1================= 2Queue sysfs files 3================= 4 5This text file will detail the queue files that are located in the sysfs tree 6for each block device. Note that stacked devices typically do not export 7any settings, since their queue merely functions as a remapping target. 8These files are the ones found in the /sys/block/xxx/queue/ directory. 9 10Files denoted with a RO postfix are readonly and the RW postfix means 11read-write. 12 13add_random (RW) 14--------------- 15This file allows to turn off the disk entropy contribution. Default 16value of this file is '1'(on). 17 18chunk_sectors (RO) 19------------------ 20This has different meaning depending on the type of the block device. 21For a RAID device (dm-raid), chunk_sectors indicates the size in 512B sectors 22of the RAID volume stripe segment. For a zoned block device, either host-aware 23or host-managed, chunk_sectors indicates the size in 512B sectors of the zones 24of the device, with the eventual exception of the last zone of the device which 25may be smaller. 26 27dax (RO) 28-------- 29This file indicates whether the device supports Direct Access (DAX), 30used by CPU-addressable storage to bypass the pagecache. It shows '1' 31if true, '0' if not. 32 33discard_granularity (RO) 34------------------------ 35This shows the size of internal allocation of the device in bytes, if 36reported by the device. A value of '0' means device does not support 37the discard functionality. 38 39discard_max_hw_bytes (RO) 40------------------------- 41Devices that support discard functionality may have internal limits on 42the number of bytes that can be trimmed or unmapped in a single operation. 43The `discard_max_hw_bytes` parameter is set by the device driver to the 44maximum number of bytes that can be discarded in a single operation. 45Discard requests issued to the device must not exceed this limit. 46A `discard_max_hw_bytes` value of 0 means that the device does not support 47discard functionality. 48 49discard_max_bytes (RW) 50---------------------- 51While discard_max_hw_bytes is the hardware limit for the device, this 52setting is the software limit. Some devices exhibit large latencies when 53large discards are issued, setting this value lower will make Linux issue 54smaller discards and potentially help reduce latencies induced by large 55discard operations. 56 57discard_zeroes_data (RO) 58------------------------ 59Obsolete. Always zero. 60 61fua (RO) 62-------- 63Whether or not the block driver supports the FUA flag for write requests. 64FUA stands for Force Unit Access. If the FUA flag is set that means that 65write requests must bypass the volatile cache of the storage device. 66 67hw_sector_size (RO) 68------------------- 69This is the hardware sector size of the device, in bytes. 70 71io_poll (RW) 72------------ 73When read, this file shows whether polling is enabled (1) or disabled 74(0). Writing '0' to this file will disable polling for this device. 75Writing any non-zero value will enable this feature. 76 77io_poll_delay (RW) 78------------------ 79If polling is enabled, this controls what kind of polling will be 80performed. It defaults to -1, which is classic polling. In this mode, 81the CPU will repeatedly ask for completions without giving up any time. 82If set to 0, a hybrid polling mode is used, where the kernel will attempt 83to make an educated guess at when the IO will complete. Based on this 84guess, the kernel will put the process issuing IO to sleep for an amount 85of time, before entering a classic poll loop. This mode might be a 86little slower than pure classic polling, but it will be more efficient. 87If set to a value larger than 0, the kernel will put the process issuing 88IO to sleep for this amount of microseconds before entering classic 89polling. 90 91io_timeout (RW) 92--------------- 93io_timeout is the request timeout in milliseconds. If a request does not 94complete in this time then the block driver timeout handler is invoked. 95That timeout handler can decide to retry the request, to fail it or to start 96a device recovery strategy. 97 98iostats (RW) 99------------- 100This file is used to control (on/off) the iostats accounting of the 101disk. 102 103logical_block_size (RO) 104----------------------- 105This is the logical block size of the device, in bytes. 106 107max_discard_segments (RO) 108------------------------- 109The maximum number of DMA scatter/gather entries in a discard request. 110 111max_hw_sectors_kb (RO) 112---------------------- 113This is the maximum number of kilobytes supported in a single data transfer. 