliseconds, a "SLOW IO" message
792 is logged to the debug log and a "delay" system event with the details of
793 the hung IO is posted.
794 .sp
795 Use \fB1\fR (default) to enable the slow IO check and \fB0\fR to disable.
796 .RE
797
798 .sp
799 .ne 2
800 .na
801 \fBzfs_deadman_checktime_ms\fR (int)
802 .ad
803 .RS 12n
804 Once a pool sync operation has taken longer than
805 \fBzfs_deadman_synctime_ms\fR milliseconds, continue to check for slow
806 operations every \fBzfs_deadman_checktime_ms\fR milliseconds.
807 .sp
808 Default value: \fB5,000\fR.
809 .RE
810
811 .sp
812 .ne 2
813 .na
814 \fBzfs_deadman_synctime_ms\fR (ulong)
815 .ad
816 .RS 12n
817 Interval in milliseconds after which the deadman is triggered and also
818 the interval after which an IO operation is considered to be "hung"
819 if \fBzfs_deadman_enabled\fR is set.
820
821 See \fBzfs_deadman_enabled\fR.
822 .sp
823 Default value: \fB1,000,000\fR.
824 .RE
825
826 .sp
827 .ne 2
828 .na
829 \fBzfs_dedup_prefetch\fR (int)
830 .ad
831 .RS 12n
832 Enable prefetching dedup-ed blks
833 .sp
834 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR to disable (default).
835 .RE
836
837 .sp
838 .ne 2
839 .na
840 \fBzfs_delay_min_dirty_percent\fR (int)
841 .ad
842 .RS 12n
843 Start to delay each transaction once there is this amount of dirty data,
844 expressed as a percentage of \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR.
845 This value should be >= zfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent.
846 See the section "ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY".
847 .sp
848 Default value: \fB60\fR.
849 .RE
850
851 .sp
852 .ne 2
853 .na
854 \fBzfs_delay_scale\fR (int)
855 .ad
856 .RS 12n
857 This controls how quickly the transaction delay approaches infinity.
858 Larger values cause longer delays for a given amount of dirty data.
859 .sp
860 For the smoothest delay, this value should be about 1 billion divided
861 by the maximum number of operations per second. This will smoothly
862 handle between 10x and 1/10th this number.
863 .sp
864 See the section "ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY".
865 .sp
866 Note: \fBzfs_delay_scale\fR * \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR must be < 2^64.
867 .sp
868 Default value: \fB500,000\fR.
869 .RE
870
871 .sp
872 .ne 2
873 .na
874 \fBzfs_delete_blocks\fR (ulong)
875 .ad
876 .RS 12n
877 This is the used to define a large file for the purposes of delete. Files
878 containing more than \fBzfs_delete_blocks\fR will be deleted asynchronously
879 while smaller files are deleted synchronously. Decreasing this value will
880 reduce the time spent in an unlink(2) system call at the expense of a longer
881 delay before the freed space is available.
882 .sp
883 Default value: \fB20,480\fR.
884 .RE
885
886 .sp
887 .ne 2
888 .na
889 \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR (int)
890 .ad
891 .RS 12n
892 Determines the dirty space limit in bytes. Once this limit is exceeded, new
893 writes are halted until space frees up. This parameter takes precedence
894 over \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_percent\fR.
895 See the section "ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY".
896 .sp
897 Default value: 10 percent of all memory, capped at \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_max\fR.
898 .RE
899
900 .sp
901 .ne 2
902 .na
903 \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_max\fR (int)
904 .ad
905 .RS 12n
906 Maximum allowable value of \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR, expressed in bytes.
907 This limit is only enforced at module load time, and will be ignored if
908 \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR is later changed. This parameter takes
909 precedence over \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_max_percent\fR. See the section
910 "ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY".
911 .sp
912 Default value: 25% of physical RAM.
913 .RE
914
915 .sp
916 .ne 2
917 .na
918 \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_max_percent\fR (int)
919 .ad
920 .RS 12n
921 Maximum allowable value of \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR, expressed as a
922 percentage of physical RAM. This limit is only enforced at module load
923 time, and will be ignored if \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR is later changed.
924 The parameter \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_max\fR takes precedence over this
925 one. See the section "ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY".
926 .sp
927 Default value: \fB25\fR.
928 .RE
929
930 .sp
931 .ne 2
932 .na
933 \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_percent\fR (int)
934 .ad
935 .RS 12n
936 Determines the dirty space limit, expressed as a percentage of all
937 memory. Once this limit is exceeded, new writes are halted until space frees
938 up. The parameter \fBzfs_dirty_data_max\fR takes precedence over this
939 one. See the section "ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY".
940 .sp
941 Default value: 10%, subject to \fBzfs_dirty_data_max_max\fR.
942 .RE
943
944 .sp
945 .ne 2
946 .na
947 \fBzfs_dirty_data_sync\fR (int)
948 .ad
949 .RS 12n
950 Start syncing out a transaction group if there is at least this much dirty data.
951 .sp
952 Default value: \fB67,108,864\fR.
953 .RE
954
955 .sp
956 .ne 2
957 .na
958 \fBzfs_fletcher_4_impl\fR (string)
959 .ad
960 .RS 12n
961 Select a fletcher 4 implementation.
962 .sp
963 Supported selectors are: \fBfastest\fR, \fBscalar\fR, \fBsse2\fR, \fBssse3\fR,
964 \fBavx2\fR, \fBavx512f\fR, and \fBaarch64_neon\fR.
965 All of the selectors except \fBfastest\fR and \fBscalar\fR require instruction
966 set extensions to be available and will only appear if ZFS detects that they are
967 present at runtime. If multiple implementations of fletcher 4 are available,
968 the \fBfastest\fR will be chosen using a micro benchmark. Selecting \fBscalar\fR
969 results in the original, CPU based calculation, being used. Selecting any option
970 other than \fBfastest\fR and \fBscalar\fR results in vector instructions from
971 the respective CPU instruction set being used.
