<3>xfs_fsr3><1> [1><3>-v3><1>] c
[1><3>-t3><1> seconds] [1><3>-f3><1> leftoff] [1><3>-m3><1> mtab]
1><3>xfs_fsr3><1> [1><3>-v3><1>] c
[xfsdev | file] ...
1>
DESCRIPTION
xfs_fsr is applicable only to XFS filesystems.
xfs_fsr improves the organization of mounted filesystems.
The reorganization algorithm operates on one file at a time,
compacting or otherwise improving the layout of
the file extents (contiguous blocks of file data).
The following options are accepted by
xfs_fsr . The
-m , -t , and
-f options have no meaning if any filesystems
or files are specified on the command line.
-m mtab
Use this file for the list of filesystems to reorganize.
The default is to use
/etc/mtab .
-t seconds
How long to reorganize.
The default is 7200 (2 hours).
-f leftoff
Use this file instead of
/var/tmp/.fsrlast to read the state of where to start and as the file
to store the state of where reorganization left off.
-v
Verbose.
Print cryptic information about
each file being reorganized.
When invoked with no arguments
xfs_fsr reorganizes all regular files in all mounted filesystems.
xfs_fsr makes many cycles over
/etc/mtab each time making a single pass over each XFS filesystem.
Each pass goes through and selects files
that have the largest number of extents. It attempts
to defragment the top 10% of these files on each pass.
It runs for up to two hours after which it records the filesystem
where it left off, so it can start there the next time.
This information is stored in the file
/var/tmp/.fsrlast_xfs. If the information found here
is somehow inconsistent or out of date
it is ignored
and reorganization starts at the beginning of the first
filesystem found in
/etc/mtab .
xfs_fsr can be called with one or more arguments
naming filesystems (block device name),
and files to reorganize.
In this mode
xfs_fsr does not read or write
/var/tmp/.fsrlast_xfs nor does it run for a fixed time interval.
It makes one pass through each specified regular file and
all regular files in each specified filesystem.
A command line name referring to a symbolic link
(except to a file system device),
FIFO, or UNIX domain socket
generates a warning message, but is otherwise ignored.
While traversing the filesystem these types
of files are silently skipped.
FILES
/etc/mtab
contains default list of filesystems to reorganize.
xfs_fsr improves the layout of extents for each file by copying the entire
file to a temporary location and then interchanging the data extents
of the target and temporary files in an atomic manner.
This method requires that enough free disk space be available to copy
any given file and that the space be less fragmented than the original
file.
It also requires the owner of the file to have enough remaining
filespace quota to do the copy on systems running quotas.
xfs_fsr generates a warning message if space is not sufficient to improve
the target file.
A temporary file used in improving a file given on the command line
is created in the same parent directory of the target file and
is prefixed by the string '<3>.fsr3><1>'.
The temporary files used in improving an entire XFS device are stored
in a directory at the root of the target device and use the same
naming scheme.
The temporary files are unlinked upon creation so data will not be
readable by any other process.
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xfs_fsr does not operate on files that are currently mapped in memory.
A 'file busy' error can be seen for these files if the verbose
flag (<3>-v3><1>) is set.
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Files marked as no-defrag will be skipped. The
xfs_io(8) chattr command with the f attribute can be used to set or clear
this flag. Files and directories created in a directory with the
no-defrag flag will inherit the attribute.
An entry in
/etc/mtab or the file specified using the
-m option must have the
rw option specified for read and write access.
If this option is not present, then
xfs_fsr skips the
filesystem described by that line.
See the
fstab(5) reference page for
more details.
In general we do not foresee the need to run
xfs_fsr on system partitions such as
/ , /boot and
/usr as in general these will not suffer from fragmentation.
There are also issues with defragmenting files
lilo(8) uses to boot your system. It is recommended that these files
should be flagged as no-defrag with the
xfs_io(8) chattr command. Should these files be moved by
xfs_fsr then you must rerun
lilo before you reboot or you may have an unbootable system.