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+.\" Copyright Neil Brown and others.
+.\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+.\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
+.\" (at your option) any later version.
+.\" See file COPYING in distribution for details.
+.TH MDADM.CONF 5
+.SH NAME
+mdadm.conf \- configuration for management of Software RAID with mdadm
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+{CONFFILE}
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+.PP
+.I mdadm
+is a tool for creating, managing, and monitoring RAID devices using the
+.B md
+driver in Linux.
+.PP
+Some common tasks, such as assembling all arrays, can be simplified
+by describing the devices and arrays in this configuration file.
+
+.SS SYNTAX
+The file should be seen as a collection of words separated by white
+space (space, tab, or newline).
+Any word that beings with a hash sign (#) starts a comment and that
+word together with the remainder of the line is ignored.
+
+Spaces can be included in a word using quotation characters. Either
+single quotes
+.RB ( ' )
+or double quotes (\fB"\fP)
+may be used. All the characters from one quotation character to
+next identical character are protected and will not be used to
+separate words to start new quoted strings. To include a single quote
+it must be between double quotes. To include a double quote it must
+be between single quotes.
+
+Any line that starts with white space (space or tab) is treated as
+though it were a continuation of the previous line.
+
+Empty lines are ignored, but otherwise each (non continuation) line
+must start with a keyword as listed below. The keywords are case
+insensitive and can be abbreviated to 3 characters.
+
+The keywords are:
+.TP
+.B DEVICE
+A
+.B device
+line lists the devices (whole devices or partitions) that might contain
+a component of an MD array. When looking for the components of an
+array,
+.I mdadm
+will scan these devices (or any devices listed on the command line).
+
+The
+.B device
+line may contain a number of different devices (separated by spaces)
+and each device name can contain wild cards as defined by
+.BR glob (7).
+
+Also, there may be several device lines present in the file.
+
+Alternatively, a
+.B device
+line can contain either or both of the words
+.B containers
+and
+.BR partitions .
+The word
+.B containers
+will cause
+.I mdadm
+to look for assembled CONTAINER arrays and included them as a source
+for assembling further arrays.
+
+The word
+.I partitions
+will cause
+.I mdadm
+to read
+.I /proc/partitions
+and include all devices and partitions found therein.
+.I mdadm
+does not use the names from
+.I /proc/partitions
+but only the major and minor device numbers. It scans
+.I /dev
+to find the name that matches the numbers.
+
+If no DEVICE line is present in any config file,
+then "DEVICE partitions containers" is assumed.
+
+For example:
+.IP
+DEVICE /dev/hda* /dev/hdc*
+.br
+DEV /dev/sd*
+.br
+DEVICE /dev/disk/by-path/pci*
+.br
+DEVICE partitions
+
+.TP
+.B ARRAY
+The ARRAY lines identify actual arrays. The second word on the line
+may be the name of the device where the array is normally
+assembled, such as
+.B /dev/md1
+or
+.BR /dev/md/backup .
+If the name does not start with a slash
+.RB (' / '),
+it is treated as being in
+.BR /dev/md/ .
+Alternately the word
+.B <ignore>
+(complete with angle brackets) can be given in which case any array
+which matches the rest of the line will never be automatically assembled.
+If no device name is given,
+.I mdadm
+will use various heuristics to determine an appropriate name.
+
+Subsequent words identify the array, or identify the array as a member
+of a group. If multiple identities are given,
+then a component device must match ALL identities to be considered a
+match. Each identity word has a tag, and equals sign, and some value.
+The tags are:
+.RS 4
+.TP
+.B uuid=
+The value should be a 128 bit uuid in hexadecimal, with punctuation
+interspersed if desired. This must match the uuid stored in the
+superblock.
+.TP
+.B super\-minor=
+The value is an integer which indicates the minor number that was
+stored in the superblock when the array was created. When an array is
+created as /dev/mdX, then the minor number X is stored.
+.TP
+.B devices=
+The value is a comma separated list of device names or device name
+patterns.
+Only devices with names which match one entry in the list will be used
+to assemble the array. Note that the devices
+listed there must also be listed on a DEVICE line.