972 .sp
973 Default value: \fBfastest\fR.
974 .RE
975
976 .sp
977 .ne 2
978 .na
979 \fBzfs_free_bpobj_enabled\fR (int)
980 .ad
981 .RS 12n
982 Enable/disable the processing of the free_bpobj object.
983 .sp
984 Default value: \fB1\fR.
985 .RE
986
987 .sp
988 .ne 2
989 .na
990 \fBzfs_free_max_blocks\fR (ulong)
991 .ad
992 .RS 12n
993 Maximum number of blocks freed in a single txg.
994 .sp
995 Default value: \fB100,000\fR.
996 .RE
997
998 .sp
999 .ne 2
1000 .na
1001 \fBzfs_vdev_async_read_max_active\fR (int)
1002 .ad
1003 .RS 12n
1004 Maximum asynchronous read I/Os active to each device.
1005 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1006 .sp
1007 Default value: \fB3\fR.
1008 .RE
1009
1010 .sp
1011 .ne 2
1012 .na
1013 \fBzfs_vdev_async_read_min_active\fR (int)
1014 .ad
1015 .RS 12n
1016 Minimum asynchronous read I/Os active to each device.
1017 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1018 .sp
1019 Default value: \fB1\fR.
1020 .RE
1021
1022 .sp
1023 .ne 2
1024 .na
1025 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent\fR (int)
1026 .ad
1027 .RS 12n
1028 When the pool has more than
1029 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent\fR dirty data, use
1030 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_max_active\fR to limit active async writes. If
1031 the dirty data is between min and max, the active I/O limit is linearly
1032 interpolated. See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1033 .sp
1034 Default value: \fB60\fR.
1035 .RE
1036
1037 .sp
1038 .ne 2
1039 .na
1040 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent\fR (int)
1041 .ad
1042 .RS 12n
1043 When the pool has less than
1044 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent\fR dirty data, use
1045 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_min_active\fR to limit active async writes. If
1046 the dirty data is between min and max, the active I/O limit is linearly
1047 interpolated. See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1048 .sp
1049 Default value: \fB30\fR.
1050 .RE
1051
1052 .sp
1053 .ne 2
1054 .na
1055 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_max_active\fR (int)
1056 .ad
1057 .RS 12n
1058 Maximum asynchronous write I/Os active to each device.
1059 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1060 .sp
1061 Default value: \fB10\fR.
1062 .RE
1063
1064 .sp
1065 .ne 2
1066 .na
1067 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_min_active\fR (int)
1068 .ad
1069 .RS 12n
1070 Minimum asynchronous write I/Os active to each device.
1071 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1072 .sp
1073 Lower values are associated with better latency on rotational media but poorer
1074 resilver performance. The default value of 2 was chosen as a compromise. A
1075 value of 3 has been shown to improve resilver performance further at a cost of
1076 further increasing latency.
1077 .sp
1078 Default value: \fB2\fR.
1079 .RE
1080
1081 .sp
1082 .ne 2
1083 .na
1084 \fBzfs_vdev_max_active\fR (int)
1085 .ad
1086 .RS 12n
1087 The maximum number of I/Os active to each device. Ideally, this will be >=
1088 the sum of each queue's max_active. It must be at least the sum of each
1089 queue's min_active. See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1090 .sp
1091 Default value: \fB1,000\fR.
1092 .RE
1093
1094 .sp
1095 .ne 2
1096 .na
1097 \fBzfs_vdev_scrub_max_active\fR (int)
1098 .ad
1099 .RS 12n
1100 Maximum scrub I/Os active to each device.
1101 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1102 .sp
1103 Default value: \fB2\fR.
1104 .RE
1105
1106 .sp
1107 .ne 2
1108 .na
1109 \fBzfs_vdev_scrub_min_active\fR (int)
1110 .ad
1111 .RS 12n
1112 Minimum scrub I/Os active to each device.
1113 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1114 .sp
1115 Default value: \fB1\fR.
1116 .RE
1117
1118 .sp
1119 .ne 2
1120 .na
1121 \fBzfs_vdev_sync_read_max_active\fR (int)
1122 .ad
1123 .RS 12n
1124 Maximum synchronous read I/Os active to each device.
1125 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1126 .sp
1127 Default value: \fB10\fR.
1128 .RE
1129
1130 .sp
1131 .ne 2
1132 .na
1133 \fBzfs_vdev_sync_read_min_active\fR (int)
1134 .ad
1135 .RS 12n
1136 Minimum synchronous read I/Os active to each device.
1137 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1138 .sp
1139 Default value: \fB10\fR.
1140 .RE
1141
1142 .sp
1143 .ne 2
1144 .na
1145 \fBzfs_vdev_sync_write_max_active\fR (int)
1146 .ad
1147 .RS 12n
1148 Maximum synchronous write I/Os active to each device.
1149 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1150 .sp
1151 Default value: \fB10\fR.
1152 .RE
1153
1154 .sp
1155 .ne 2
1156 .na
1157 \fBzfs_vdev_sync_write_min_active\fR (int)
1158 .ad
1159 .RS 12n
1160 Minimum synchronous write I/Os active to each device.
1161 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1162 .sp
1163 Default value: \fB10\fR.
1164 .RE
1165
1166 .sp
1167 .ne 2
1168 .na
1169 \fBzfs_vdev_queue_depth_pct\fR (int)
1170 .ad
1171 .RS 12n
1172 Maximum number of queued allocations per top-level vdev expressed as
1173 a percentage of \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_max_active\fR which allows the
1174 system to detect devices that are more capable of handling allocations
1175 and to allocate more blocks to those devices. It allows for dynamic
1176 allocation distribution when devices are imbalanced as fuller devices
1177 will tend to be slower than empty devices.
1178
1179 See also \fBzio_dva_throttle_enabled\fR.
1180 .sp
1181 Default value: \fB1000\fR.
1182 .RE
1183
1184 .sp
1185 .ne 2
1186 .na
1187 \fBzfs_disable_dup_eviction\fR (int)
1188 .ad
1189 .RS 12n
1190 Disable duplicate buffer eviction
1191 .sp
1192 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1193 .RE
1194
1195 .sp
1196 .ne 2
1197 .na
1198 \fBzfs_expire_snapshot\fR (int)
1199 .ad
1200 .RS 12n
1201 Seconds to expire .zfs/snapshot
1202 .sp
1203 Default value: \fB300\fR.
1204 .RE
1205
1206 .sp
1207 .ne 2
1208 .na
1209 \fBzfs_admin_snapshot\fR (int)
1210 .ad
1211 .RS 12n
1212 Allow the creation, removal, or renaming of entries in the .zfs/snapshot
1213 directory to cause the creation, destruction, or renaming of snapshots.
1214 When enabled this functionality works both locally and over NFS exports
1215 which have the 'no_root_squash' option set. This functionality is disabled
1216 by default.
1217 .sp
1218 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1219 .RE
1220
1221 .sp
1222 .ne 2
1223 .na
1224 \fBzfs_flags\fR (int)
1225 .ad
1226 .RS 12n
1227 Set additional debugging flags. The following flags may be bitwise-or'd
1228 together.
1229 .sp
1230 .TS
1231 box;
1232 rB lB
1233 lB lB
1234 r l.
