FAQ

What is OpenZFS

OpenZFS is an outstanding storage platform that encompasses the functionality of traditional filesystems, volume managers, and more, with consistent reliability, functionality and performance across all distributions. Additional information about OpenZFS can be found in the OpenZFS wikipedia article.

Hardware Requirements

Because ZFS was originally designed for Sun Solaris it was long considered a filesystem for large servers and for companies that could afford the best and most powerful hardware available. But since the porting of ZFS to numerous OpenSource platforms (The BSDs, Illumos and Linux - under the umbrella organization “OpenZFS”), these requirements have been lowered.

The suggested hardware requirements are:

  • ECC memory. This isn’t really a requirement, but it’s highly recommended.

  • 8GB+ of memory for the best performance. It’s perfectly possible to run with 2GB or less (and people do), but you’ll need more if using deduplication.

Do I have to use ECC memory for ZFS?

Using ECC memory for OpenZFS is strongly recommended for enterprise environments where the strongest data integrity guarantees are required. Without ECC memory rare random bit flips caused by cosmic rays or by faulty memory can go undetected. If this were to occur OpenZFS (or any other filesystem) will write the damaged data to disk and be unable to automatically detect the corruption.

Unfortunately, ECC memory is not always supported by consumer grade hardware. And even when it is, ECC memory will be more expensive. For home users the additional safety brought by ECC memory might not justify the cost. It’s up to you to determine what level of protection your data requires.

Installation

OpenZFS is available for FreeBSD and all major Linux distributions. Refer to the getting started section of the wiki for links to installations instructions. If your distribution/OS isn’t listed you can always build OpenZFS from the latest official tarball.

Supported Architectures

OpenZFS is regularly compiled for the following architectures: aarch64, arm, ppc, ppc64, x86, x86_64.

Supported Linux Kernels

The notes for a given OpenZFS release will include a range of supported kernels. Point releases will be tagged as needed in order to support the stable kernel available from kernel.org. The oldest supported kernel is 2.6.32 due to its prominence in Enterprise Linux distributions.

32-bit vs 64-bit Systems

You are strongly encouraged to use a 64-bit kernel. OpenZFS will build for 32-bit systems but you may encounter stability problems.

ZFS was originally developed for the Solaris kernel which differs from some OpenZFS platforms in several significant ways. Perhaps most importantly for ZFS it is common practice in the Solaris kernel to make heavy use of the virtual address space. However, use of the virtual address space is strongly discouraged in the Linux kernel. This is particularly true on 32-bit architectures where the virtual address space is limited to 100M by default. Using the virtual address space on 64-bit Linux kernels is also discouraged but the address space is so much larger than physical memory that it is less of an issue.

If you are bumping up against the virtual memory limit on a 32-bit system you will see the following message in your system logs. You can increase the virtual address size with the boot option vmalloc=512M.

vmap allocation for size 4198400 failed: use vmalloc=<size> to increase size.

However, even after making this change your system will likely not be entirely stable. Proper support for 32-bit systems is contingent upon the OpenZFS code being weaned off its dependence on virtual memory. This will take some time to do correctly but it is planned for OpenZFS. This change is also expected to improve how efficiently OpenZFS manages the ARC cache and allow for tighter integration with the standard Linux page cache.

Booting from ZFS

Booting from ZFS on Linux is possible and many people do it. There are excellent walk throughs available for Debian, Ubuntu, and Gentoo.

On FreeBSD 13+ booting from ZFS is supported out of the box.

Selecting /dev/ names when creating a pool (Linux)

There are different /dev/ names that can be used when creating a ZFS pool. Each option has advantages and drawbacks, the right choice for your ZFS pool really depends on your requirements. For development and testing using /dev/sdX naming is quick and easy. A typical home server might prefer /dev/disk/by-id/ naming for simplicity and readability. While very large configurations with multiple controllers, enclosures, and switches will likely prefer /dev/disk/by-vdev naming for maximum control. But in the end, how you choose to identify your disks is up to you.

  • /dev/sdX, /dev/hdX: Best for development/test pools

    • Summary: The top level /dev/ names are the default for consistency with other ZFS implementations. They are available under all Linux distributions and are commonly used. However, because they are not persistent they should only be used with ZFS for development/test pools.

    • Benefits: This method is easy for a quick test, the names are short, and they will be available on all Linux distributions.

