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Linux/Documentation/admin-guide/device-mapper/dm-dust.rst

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Diff markup

Differences between /Documentation/admin-guide/device-mapper/dm-dust.rst (Version linux-6.12-rc7) and /Documentation/admin-guide/device-mapper/dm-dust.rst (Version linux-5.6.19)


  1 dm-dust                                             1 dm-dust
  2 =======                                             2 =======
  3                                                     3 
  4 This target emulates the behavior of bad secto      4 This target emulates the behavior of bad sectors at arbitrary
  5 locations, and the ability to enable the emula      5 locations, and the ability to enable the emulation of the failures
  6 at an arbitrary time.                               6 at an arbitrary time.
  7                                                     7 
  8 This target behaves similarly to a linear targ      8 This target behaves similarly to a linear target.  At a given time,
  9 the user can send a message to the target to s      9 the user can send a message to the target to start failing read
 10 requests on specific blocks (to emulate the be     10 requests on specific blocks (to emulate the behavior of a hard disk
 11 drive with bad sectors).                           11 drive with bad sectors).
 12                                                    12 
 13 When the failure behavior is enabled (i.e.: wh     13 When the failure behavior is enabled (i.e.: when the output of
 14 "dmsetup status" displays "fail_read_on_bad_bl     14 "dmsetup status" displays "fail_read_on_bad_block"), reads of blocks
 15 in the "bad block list" will fail with EIO ("I     15 in the "bad block list" will fail with EIO ("Input/output error").
 16                                                    16 
 17 Writes of blocks in the "bad block list will r     17 Writes of blocks in the "bad block list will result in the following:
 18                                                    18 
 19 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list".     19 1. Remove the block from the "bad block list".
 20 2. Successfully complete the write.                20 2. Successfully complete the write.
 21                                                    21 
 22 This emulates the "remapped sector" behavior o     22 This emulates the "remapped sector" behavior of a drive with bad
 23 sectors.                                           23 sectors.
 24                                                    24 
 25 Normally, a drive that is encountering bad sec     25 Normally, a drive that is encountering bad sectors will most likely
 26 encounter more bad sectors, at an unknown time     26 encounter more bad sectors, at an unknown time or location.
 27 With dm-dust, the user can use the "addbadbloc     27 With dm-dust, the user can use the "addbadblock" and "removebadblock"
 28 messages to add arbitrary bad blocks at new lo     28 messages to add arbitrary bad blocks at new locations, and the
 29 "enable" and "disable" messages to modulate th     29 "enable" and "disable" messages to modulate the state of whether the
 30 configured "bad blocks" will be treated as bad     30 configured "bad blocks" will be treated as bad, or bypassed.
 31 This allows the pre-writing of test data and m     31 This allows the pre-writing of test data and metadata prior to
 32 simulating a "failure" event where bad sectors     32 simulating a "failure" event where bad sectors start to appear.
 33                                                    33 
 34 Table parameters                                   34 Table parameters
 35 ----------------                                   35 ----------------
 36 <device_path> <offset> <blksz>                     36 <device_path> <offset> <blksz>
 37                                                    37 
 38 Mandatory parameters:                              38 Mandatory parameters:
 39     <device_path>:                                 39     <device_path>:
