Device-mapper snapshot support
Device-mapper allows you, without massive data copying:
*) To create snapshots of any block device i.e. mountable, saved states of
the block device which are also writable without interfering with the
original content;
*) To create device “forks”, i.e. multiple different versions of the
same data stream.
*) To merge a snapshot of a block device back into the snapshot’s origin
device.
In the first two cases, dm copies only the chunks of data that get
changed and uses a separate copy-on-write (COW) block device for
storage.
For snapshot merge the contents of the COW storage are merged back into
the origin device.
There are three dm targets available:
snapshot, snapshot-origin, and snapshot-merge.
*) snapshot-origin
which will normally have one or more snapshots based on it.
Reads will be mapped directly to the backing device. For each write, the
original data will be saved in the
its visible content unchanged, at least until the
*) snapshot
A snapshot of the
only go to the
from
smaller than the origin and if it fills up the snapshot will become
useless and be disabled, returning errors. So it is important to monitor
the amount of free space and expand the
<persistent?> is P (Persistent) or N (Not persistent - will not survive
after reboot). O (Overflow) can be added as a persistent store option
to allow userspace to advertise its support for seeing “Overflow” in the
snapshot status. So supported store types are “P”, “PO” and “N”.
The difference between persistent and transient is with transient
snapshots less metadata must be saved on disk - they can be kept in
memory by the kernel.
When loading or unloading the snapshot target, the corresponding
snapshot-origin or snapshot-merge target must be suspended. A failure to
suspend the origin target could result in data corruption.
- snapshot-merge
takes the same table arguments as the snapshot target except it only
works with persistent snapshots. This target assumes the role of the
“snapshot-origin” target and must not be loaded if the “snapshot-origin”
is still present for
Creates a merging snapshot that takes control of the changed chunks
stored in the
procedure, and merges these chunks back into the
has started (in the background) the
will continue while I/O is flowing to it. Changes to the
deferred until the merging snapshot’s corresponding chunk(s) have been
merged. Once merging has started the snapshot device, associated with
the “snapshot” target, will return -EIO when accessed.
How snapshot is used by LVM2
When you create the first LVM2 snapshot of a volume, four dm devices are used:
- a device containing the original mapping table of the source volume;
- a device used as the
; - a “snapshot” device, combining #1 and #2, which is the visible snapshot
volume; - the “original” volume (which uses the device number used by the original
source volume), whose table is replaced by a “snapshot-origin” mapping
from device #1.
A fixed naming scheme is used, so with the following commands:
lvcreate -L 1G -n base volumeGroup
lvcreate -L 100M –snapshot -n snap volumeGroup/base
we’ll have this situation (with volumes in above order):
dmsetup table|grep volumeGroup
volumeGroup-base-real: 0 2097152 linear 8:19 384
volumeGroup-snap-cow: 0 204800 linear 8:19 2097536
volumeGroup-snap: 0 2097152 snapshot 254:11 254:12 P 16
volumeGroup-base: 0 2097152 snapshot-origin 254:11
ls -lL /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-*
brw——- 1 root root 254, 11 29 ago 18:15 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-base-real
brw——- 1 root root 254, 12 29 ago 18:15 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-snap-cow
brw——- 1 root root 254, 13 29 ago 18:15 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-snap
brw——- 1 root root 254, 10 29 ago 18:14 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-base
How snapshot-merge is used by LVM2
A merging snapshot assumes the role of the “snapshot-origin” while
merging. As such the “snapshot-origin” is replaced with
“snapshot-merge”. The “-real” device is not changed and the “-cow”
device is renamed to
merging snapshot after it completes. The “snapshot” that hands over its
COW device to the “snapshot-merge” is deactivated (unless using lvchange
–refresh); but if it is left active it will simply return I/O errors.
A snapshot will merge into its origin with the following command:
lvconvert –merge volumeGroup/snap
we’ll now have this situation:
dmsetup table|grep volumeGroup
volumeGroup-base-real: 0 2097152 linear 8:19 384
volumeGroup-base-cow: 0 204800 linear 8:19 2097536
volumeGroup-base: 0 2097152 snapshot-merge 254:11 254:12 P 16
ls -lL /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-*
brw——- 1 root root 254, 11 29 ago 18:15 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-base-real
brw——- 1 root root 254, 12 29 ago 18:16 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-base-cow
brw——- 1 root root 254, 10 29 ago 18:16 /dev/mapper/volumeGroup-base
How to determine when a merging is complete
The snapshot-merge and snapshot status lines end with:
Both
During merging, the number of sectors allocated gets smaller and
smaller. Merging has finished when the number of sectors holding data
is zero, in other words
Here is a practical example (using a hybrid of lvm and dmsetup commands):
lvs
LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% Move Log Copy% Convert
base volumeGroup owi-a- 4.00g
snap volumeGroup swi-a- 1.00g base 18.97
dmsetup status volumeGroup-snap
0 8388608 snapshot 397896/2097152 1560
^^^^ metadata sectors
lvconvert –merge -b volumeGroup/snap
Merging of volume snap started.
lvs volumeGroup/snap
LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% Move Log Copy% Convert
base volumeGroup Owi-a- 4.00g 17.23
dmsetup status volumeGroup-base
0 8388608 snapshot-merge 281688/2097152 1104
dmsetup status volumeGroup-base
0 8388608 snapshot-merge 180480/2097152 712
dmsetup status volumeGroup-base
0 8388608 snapshot-merge 16/2097152 16
Merging has finished.
lvs
LV VG Attr LSize Origin Snap% Move Log Copy% Convert
base volumeGroup owi-a- 4.00g