ztest.1
ZTEST(1) | General Commands Manual | ZTEST(1) |
NAME
ztest
— was
written by the ZFS Developers as a ZFS unit test
SYNOPSIS
ztest |
[-VEG ] [-v
vdevs] [-s
size_of_each_vdev] [-a
alignment_shift] [-m
mirror_copies] [-r
raidz_disks/draid_disks] [-R
raid_parity] [-K
raid_kind] [-D
draid_data] [-S
draid_spares] [-C
vdev_class_state] [-d
datasets] [-t
threads] [-g
gang_block_threshold] [-i
initialize_pool_i_times] [-k
kill_percentage] [-p
pool_name] [-T
time] [-z
zil_failure_rate] |
DESCRIPTION
ztest
was written by the ZFS Developers as
a ZFS unit test. The tool was developed in tandem with the ZFS functionality
and was executed nightly as one of the many regression test against the
daily build. As features were added to ZFS, unit tests were also added to
ztest
. In addition, a separate test development team
wrote and executed more functional and stress tests.
By default ztest
runs for ten minutes and
uses block files (stored in /tmp) to create pools
rather than using physical disks. Block files afford
ztest
its flexibility to play around with zpool
components without requiring large hardware configurations. However, storing
the block files in /tmp may not work for you if you
have a small tmp directory.
By default is non-verbose. This is why entering the command above
will result in ztest
quietly executing for 5
minutes. The -V
option can be used to increase the
verbosity of the tool. Adding multiple -V
options is
allowed and the more you add the more chatty ztest
becomes.
After the ztest
run completes, you should
notice many ztest.* files lying around. Once the run
completes you can safely remove these files. Note that you shouldn't remove
these files during a run. You can re-use these files in your next
ztest
run by using the -E
option.
OPTIONS
-h
,-?
,--help
- Print a help summary.
-v
,--vdevs
= (default: 5)- Number of vdevs.
-s
,--vdev-size
= (default: 64M)- Size of each vdev.
-a
,--alignment-shift
= (default: 9) (use 0 for random)- Alignment shift used in test.
-m
,--mirror-copies
= (default: 2)- Number of mirror copies.
-r
,--raid-disks
= (default: 4 for raidz/16 for draid)- Number of raidz/draid disks.
-R
,--raid-parity
= (default: 1)- Raid parity (raidz & draid).
-K
,--raid-kind
=raidz|draid|random (default: random)- The kind of RAID config to use. With random the kind alternates between raidz and draid.
-D
,--draid-data
= (default: 4)- Number of data disks in a dRAID redundancy group.
-S
,--draid-spares
= (default: 1)- Number of dRAID distributed spare disks.
-d
,--datasets
= (default: 7)- Number of datasets.
-t
,--threads
= (default: 23)- Number of threads.
-g
,--gang-block-threshold
= (default: 32K)- Gang block threshold.
-i
,--init-count
= (default: 1)- Number of pool initializations.
-k
,--kill-percentage
= (default: 70%)- Kill percentage.
-p
,--pool-name
= (default: ztest)- Pool name.
-f
,--vdev-file-directory
= (default: /tmp)- File directory for vdev files.
-M
,--multi-host
- Multi-host; simulate pool imported on remote host.
-E
,--use-existing-pool
- Use existing pool (use existing pool instead of creating new one).
-T
,--run-time
= (default: 300s)- Total test run time.
-P
,--pass-time
= (default: 60s)- Time per pass.
-F
,--freeze-loops
= (default: 50)- Max loops in
spa_freeze
(). -B
,--alt-ztest
=- Alternate ztest path.
-C
,--vdev-class-state
=on|off|random (default: random)- The vdev allocation class state.
-o
,--option
=variable=value- Set global variable to an unsigned 32-bit integer value (little-endian only).
-G
,--dump-debug
- Dump zfs_dbgmsg buffer before exiting due to an error.
-V
,--verbose
- Verbose (use multiple times for ever more verbosity).
EXAMPLES
To override /tmp as your location for
block files, you can use the -f
option:
# ztest -f /
To get an idea of what ztest
is actually
testing try this:
# ztest -f / -VVV
Maybe you'd like to run ztest
for longer?
To do so simply use the -T
option and specify the
runlength in seconds like so:
# ztest -f / -V -T 120
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
ZFS_HOSTID
=id- Use id instead of the SPL hostid to identify this host.
Intended for use with
ztest
, but this environment variable will affect any utility which uses libzpool, including zpool(8). Since the kernel is unaware of this setting, results with utilities other than ztest are undefined. ZFS_STACK_SIZE
=stacksize- Limit the default stack size to stacksize bytes for the
purpose of detecting and debugging kernel stack overflows. This value
defaults to 32K which is double the default
16K Linux
kernel stack size.
In practice, setting the stack size slightly higher is needed because differences in stack usage between kernel and user space can lead to spurious stack overflows (especially when debugging is enabled). The specified value will be rounded up to a floor of PTHREAD_STACK_MIN which is the minimum stack required for a NULL procedure in user space.
By default the stack size is limited to 256K.
SEE ALSO
May 26, 2021 | Debian |