 40         Path to the block device.                  40         Path to the block device.
 41                                                    41 
 42     <offset>:                                      42     <offset>:
 43         Offset to data area from start of devi     43         Offset to data area from start of device_path
 44                                                    44 
 45     <blksz>:                                       45     <blksz>:
 46         Block size in bytes                        46         Block size in bytes
 47                                                    47 
 48              (minimum 512, maximum 1073741824,     48              (minimum 512, maximum 1073741824, must be a power of 2)
 49                                                    49 
 50 Usage instructions                                 50 Usage instructions
 51 ------------------                                 51 ------------------
 52                                                    52 
 53 First, find the size (in 512-byte sectors) of      53 First, find the size (in 512-byte sectors) of the device to be used::
 54                                                    54 
 55         $ sudo blockdev --getsz /dev/vdb1          55         $ sudo blockdev --getsz /dev/vdb1
 56         33552384                                   56         33552384
 57                                                    57 
 58 Create the dm-dust device:                         58 Create the dm-dust device:
 59 (For a device with a block size of 512 bytes)      59 (For a device with a block size of 512 bytes)
 60                                                    60 
 61 ::                                                 61 ::
 62                                                    62 
 63         $ sudo dmsetup create dust1 --table '0     63         $ sudo dmsetup create dust1 --table '0 33552384 dust /dev/vdb1 0 512'
 64                                                    64 
 65 (For a device with a block size of 4096 bytes)     65 (For a device with a block size of 4096 bytes)
 66                                                    66 
 67 ::                                                 67 ::
 68                                                    68 
 69         $ sudo dmsetup create dust1 --table '0     69         $ sudo dmsetup create dust1 --table '0 33552384 dust /dev/vdb1 0 4096'
 70                                                    70 
 71 Check the status of the read behavior ("bypass     71 Check the status of the read behavior ("bypass" indicates that all I/O
 72 will be passed through to the underlying devic !!  72 will be passed through to the underlying device)::
 73 bad block additions, removals, and remaps will << 
 74                                                    73 
 75         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1                74         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1
 76         0 33552384 dust 252:17 bypass verbose  !!  75         0 33552384 dust 252:17 bypass
 77                                                    76 
 78         $ sudo dd if=/dev/mapper/dust1 of=/dev     77         $ sudo dd if=/dev/mapper/dust1 of=/dev/null bs=512 count=128 iflag=direct
 79         128+0 records in                           78         128+0 records in
 80         128+0 records out                          79         128+0 records out
 81                                                    80 
 82         $ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/     81         $ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/dust1 bs=512 count=128 oflag=direct
 83         128+0 records in                           82         128+0 records in
 84         128+0 records out                          83         128+0 records out
 85                                                    84 
 86 Adding and removing bad blocks                     85 Adding and removing bad blocks
 87 ------------------------------                     86 ------------------------------
 88                                                    87 
 89 At any time (i.e.: whether the device has the      88 At any time (i.e.: whether the device has the "bad block" emulation
 90 enabled or disabled), bad blocks may be added      89 enabled or disabled), bad blocks may be added or removed from the
 91 device via the "addbadblock" and "removebadblo     90 device via the "addbadblock" and "removebadblock" messages::
 92                                                    91 
 93         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadb     92         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 60
 94         kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock      93         kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock added at block 60
 95                                                    94 
 96         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadb     95         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 67
 97         kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock      96         kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock added at block 67
 98                                                    97 
 99         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadb     98         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 72
100         kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock      99         kernel: device-mapper: dust: badblock added at block 72
101                                                   100 
102 These bad blocks will be stored in the "bad bl    101 These bad blocks will be stored in the "bad block list".
103 While the device is in "bypass" mode, reads an    102 While the device is in "bypass" mode, reads and writes will succeed::
104                                                   103 
105         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1               104         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1
106         0 33552384 dust 252:17 bypass             105         0 33552384 dust 252:17 bypass
107                                                   106 
108 Enabling block read failures                      107 Enabling block read failures
109 ----------------------------                      108 ----------------------------
110                                                   109 
111 To enable the "fail read on bad block" behavio    110 To enable the "fail read on bad block" behavior, send the "enable" message::
112                                                   111 
113         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 enable     112         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 enable
114         kernel: device-mapper: dust: enabling     113         kernel: device-mapper: dust: enabling read failures on bad sectors
115                                                   114 
116         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1               115         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1
117         0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_ba    116         0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_bad_block
118                                                   117 
119 With the device in "fail read on bad block" mo    118 With the device in "fail read on bad block" mode, attempting to read a
120 block will encounter an "Input/output error"::    119 block will encounter an "Input/output error"::
121                                                   120 
122         $ sudo dd if=/dev/mapper/dust1 of=/dev    121         $ sudo dd if=/dev/mapper/dust1 of=/dev/null bs=512 count=1 skip=67 iflag=direct
123         dd: error reading '/dev/mapper/dust1':    122         dd: error reading '/dev/mapper/dust1': Input/output error
124         0+0 records in                            123         0+0 records in
125         0+0 records out                           124         0+0 records out
126         0 bytes copied, 0.00040651 s, 0.0 kB/s    125         0 bytes copied, 0.00040651 s, 0.0 kB/s
127                                                   126 
128 ...and writing to the bad blocks will remove t    127 ...and writing to the bad blocks will remove the blocks from the list,
129 therefore emulating the "remap" behavior of ha    128 therefore emulating the "remap" behavior of hard disk drives::
130                                                   129 
131         $ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/    130         $ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/dust1 bs=512 count=128 oflag=direct
132         128+0 records in                          131         128+0 records in
133         128+0 records out                         132         128+0 records out
134                                                   133 
135         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 60     134         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 60 removed from badblocklist by write
136         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 67     135         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 67 removed from badblocklist by write