+.TP
+.B level=
+The value is a RAID level. This is not normally used to
+identify an array, but is supported so that the output of
+
+.B "mdadm \-\-examine \-\-scan"
+
+can be use directly in the configuration file.
+.TP
+.B num\-devices=
+The value is the number of devices in a complete active array. As with
+.B level=
+this is mainly for compatibility with the output of
+
+.BR "mdadm \-\-examine \-\-scan" .
+
+.TP
+.B spares=
+The value is a number of spare devices to expect the array to have.
+The sole use of this keyword and value is as follows:
+.B mdadm \-\-monitor
+will report an array if it is found to have fewer than this number of
+spares when
+.B \-\-monitor
+starts or when
+.B \-\-oneshot
+is used.
+
+.TP
+.B spare\-group=
+The value is a textual name for a group of arrays. All arrays with
+the same
+.B spare\-group
+name are considered to be part of the same group. The significance of
+a group of arrays is that
+.I mdadm
+will, when monitoring the arrays, move a spare drive from one array in
+a group to another array in that group if the first array had a failed
+or missing drive but no spare.
+
+.TP
+.B auto=
+This option is rarely needed with mdadm-3.0, particularly if use with
+the Linux kernel v2.6.28 or later.
+It tells
+.I mdadm
+whether to use partitionable array or non-partitionable arrays and,
+in the absence of
+.IR udev ,
+how many partition devices to create. From 2.6.28 all md array
+devices are partitionable, hence this option is not needed.
+
+The value of this option can be "yes" or "md" to indicate that a
+traditional, non-partitionable md array should be created, or "mdp",
+"part" or "partition" to indicate that a partitionable md array (only
+available in linux 2.6 and later) should be used. This later set can
+also have a number appended to indicate how many partitions to create
+device files for, e.g.
+.BR auto=mdp5 .
+The default is 4.
+
+.TP
+.B bitmap=
+The option specifies a file in which a write-intent bitmap should be
+found. When assembling the array,
+.I mdadm
+will provide this file to the
+.B md
+driver as the bitmap file. This has the same function as the
+.B \-\-bitmap\-file
+option to
+.BR \-\-assemble .
+
+.TP
+.B metadata=
+Specify the metadata format that the array has. This is mainly
+recognised for comparability with the output of
+.BR "mdadm \-Es" .
+
+.TP
+.B container=
+Specify that this array is a member array of some container. The
+value given can be either a path name in /dev, or a UUID of the
+container array.
+
+.TP
+.B member=
+Specify that this array is a member array of some container. Each
+type of container has some way to enumerate member arrays, often a
+simple sequence number. The value identifies which member of a
+container the array is. It will usually accompany a "container=" word.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B MAILADDR
+The
+.B mailaddr
+line gives an E-mail address that alerts should be
+sent to when
+.I mdadm
+is running in
+.B \-\-monitor
+mode (and was given the
+.B \-\-scan
+option). There should only be one
+.B MAILADDR
+line and it should have only one address. Any subsequent addresses
+are silently ignored.
+
+.TP
+.B MAILFROM
+The
+.B mailfrom
+line (which can only be abbreviated to at least 5 characters) gives an
+address to appear in the "From" address for alert mails. This can be
+useful if you want to explicitly set a domain, as the default from
+address is "root" with no domain. All words on this line are
+catenated with spaces to form the address.
+
+Note that this value cannot be set via the
+.I mdadm
+commandline. It is only settable via the config file.
+There should only be one
+.B MAILADDR
+line and it should have only one address. Any subsequent addresses
+are silently ignored.
+
+.TP
+.B PROGRAM
+The
+.B program
+line gives the name of a program to be run when
+.B "mdadm \-\-monitor"
+detects potentially interesting events on any of the arrays that it
+is monitoring. This program gets run with two or three arguments, they
+being the Event, the md device, and possibly the related component
+device.
+
+There should only be one
+.B program
+line and it should be given only one program. Any subsequent programs
+are silently ignored.
