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mkfs.xfs
Section: Maintenance Commands (8) Index
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NAME
mkfs.xfs - construct an XFS filesystem
SYNOPSIS
mkfs.xfs
[
-b
block_size
] [
-m
global_metadata_options
] [
-d
data_section_options
] [
-f
] [
-i
inode_options
] [
-l
log_section_options
] [
-n
naming_options
] [
-p
protofile
] [
-q
] [
-r
realtime_section_options
] [
-s
sector_size
] [
-L
label
] [
-N
] [
-K
]
device
mkfs.xfs -V
DESCRIPTION
mkfs.xfs
constructs an XFS filesystem by writing on a special
file using the values found in the arguments of the command line.
It is invoked automatically by
mkfs(8)
when it is given the
-t xfs
option.
In its simplest (and most commonly used form), the size of the
filesystem is determined from the disk driver. As an example, to make
a filesystem with an internal log on the first partition on the first
SCSI disk, use:
-
mkfs.xfs /dev/sda1
The metadata log can be placed on another device to reduce the number
of disk seeks. To create a filesystem on the first partition on the
first SCSI disk with a 10MiB log located on the first partition
on the second SCSI disk, use:
-
-
mkfs.xfs -l logdev=/dev/sdb1,size=10m /dev/sda1
Each of the
option
elements in the argument list above can be given as multiple comma-separated
suboptions if multiple suboptions apply to the same option.
Equivalently, each main option can be given multiple times with
different suboptions.
For example,
-l internal,size=10m
and
-l internal -l size=10m
are equivalent.
In the descriptions below, sizes are given in sectors, bytes, blocks,
kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes, etc.
Sizes are treated as hexadecimal if prefixed by 0x or 0X,
octal if prefixed by 0, or decimal otherwise.
The following lists possible multiplication suffixes:
-
-
s - multiply by sector size (default = 512, see -s
- option below).
-
b - multiply by filesystem block size (default = 4K, see -b
- option below).
-
k - multiply by one kilobyte (1,024 bytes).
-
m - multiply by one megabyte (1,048,576 bytes).
-
g - multiply by one gigabyte (1,073,741,824 bytes).
-
t - multiply by one terabyte (1,099,511,627,776 bytes).
-
p - multiply by one petabyte (1,024 terabytes).
-
e - multiply by one exabyte (1,048,576 terabytes).
When specifying parameters in units of sectors or filesystem blocks, the
-s
option or the
-b
option first needs to be added to the command line.
Failure to specify the size of the units will result in illegal value errors
when parameters are quantified in those units.
Many feature options allow an optional argument of 0 or 1, to explicitly
disable or enable the functionality.
OPTIONS
- -b block_size_options
-
This option specifies the fundamental block size of the filesystem.
The valid
block_size_options
are:
log=value
or
size=value
and only one can be supplied.
The block size is specified either as a base two logarithm value with
log=,
or in bytes with
size=.
The default value is 4096 bytes (4 KiB), the minimum is 512, and the
maximum is 65536 (64 KiB).
-
To specify any options on the command line in units of filesystem blocks, this
option must be specified first so that the filesystem block size is
applied consistently to all options.
-
Although
mkfs.xfs
will accept any of these values and create a valid filesystem,
XFS on Linux can only mount filesystems with pagesize or smaller blocks.
- -m global_metadata_options
-
These options specify metadata format options that either apply to the entire
filesystem or aren't easily characterised by a specific functionality group. The
valid
global_metadata_options
are:
-
- crc=value
-
This is used to create a filesystem which maintains and checks CRC information
in all metadata objects on disk. The value is either 0 to disable the feature,
or 1 to enable the use of CRCs.
-
CRCs enable enhanced error detection due to hardware issues, whilst the format
changes also improves crash recovery algorithms and the ability of various tools
to validate and repair metadata corruptions when they are found. The CRC
algorithm used is CRC32c, so the overhead is dependent on CPU architecture as
some CPUs have hardware acceleration of this algorithm. Typically the overhead
of calculating and checking the CRCs is not noticeable in normal operation.