137         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 72     136         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 72 removed from badblocklist by write
138         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 87     137         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 87 removed from badblocklist by write
139                                                   138 
140 Bad block add/remove error handling               139 Bad block add/remove error handling
141 -----------------------------------               140 -----------------------------------
142                                                   141 
143 Attempting to add a bad block that already exi    142 Attempting to add a bad block that already exists in the list will
144 result in an "Invalid argument" error, as well    143 result in an "Invalid argument" error, as well as a helpful message::
145                                                   144 
146         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadb    145         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 addbadblock 88
147         device-mapper: message ioctl on dust1     146         device-mapper: message ioctl on dust1  failed: Invalid argument
148         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 88     147         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 88 already in badblocklist
149                                                   148 
150 Attempting to remove a bad block that doesn't     149 Attempting to remove a bad block that doesn't exist in the list will
151 result in an "Invalid argument" error, as well    150 result in an "Invalid argument" error, as well as a helpful message::
152                                                   151 
153         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 removeb    152         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 removebadblock 87
154         device-mapper: message ioctl on dust1     153         device-mapper: message ioctl on dust1  failed: Invalid argument
155         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 87     154         kernel: device-mapper: dust: block 87 not found in badblocklist
156                                                   155 
157 Counting the number of bad blocks in the bad b    156 Counting the number of bad blocks in the bad block list
158 ----------------------------------------------    157 -------------------------------------------------------
159                                                   158 
160 To count the number of bad blocks configured i    159 To count the number of bad blocks configured in the device, run the
161 following message command::                       160 following message command::
162                                                   161 
163         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 countba    162         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 countbadblocks
164                                                   163 
165 A message will print with the number of bad bl    164 A message will print with the number of bad blocks currently
166 configured on the device::                        165 configured on the device::
167                                                   166 
168         countbadblocks: 895 badblock(s) found  !! 167         kernel: device-mapper: dust: countbadblocks: 895 badblock(s) found
169                                                   168 
170 Querying for specific bad blocks                  169 Querying for specific bad blocks
171 --------------------------------                  170 --------------------------------
172                                                   171 
173 To find out if a specific block is in the bad     172 To find out if a specific block is in the bad block list, run the
174 following message command::                       173 following message command::
175                                                   174 
176         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 querybl    175         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 queryblock 72
177                                                   176 
178 The following message will print if the block     177 The following message will print if the block is in the list::
179                                                   178 
180         dust_query_block: block 72 found in ba !! 179         device-mapper: dust: queryblock: block 72 found in badblocklist
181                                                   180 
182 The following message will print if the block     181 The following message will print if the block is not in the list::
183                                                   182 
184         dust_query_block: block 72 not found i !! 183         device-mapper: dust: queryblock: block 72 not found in badblocklist
185                                                   184 
186 The "queryblock" message command will work in     185 The "queryblock" message command will work in both the "enabled"
187 and "disabled" modes, allowing the verificatio    186 and "disabled" modes, allowing the verification of whether a block
188 will be treated as "bad" without having to iss    187 will be treated as "bad" without having to issue I/O to the device,
189 or having to "enable" the bad block emulation.    188 or having to "enable" the bad block emulation.
190                                                   189 
191 Clearing the bad block list                       190 Clearing the bad block list
192 ---------------------------                       191 ---------------------------
193                                                   192 
194 To clear the bad block list (without needing t    193 To clear the bad block list (without needing to individually run
195 a "removebadblock" message command for every b    194 a "removebadblock" message command for every block), run the
196 following message command::                       195 following message command::
197                                                   196 
198         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 clearba    197         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 clearbadblocks
199                                                   198 
200 After clearing the bad block list, the followi    199 After clearing the bad block list, the following message will appear::
201                                                   200 
202         dust_clear_badblocks: badblocks cleare !! 201         kernel: device-mapper: dust: clearbadblocks: badblocks cleared
203                                                   202 
204 If there were no bad blocks to clear, the foll    203 If there were no bad blocks to clear, the following message will
205 appear::                                          204 appear::
206                                                   205 
207         dust_clear_badblocks: no badblocks fou !! 206         kernel: device-mapper: dust: clearbadblocks: no badblocks found
208                                                << 
209 Listing the bad block list                     << 
210 --------------------------                     << 
211                                                << 
212 To list all bad blocks in the bad block list ( << 
213 with blocks 1 and 2 in the bad block list), ru << 
214 command::                                      << 
215                                                << 
216         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 listbad << 
217         1                                      << 
218         2                                      << 
219                                                << 
220 If there are no bad blocks in the bad block li << 
221 execute with no output::                       << 
222                                                << 
223         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 listbad << 
224                                                   207 
225 Message commands list                             208 Message commands list
226 ---------------------                             209 ---------------------
227                                                   210 
228 Below is a list of the messages that can be se    211 Below is a list of the messages that can be sent to a dust device:
229                                                   212 
230 Operations on blocks (requires a <blknum> argu    213 Operations on blocks (requires a <blknum> argument)::
231                                                   214 
232         addbadblock <blknum>                      215         addbadblock <blknum>
233         queryblock <blknum>                       216         queryblock <blknum>
234         removebadblock <blknum>                   217         removebadblock <blknum>
235                                                   218 
236 ...where <blknum> is a block number within ran    219 ...where <blknum> is a block number within range of the device
237 (corresponding to the block size of the device    220 (corresponding to the block size of the device.)