+
+
+.TP
+.B CREATE
+The
+.B create
+line gives default values to be used when creating arrays, new members
+of arrays, and device entries for arrays.
+
+There should only be one
+.B create
+line. Any subsequent lines will override the previous settings.
+
+Keywords used in the
+.I CREATE
+line and supported values are:
+
+.RS 4
+.TP
+.B owner=
+.TP
+.B group=
+These can give user/group ids or names to use instead of system
+defaults (root/wheel or root/disk).
+.TP
+.B mode=
+An octal file mode such as 0660 can be given to override the default
+of 0600.
+.TP
+.B auto=
+This corresponds to the
+.B \-\-auto
+flag to mdadm. Give
+.BR yes ,
+.BR md ,
+.BR mdp ,
+.B part
+\(em possibly followed by a number of partitions \(em to indicate how
+missing device entries should be created.
+
+.TP
+.B metadata=
+The name of the metadata format to use if none is explicitly given.
+This can be useful to impose a system-wide default of version-1 superblocks.
+
+.TP
+.B names=yes
+Since Linux 2.6.29 it has been possible to create
+.B md
+devices with a name like
+.B md_home
+rather than just a number, like
+.BR md3 .
+.I mdadm
+will use the numeric alternative by default as other tools that interact
+with md arrays may expect only numbers.
+If
+.B names=yes
+is given in
+.I mdadm.conf
+then
+.I mdadm
+will use a name when appropriate.
+If
+.B names=no
+is given, then non-numeric
+.I md
+device names will not be used even if the default changes in a future
+release of
+.IR mdadm .
+
+.TP
+.B bbl=no
+By default,
+.I mdadm
+will reserve space for a bad block list (bbl) on all devices
+included in or added to any array that supports them. Setting
+.B bbl=no
+will prevent this, so newly added devices will not have a bad
+block log.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B HOMEHOST
+The
+.B homehost
+line gives a default value for the
+.B \-\-homehost=
+option to mdadm. There should normally be only one other word on the line.
+It should either be a host name, or one of the special words
+.BR <system>,
+.B <none>
+and
+.BR <ignore> .
+If
+.B <system>
+is given, then the
+.BR gethostname ( 2 )
+systemcall is used to get the host name. This is the default.
+
+If
+.B <ignore>
+is given, then a flag is set so that when arrays are being
+auto-assembled the checking of the recorded
+.I homehost
+is disabled.
+If
+.B <ignore>
+is given it is also possible to give an explicit name which will be
+used when creating arrays. This is the only case when there can be
+more that one other word on the
+.B HOMEHOST
+line. If there are other words, or other
+.B HOMEHOST
+lines, they are silently ignored.
+
+If
+.B <none>
+is given, then the default of using
+.BR gethostname ( 2 )
+is over-ridden and no homehost name is assumed.
+
+When arrays are created, this host name will be stored in the
+metadata. When arrays are assembled using auto-assembly, arrays which
+do not record the correct homehost name in their metadata will be
+assembled using a "foreign" name. A "foreign" name alway ends with a
+digit string preceded by an underscore to differentiate it
+from any possible local name. e.g.
+.B /dev/md/1_1
+or
+.BR /dev/md/home_0 .
+
+.TP
+.B HOMECLUSTER
+The
+.B homcluster
+line gives a default value for the
+.B \-\-homecluster=
+option to mdadm. It specifies the cluster name for the md device.
+The md device can be assembled only on the cluster which matches
+the name specified. If
+.B homcluster
+is not provided, mdadm tries to detect the cluster name automatically.
+
+There should only be one
+.B homecluster
+line. Any subsequent lines will be silently ignored.
+
+.TP
+.B AUTO
+A list of names of metadata format can be given, each preceded by a
+plus or minus sign. Also the word
+.I homehost
+is allowed as is
+.I all
+preceded by plus or minus sign.
+.I all
+is usually last.
+
+When
+.I mdadm
+is auto-assembling an array, either via
+.I \-\-assemble
+or
+.I \-\-incremental
+and it finds metadata of a given type, it checks that metadata type
+against those listed in this line. The first match wins, where
+.I all
+matches anything.