-
By default,
mkfs.xfs
will enable metadata CRCs.
- finobt=value
-
This option enables the use of a separate free inode btree index in each
allocation group. The value is either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to create
a free inode btree in each allocation group.
-
The free inode btree mirrors the existing allocated inode btree index which
indexes both used and free inodes. The free inode btree does not index used
inodes, allowing faster, more consistent inode allocation performance as
filesystems age.
-
By default,
mkfs.xfs
will create free inode btrees for filesystems created with the (default)
-m crc=1
option set. When the option
-m crc=0
is used, the free inode btree feature is not supported and is disabled.
- uuid=value
-
Use the given value as the filesystem UUID for the newly created filesystem.
The default is to generate a random UUID.
- rmapbt=value
-
This option enables the creation of a reverse-mapping btree index in each
allocation group. The value is either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to
create the btree.
-
The reverse mapping btree maps filesystem blocks to the owner of the
filesystem block. Most of the mappings will be to an inode number and an
offset, though there will also be mappings to filesystem metadata. This
secondary metadata can be used to validate the primary metadata or to
pinpoint exactly which data has been lost when a disk error occurs.
-
By default,
mkfs.xfs
will not create reverse mapping btrees. This feature is only available
for filesystems created with the (default)
-m crc=1
option set. When the option
-m crc=0
is used, the reverse mapping btree feature is not supported and is disabled.
- reflink=value
-
This option enables the use of a separate reference count btree index in each
allocation group. The value is either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to create
a reference count btree in each allocation group.
-
The reference count btree enables the sharing of physical extents between
the data forks of different files, which is commonly known as "reflink".
Unlike traditional Unix filesystems which assume that every inode and
logical block pair map to a unique physical block, a reflink-capable
XFS filesystem removes the uniqueness requirement, allowing up to four
billion arbitrary inode/logical block pairs to map to a physical block.
If a program tries to write to a multiply-referenced block in a file, the write
will be redirected to a new block, and that file's logical-to-physical
mapping will be changed to the new block ("copy on write"). This feature
enables the creation of per-file snapshots and deduplication. It is only
available for the data forks of regular files.
-
By default,
mkfs.xfs
will not create reference count btrees and therefore will not enable the
reflink feature. This feature is only available for filesystems created with
the (default)
-m crc=1
option set. When the option
-m crc=0
is used, the reference count btree feature is not supported and reflink is
disabled.
- -d data_section_options
-
These options specify the location, size, and other parameters of the
data section of the filesystem. The valid
data_section_options
are:
-
- agcount=value
-
This is used to specify the number of allocation groups. The data section
of the filesystem is divided into allocation groups to improve the
performance of XFS. More allocation groups imply that more parallelism
can be achieved when allocating blocks and inodes. The minimum
allocation group size is 16 MiB; the maximum size is just under 1 TiB.
The data section of the filesystem is divided into
value
allocation groups (default value is scaled automatically based
on the underlying device size).
- agsize=value
-
This is an alternative to using the
agcount
suboption. The
value
is the desired size of the allocation group expressed in bytes
(usually using the
m or g
suffixes).
This value must be a multiple of the filesystem block size, and
must be at least 16MiB, and no more than 1TiB, and may
be automatically adjusted to properly align with the stripe geometry.
The
agcount
and
agsize
suboptions are mutually exclusive.
- name=value
-
This can be used to specify the name of the special file containing
the filesystem. In this case, the log section must be specified as
internal
(with a size, see the
-l
option below) and there can be no real-time section.
- file[=value]
-
This is used to specify that the file given by the
name
suboption is a regular file. The
value
is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that the file is regular. This
suboption is used only to make a filesystem image. If the
value
is omitted then 1 is assumed.
