xfs(5) | File Formats Manual | xfs(5) |
xfs - layout, mount options, and supported file attributes for the XFS filesystem
An XFS filesystem can reside on a regular disk partition or on a logical volume. An XFS filesystem has up to three parts: a data section, a log section, and a realtime section. Using the default mkfs.xfs(8) options, the realtime section is absent, and the log area is contained within the data section. The log section can be either separate from the data section or contained within it. The filesystem sections are divided into a certain number of blocks, whose size is specified at mkfs.xfs(8) time with the -b option.
The data section contains all the filesystem metadata (inodes, directories, indirect blocks) as well as the user file data for ordinary (non-realtime) files and the log area if the log is internal to the data section. The data section is divided into a number of allocation groups. The number and size of the allocation groups are chosen by mkfs.xfs(8) so that there is normally a small number of equal-sized groups. The number of allocation groups controls the amount of parallelism available in file and block allocation. It should be increased from the default if there is sufficient memory and a lot of allocation activity. The number of allocation groups should not be set very high, since this can cause large amounts of CPU time to be used by the filesystem, especially when the filesystem is nearly full. More allocation groups are added (of the original size) when xfs_growfs(8) is run.
The log section (or area, if it is internal to the data section) is used to store changes to filesystem metadata while the filesystem is running until those changes are made to the data section. It is written sequentially during normal operation and read only during mount. When mounting a filesystem after a crash, the log is read to complete operations that were in progress at the time of the crash.
The realtime section is used to store the data of realtime files. These files had an attribute bit set through xfsctl(3) after file creation, before any data was written to the file. The realtime section is divided into a number of extents of fixed size (specified at mkfs.xfs(8) time). Each file in the realtime section has an extent size that is a multiple of the realtime section extent size.
Each allocation group contains several data structures. The first sector contains the superblock. For allocation groups after the first, the superblock is just a copy and is not updated after mkfs.xfs(8). The next three sectors contain information for block and inode allocation within the allocation group. Also contained within each allocation group are data structures to locate free blocks and inodes; these are located through the header structures.
Each XFS filesystem is labeled with a Universal Unique Identifier (UUID). The UUID is stored in every allocation group header and is used to help distinguish one XFS filesystem from another, therefore you should avoid using dd(1) or other block-by-block copying programs to copy XFS filesystems. If two XFS filesystems on the same machine have the same UUID, xfsdump(8) may become confused when doing incremental and resumed dumps. xfsdump(8) and xfsrestore(8) are recommended for making copies of XFS filesystems.
Some functionality specific to the XFS filesystem is accessible to applications through the xfsctl(3) and by-handle (see open_by_handle(3)) interfaces.
The following XFS-specific mount options may be used when mounting an XFS filesystem. Other generic options may be used as well; refer to the mount(8) manual page for more details.
The default behavior is for dynamic end-of-file preallocation size, which uses a set of heuristics to optimise the preallocation size based on the current allocation patterns within the file and the access patterns to the file. Specifying a fixed allocsize value turns off the dynamic behavior.
The default behavior is determined by the on-disk feature bit indicating that attr2 behavior is active. If either mount option it set, then that becomes the new default used by the filesystem.
CRC enabled filesystems always use the attr2 format, and so will reject the noattr2 mount option if it is set.
Note: It is currently recommended that you use the fstrim application to discard unused blocks rather than the discard mount option because the performance impact of this option is quite severe. For this reason, nodiscard is the default.
When inode64 is specified, it indicates that XFS is allowed to create inodes at any location in the filesystem, including those which will result in inode numbers occupying more than 32 bits of significance.
inode32 is provided for backwards compatibility with older systems and applications, since 64 bits inode numbers might cause problems for some applications that cannot handle large inode numbers. If applications are in use which do not handle inode numbers bigger than 32 bits, the inode32 option should be specified.
For kernel v3.7 and later, inode64 is the default.
If "largeio" specified, a filesystem that was created with a "swidth" specified will return the "swidth" value (in bytes) in st_blksize. If the filesystem does not have a "swidth" specified but does specify an "allocsize" then "allocsize" (in bytes) will be returned instead. Otherwise the behavior is the same as if "nolargeio" was specified. nolargeio is the default.
The default value is 8 buffers.
If the memory cost of 8 log buffers is too high on small systems, then it may be reduced at some cost to performance on metadata intensive workloads. The logbsize option below controls the size of each buffer and so is also relevant to this case.
The default value for version 1 logs is 32768, while the default value for version 2 logs is max(32768, log_sunit).
The sunit and swidth parameters specified must be compatible with the existing filesystem alignment characteristics. In general, that means the only valid changes to sunit are increasing it by a power-of-2 multiple. Valid swidth values are any integer multiple of a valid sunit value.
Typically the only time these mount options are necessary if after an underlying RAID device has had it's geometry modified, such as adding a new disk to a RAID5 lun and reshaping it.
The following mount options have been removed from the kernel, and will yield mount failures if specified. Mount options are deprecated for a significant period time prior to removal.
Name | Removed |
---- | ------- |
delaylog/nodelaylog | v4.0 |
ihashsize | v4.0 |
irixsgid | v4.0 |
osyncisdsync/osyncisosync | v4.0 |
barrier/nobarrier | v4.19 |
The XFS filesystem supports setting the following file attributes on Linux systems using the chattr(1) utility:
a - append only
A - no atime updates
d - no dump
i - immutable
S - synchronous updates
For descriptions of these attribute flags, please refer to the chattr(1) man page.
chattr(1), xfsctl(3), mount(8), mkfs.xfs(8), xfs_info(8), xfs_admin(8), xfsdump(8), xfsrestore(8).