114 115max_integrity_segments (RO) 116--------------------------- 117Maximum number of elements in a DMA scatter/gather list with integrity 118data that will be submitted by the block layer core to the associated 119block driver. 120 121max_active_zones (RO) 122--------------------- 123For zoned block devices (zoned attribute indicating "host-managed" or 124"host-aware"), the sum of zones belonging to any of the zone states: 125EXPLICIT OPEN, IMPLICIT OPEN or CLOSED, is limited by this value. 126If this value is 0, there is no limit. 127 128If the host attempts to exceed this limit, the driver should report this error 129with BLK_STS_ZONE_ACTIVE_RESOURCE, which user space may see as the EOVERFLOW 130errno. 131 132max_open_zones (RO) 133------------------- 134For zoned block devices (zoned attribute indicating "host-managed" or 135"host-aware"), the sum of zones belonging to any of the zone states: 136EXPLICIT OPEN or IMPLICIT OPEN, is limited by this value. 137If this value is 0, there is no limit. 138 139If the host attempts to exceed this limit, the driver should report this error 140with BLK_STS_ZONE_OPEN_RESOURCE, which user space may see as the ETOOMANYREFS 141errno. 142 143max_sectors_kb (RW) 144------------------- 145This is the maximum number of kilobytes that the block layer will allow 146for a filesystem request. Must be smaller than or equal to the maximum 147size allowed by the hardware. 148 149max_segments (RO) 150----------------- 151Maximum number of elements in a DMA scatter/gather list that is submitted 152to the associated block driver. 153 154max_segment_size (RO) 155--------------------- 156Maximum size in bytes of a single element in a DMA scatter/gather list. 157 158minimum_io_size (RO) 159-------------------- 160This is the smallest preferred IO size reported by the device. 161 162nomerges (RW) 163------------- 164This enables the user to disable the lookup logic involved with IO 165merging requests in the block layer. By default (0) all merges are 166enabled. When set to 1 only simple one-hit merges will be tried. When 167set to 2 no merge algorithms will be tried (including one-hit or more 168complex tree/hash lookups). 169 170nr_requests (RW) 171---------------- 172This controls how many requests may be allocated in the block layer for 173read or write requests. Note that the total allocated number may be twice 174this amount, since it applies only to reads or writes (not the accumulated 175sum). 176 177To avoid priority inversion through request starvation, a request 178queue maintains a separate request pool per each cgroup when 179CONFIG_BLK_CGROUP is enabled, and this parameter applies to each such 180per-block-cgroup request pool. IOW, if there are N block cgroups, 181each request queue may have up to N request pools, each independently 182regulated by nr_requests. 183 184nr_zones (RO) 185------------- 186For zoned block devices (zoned attribute indicating "host-managed" or 187"host-aware"), this indicates the total number of zones of the device. 188This is always 0 for regular block devices. 189 190optimal_io_size (RO) 191-------------------- 192This is the optimal IO size reported by the device. 193 194physical_block_size (RO) 195------------------------ 196This is the physical block size of device, in bytes. 197 198read_ahead_kb (RW) 199------------------ 200Maximum number of kilobytes to read-ahead for filesystems on this block 201device. 202 203rotational (RW) 204--------------- 205This file is used to stat if the device is of rotational type or 206non-rotational type. 207 208rq_affinity (RW) 209---------------- 210If this option is '1', the block layer will migrate request completions to the 211cpu "group" that originally submitted the request. For some workloads this 212provides a significant reduction in CPU cycles due to caching effects. 213 214For storage configurations that need to maximize distribution of completion 215processing setting this option to '2' forces the completion to run on the 216requesting cpu (bypassing the "group" aggregation logic). 217 218scheduler (RW) 219-------------- 220When read, this file will display the current and available IO schedulers 221for this block device. The currently active IO scheduler will be enclosed 222in [] brackets. Writing an IO scheduler name to this file will switch 223control of this block device to that new IO scheduler. Note that writing 224an IO scheduler name to this file will attempt to load that IO scheduler 225module, if it isn't already present in the system. 