1235 Value Symbolic Name
1236 Description
1237 _
1238 1 ZFS_DEBUG_DPRINTF
1239 Enable dprintf entries in the debug log.
1240 _
1241 2 ZFS_DEBUG_DBUF_VERIFY *
1242 Enable extra dbuf verifications.
1243 _
1244 4 ZFS_DEBUG_DNODE_VERIFY *
1245 Enable extra dnode verifications.
1246 _
1247 8 ZFS_DEBUG_SNAPNAMES
1248 Enable snapshot name verification.
1249 _
1250 16 ZFS_DEBUG_MODIFY
1251 Check for illegally modified ARC buffers.
1252 _
1253 32 ZFS_DEBUG_SPA
1254 Enable spa_dbgmsg entries in the debug log.
1255 _
1256 64 ZFS_DEBUG_ZIO_FREE
1257 Enable verification of block frees.
1258 _
1259 128 ZFS_DEBUG_HISTOGRAM_VERIFY
1260 Enable extra spacemap histogram verifications.
1261 _
1262 256 ZFS_DEBUG_METASLAB_VERIFY
1263 Verify space accounting on disk matches in-core range_trees.
1264 _
1265 512 ZFS_DEBUG_SET_ERROR
1266 Enable SET_ERROR and dprintf entries in the debug log.
1267 .TE
1268 .sp
1269 * Requires debug build.
1270 .sp
1271 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1272 .RE
1273
1274 .sp
1275 .ne 2
1276 .na
1277 \fBzfs_free_leak_on_eio\fR (int)
1278 .ad
1279 .RS 12n
1280 If destroy encounters an EIO while reading metadata (e.g. indirect
1281 blocks), space referenced by the missing metadata can not be freed.
1282 Normally this causes the background destroy to become "stalled", as
1283 it is unable to make forward progress. While in this stalled state,
1284 all remaining space to free from the error-encountering filesystem is
1285 "temporarily leaked". Set this flag to cause it to ignore the EIO,
1286 permanently leak the space from indirect blocks that can not be read,
1287 and continue to free everything else that it can.
1288
1289 The default, "stalling" behavior is useful if the storage partially
1290 fails (i.e. some but not all i/os fail), and then later recovers. In
1291 this case, we will be able to continue pool operations while it is
1292 partially failed, and when it recovers, we can continue to free the
1293 space, with no leaks. However, note that this case is actually
1294 fairly rare.
1295
1296 Typically pools either (a) fail completely (but perhaps temporarily,
1297 e.g. a top-level vdev going offline), or (b) have localized,
1298 permanent errors (e.g. disk returns the wrong data due to bit flip or
1299 firmware bug). In case (a), this setting does not matter because the
1300 pool will be suspended and the sync thread will not be able to make
1301 forward progress regardless. In case (b), because the error is
1302 permanent, the best we can do is leak the minimum amount of space,
1303 which is what setting this flag will do. Therefore, it is reasonable
1304 for this flag to normally be set, but we chose the more conservative
1305 approach of not setting it, so that there is no possibility of
1306 leaking space in the "partial temporary" failure case.
1307 .sp
1308 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1309 .RE
1310
1311 .sp
1312 .ne 2
1313 .na
1314 \fBzfs_free_min_time_ms\fR (int)
1315 .ad
1316 .RS 12n
1317 During a \fBzfs destroy\fR operation using \fBfeature@async_destroy\fR a minimum
1318 of this much time will be spent working on freeing blocks per txg.
1319 .sp
1320 Default value: \fB1,000\fR.
1321 .RE
1322
1323 .sp
1324 .ne 2
1325 .na
1326 \fBzfs_immediate_write_sz\fR (long)
1327 .ad
1328 .RS 12n
1329 Largest data block to write to zil. Larger blocks will be treated as if the
1330 dataset being written to had the property setting \fBlogbias=throughput\fR.
1331 .sp
1332 Default value: \fB32,768\fR.
1333 .RE
1334
1335 .sp
1336 .ne 2
1337 .na
1338 \fBzfs_max_recordsize\fR (int)
1339 .ad
1340 .RS 12n
1341 We currently support block sizes from 512 bytes to 16MB. The benefits of
1342 larger blocks, and thus larger IO, need to be weighed against the cost of
1343 COWing a giant block to modify one byte. Additionally, very large blocks
1344 can have an impact on i/o latency, and also potentially on the memory
1345 allocator. Therefore, we do not allow the recordsize to be set larger than
1346 zfs_max_recordsize (default 1MB). Larger blocks can be created by changing
1347 this tunable, and pools with larger blocks can always be imported and used,
1348 regardless of this setting.
1349 .sp
1350 Default value: \fB1,048,576\fR.
1351 .RE
1352
1353 .sp
1354 .ne 2
1355 .na
1356 \fBzfs_mdcomp_disable\fR (int)
1357 .ad
1358 .RS 12n
1359 Disable meta data compression
1360 .sp
1361 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1362 .RE
1363
1364 .sp
1365 .ne 2
1366 .na
1367 \fBzfs_metaslab_fragmentation_threshold\fR (int)
1368 .ad
1369 .RS 12n
1370 Allow metaslabs to keep their active state as long as their fragmentation
1371 percentage is less than or equal to this value. An active metaslab that
1372 exceeds this threshold will no longer keep its active status allowing
1373 better metaslabs to be selected.
1374 .sp
1375 Default value: \fB70\fR.
1376 .RE
1377
1378 .sp
1379 .ne 2
1380 .na
1381 \fBzfs_mg_fragmentation_threshold\fR (int)
1382 .ad
1383 .RS 12n
1384 Metaslab groups are considered eligible for allocations if their
1385 fragmentation metric (measured as a percentage) is less than or equal to
1386 this value. If a metaslab group exceeds this threshold then it will be
1387 skipped unless all metaslab groups within the metaslab class have also
1388 crossed this threshold.
1389 .sp
1390 Default value: \fB85\fR.
1391 .RE
1392
1393 .sp
1394 .ne 2
1395 .na
1396 \fBzfs_mg_noalloc_threshold\fR (int)
1397 .ad
1398 .RS 12n
1399 Defines a threshold at which metaslab groups should be eligible for
1400 allocations. The value is expressed as a percentage of free space
1401 beyond which a metaslab group is always eligible for allocations.
1402 If a metaslab group's free space is less than or equal to the
1403 threshold, the allocator will avoid allocating to that group
1404 unless all groups in the pool have reached the threshold. Once all
1405 groups have reached the threshold, all groups are allowed to accept
1406 allocations. The default value of 0 disables the feature and causes
1407 all metaslab groups to be eligible for allocations.
1408
1409 This parameter allows one to deal with pools having heavily imbalanced
1410 vdevs such as would be the case when a new vdev has been added.
1411 Setting the threshold to a non-zero percentage will stop allocations
1412 from being made to vdevs that aren't filled to the specified percentage
1413 and allow lesser filled vdevs to acquire more allocations than they
1414 otherwise would under the old \fBzfs_mg_alloc_failures\fR facility.