+If a match is found that was preceded by a plus sign, the auto
+assembly is allowed. If the match was preceded by a minus sign, the
+auto assembly is disallowed. If no match is found, the auto assembly
+is allowed.
+
+If the metadata indicates that the array was created for
+.I this
+host, and the word
+.I homehost
+appears before any other match, then the array is treated as a valid
+candidate for auto-assembly.
+
+This can be used to disable all auto-assembly (so that only arrays
+explicitly listed in mdadm.conf or on the command line are assembled),
+or to disable assembly of certain metadata types which might be
+handled by other software. It can also be used to disable assembly of
+all foreign arrays - normally such arrays are assembled but given a
+non-deterministic name in
+.BR /dev/md/ .
+
+The known metadata types are
+.BR 0.90 ,
+.BR 1.x ,
+.BR ddf ,
+.BR imsm .
+
+.B AUTO
+should be given at most once. Subsequent lines are silently ignored.
+Thus a later config file in a config directory will not overwrite
+the setting in an earlier config file.
+
+.TP
+.B POLICY
+This is used to specify what automatic behavior is allowed on devices
+newly appearing in the system and provides a way of marking spares that can
+be moved to other arrays as well as the migration domains.
+.I Domain
+can be defined through
+.I policy
+line by specifying a domain name for a number of paths from
+.BR /dev/disk/by-path/ .
+A device may belong to several domains. The domain of an array is a union
+of domains of all devices in that array. A spare can be automatically
+moved from one array to another if the set of the destination array's
+.I domains
+contains all the
+.I domains
+of the new disk or if both arrays have the same
+.IR spare-group .
+
+To update hot plug configuration it is necessary to execute
+.B mdadm \-\-udev\-rules
+command after changing the config file
+
+Keywords used in the
+.I POLICY
+line and supported values are:
+
+.RS 4
+.TP
+.B domain=
+any arbitrary string
+.TP
+.B metadata=
+0.9 1.x ddf or imsm
+.TP
+.B path=
+file glob matching anything from
+.B /dev/disk/by-path
+.TP
+.B type=
+either
+.B disk
+or
+.BR part .
+.TP
+.B action=
+include, re-add, spare, spare-same-slot, or force-spare
+.TP
+.B auto=
+yes, no, or homehost.
+
+.P
+The
+.I action
+item determines the automatic behavior allowed for devices matching the
+.I path
+and
+.I type
+in the same line. If a device matches several lines with different
+.I actions
+then the most permissive will apply. The ordering of policy lines
+is irrelevant to the end result.
+.TP
+.B include
+allows adding a disk to an array if metadata on that disk matches that array
+.TP
+.B re\-add
+will include the device in the array if it appears to be a current member
+or a member that was recently removed and the array has a
+write-intent-bitmap to allow the
+.B re\-add
+functionality.
+.TP
+.B spare
+as above and additionally: if the device is bare it can
+become a spare if there is any array that it is a candidate for based
+on domains and metadata.
+.TP
+.B spare\-same\-slot
+as above and additionally if given slot was used by an array that went
+degraded recently and the device plugged in has no metadata then it will
+be automatically added to that array (or it's container)
+.TP
+.B force\-spare
+as above and the disk will become a spare in remaining cases
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B PART-POLICY
+This is similar to
+.B POLICY
+and accepts the same keyword assignments. It allows a consistent set
+of policies to applied to each of the partitions of a device.
+
+A
+.B PART-POLICY
+line should set
+.I type=disk
+and identify the path to one or more disk devices. Each partition on
+these disks will be treated according to the
+.I action=
+setting from this line. If a
+.I domain
+is set in the line, then the domain associated with each patition will
+be based on the domain, but with
+.RB \(dq -part N\(dq
+appended, when N is the partition number for the partition that was
+found.
+
+.TP
+.B SYSFS
+The
+.B SYSFS
+line lists custom values of MD device's sysfs attributes which will be
+stored in sysfs after the array is assembled. Multiple lines are allowed and each
+line has to contain the uuid or the name of the device to which it relates.
+Lines are applied in reverse order.