    • Drawbacks: The names are not persistent and will change depending on what order the disks are detected in. Adding or removing hardware for your system can easily cause the names to change. You would then need to remove the zpool.cache file and re-import the pool using the new names.

    • Example: zpool create tank sda sdb

  • /dev/disk/by-id/: Best for small pools (less than 10 disks)

    • Summary: This directory contains disk identifiers with more human readable names. The disk identifier usually consists of the interface type, vendor name, model number, device serial number, and partition number. This approach is more user friendly because it simplifies identifying a specific disk.

    • Benefits: Nice for small systems with a single disk controller. Because the names are persistent and guaranteed not to change, it doesn’t matter how the disks are attached to the system. You can take them all out, randomly mix them up on the desk, put them back anywhere in the system and your pool will still be automatically imported correctly.

    • Drawbacks: Configuring redundancy groups based on physical location becomes difficult and error prone. Unreliable on many personal virtual machine setups because the software does not generate persistent unique names by default.

    • Example: zpool create tank scsi-SATA_Hitachi_HTS7220071201DP1D10DGG6HMRP

  • /dev/disk/by-path/: Good for large pools (greater than 10 disks)

    • Summary: This approach is to use device names which include the physical cable layout in the system, which means that a particular disk is tied to a specific location. The name describes the PCI bus number, as well as enclosure names and port numbers. This allows the most control when configuring a large pool.

    • Benefits: Encoding the storage topology in the name is not only helpful for locating a disk in large installations. But it also allows you to explicitly layout your redundancy groups over multiple adapters or enclosures.

    • Drawbacks: These names are long, cumbersome, and difficult for a human to manage.

    • Example: zpool create tank pci-0000:00:1f.2-scsi-0:0:0:0 pci-0000:00:1f.2-scsi-1:0:0:0

  • /dev/disk/by-vdev/: Best for large pools (greater than 10 disks)

    • Summary: This approach provides administrative control over device naming using the configuration file /etc/zfs/vdev_id.conf. Names for disks in JBODs can be generated automatically to reflect their physical location by enclosure IDs and slot numbers. The names can also be manually assigned based on existing udev device links, including those in /dev/disk/by-path or /dev/disk/by-id. This allows you to pick your own unique meaningful names for the disks. These names will be displayed by all the zfs utilities so it can be used to clarify the administration of a large complex pool. See the vdev_id and vdev_id.conf man pages for further details.

    • Benefits: The main benefit of this approach is that it allows you to choose meaningful human-readable names. Beyond that, the benefits depend on the naming method employed. If the names are derived from the physical path the benefits of /dev/disk/by-path are realized. On the other hand, aliasing the names based on drive identifiers or WWNs has the same benefits as using /dev/disk/by-id.

    • Drawbacks: This method relies on having a /etc/zfs/vdev_id.conf file properly configured for your system. To configure this file please refer to section Setting up the /etc/zfs/vdev_id.conf file. As with benefits, the drawbacks of /dev/disk/by-id or /dev/disk/by-path may apply depending on the naming method employed.

    • Example: zpool create tank mirror A1 B1 mirror A2 B2

  • /dev/disk/by-uuid/: Not a great option

  • Summary: One might think from the use of “UUID” that this would be an ideal option - however, in practice, this ends up listing one device per pool ID, which is not very useful for importing pools with multiple disks.

  • /dev/disk/by-partuuid//by-partlabel: Works only for existing partitions

  • Summary: partition UUID is generated on it’s creation, so usage is limited

  • Drawbacks: you can’t refer to a partition unique ID on an unpartitioned disk for zpool replace/add/attach, and you can’t find failed disk easily without a mapping written down ahead of time.

Setting up the /etc/zfs/vdev_id.conf file

In order to use /dev/disk/by-vdev/ naming the /etc/zfs/vdev_id.conf must be configured. The format of this file is described in the vdev_id.conf man page. Several examples follow.