1415 .sp
1416 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1417 .RE
1418
1419 .sp
1420 .ne 2
1421 .na
1422 \fBzfs_multihost_history\fR (int)
1423 .ad
1424 .RS 12n
1425 Historical statistics for the last N multihost updates will be available in
1426 \fB/proc/spl/kstat/zfs/<pool>/multihost\fR
1427 .sp
1428 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1429 .RE
1430
1431 .sp
1432 .ne 2
1433 .na
1434 \fBzfs_multihost_interval\fR (ulong)
1435 .ad
1436 .RS 12n
1437 Used to control the frequency of multihost writes which are performed when the
1438 \fBmultihost\fR pool property is on. This is one factor used to determine
1439 the length of the activity check during import.
1440 .sp
1441 The multihost write period is \fBzfs_multihost_interval / leaf-vdevs\fR milliseconds.
1442 This means that on average a multihost write will be issued for each leaf vdev every
1443 \fBzfs_multihost_interval\fR milliseconds. In practice, the observed period can
1444 vary with the I/O load and this observed value is the delay which is stored in
1445 the uberblock.
1446 .sp
1447 On import the activity check waits a minimum amount of time determined by
1448 \fBzfs_multihost_interval * zfs_multihost_import_intervals\fR. The activity
1449 check time may be further extended if the value of mmp delay found in the best
1450 uberblock indicates actual multihost updates happened at longer intervals than
1451 \fBzfs_multihost_interval\fR. A minimum value of \fB100ms\fR is enforced.
1452 .sp
1453 Default value: \fB1000\fR.
1454 .RE
1455
1456 .sp
1457 .ne 2
1458 .na
1459 \fBzfs_multihost_import_intervals\fR (uint)
1460 .ad
1461 .RS 12n
1462 Used to control the duration of the activity test on import. Smaller values of
1463 \fBzfs_multihost_import_intervals\fR will reduce the import time but increase
1464 the risk of failing to detect an active pool. The total activity check time is
1465 never allowed to drop below one second. A value of 0 is ignored and treated as
1466 if it was set to 1
1467 .sp
1468 Default value: \fB10\fR.
1469 .RE
1470
1471 .sp
1472 .ne 2
1473 .na
1474 \fBzfs_multihost_fail_intervals\fR (uint)
1475 .ad
1476 .RS 12n
1477 Controls the behavior of the pool when multihost write failures are detected.
1478 .sp
1479 When \fBzfs_multihost_fail_intervals = 0\fR then multihost write failures are ignored.
1480 The failures will still be reported to the ZED which depending on its
1481 configuration may take action such as suspending the pool or offlining a device.
1482 .sp
1483 When \fBzfs_multihost_fail_intervals > 0\fR then sequential multihost write failures
1484 will cause the pool to be suspended. This occurs when
1485 \fBzfs_multihost_fail_intervals * zfs_multihost_interval\fR milliseconds have
1486 passed since the last successful multihost write. This guarantees the activity test
1487 will see multihost writes if the pool is imported.
1488 .sp
1489 Default value: \fB5\fR.
1490 .RE
1491
1492 .sp
1493 .ne 2
1494 .na
1495 \fBzfs_no_scrub_io\fR (int)
1496 .ad
1497 .RS 12n
1498 Set for no scrub I/O. This results in scrubs not actually scrubbing data and
1499 simply doing a metadata crawl of the pool instead.
1500 .sp
1501 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1502 .RE
1503
1504 .sp
1505 .ne 2
1506 .na
1507 \fBzfs_no_scrub_prefetch\fR (int)
1508 .ad
1509 .RS 12n
1510 Set to disable block prefetching for scrubs.
1511 .sp
1512 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1513 .RE
1514
1515 .sp
1516 .ne 2
1517 .na
1518 \fBzfs_nocacheflush\fR (int)
1519 .ad
1520 .RS 12n
1521 Disable cache flush operations on disks when writing. Beware, this may cause
1522 corruption if disks re-order writes.
1523 .sp
1524 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1525 .RE
1526
1527 .sp
1528 .ne 2
1529 .na
1530 \fBzfs_nopwrite_enabled\fR (int)
1531 .ad
1532 .RS 12n
1533 Enable NOP writes
1534 .sp
1535 Use \fB1\fR for yes (default) and \fB0\fR to disable.
1536 .RE
1537
1538 .sp
1539 .ne 2
1540 .na
1541 \fBzfs_dmu_offset_next_sync\fR (int)
1542 .ad
1543 .RS 12n
1544 Enable forcing txg sync to find holes. When enabled forces ZFS to act
1545 like prior versions when SEEK_HOLE or SEEK_DATA flags are used, which
1546 when a dnode is dirty causes txg's to be synced so that this data can be
1547 found.
1548 .sp
1549 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR to disable (default).
1550 .RE
1551
1552 .sp
1553 .ne 2
1554 .na
1555 \fBzfs_pd_bytes_max\fR (int)
1556 .ad
1557 .RS 12n
1558 The number of bytes which should be prefetched during a pool traversal
1559 (eg: \fBzfs send\fR or other data crawling operations)
1560 .sp
1561 Default value: \fB52,428,800\fR.
1562 .RE
1563
1564 .sp
1565 .ne 2
1566 .na
1567 \fBzfs_per_txg_dirty_frees_percent \fR (ulong)
1568 .ad
1569 .RS 12n
1570 Tunable to control percentage of dirtied blocks from frees in one TXG.
1571 After this threshold is crossed, additional dirty blocks from frees
1572 wait until the next TXG.
1573 A value of zero will disable this throttle.
1574 .sp
1575 Default value: \fB30\fR and \fB0\fR to disable.
1576 .RE
1577
1578
1579
1580 .sp
1581 .ne 2
1582 .na
1583 \fBzfs_prefetch_disable\fR (int)
1584 .ad
1585 .RS 12n
1586 This tunable disables predictive prefetch. Note that it leaves "prescient"
1587 prefetch (e.g. prefetch for zfs send) intact. Unlike predictive prefetch,
1588 prescient prefetch never issues i/os that end up not being needed, so it
1589 can't hurt performance.
1590 .sp
1591 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1592 .RE
1593
1594 .sp
1595 .ne 2
1596 .na
1597 \fBzfs_read_chunk_size\fR (long)
1598 .ad
1599 .RS 12n
1600 Bytes to read per chunk
1601 .sp
1602 Default value: \fB1,048,576\fR.
1603 .RE
1604
1605 .sp
1606 .ne 2
1607 .na
1608 \fBzfs_read_history\fR (int)
1609 .ad
1610 .RS 12n
1611 Historical statistics for the last N reads will be available in
1612 \fB/proc/spl/kstat/zfs/<pool>/reads\fR
1613 .sp
1614 Default value: \fB0\fR (no data is kept).
1615 .RE
1616
1617 .sp
1618 .ne 2
1619 .na
1620 \fBzfs_read_history_hits\fR (int)
1621 .ad
1622 .RS 12n
1623 Include cache hits in read history
1624 .sp
1625 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1626 .RE
1627
1628 .sp
1629 .ne 2
1630 .na
1631 \fBzfs_recover\fR (int)
1632 .ad
1633 .RS 12n
1634 Set to attempt to recover from fatal errors. This should only be used as a
1635 last resort, as it typically results in leaked space, or worse.
