DM Multipath
DM Multipath
DM Multipath
DM Multipath Configuration and Administration
DM Multipath
Copyright © 2009 Red Hat, Inc. This material may only be distributed subject to the terms and
conditions set forth in the Open Publication License, V1.0 or later (the latest version of the OPL is
presently available at http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/).
Red Hat and the Red Hat "Shadow Man" logo are registered trademarks of Red Hat, Inc. in the United
States and other countries.
All other trademarks referenced herein are the property of their respective owners.
This book provides information on using the Device-Mapper Multipath feature of Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 5
Preface v
1. Audience ........................................................................................................................ v
2. Related Documentation ................................................................................................... v
3. Feedback ....................................................................................................................... vi
4. Document Conventions ................................................................................................... vi
4.1. Typographic Conventions ..................................................................................... vi
4.2. Pull-quote Conventions ....................................................................................... viii
4.3. Notes and Warnings ........................................................................................... viii
1. Device Mapper Multipathing 1
1.1. Overview of DM-Multipath ............................................................................................. 1
1.2. Storage Array Support .................................................................................................. 3
1.3. DM-Multipath Components ............................................................................................ 3
1.4. DM-Multipath Setup Overview ....................................................................................... 4
2. Multipath Devices 5
2.1. Multipath Device Identifiers ........................................................................................... 5
2.2. Consistent Multipath Device Names in a Cluster ............................................................ 5
2.3. Multipath Device Attributes ........................................................................................... 6
2.4. Multipath Devices in Logical Volumes ............................................................................ 6
3. Setting Up DM-Multipath 7
3.1. Setting Up DM-Multipath ............................................................................................... 7
3.2. Ignoring Local Disks when Generating Multipath Devices ................................................ 8
3.3. Adding Devices to the Multipathing Database ............................................................. 10
4. The DM-Multipath Configuration File 11
4.1. Configuration File Overview ........................................................................................ 11
4.2. Configuration File Blacklist .......................................................................................... 12
4.2.1. Blacklisting by WWID ....................................................................................... 12
4.2.2. Blacklisting By Device Name ............................................................................ 12
4.2.3. Blacklisting By Device Type ............................................................................. 13
4.2.4. Blacklist Exceptions ......................................................................................... 13
4.3. Configuration File Defaults .......................................................................................... 14
4.4. Multipaths Device Configuration Attributes ................................................................... 17
4.5. Configuration File Devices .......................................................................................... 18
5. DM-Multipath Administration and Troubleshooting 23
5.1. Resizing an Online Multipath Device ........................................................................... 23
5.2. The Multipath Daemon ............................................................................................... 24
5.3. Issues with Large Number of LUNs ............................................................................. 24
5.4. Issues with queue_if_no_path feature .......................................................................... 24
5.5. Multipath Command Output ........................................................................................ 25
5.6. Multipath Queries with multipath Command ................................................................. 25
5.7. Multipath Command Options ....................................................................................... 26
5.8. Determining Device Mapper Entries with the dmsetup Command ................................... 26
5.9. Troubleshooting with the multipathd Interactive Console ................................................ 27
A. Revision History 29
Index 31
iii
iv
Preface
This book describes the Device Mapper Multipath (DM-Multipath) feature of Red Hat Enterprise Linux
for the RHEL 5 release.
1. Audience
This book is intended to be used by system administrators managing systems running the Linux
operating system. It requires familiarity with Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
2. Related Documentation
For more information about using Red Hat Enterprise Linux, refer to the following resources:
• Red Hat Enterprise Linux Installation Guide — Provides information regarding installation of Red
Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
• Red Hat Enterprise Linux Deployment Guide — Provides information regarding the deployment,
configuration and administration of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
For more information about Red Hat Cluster Suite for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5, refer to the following
resources:
• Red Hat Cluster Suite Overview — Provides a high level overview of the Red Hat Cluster Suite.
• Configuring and Managing a Red Hat Cluster — Provides information about installing, configuring
and managing Red Hat Cluster components.
• Logical Volume Manager Administration — Provides a description of the Logical Volume Manager
(LVM), including information on running LVM in a clustered environment.
• Global File System: Configuration and Administration — Provides information about installing,
configuring, and maintaining Red Hat GFS (Red Hat Global File System).
• Global File System 2: Configuration and Administration — Provides information about installing,
configuring, and maintaining Red Hat GFS2 (Red Hat Global File System 2).
• Using GNBD with Global File System — Provides an overview on using Global Network Block
Device (GNBD) with Red Hat GFS.
• Red Hat Cluster Suite Release Notes — Provides information about the current release of Red Hat
Cluster Suite.