A non-multipath configuration with direct-attached SAS enclosures and an arbitrary slot re-mapping.

multipath     no
topology      sas_direct
phys_per_port 4

#       PCI_SLOT HBA PORT  CHANNEL NAME
channel 85:00.0  1         A
channel 85:00.0  0         B

#    Linux      Mapped
#    Slot       Slot
slot 0          2
slot 1          6
slot 2          0
slot 3          3
slot 4          5
slot 5          7
slot 6          4
slot 7          1

A SAS-switch topology. Note that the channel keyword takes only two arguments in this example.

topology      sas_switch

#       SWITCH PORT  CHANNEL NAME
channel 1            A
channel 2            B
channel 3            C
channel 4            D

A multipath configuration. Note that channel names have multiple definitions - one per physical path.

multipath yes

#       PCI_SLOT HBA PORT  CHANNEL NAME
channel 85:00.0  1         A
channel 85:00.0  0         B
channel 86:00.0  1         A
channel 86:00.0  0         B

A configuration using device link aliases.

#     by-vdev
#     name     fully qualified or base name of device link
alias d1       /dev/disk/by-id/wwn-0x5000c5002de3b9ca
alias d2       wwn-0x5000c5002def789e

After defining the new disk names run udevadm trigger to prompt udev to parse the configuration file. This will result in a new /dev/disk/by-vdev directory which is populated with symlinks to /dev/sdX names. Following the first example above, you could then create the new pool of mirrors with the following command:

$ zpool create tank \
    mirror A0 B0 mirror A1 B1 mirror A2 B2 mirror A3 B3 \
    mirror A4 B4 mirror A5 B5 mirror A6 B6 mirror A7 B7

$ zpool status
  pool: tank
 state: ONLINE
 scan: none requested
config:

    NAME        STATE     READ WRITE CKSUM
    tank        ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-0  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A0      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B0      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-1  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A1      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B1      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-2  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A2      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B2      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-3  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A3      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B3      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-4  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A4      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B4      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-5  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A5      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B5      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-6  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A6      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B6      ONLINE       0     0     0
      mirror-7  ONLINE       0     0     0
        A7      ONLINE       0     0     0
        B7      ONLINE       0     0     0

errors: No known data errors

Changing /dev/ names on an existing pool

Changing the /dev/ names on an existing pool can be done by simply exporting the pool and re-importing it with the -d option to specify which new names should be used. For example, to use the custom names in /dev/disk/by-vdev:

$ zpool export tank
$ zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-vdev tank

The /etc/zfs/zpool.cache file

Whenever a pool is imported on the system it will be added to the /etc/zfs/zpool.cache file. This file stores pool configuration information, such as the device names and pool state. If this file exists when running the zpool import command then it will be used to determine the list of pools available for import. When a pool is not listed in the cache file it will need to be detected and imported using the zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id command.

Generating a new /etc/zfs/zpool.cache file

The /etc/zfs/zpool.cache file will be automatically updated when your pool configuration is changed. However, if for some reason it becomes stale you can force the generation of a new /etc/zfs/zpool.cache file by setting the cachefile property on the pool.

$ zpool set cachefile=/etc/zfs/zpool.cache tank

Conversely the cache file can be disabled by setting cachefile=none. This is useful for failover configurations where the pool should always be explicitly imported by the failover software.

$ zpool set cachefile=none tank

Sending and Receiving Streams

hole_birth Bugs

The hole_birth feature has/had bugs, the result of which is that, if you do a zfs send -i (or -R, since it uses -i) from an affected dataset, the receiver will not see any checksum or other errors, but will not match the source.

ZoL versions 0.6.5.8 and 0.7.0-rc1 (and above) default to ignoring the faulty metadata which causes this issue on the sender side.

For more details, see the hole_birth FAQ.

Sending Large Blocks

When sending incremental streams which contain large blocks (>128K) the --large-block flag must be specified. Inconsistent use of the flag between incremental sends can result in files being incorrectly zeroed when they are received. Raw encrypted send/recvs automatically imply the --large-block flag and are therefore unaffected.

For more details, see issue 6224.

CEPH/ZFS

There is a lot of tuning that can be done that’s dependent on the workload that is being put on CEPH/ZFS, as well as some general guidelines. Some are as follow;

ZFS Configuration

The CEPH filestore back-end heavily relies on xattrs, for optimal performance all CEPH workloads will benefit from the following ZFS dataset parameters

  • xattr=sa

  • dnodesize=auto

Beyond that typically rbd/cephfs focused workloads benefit from small recordsize({16K-128K), while objectstore/s3/rados focused workloads benefit from large recordsize (128K-1M).