238                                                   221 
239 Single argument message commands::                222 Single argument message commands::
240                                                   223 
241         countbadblocks                            224         countbadblocks
242         clearbadblocks                            225         clearbadblocks
243         listbadblocks                          << 
244         disable                                   226         disable
245         enable                                    227         enable
246         quiet                                     228         quiet
247                                                   229 
248 Device removal                                    230 Device removal
249 --------------                                    231 --------------
250                                                   232 
251 When finished, remove the device via the "dmse    233 When finished, remove the device via the "dmsetup remove" command::
252                                                   234 
253         $ sudo dmsetup remove dust1               235         $ sudo dmsetup remove dust1
254                                                   236 
255 Quiet mode                                        237 Quiet mode
256 ----------                                        238 ----------
257                                                   239 
258 On test runs with many bad blocks, it may be d    240 On test runs with many bad blocks, it may be desirable to avoid
259 excessive logging (from bad blocks added, remo    241 excessive logging (from bad blocks added, removed, or "remapped").
260 This can be done by enabling "quiet mode" via     242 This can be done by enabling "quiet mode" via the following message::
261                                                   243 
262         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 quiet      244         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 quiet
263                                                   245 
264 This will suppress log messages from add / rem    246 This will suppress log messages from add / remove / removed by write
265 operations.  Log messages from "countbadblocks    247 operations.  Log messages from "countbadblocks" or "queryblock"
266 message commands will still print in quiet mod    248 message commands will still print in quiet mode.
267                                                   249 
268 The status of quiet mode can be seen by runnin    250 The status of quiet mode can be seen by running "dmsetup status"::
269                                                   251 
270         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1               252         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1
271         0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_ba    253         0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_bad_block quiet
272                                                   254 
273 To disable quiet mode, send the "quiet" messag    255 To disable quiet mode, send the "quiet" message again::
274                                                   256 
275         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 quiet      257         $ sudo dmsetup message dust1 0 quiet
276                                                   258 
277         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1               259         $ sudo dmsetup status dust1
278         0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_ba    260         0 33552384 dust 252:17 fail_read_on_bad_block verbose
279                                                   261 
280 (The presence of "verbose" indicates normal lo    262 (The presence of "verbose" indicates normal logging.)
281                                                   263 
282 "Why not...?"                                     264 "Why not...?"
283 -------------                                     265 -------------
284                                                   266 
285 scsi_debug has a "medium error" mode that can     267 scsi_debug has a "medium error" mode that can fail reads on one
286 specified sector (sector 0x1234, hardcoded in     268 specified sector (sector 0x1234, hardcoded in the source code), but
287 it uses RAM for the persistent storage, which     269 it uses RAM for the persistent storage, which drastically decreases
288 the potential device size.                        270 the potential device size.
289                                                   271 
290 dm-flakey fails all I/O from all block locatio    272 dm-flakey fails all I/O from all block locations at a specified time
291 frequency, and not a given point in time.         273 frequency, and not a given point in time.
292                                                   274 
293 When a bad sector occurs on a hard disk drive,    275 When a bad sector occurs on a hard disk drive, reads to that sector
294 are failed by the device, usually resulting in    276 are failed by the device, usually resulting in an error code of EIO
295 ("I/O error") or ENODATA ("No data available")    277 ("I/O error") or ENODATA ("No data available").  However, a write to
296 the sector may succeed, and result in the sect    278 the sector may succeed, and result in the sector becoming readable
297 after the device controller no longer experien    279 after the device controller no longer experiences errors reading the
298 sector (or after a reallocation of the sector)    280 sector (or after a reallocation of the sector).  However, there may
299 be bad sectors that occur on the device in the    281 be bad sectors that occur on the device in the future, in a different,
300 unpredictable location.                           282 unpredictable location.
301                                                   283 
302 This target seeks to provide a device that can    284 This target seeks to provide a device that can exhibit the behavior
303 of a bad sector at a known sector location, at    285 of a bad sector at a known sector location, at a known time, based
304 on a large storage device (at least tens of gi    286 on a large storage device (at least tens of gigabytes, not occupying
305 system memory).                                   287 system memory).
                                                      

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