1636 .sp
1637 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1638 .RE
1639
1640 .sp
1641 .ne 2
1642 .na
1643 \fBzfs_resilver_delay\fR (int)
1644 .ad
1645 .RS 12n
1646 Number of ticks to delay prior to issuing a resilver I/O operation when
1647 a non-resilver or non-scrub I/O operation has occurred within the past
1648 \fBzfs_scan_idle\fR ticks.
1649 .sp
1650 Default value: \fB2\fR.
1651 .RE
1652
1653 .sp
1654 .ne 2
1655 .na
1656 \fBzfs_resilver_min_time_ms\fR (int)
1657 .ad
1658 .RS 12n
1659 Resilvers are processed by the sync thread. While resilvering it will spend
1660 at least this much time working on a resilver between txg flushes.
1661 .sp
1662 Default value: \fB3,000\fR.
1663 .RE
1664
1665 .sp
1666 .ne 2
1667 .na
1668 \fBzfs_scan_idle\fR (int)
1669 .ad
1670 .RS 12n
1671 Idle window in clock ticks. During a scrub or a resilver, if
1672 a non-scrub or non-resilver I/O operation has occurred during this
1673 window, the next scrub or resilver operation is delayed by, respectively
1674 \fBzfs_scrub_delay\fR or \fBzfs_resilver_delay\fR ticks.
1675 .sp
1676 Default value: \fB50\fR.
1677 .RE
1678
1679 .sp
1680 .ne 2
1681 .na
1682 \fBzfs_scan_min_time_ms\fR (int)
1683 .ad
1684 .RS 12n
1685 Scrubs are processed by the sync thread. While scrubbing it will spend
1686 at least this much time working on a scrub between txg flushes.
1687 .sp
1688 Default value: \fB1,000\fR.
1689 .RE
1690
1691 .sp
1692 .ne 2
1693 .na
1694 \fBzfs_scrub_delay\fR (int)
1695 .ad
1696 .RS 12n
1697 Number of ticks to delay prior to issuing a scrub I/O operation when
1698 a non-scrub or non-resilver I/O operation has occurred within the past
1699 \fBzfs_scan_idle\fR ticks.
1700 .sp
1701 Default value: \fB4\fR.
1702 .RE
1703
1704 .sp
1705 .ne 2
1706 .na
1707 \fBzfs_send_corrupt_data\fR (int)
1708 .ad
1709 .RS 12n
1710 Allow sending of corrupt data (ignore read/checksum errors when sending data)
1711 .sp
1712 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1713 .RE
1714
1715 .sp
1716 .ne 2
1717 .na
1718 \fBzfs_sync_pass_deferred_free\fR (int)
1719 .ad
1720 .RS 12n
1721 Flushing of data to disk is done in passes. Defer frees starting in this pass
1722 .sp
1723 Default value: \fB2\fR.
1724 .RE
1725
1726 .sp
1727 .ne 2
1728 .na
1729 \fBzfs_sync_pass_dont_compress\fR (int)
1730 .ad
1731 .RS 12n
1732 Don't compress starting in this pass
1733 .sp
1734 Default value: \fB5\fR.
1735 .RE
1736
1737 .sp
1738 .ne 2
1739 .na
1740 \fBzfs_sync_pass_rewrite\fR (int)
1741 .ad
1742 .RS 12n
1743 Rewrite new block pointers starting in this pass
1744 .sp
1745 Default value: \fB2\fR.
1746 .RE
1747
1748 .sp
1749 .ne 2
1750 .na
1751 \fBzfs_sync_taskq_batch_pct\fR (int)
1752 .ad
1753 .RS 12n
1754 This controls the number of threads used by the dp_sync_taskq. The default
1755 value of 75% will create a maximum of one thread per cpu.
1756 .sp
1757 Default value: \fB75\fR.
1758 .RE
1759
1760 .sp
1761 .ne 2
1762 .na
1763 \fBzfs_top_maxinflight\fR (int)
1764 .ad
1765 .RS 12n
1766 Max concurrent I/Os per top-level vdev (mirrors or raidz arrays) allowed during
1767 scrub or resilver operations.
1768 .sp
1769 Default value: \fB32\fR.
1770 .RE
1771
1772 .sp
1773 .ne 2
1774 .na
1775 \fBzfs_txg_history\fR (int)
1776 .ad
1777 .RS 12n
1778 Historical statistics for the last N txgs will be available in
1779 \fB/proc/spl/kstat/zfs/<pool>/txgs\fR
1780 .sp
1781 Default value: \fB100\fR.
1782 .RE
1783
1784 .sp
1785 .ne 2
1786 .na
1787 \fBzfs_txg_timeout\fR (int)
1788 .ad
1789 .RS 12n
1790 Flush dirty data to disk at least every N seconds (maximum txg duration)
1791 .sp
1792 Default value: \fB5\fR.
1793 .RE
1794
1795 .sp
1796 .ne 2
1797 .na
1798 \fBzfs_vdev_aggregation_limit\fR (int)
1799 .ad
1800 .RS 12n
1801 Max vdev I/O aggregation size
1802 .sp
1803 Default value: \fB131,072\fR.
1804 .RE
1805
1806 .sp
1807 .ne 2
1808 .na
1809 \fBzfs_vdev_cache_bshift\fR (int)
1810 .ad
1811 .RS 12n
1812 Shift size to inflate reads too
1813 .sp
1814 Default value: \fB16\fR (effectively 65536).
1815 .RE
1816
1817 .sp
1818 .ne 2
1819 .na
1820 \fBzfs_vdev_cache_max\fR (int)
1821 .ad
1822 .RS 12n
1823 Inflate reads small than this value to meet the \fBzfs_vdev_cache_bshift\fR
1824 size.
1825 .sp
1826 Default value: \fB16384\fR.
1827 .RE
1828
1829 .sp
1830 .ne 2
1831 .na
1832 \fBzfs_vdev_cache_size\fR (int)
1833 .ad
1834 .RS 12n
1835 Total size of the per-disk cache in bytes.
1836 .sp
1837 Currently this feature is disabled as it has been found to not be helpful
1838 for performance and in some cases harmful.
1839 .sp
1840 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1841 .RE
1842
1843 .sp
1844 .ne 2
1845 .na
1846 \fBzfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_inc\fR (int)
1847 .ad
1848 .RS 12n
1849 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
1850 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member when an I/O immediately
1851 follows its predecessor on rotational vdevs for the purpose of making decisions
1852 based on load.