+.RS 4
+.TP
+.B uuid=
+hexadecimal identifier of MD device. This has to match the uuid stored in the
+superblock.
+.TP
+.B name=
+name of the MD device as was given to
+.I mdadm
+when the array was created. It will be ignored if
+.B uuid
+is not empty.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B MONITORDELAY
+The
+.B monitordelay
+line gives a delay in seconds
+.I mdadm
+shall wait before pooling md arrays
+when
+.I mdadm
+is running in
+.B \-\-monitor
+mode.
+.B \-d/\-\-delay
+command line argument takes precedence over the config file.
+
+If multiple
+.B MINITORDELAY
+lines are provided, only first non-zero value is considered.
+
+.SH FILES
+
+.SS {CONFFILE}
+
+The default config file location, used when
+.I mdadm
+is running without --config option.
+
+.SS {CONFFILE}.d
+
+The default directory with config files. Used when
+.I mdadm
+is running without --config option, after successful reading of the
+.B {CONFFILE}
+default config file. Files in that directory
+are read in lexical order.
+
+
+.SS {CONFFILE2}
+
+Alternative config file that is read, when
+.I mdadm
+is running without --config option and the
+.B {CONFFILE}
+default config file was not opened successfully.
+
+.SS {CONFFILE2}.d
+
+The alternative directory with config files. Used when
+.I mdadm
+is runninng without --config option, after reading the
+.B {CONFFILE2}
+alternative config file whether it was successful or not. Files in
+that directory are read in lexical order.
+
+.SH EXAMPLE
+DEVICE /dev/sd[bcdjkl]1
+.br
+DEVICE /dev/hda1 /dev/hdb1
+
+# /dev/md0 is known by its UUID.
+.br
+ARRAY /dev/md0 UUID=3aaa0122:29827cfa:5331ad66:ca767371
+.br
+# /dev/md1 contains all devices with a minor number of
+.br
+# 1 in the superblock.
+.br
+ARRAY /dev/md1 superminor=1
+.br
+# /dev/md2 is made from precisely these two devices
+.br
+ARRAY /dev/md2 devices=/dev/hda1,/dev/hdb1
+
+# /dev/md4 and /dev/md5 are a spare-group and spares
+.br
+# can be moved between them
+.br
+ARRAY /dev/md4 uuid=b23f3c6d:aec43a9f:fd65db85:369432df
+.br
+ spare\-group=group1
+.br
+ARRAY /dev/md5 uuid=19464854:03f71b1b:e0df2edd:246cc977
+.br
+ spare\-group=group1
+.br
+# /dev/md/home is created if need to be a partitionable md array
+.br
+# any spare device number is allocated.
+.br
+ARRAY /dev/md/home UUID=9187a482:5dde19d9:eea3cc4a:d646ab8b
+.br
+ auto=part
+.br
+POLICY domain=domain1 metadata=imsm path=pci-0000:00:1f.2-scsi-*
+.br
+ action=spare
+.br
+POLICY domain=domain1 metadata=imsm path=pci-0000:04:00.0-scsi-[01]*
+.br
+ action=include
+.br
+# One domain comprising of devices attached to specified paths is defined.
+.br
+# Bare device matching first path will be made an imsm spare on hot plug.
+.br
+# If more than one array is created on devices belonging to domain1 and
+.br
+# one of them becomes degraded, then any imsm spare matching any path for
+.br
+# given domain name can be migrated.
+.br
+MAILADDR root@mydomain.tld
+.br
+PROGRAM /usr/sbin/handle\-mdadm\-events
+.br
+CREATE group=system mode=0640 auto=part\-8
+.br
+HOMEHOST <system>
+.br
+AUTO +1.x homehost \-all
+.br
+SYSFS name=/dev/md/raid5 group_thread_cnt=4 sync_speed_max=1000000
+.br
+SYSFS uuid=bead5eb6:31c17a27:da120ba2:7dfda40d group_thread_cnt=4
+sync_speed_max=1000000
+.br
+MONITORDELAY 60
+
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR mdadm (8),
+.BR md (4).