- size=value
-
This is used to specify the size of the data section. This suboption
is required if
-d file[=1]
is given. Otherwise, it is only needed if the filesystem should occupy
less space than the size of the special file.
- sunit=value
-
This is used to specify the stripe unit for a RAID device or a
logical volume. The
value
has to be specified in 512-byte block units. Use the
su
suboption to specify the stripe unit size in bytes. This suboption
ensures that data allocations will be stripe unit aligned when the
current end of file is being extended and the file size is larger
than 512KiB. Also inode allocations and the internal log will be
stripe unit aligned.
- su=value
-
This is an alternative to using
sunit.
The
su
suboption is used to specify the stripe unit for a RAID device or a
striped logical volume. The
value
has to be specified in bytes, (usually using the
m or g
suffixes). This
value
must be a multiple of the filesystem block size.
- swidth=value
-
This is used to specify the stripe width for a RAID device or a
striped logical volume. The
value
has to be specified in 512-byte block units. Use the
sw
suboption to specify the stripe width size in bytes.
This suboption is required if
-d sunit
has been specified and it has to be a multiple of the
-d sunit
suboption.
- sw=value
-
suboption is an alternative to using
swidth.
The
sw
suboption is used to specify the stripe width for a RAID device or
striped logical volume. The
value
is expressed as a multiplier of the stripe unit,
usually the same as the number of stripe members in the logical
volume configuration, or data disks in a RAID device.
-
When a filesystem is created on a logical volume device,
mkfs.xfs
will automatically query the logical volume for appropriate
sunit
and
swidth
values.
- noalign
-
This option disables automatic geometry detection and creates the filesystem
without stripe geometry alignment even if the underlying storage device provides
this information.
- -f
-
Force overwrite when an existing filesystem is detected on the device.
By default,
mkfs.xfs
will not write to the device if it suspects that there is a filesystem
or partition table on the device already.
- -i inode_options
-
This option specifies the inode size of the filesystem, and other
inode allocation parameters.
The XFS inode contains a fixed-size part and a variable-size part.
The variable-size part, whose size is affected by this option, can contain:
directory data, for small directories;
attribute data, for small attribute sets;
symbolic link data, for small symbolic links;
the extent list for the file, for files with a small number of extents;
and the root of a tree describing the location of extents for the file,
for files with a large number of extents.
-
The valid
inode_options
are:
-
- size=value | log=value | perblock=value
-
The inode size is specified either as a
value
in bytes with
size=,
a base two logarithm
value
with
log=,
or as the number fitting in a filesystem block with
perblock=.
The minimum (and default)
value
is 256 bytes without crc, 512 bytes with crc enabled.
The maximum
value
is 2048 (2 KiB) subject to the restriction that
the inode size cannot exceed one half of the filesystem block size.
-
XFS uses 64-bit inode numbers internally; however, the number of
significant bits in an inode number
is affected by filesystem geometry. In
practice, filesystem size and inode size are the predominant factors.
The Linux kernel (on 32 bit hardware platforms) and most applications
cannot currently handle inode numbers greater than 32 significant bits,
so if no inode size is given on the command line,
mkfs.xfs
will attempt to choose a size
such that inode numbers will be < 32 bits. If an inode size
is specified, or if a filesystem is sufficiently large,
mkfs.xfs
will warn if this will create inode numbers > 32 significant
bits.
- maxpct=value
-
This specifies the maximum percentage of space in the filesystem that
can be allocated to inodes. The default
value
is 25% for filesystems under 1TB, 5% for filesystems under 50TB and 1%
for filesystems over 50TB.
-
In the default inode allocation mode, inode blocks are chosen such
that inode numbers will not exceed 32 bits, which restricts the inode
blocks to the lower portion of the filesystem. The data block
allocator will avoid these low blocks to accommodate the specified
maxpct, so a high value may result in a filesystem with nothing but
inodes in a significant portion of the lower blocks of the filesystem.
(This restriction is not present when the filesystem is mounted with
the
inode64
option on 64-bit platforms).