1853 .sp
1854 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1855 .RE
1856
1857 .sp
1858 .ne 2
1859 .na
1860 \fBzfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_inc\fR (int)
1861 .ad
1862 .RS 12n
1863 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
1864 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member when an I/O lacks
1865 locality as defined by the zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_offset. I/Os within
1866 this that are not immediately following the previous I/O are incremented by
1867 half.
1868 .sp
1869 Default value: \fB5\fR.
1870 .RE
1871
1872 .sp
1873 .ne 2
1874 .na
1875 \fBzfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_offset\fR (int)
1876 .ad
1877 .RS 12n
1878 The maximum distance for the last queued I/O in which the balancing algorithm
1879 considers an I/O to have locality.
1880 See the section "ZFS I/O SCHEDULER".
1881 .sp
1882 Default value: \fB1048576\fR.
1883 .RE
1884
1885 .sp
1886 .ne 2
1887 .na
1888 \fBzfs_vdev_mirror_non_rotating_inc\fR (int)
1889 .ad
1890 .RS 12n
1891 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
1892 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member on non-rotational vdevs
1893 when I/Os do not immediately follow one another.
1894 .sp
1895 Default value: \fB0\fR.
1896 .RE
1897
1898 .sp
1899 .ne 2
1900 .na
1901 \fBzfs_vdev_mirror_non_rotating_seek_inc\fR (int)
1902 .ad
1903 .RS 12n
1904 A number by which the balancing algorithm increments the load calculation for
1905 the purpose of selecting the least busy mirror member when an I/O lacks
1906 locality as defined by the zfs_vdev_mirror_rotating_seek_offset. I/Os within
1907 this that are not immediately following the previous I/O are incremented by
1908 half.
1909 .sp
1910 Default value: \fB1\fR.
1911 .RE
1912
1913 .sp
1914 .ne 2
1915 .na
1916 \fBzfs_vdev_read_gap_limit\fR (int)
1917 .ad
1918 .RS 12n
1919 Aggregate read I/O operations if the gap on-disk between them is within this
1920 threshold.
1921 .sp
1922 Default value: \fB32,768\fR.
1923 .RE
1924
1925 .sp
1926 .ne 2
1927 .na
1928 \fBzfs_vdev_scheduler\fR (charp)
1929 .ad
1930 .RS 12n
1931 Set the Linux I/O scheduler on whole disk vdevs to this scheduler
1932 .sp
1933 Default value: \fBnoop\fR.
1934 .RE
1935
1936 .sp
1937 .ne 2
1938 .na
1939 \fBzfs_vdev_write_gap_limit\fR (int)
1940 .ad
1941 .RS 12n
1942 Aggregate write I/O over gap
1943 .sp
1944 Default value: \fB4,096\fR.
1945 .RE
1946
1947 .sp
1948 .ne 2
1949 .na
1950 \fBzfs_vdev_raidz_impl\fR (string)
1951 .ad
1952 .RS 12n
1953 Parameter for selecting raidz parity implementation to use.
1954
1955 Options marked (always) below may be selected on module load as they are
1956 supported on all systems.
1957 The remaining options may only be set after the module is loaded, as they
1958 are available only if the implementations are compiled in and supported
1959 on the running system.
1960
1961 Once the module is loaded, the content of
1962 /sys/module/zfs/parameters/zfs_vdev_raidz_impl will show available options
1963 with the currently selected one enclosed in [].
1964 Possible options are:
1965 fastest - (always) implementation selected using built-in benchmark
1966 original - (always) original raidz implementation
1967 scalar - (always) scalar raidz implementation
1968 sse2 - implementation using SSE2 instruction set (64bit x86 only)
1969 ssse3 - implementation using SSSE3 instruction set (64bit x86 only)
1970 avx2 - implementation using AVX2 instruction set (64bit x86 only)
1971 avx512f - implementation using AVX512F instruction set (64bit x86 only)
1972 avx512bw - implementation using AVX512F & AVX512BW instruction sets (64bit x86 only)
1973 aarch64_neon - implementation using NEON (Aarch64/64 bit ARMv8 only)
1974 aarch64_neonx2 - implementation using NEON with more unrolling (Aarch64/64 bit ARMv8 only)
1975 .sp
1976 Default value: \fBfastest\fR.
1977 .RE
1978
1979 .sp
1980 .ne 2
1981 .na
1982 \fBzfs_zevent_cols\fR (int)
1983 .ad
1984 .RS 12n
1985 When zevents are logged to the console use this as the word wrap width.
1986 .sp
1987 Default value: \fB80\fR.
1988 .RE
1989
1990 .sp
1991 .ne 2
1992 .na
1993 \fBzfs_zevent_console\fR (int)
1994 .ad
1995 .RS 12n
1996 Log events to the console
1997 .sp
1998 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
1999 .RE
2000
2001 .sp
2002 .ne 2
2003 .na
2004 \fBzfs_zevent_len_max\fR (int)
2005 .ad
2006 .RS 12n
2007 Max event queue length. A value of 0 will result in a calculated value which
2008 increases with the number of CPUs in the system (minimum 64 events). Events
2009 in the queue can be viewed with the \fBzpool events\fR command.
2010 .sp
2011 Default value: \fB0\fR.
2012 .RE
2013
2014 .sp
2015 .ne 2
2016 .na
2017 \fBzfs_zil_clean_taskq_maxalloc\fR (int)
2018 .ad
2019 .RS 12n
2020 The maximum number of taskq entries that are allowed to be cached. When this
2021 limit is exceeded itx's will be cleaned synchronously.
2022 .sp
2023 Default value: \fB1048576\fR.
2024 .RE
2025
2026 .sp
2027 .ne 2
2028 .na
2029 \fBzfs_zil_clean_taskq_minalloc\fR (int)
2030 .ad
2031 .RS 12n
2032 The number of taskq entries that are pre-populated when the taskq is first
2033 created and are immediately available for use.
2034 .sp
2035 Default value: \fB1024\fR.
2036 .RE
2037
2038 .sp
2039 .ne 2
2040 .na
2041 \fBzfs_zil_clean_taskq_nthr_pct\fR (int)
2042 .ad
2043 .RS 12n
2044 This controls the number of threads used by the dp_zil_clean_taskq. The default
2045 value of 100% will create a maximum of one thread per cpu.
2046 .sp
2047 Default value: \fB100\fR.
2048 .RE
2049
2050 .sp
2051 .ne 2
2052 .na
2053 \fBzil_replay_disable\fR (int)
2054 .ad
2055 .RS 12n
2056 Disable intent logging replay. Can be disabled for recovery from corrupted
2057 ZIL
2058 .sp
2059 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
2060 .RE
2061
2062 .sp
2063 .ne 2
2064 .na
2065 \fBzil_slog_bulk\fR (ulong)
2066 .ad
2067 .RS 12n
2068 Limit SLOG write size per commit executed with synchronous priority.
2069 Any writes above that will be executed with lower (asynchronous) priority
2070 to limit potential SLOG device abuse by single active ZIL writer.