CEPH Configuration (ceph.conf)

Additionally CEPH sets various values internally for handling xattrs based on the underlying filesystem. As CEPH only officially supports/detects XFS and BTRFS, for all other filesystems it falls back to rather limited “safe” values. On newer releases, the need for larger xattrs will prevent OSD’s from even starting.

The officially recommended workaround (see here) has some severe downsides, and more specifically is geared toward filesystems with “limited” xattr support such as ext4.

ZFS does not have a limit internally to xattrs length, as such we can treat it similarly to how CEPH treats XFS. We can set overrides to set 3 internal values to the same as those used with XFS(see here and here) and allow it be used without the severe limitations of the “official” workaround.

[osd]
filestore_max_inline_xattrs = 10
filestore_max_inline_xattr_size = 65536
filestore_max_xattr_value_size = 65536

Other General Guidelines

  • Use a separate journal device. Do not collocate CEPH journal on ZFS dataset if at all possible, this will quickly lead to terrible fragmentation, not to mention terrible performance upfront even before fragmentation (CEPH journal does a dsync for every write).

  • Use a SLOG device, even with a separate CEPH journal device. For some workloads, skipping SLOG and setting logbias=throughput may be acceptable.

  • Use a high-quality SLOG/CEPH journal device. A consumer based SSD, or even NVMe WILL NOT DO (Samsung 830, 840, 850, etc) for a variety of reasons. CEPH will kill them quickly, on-top of the performance being quite low in this use. Generally recommended devices are [Intel DC S3610, S3700, S3710, P3600, P3700], or [Samsung SM853, SM863], or better.

  • If using a high quality SSD or NVMe device (as mentioned above), you CAN share SLOG and CEPH Journal to good results on single device. A ratio of 4 HDDs to 1 SSD (Intel DC S3710 200GB), with each SSD partitioned (remember to align!) to 4x10GB (for ZIL/SLOG) + 4x20GB (for CEPH journal) has been reported to work well.

Again - CEPH + ZFS will KILL a consumer based SSD VERY quickly. Even ignoring the lack of power-loss protection, and endurance ratings, you will be very disappointed with performance of consumer based SSD under such a workload.

Performance Considerations

To achieve good performance with your pool there are some easy best practices you should follow.

  • Evenly balance your disks across controllers: Often the limiting factor for performance is not the disks but the controller. By balancing your disks evenly across controllers you can often improve throughput.

  • Create your pool using whole disks: When running zpool create use whole disk names. This will allow ZFS to automatically partition the disk to ensure correct alignment. It will also improve interoperability with other OpenZFS implementations which honor the wholedisk property.

  • Have enough memory: A minimum of 2GB of memory is recommended for ZFS. Additional memory is strongly recommended when the compression and deduplication features are enabled.

  • Improve performance by setting ashift=12: You may be able to improve performance for some workloads by setting ashift=12. This tuning can only be set when block devices are first added to a pool, such as when the pool is first created or when a new vdev is added to the pool. This tuning parameter can result in a decrease of capacity for RAIDZ configurations.

Advanced Format Disks

Advanced Format (AF) is a new disk format which natively uses a 4,096 byte, instead of 512 byte, sector size. To maintain compatibility with legacy systems many AF disks emulate a sector size of 512 bytes. By default, ZFS will automatically detect the sector size of the drive. This combination can result in poorly aligned disk accesses which will greatly degrade the pool performance.

Therefore, the ability to set the ashift property has been added to the zpool command. This allows users to explicitly assign the sector size when devices are first added to a pool (typically at pool creation time or adding a vdev to the pool). The ashift values range from 9 to 16 with the default value 0 meaning that zfs should auto-detect the sector size. This value is actually a bit shift value, so an ashift value for 512 bytes is 9 (2^9 = 512) while the ashift value for 4,096 bytes is 12 (2^12 = 4,096).