-
Setting the value to 0 means that essentially all of the filesystem
can become inode blocks, subject to inode32 restrictions.
-
This value can be modified with
xfs_growfs(8).
- align[=value]
-
This is used to specify that inode allocation is or is not aligned. The
value
is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that inodes are allocated aligned.
If the
value
is omitted, 1 is assumed. The default is that inodes are aligned.
Aligned inode access is normally more efficient than unaligned access;
alignment must be established at the time the filesystem is created,
since inodes are allocated at that time.
This option can be used to turn off inode alignment when the
filesystem needs to be mountable by a version of IRIX
that does not have the inode alignment feature
(any release of IRIX before 6.2, and IRIX 6.2 without XFS patches).
- attr=value
-
This is used to specify the version of extended attribute inline
allocation policy to be used. By default, this is 2, which uses an
efficient algorithm for managing the available inline inode space
between attribute and extent data.
-
The previous version 1, which has fixed regions for attribute and
extent data, is kept for backwards compatibility with kernels older
than version 2.6.16.
- projid32bit[=value]
-
This is used to enable 32bit quota project identifiers. The
value
is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that 32bit projid are to be enabled.
If the value is omitted, 1 is assumed. (This default changed
in release version 3.2.0.)
- sparse[=value]
-
Enable sparse inode chunk allocation. The
value
is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that sparse allocation is enabled.
If the value is omitted, 1 is assumed. Sparse inode allocation is
disabled by default. This feature is only available for filesystems
formatted with
-m crc=1.
-
When enabled, sparse inode allocation allows the filesystem to allocate
smaller than the standard 64-inode chunk when free space is severely
limited. This feature is useful for filesystems that might fragment free
space over time such that no free extents are large enough to
accommodate a chunk of 64 inodes. Without this feature enabled, inode
allocations can fail with out of space errors under severe fragmented
free space conditions.
- -l log_section_options
-
These options specify the location, size, and other parameters of the
log section of the filesystem. The valid
log_section_options
are:
-
- internal[=value]
-
This is used to specify that the log section is a piece of the data
section instead of being another device or logical volume. The
value
is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that the log is internal. If the
value
is omitted, 1 is assumed.
- logdev=device
-
This is used to specify that the log section should reside on the
device
separate from the data section. The
internal=1
and
logdev
options are mutually exclusive.
- size=value
-
This is used to specify the size of the log section.
-
If the log is contained within the data section and
size
isn't specified,
mkfs.xfs
will try to select a suitable log size depending
on the size of the filesystem. The actual logsize depends on the
filesystem block size and the directory block size.
-
Otherwise, the
size
suboption is only needed if the log section of the filesystem
should occupy less space than the size of the special file. The
value
is specified in bytes or blocks, with a
b
suffix meaning multiplication by the filesystem block size, as
described above. The overriding minimum value for size is 512 blocks.
With some combinations of filesystem block size, inode size,
and directory block size, the minimum log size is larger than 512 blocks.
- version=value
-
This specifies the version of the log. The current default is 2,
which allows for larger log buffer sizes, as well as supporting
stripe-aligned log writes (see the sunit and su options, below).
-
The previous version 1, which is limited to 32k log buffers and does
not support stripe-aligned writes, is kept for backwards compatibility
with very old 2.4 kernels.
- sunit=value
-
This specifies the alignment to be used for log writes. The
value
has to be specified in 512-byte block units. Use the
su
suboption to specify the log stripe unit size in bytes.
Log writes will be aligned on this boundary,
and rounded up to this boundary.
This gives major improvements in performance on some configurations
such as software RAID5 when the
sunit
is specified as the filesystem block size.
The equivalent byte value must be a multiple of the filesystem block
size. Version 2 logs are automatically selected if the log
sunit
suboption is specified.
-
The
su
suboption is an alternative to using
sunit.