2071 .sp
2072 Default value: \fB786,432\fR.
2073 .RE
2074
2075 .sp
2076 .ne 2
2077 .na
2078 \fBzio_delay_max\fR (int)
2079 .ad
2080 .RS 12n
2081 A zevent will be logged if a ZIO operation takes more than N milliseconds to
2082 complete. Note that this is only a logging facility, not a timeout on
2083 operations.
2084 .sp
2085 Default value: \fB30,000\fR.
2086 .RE
2087
2088 .sp
2089 .ne 2
2090 .na
2091 \fBzio_dva_throttle_enabled\fR (int)
2092 .ad
2093 .RS 12n
2094 Throttle block allocations in the ZIO pipeline. This allows for
2095 dynamic allocation distribution when devices are imbalanced.
2096 When enabled, the maximum number of pending allocations per top-level vdev
2097 is limited by \fBzfs_vdev_queue_depth_pct\fR.
2098 .sp
2099 Default value: \fB1\fR.
2100 .RE
2101
2102 .sp
2103 .ne 2
2104 .na
2105 \fBzio_requeue_io_start_cut_in_line\fR (int)
2106 .ad
2107 .RS 12n
2108 Prioritize requeued I/O
2109 .sp
2110 Default value: \fB0\fR.
2111 .RE
2112
2113 .sp
2114 .ne 2
2115 .na
2116 \fBzio_taskq_batch_pct\fR (uint)
2117 .ad
2118 .RS 12n
2119 Percentage of online CPUs (or CPU cores, etc) which will run a worker thread
2120 for IO. These workers are responsible for IO work such as compression and
2121 checksum calculations. Fractional number of CPUs will be rounded down.
2122 .sp
2123 The default value of 75 was chosen to avoid using all CPUs which can result in
2124 latency issues and inconsistent application performance, especially when high
2125 compression is enabled.
2126 .sp
2127 Default value: \fB75\fR.
2128 .RE
2129
2130 .sp
2131 .ne 2
2132 .na
2133 \fBzvol_inhibit_dev\fR (uint)
2134 .ad
2135 .RS 12n
2136 Do not create zvol device nodes. This may slightly improve startup time on
2137 systems with a very large number of zvols.
2138 .sp
2139 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
2140 .RE
2141
2142 .sp
2143 .ne 2
2144 .na
2145 \fBzvol_major\fR (uint)
2146 .ad
2147 .RS 12n
2148 Major number for zvol block devices
2149 .sp
2150 Default value: \fB230\fR.
2151 .RE
2152
2153 .sp
2154 .ne 2
2155 .na
2156 \fBzvol_max_discard_blocks\fR (ulong)
2157 .ad
2158 .RS 12n
2159 Discard (aka TRIM) operations done on zvols will be done in batches of this
2160 many blocks, where block size is determined by the \fBvolblocksize\fR property
2161 of a zvol.
2162 .sp
2163 Default value: \fB16,384\fR.
2164 .RE
2165
2166 .sp
2167 .ne 2
2168 .na
2169 \fBzvol_prefetch_bytes\fR (uint)
2170 .ad
2171 .RS 12n
2172 When adding a zvol to the system prefetch \fBzvol_prefetch_bytes\fR
2173 from the start and end of the volume. Prefetching these regions
2174 of the volume is desirable because they are likely to be accessed
2175 immediately by \fBblkid(8)\fR or by the kernel scanning for a partition
2176 table.
2177 .sp
2178 Default value: \fB131,072\fR.
2179 .RE
2180
2181 .sp
2182 .ne 2
2183 .na
2184 \fBzvol_request_sync\fR (uint)
2185 .ad
2186 .RS 12n
2187 When processing I/O requests for a zvol submit them synchronously. This
2188 effectively limits the queue depth to 1 for each I/O submitter. When set
2189 to 0 requests are handled asynchronously by a thread pool. The number of
2190 requests which can be handled concurrently is controller by \fBzvol_threads\fR.
2191 .sp
2192 Default value: \fB0\fR.
2193 .RE
2194
2195 .sp
2196 .ne 2
2197 .na
2198 \fBzvol_threads\fR (uint)
2199 .ad
2200 .RS 12n
2201 Max number of threads which can handle zvol I/O requests concurrently.
2202 .sp
2203 Default value: \fB32\fR.
2204 .RE
2205
2206 .sp
2207 .ne 2
2208 .na
2209 \fBzvol_volmode\fR (uint)
2210 .ad
2211 .RS 12n
2212 Defines zvol block devices behaviour when \fBvolmode\fR is set to \fBdefault\fR.
2213 Valid values are \fB1\fR (full), \fB2\fR (dev) and \fB3\fR (none).
2214 .sp
2215 Default value: \fB1\fR.
2216 .RE
2217
2218 .sp
2219 .ne 2
2220 .na
2221 \fBzfs_qat_disable\fR (int)
2222 .ad
2223 .RS 12n
2224 This tunable disables qat hardware acceleration for gzip compression.
2225 It is available only if qat acceleration is compiled in and qat driver
2226 is present.
2227 .sp
2228 Use \fB1\fR for yes and \fB0\fR for no (default).
2229 .RE
2230
2231 .SH ZFS I/O SCHEDULER
2232 ZFS issues I/O operations to leaf vdevs to satisfy and complete I/Os.
2233 The I/O scheduler determines when and in what order those operations are
2234 issued. The I/O scheduler divides operations into five I/O classes
2235 prioritized in the following order: sync read, sync write, async read,
2236 async write, and scrub/resilver. Each queue defines the minimum and
2237 maximum number of concurrent operations that may be issued to the
2238 device. In addition, the device has an aggregate maximum,
2239 \fBzfs_vdev_max_active\fR. Note that the sum of the per-queue minimums
2240 must not exceed the aggregate maximum. If the sum of the per-queue
2241 maximums exceeds the aggregate maximum, then the number of active I/Os
2242 may reach \fBzfs_vdev_max_active\fR, in which case no further I/Os will
2243 be issued regardless of whether all per-queue minimums have been met.
2244 .sp
2245 For many physical devices, throughput increases with the number of
2246 concurrent operations, but latency typically suffers. Further, physical
2247 devices typically have a limit at which more concurrent operations have no
2248 effect on throughput or can actually cause it to decrease.