Red Hat Cluster Suite documentation and other Red Hat documents are available in HTML,
PDF, and RPM versions on the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Documentation CD and online at http://
www.redhat.com/docs/.
v
Preface
3. Feedback
If you spot a typo, or if you have thought of a way to make this manual better, we would love to
hear from you. Please submit a report in Bugzilla (http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/) against the
component rh-cs.
By mentioning this manual's identifier, we know exactly which version of the guide you have.
If you have a suggestion for improving the documentation, try to be as specific as possible. If you have
found an error, please include the section number and some of the surrounding text so we can find it
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This manual uses several conventions to highlight certain words and phrases and draw attention to
specific pieces of information.
1
In PDF and paper editions, this manual uses typefaces drawn from the Liberation Fonts set. The
Liberation Fonts set is also used in HTML editions if the set is installed on your system. If not,
alternative but equivalent typefaces are displayed. Note: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and later includes
the Liberation Fonts set by default.
Mono-spaced Bold
Used to highlight system input, including shell commands, file names and paths. Also used to highlight
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The above includes a file name, a shell command and a key cap, all presented in Mono-spaced Bold
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Key-combinations can be distinguished from key caps by the hyphen connecting each part of a key-
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Press Ctrl-Alt-F1 to switch to the first virtual terminal. Press Ctrl-Alt-F7 to return
to your X-Windows session.
1
https://fedorahosted.org/liberation-fonts/
vi
Typographic Conventions
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vii
Preface
Aside from standard usage for presenting the title of a work, italics denotes the first use of a new and
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viii
Notes and Warnings
Note
A Note is a tip or shortcut or alternative approach to the task at hand. Ignoring a note
should have no negative consequences, but you might miss out on a trick that makes your
life easier.
Important
Important boxes detail things that are easily missed: configuration changes that only
apply to the current session, or services that need restarting before an update will apply.
Ignoring Important boxes won't cause data loss but may cause irritation and frustration.
Warning
A Warning should not be ignored. Ignoring warnings will most likely cause data loss.
ix
x
Chapter 1.
• Redundancy
• Improved Performance
DM-Multipath can be configured in active/active mode, where I/O is spread over the paths in a
round-robin fashion. In some configurations, DM-Multipath can detect loading on the I/O paths and
dynamically re-balance the load.
Figure 1.1, “Active/Passive Multipath Configuration with One RAID Device” shows an active/passive
configuration with two I/O paths from the server to a RAID device. There are 2 HBAs on the server, 2
SAN switches, and 2 RAID controllers.
In this configuration, there is one I/O path that goes through hba1, SAN1, and controller 1 and a
second I/O path that goes through hba2, SAN2, and controller2. There are many points of possible
failure in this configuration:
1
Chapter 1. Device Mapper Multipathing
• HBA failure
• FC cable failure
With DM-Multipath configured, a failure at any of these points will cause DM-Multipath to switch to the
alternate I/O path.
Figure 1.2, “Active/Passive Multipath Configuration with Two RAID Devices” shows a more complex
active/passive configuration with 2 HBAs on the server, 2 SAN switches, and 2 RAID devices with 2
RAID controllers each.
In the example shown in Figure 1.2, “Active/Passive Multipath Configuration with Two RAID Devices”,
there are two I/O paths to each RAID device (just as there are in the example shown in Figure 1.1,
“Active/Passive Multipath Configuration with One RAID Device”). With DM-Multipath configured, a
failure at any of the points of the I/O path to either of the RAID devices will cause DM-Multipath to
switch to the alternate I/O path for that device.
Figure 1.3, “Active/Active Multipath Configuration with One RAID Device” shows an active/active
configuration with 2 HBAs on the server, 1 SAN switch, and 2 RAID controllers. There are four I/O
paths from the server to a storage device:
• hba1 to controller1
• hba1 to controller2
• hba2 to controller1
• hba2 to controller2
2
Storage Array Support
Some storage arrays require special handling of I/O errors and path switching. These require separate
hardware handler kernel modules.
Component Description
dm-multipath kernel module Reroutes I/O and supports failover for paths and path groups.
multipath command Lists and configures multipath devices. Normally started up
with /etc/rc.sysinit, it can also be started up by a udev
program whenever a block device is added or it can be run by the
initramfs file system.
multipathd daemon Monitors paths; as paths fail and come back, it may initiate path
group switches. Provides for interactive changes to multipath
devices. This must be restarted for any changes to the /etc/
multipath.conf file.
3
Chapter 1. Device Mapper Multipathing
Component Description
kpartx command Creates device mapper devices for the partitions on a device It is
necessary to use this command for DOS-based partitions with DM-
MP. The kpartx is provided in its own package, but the device-
mapper-multipath package depends on it.