- su=value
-
This is used to specify the log stripe. The
value
has to be specified in bytes, (usually using the
s or b
suffixes). This value must be a multiple of the filesystem block size.
Version 2 logs are automatically selected if the log
su
suboption is specified.
- lazy-count=value
-
This changes the method of logging various persistent counters
in the superblock. Under metadata intensive workloads, these
counters are updated and logged frequently enough that the superblock
updates become a serialization point in the filesystem. The
value
can be either 0 or 1.
-
With
lazy-count=1,
the superblock is not modified or logged on every change of the
persistent counters. Instead, enough information is kept in
other parts of the filesystem to be able to maintain the persistent
counter values without needed to keep them in the superblock.
This gives significant improvements in performance on some configurations.
The default
value
is 1 (on) so you must specify
lazy-count=0
if you want to disable this feature for older kernels which don't support
it.
- -n naming_options
-
These options specify the version and size parameters for the naming
(directory) area of the filesystem. The valid
naming_options
are:
-
- size=value | log=value
-
The block size is specified either as a
value
in bytes with
size=,
or as a base two logarithm
value
with log=.
The block size must be a power of 2 and cannot be less than the
filesystem block size.
The default size
value
for version 2 directories is 4096 bytes (4 KiB),
unless the filesystem block size is larger than 4096,
in which case the default
value
is the filesystem block size.
For version 1 directories the block size is the same as the
filesystem block size.
- version=value
-
The naming (directory) version
value
can be either 2 or 'ci', defaulting to 2 if unspecified.
With version 2 directories, the directory block size can be
any power of 2 size from the filesystem block size up to 65536.
-
The
version=ci
option enables ASCII only case-insensitive filename lookup and version
2 directories. Filenames are case-preserving, that is, the names
are stored in directories using the case they were created with.
-
Note: Version 1 directories are not supported.
- ftype=value
-
This feature allows the inode type to be stored in the directory
structure so that the
readdir(3)
and
getdents(2)
do not need to look up the inode to determine the inode type.
The
value
is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that filetype information
will be stored in the directory structure. The default value is 1.
When CRCs are enabled (the default), the ftype functionality is always
enabled, and cannot be turned off.
-
- -p protofile
-
If the optional
-p protofile
argument is given,
mkfs.xfs
uses
protofile
as a prototype file and takes its directions from that file.
The blocks and inodes specifiers in the
protofile
are provided for backwards compatibility, but are otherwise unused.
The syntax of the protofile is defined by a number of tokens separated
by spaces or newlines. Note that the line numbers are not part of the
syntax but are meant to help you in the following discussion of the file
contents.
1 /stand/diskboot
2 4872 110
3 d--777 3 1
4 usr d--777 3 1
5 sh ---755 3 1 /bin/sh
6 ken d--755 6 1
7 $
8 b0 b--644 3 1 0 0
9 c0 c--644 3 1 0 0
10 fifo p--644 3 1
11 slink l--644 3 1 /a/symbolic/link
12 : This is a comment line
13 $
14 $
-
Line 1 is a dummy string.
(It was formerly the bootfilename.)
It is present for backward
compatibility; boot blocks are not used on SGI systems.
-
Note that some string of characters must be present as the first line of
the proto file to cause it to be parsed correctly; the value
of this string is immaterial since it is ignored.
-
Line 2 contains two numeric values (formerly the numbers of blocks and inodes).
These are also merely for backward compatibility: two numeric values must
appear at this point for the proto file to be correctly parsed,
but their values are immaterial since they are ignored.
-
The lines 3 through 11 specify the files and directories you want to
include in this filesystem. Line 3 defines the
root directory. Other directories and
files that you want in the filesystem
are indicated by lines 4 through 6 and
lines 8 through 10. Line 11 contains
symbolic link syntax.
-
Notice the dollar sign
($)
syntax on line 7. This syntax directs the
mkfs.xfs
command to terminate the branch of the filesystem it
is currently on and then continue
from the directory specified by
the next line, in this case line 8.