2249 .sp
2250 The scheduler selects the next operation to issue by first looking for an
2251 I/O class whose minimum has not been satisfied. Once all are satisfied and
2252 the aggregate maximum has not been hit, the scheduler looks for classes
2253 whose maximum has not been satisfied. Iteration through the I/O classes is
2254 done in the order specified above. No further operations are issued if the
2255 aggregate maximum number of concurrent operations has been hit or if there
2256 are no operations queued for an I/O class that has not hit its maximum.
2257 Every time an I/O is queued or an operation completes, the I/O scheduler
2258 looks for new operations to issue.
2259 .sp
2260 In general, smaller max_active's will lead to lower latency of synchronous
2261 operations. Larger max_active's may lead to higher overall throughput,
2262 depending on underlying storage.
2263 .sp
2264 The ratio of the queues' max_actives determines the balance of performance
2265 between reads, writes, and scrubs. E.g., increasing
2266 \fBzfs_vdev_scrub_max_active\fR will cause the scrub or resilver to complete
2267 more quickly, but reads and writes to have higher latency and lower throughput.
2268 .sp
2269 All I/O classes have a fixed maximum number of outstanding operations
2270 except for the async write class. Asynchronous writes represent the data
2271 that is committed to stable storage during the syncing stage for
2272 transaction groups. Transaction groups enter the syncing state
2273 periodically so the number of queued async writes will quickly burst up
2274 and then bleed down to zero. Rather than servicing them as quickly as
2275 possible, the I/O scheduler changes the maximum number of active async
2276 write I/Os according to the amount of dirty data in the pool. Since
2277 both throughput and latency typically increase with the number of
2278 concurrent operations issued to physical devices, reducing the
2279 burstiness in the number of concurrent operations also stabilizes the
2280 response time of operations from other -- and in particular synchronous
2281 -- queues. In broad strokes, the I/O scheduler will issue more
2282 concurrent operations from the async write queue as there's more dirty
2283 data in the pool.
2284 .sp
2285 Async Writes
2286 .sp
2287 The number of concurrent operations issued for the async write I/O class
2288 follows a piece-wise linear function defined by a few adjustable points.
2289 .nf
2290
2291 | o---------| <-- zfs_vdev_async_write_max_active
2292 ^ | /^ |
2293 | | / | |
2294 active | / | |
2295 I/O | / | |
2296 count | / | |
2297 | / | |
2298 |-------o | | <-- zfs_vdev_async_write_min_active
2299 0|_______^______|_________|
2300 0% | | 100% of zfs_dirty_data_max
2301 | |
2302 | `-- zfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent
2303 `--------- zfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent
2304
2305 .fi
2306 Until the amount of dirty data exceeds a minimum percentage of the dirty
2307 data allowed in the pool, the I/O scheduler will limit the number of
2308 concurrent operations to the minimum. As that threshold is crossed, the
2309 number of concurrent operations issued increases linearly to the maximum at
2310 the specified maximum percentage of the dirty data allowed in the pool.
2311 .sp
2312 Ideally, the amount of dirty data on a busy pool will stay in the sloped
2313 part of the function between \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_min_dirty_percent\fR
2314 and \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent\fR. If it exceeds the
2315 maximum percentage, this indicates that the rate of incoming data is
2316 greater than the rate that the backend storage can handle. In this case, we
2317 must further throttle incoming writes, as described in the next section.
2318
2319 .SH ZFS TRANSACTION DELAY
2320 We delay transactions when we've determined that the backend storage
2321 isn't able to accommodate the rate of incoming writes.
2322 .sp
2323 If there is already a transaction waiting, we delay relative to when
2324 that transaction will finish waiting. This way the calculated delay time
2325 is independent of the number of threads concurrently executing
2326 transactions.
2327 .sp
2328 If we are the only waiter, wait relative to when the transaction
2329 started, rather than the current time. This credits the transaction for
2330 "time already served", e.g. reading indirect blocks.
2331 .sp
2332 The minimum time for a transaction to take is calculated as:
2333 .nf
2334 min_time = zfs_delay_scale * (dirty - min) / (max - dirty)
2335 min_time is then capped at 100 milliseconds.
2336 .fi
2337 .sp
2338 The delay has two degrees of freedom that can be adjusted via tunables. The
2339 percentage of dirty data at which we start to delay is defined by
2340 \fBzfs_delay_min_dirty_percent\fR. This should typically be at or above
2341 \fBzfs_vdev_async_write_active_max_dirty_percent\fR so that we only start to
2342 delay after writing at full speed has failed to keep up with the incoming write
2343 rate. The scale of the curve is defined by \fBzfs_delay_scale\fR. Roughly speaking,
2344 this variable determines the amount of delay at the midpoint of the curve.
2345 .sp
2346 .nf
2347 delay
2348 10ms +-------------------------------------------------------------*+
2349 | *|
2350 9ms + *+
2351 | *|
2352 8ms + *+
2353 | * |
2354 7ms + * +
2355 | * |
2356 6ms + * +
2357 | * |
2358 5ms + * +
2359 | * |
2360 4ms + * +
2361 | * |
2362 3ms + * +
2363 | * |
2364 2ms + (midpoint) * +
2365 | | ** |
2366 1ms + v *** +
2367 | zfs_delay_scale ----------> ******** |
2368 0 +-------------------------------------*********----------------+
2369 0% <- zfs_dirty_data_max -> 100%
2370 .fi
2371 .sp
2372 Note that since the delay is added to the outstanding time remaining on the
2373 most recent transaction, the delay is effectively the inverse of IOPS.
2374 Here the midpoint of 500us translates to 2000 IOPS. The shape of the curve
2375 was chosen such that small changes in the amount of accumulated dirty data
2376 in the first 3/4 of the curve yield relatively small differences in the
2377 amount of delay.
2378 .sp
2379 The effects can be easier to understand when the amount of delay is
2380 represented on a log scale:
2381 .sp
2382 .nf
2383 delay
2384 100ms +-------------------------------------------------------------++
2385 + +
2386 | |
2387 + *+
2388 10ms + *+
2389 + ** +
2390 | (midpoint) ** |
2391 + | ** +
2392 1ms + v **** +
2393 + zfs_delay_scale ----------> ***** +
2394 | **** |
2395 + **** +
2396 100us + ** +
2397 + * +
2398 | * |
2399 + * +
2400 10us + * +
2401 + +
2402 | |
2403 + +
2404 +--------------------------------------------------------------+
2405 0% <- zfs_dirty_data_max -> 100%
2406 .fi
2407 .sp
2408 Note here that only as the amount of dirty data approaches its limit does
2409 the delay start to increase rapidly. The goal of a properly tuned system
2410 should be to keep the amount of dirty data out of that range by first
2411 ensuring that the appropriate limits are set for the I/O scheduler to reach
2412 optimal throughput on the backend storage, and then by changing the value
2413 of \fBzfs_delay_scale\fR to increase the steepness of the curve.