To force the pool to use 4,096 byte sectors at pool creation time, you may run:

$ zpool create -o ashift=12 tank mirror sda sdb

To force the pool to use 4,096 byte sectors when adding a vdev to a pool, you may run:

$ zpool add -o ashift=12 tank mirror sdc sdd

ZVOL used space larger than expected

Depending on the filesystem used on the zvol (e.g. ext4) and the usage (e.g. deletion and creation of many files) the used and referenced properties reported by the zvol may be larger than the “actual” space that is being used as reported by the consumer.
This can happen due to the way some filesystems work, in which they prefer to allocate files in new untouched blocks rather than the fragmented used blocks marked as free. This forces zfs to reference all blocks that the underlying filesystem has ever touched.
This is in itself not much of a problem, as when the used property reaches the configured volsize the underlying filesystem will start reusing blocks. But the problem arises if it is desired to snapshot the zvol, as the space referenced by the snapshots will contain the unused blocks.
This issue can be prevented, by issuing the so-called trim (for ex. fstrim command on Linux) to allow the kernel to specify to zfs which blocks are unused.
Issuing a trim before a snapshot is taken will ensure a minimum snapshot size.
For Linux adding the discard option for the mounted ZVOL in /etc/fstab effectively enables the kernel to issue the trim commands continuously, without the need to execute fstrim on-demand.

Using a zvol for a swap device on Linux

You may use a zvol as a swap device but you’ll need to configure it appropriately.

CAUTION: for now swap on zvol may lead to deadlock, in this case please send your logs here.

  • Set the volume block size to match your systems page size. This tuning prevents ZFS from having to perform read-modify-write options on a larger block while the system is already low on memory.

  • Set the logbias=throughput and sync=always properties. Data written to the volume will be flushed immediately to disk freeing up memory as quickly as possible.

  • Set primarycache=metadata to avoid keeping swap data in RAM via the ARC.

  • Disable automatic snapshots of the swap device.

$ zfs create -V 4G -b $(getconf PAGESIZE) \
    -o logbias=throughput -o sync=always \
    -o primarycache=metadata \
    -o com.sun:auto-snapshot=false rpool/swap

Using ZFS on Xen Hypervisor or Xen Dom0 (Linux)

It is usually recommended to keep virtual machine storage and hypervisor pools, quite separate. Although few people have managed to successfully deploy and run OpenZFS using the same machine configured as Dom0. There are few caveats:

  • Set a fair amount of memory in grub.conf, dedicated to Dom0.

    • dom0_mem=16384M,max:16384M

  • Allocate no more of 30-40% of Dom0’s memory to ZFS in /etc/modprobe.d/zfs.conf.

    • options zfs zfs_arc_max=6442450944

  • Disable Xen’s auto-ballooning in /etc/xen/xl.conf

  • Watch out for any Xen bugs, such as this one related to ballooning

udisks2 creating /dev/mapper/ entries for zvol (Linux)

To prevent udisks2 from creating /dev/mapper entries that must be manually removed or maintained during zvol remove / rename, create a udev rule such as /etc/udev/rules.d/80-udisks2-ignore-zfs.rules with the following contents:

ENV{ID_PART_ENTRY_SCHEME}=="gpt", ENV{ID_FS_TYPE}=="zfs_member", ENV{ID_PART_ENTRY_TYPE}=="6a898cc3-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631", ENV{UDISKS_IGNORE}="1"

Licensing

License information can be found here.

Reporting a problem

You can open a new issue and search existing issues using the public issue tracker. The issue tracker is used to organize outstanding bug reports, feature requests, and other development tasks. Anyone may post comments after signing up for a github account.

Please make sure that what you’re actually seeing is a bug and not a support issue. If in doubt, please ask on the mailing list first, and if you’re then asked to file an issue, do so.

When opening a new issue include this information at the top of the issue:

  • What distribution you’re using and the version.

  • What spl/zfs packages you’re using and the version.

  • Describe the problem you’re observing.

  • Describe how to reproduce the problem.

  • Including any warning/errors/backtraces from the system logs.

When a new issue is opened it’s not uncommon for a developer to request additional information about the problem. In general, the more detail you share about a problem the quicker a developer can resolve it. For example, providing a simple test case is always exceptionally helpful. Be prepared to work with the developer looking in to your bug in order to get it resolved. They may ask for information like:

  • Your pool configuration as reported by zdb or zpool status.

  • Your hardware configuration, such as

    • Number of CPUs.

    • Amount of memory.

    • Whether your system has ECC memory.

    • Whether it is running under a VMM/Hypervisor.

    • Kernel version.

    • Values of the spl/zfs module parameters.

  • Stack traces which may be logged to dmesg.

Does OpenZFS have a Code of Conduct?

Yes, the OpenZFS community has a code of conduct. See the Code of Conduct for details.