226 227write_cache (RW) 228---------------- 229When read, this file will display whether the device has write back 230caching enabled or not. It will return "write back" for the former 231case, and "write through" for the latter. Writing to this file can 232change the kernels view of the device, but it doesn't alter the 233device state. This means that it might not be safe to toggle the 234setting from "write back" to "write through", since that will also 235eliminate cache flushes issued by the kernel. 236 237write_same_max_bytes (RO) 238------------------------- 239This is the number of bytes the device can write in a single write-same 240command. A value of '0' means write-same is not supported by this 241device. 242 243wbt_lat_usec (RW) 244----------------- 245If the device is registered for writeback throttling, then this file shows 246the target minimum read latency. If this latency is exceeded in a given 247window of time (see wb_window_usec), then the writeback throttling will start 248scaling back writes. Writing a value of '0' to this file disables the 249feature. Writing a value of '-1' to this file resets the value to the 250default setting. 251 252throttle_sample_time (RW) 253------------------------- 254This is the time window that blk-throttle samples data, in millisecond. 255blk-throttle makes decision based on the samplings. Lower time means cgroups 256have more smooth throughput, but higher CPU overhead. This exists only when 257CONFIG_BLK_DEV_THROTTLING_LOW is enabled. 258 259write_zeroes_max_bytes (RO) 260--------------------------- 261For block drivers that support REQ_OP_WRITE_ZEROES, the maximum number of 262bytes that can be zeroed at once. The value 0 means that REQ_OP_WRITE_ZEROES 263is not supported. 264 265zone_append_max_bytes (RO) 266-------------------------- 267This is the maximum number of bytes that can be written to a sequential 268zone of a zoned block device using a zone append write operation 269(REQ_OP_ZONE_APPEND). This value is always 0 for regular block devices. 270 271zoned (RO) 272---------- 273This indicates if the device is a zoned block device and the zone model of the 274device if it is indeed zoned. The possible values indicated by zoned are 275"none" for regular block devices and "host-aware" or "host-managed" for zoned 276block devices. The characteristics of host-aware and host-managed zoned block 277devices are described in the ZBC (Zoned Block Commands) and ZAC 278(Zoned Device ATA Command Set) standards. These standards also define the 279"drive-managed" zone model. However, since drive-managed zoned block devices 280do not support zone commands, they will be treated as regular block devices 281and zoned will report "none". 282 283zone_write_granularity (RO) 284--------------------------- 285This indicates the alignment constraint, in bytes, for write operations in 286sequential zones of zoned block devices (devices with a zoned attributed 287that reports "host-managed" or "host-aware"). This value is always 0 for 288regular block devices. 289 290independent_access_ranges (RO) 291------------------------------ 292 293The presence of this sub-directory of the /sys/block/xxx/queue/ directory 294indicates that the device is capable of executing requests targeting 295different sector ranges in parallel. For instance, single LUN multi-actuator 296hard-disks will have an independent_access_ranges directory if the device 297correctly advertizes the sector ranges of its actuators. 298 299The independent_access_ranges directory contains one directory per access 300range, with each range described using the sector (RO) attribute file to 301indicate the first sector of the range and the nr_sectors (RO) attribute file 302to indicate the total number of sectors in the range starting from the first 303sector of the range. For example, a dual-actuator hard-disk will have the 304following independent_access_ranges entries.:: 305 306 $ tree /sys/block/<device>/queue/independent_access_ranges/ 307 /sys/block/<device>/queue/independent_access_ranges/ 308 |-- 0 309 | |-- nr_sectors 310 | `-- sector 311 `-- 1 312 |-- nr_sectors 313 `-- sector 314 315The sector and nr_sectors attributes use 512B sector unit, regardless of 316the actual block size of the device. Independent access ranges do not 317overlap and include all sectors within the device capacity. The access 318ranges are numbered in increasing order of the range start sector, 319that is, the sector attribute of range 0 always has the value 0. 320 321Jens Axboe <jens.axboe@oracle.com>, February 2009 322