It must be the last character
on a line.
The colon
on line 12 introduces a comment; all characters up until the
following newline are ignored.
Note that this means you cannot
have a file in a prototype file whose name contains a colon.
The
$
on lines 13 and 14 end the process, since no additional
specifications follow.
-
File specifications provide the following:
-
* file mode
* user ID
* group ID
* the file's beginning contents
-
A 6-character string defines the mode for
a file. The first character of this string
defines the file type. The character range
for this first character is
-bcdpl.
A file may be a regular file, a block special file,
a character special file, directory files, named
pipes (first-in, first out files), and symbolic
links.
The second character of the mode string is
used to specify setuserID mode, in which case
it is
u.
If setuserID mode is not specified, the second character is
-.
The third character of the mode string is
used to specify the setgroupID mode, in which
case it is
g.
If setgroupID mode is not specified, the third character is
-.
The remaining characters of the mode string are
a three digit octal number. This octal number
defines the owner, group, and other read, write,
and execute permissions for the file, respectively.
For more information on file permissions, see the
chmod(1)
command.
-
Following the mode character string are two
decimal number tokens that specify the user and group IDs
of the file's owner.
-
In a regular file, the next token specifies the
pathname from which the contents and size of the
file are copied.
In a block or character special file, the next token
are two decimal numbers that specify the major and minor
device numbers.
When a file is a symbolic link, the next token
specifies the contents of the link.
When the file is a directory, the
mkfs.xfs
command creates the entries
dot
(.) and
dot-dot
(..) and then reads the list of names and file specifications
in a recursive manner for all of the entries
in the directory. A scan of the protofile is
always terminated with the dollar (
$
) token.
- -q
-
Quiet option. Normally
mkfs.xfs
prints the parameters of the filesystem
to be constructed;
the
-q
flag suppresses this.
- -r realtime_section_options
-
These options specify the location, size, and other parameters of the
real-time section of the filesystem. The valid
realtime_section_options
are:
-
- rtdev=device
-
This is used to specify the
device
which should contain the real-time section of the filesystem.
The suboption value is the name of a block device.
- extsize=value
-
This is used to specify the size of the blocks in the real-time
section of the filesystem. This
value
must be a multiple of the filesystem block size. The minimum allowed
size is the filesystem block size or 4 KiB (whichever is larger); the
default size is the stripe width for striped volumes or 64 KiB for
non-striped volumes; the maximum allowed size is 1 GiB. The real-time
extent size should be carefully chosen to match the parameters of the
physical media used.
- size=value
-
This is used to specify the size of the real-time section.
This suboption is only needed if the real-time section of the
filesystem should occupy less space than the size of the partition
or logical volume containing the section.
- noalign
-
This option disables stripe size detection, enforcing a realtime device with no
stripe geometry.
- -s sector_size
-
This option specifies the fundamental sector size of the filesystem.
The
sector_size
is specified either as a value in bytes with
size=value
or as a base two logarithm value with
log=value.
The default
sector_size
is 512 bytes. The minimum value for sector size is
512; the maximum is 32768 (32 KiB). The
sector_size
must be a power of 2 size and cannot be made larger than the
filesystem block size.
-
To specify any options on the command line in units of sectors, this
option must be specified first so that the sector size is
applied consistently to all options.
- -L label
-
Set the filesystem
label.
XFS filesystem labels can be at most 12 characters long; if
label
is longer than 12 characters,
mkfs.xfs
will not proceed with creating the filesystem. Refer to the
mount(8) and xfs_admin(8)
manual entries for additional information.
- -N
-
Causes the file system parameters to be printed out without really
creating the file system.
- -K
-
Do not attempt to discard blocks at mkfs time.
- -V
-
Prints the version number and exits.
SEE ALSO
xfs(5),
mkfs(8),
mount(8),
xfs_info(8),
xfs_admin(8).
BUGS
With a prototype file, it is not possible to specify hard links.
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- BUGS
-
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