Table 1.1. DM-Multipath Components
The basic procedure for configuring your system with DM-Multipath is as follows:
Detailed setup instructions for several example multipath configurations are provided in see Chapter 3,
Setting Up DM-Multipath.
4
Chapter 2.
Multipath Devices
Without DM-Multipath, each path from a server node to a storage controller is treated by the system
as a separate device, even when the I/O path connects the same server node to the same storage
controller. DM-Multipath provides a way of organizing the I/O paths logically, by creating a single
multipath device on top of the underlying devices.
For example, a node with two HBAs attached to a storage controller with two ports via a single
unzoned FC switch sees four devices: /dev/sda, /dev/sdb, dev/sdc, and /dev/sdd. DM-
Multipath creates a single device with a unique WWID that reroutes I/O to those four underlying
devices according to the multipath configuration. When the user_friendly_names configuration
option is set to yes, the name of the multipath device is set to mpathn.
When new devices are brought under the control of DM-Multipath, the new devices may be seen in
three different places under the /dev directory: /dev/mapper/mpathn, /dev/mpath/mpathn, and
/dev/dm-n.
• The devices in /dev/mapper are created early in the boot process. Use these devices to access
the multipathed devices, for example when creating logical volumes.
• The devices in /dev/mpath are provided as a convenience so that all multipathed devices can
be seen in one directory. These devices are created by the udev device manager and may not be
available on startup when the system needs to access them. Do not use these devices for creating
logical volumes or filesystems.
• Any devices of the form /dev/dm-n are for internal use only and should never be used.
You can also set the name of a multipath device to a name of your choosing by using the alias
option in the multipaths section of the multipath configuration file. For information on the
multipaths section of the multipath configuration file, see Section 4.4, “Multipaths Device
Configuration Attributes”.
• Use the alias option in the multipaths section of the multipath configuration file to set the name
of the multipath device. The alias for the multipath device is consistent across all the nodes in
5
Chapter 2. Multipath Devices
a cluster. For information on the multipaths section of the multipath configuration file, see see
Section 4.4, “Multipaths Device Configuration Attributes”.
• If you want the system-defined user-friendly names to be consistent across all nodes in the cluster,
set up all of the multipath devices on one machine. Then copy the /var/lib/multipath/
bindings file from that machine to all the other machines in the cluster.
pvcreate /dev/mapper/mpath0
You can use the resulting LVM physical device when you create an LVM volume group just as you
would use any other LVM physical device.
Note
If you attempt to create an LVM physical volume on a whole device on which you have
configured partitions, the pvcreate command will fail. Note that the Anaconda and
Kickstart installation programs create empty partition tables if you do not specify otherwise
for every block device. If you wish to use the whole device rather than a partition, you
must remove the existing partitions from the device. You can remove existing partitions
with the kpartx -d and the fdisk commands. If your system has block devices that are
greater that 2Tb, you can use the parted command to remove partitions.
When you create an LVM logical volume that uses active/passive multipath arrays as the underlying
physical devices, you should include filters in the lvm.conf to exclude the disks that underlie the
multipath devices. This is because if the array automatically changes the active path to the passive
path when it receives I/O, multipath will failover and failback whenever LVM scans the passive path if
these devices are not filtered. For active/passive arrays that require a command to make the passive
path active, LVM prints a warning message when this occurs.
To filter all SCSI devices in the LVM configuration file (lvm.conf), include the following filter in the
devices section of the file.
6
Chapter 3.
Setting Up DM-Multipath
This chapter provides step-by-step example procedures for configuring DM-Multipath. It includes the
following procedures:
Use the following procedure to set up DM-Multipath for a basic failover configuration.
1. Edit the /etc/multipath.conf file by commenting out the following lines at the top of the file.
This section of the configuration file, in its initial state, blacklists all devices. You must comment it
out to enable multipathing.
blacklist {
devnode "*"
}
# blacklist {
# devnode "*"
# }
2. The default settings for DM-Multipath are compiled in to the system and do not need to be
explicitly set in the /etc/multipath.conf file.
The default value of path_grouping_policy is set to failover, so in this example you do not
need to change the default value. For information on changing the values in the configuration file
to something other than the defaults, see Chapter 4, The DM-Multipath Configuration File.
The initial defaults section of the configuration file configures your system that the names of the
multipath devices are of the form mpathn; without this setting, the names of the multipath devices
would be aliased to the WWID of the device.
modprobe dm-multipath
7
Chapter 3. Setting Up DM-Multipath
The multipath -v2 command prints out multipathed paths that show which devices are
multipathed. If the command does not print anything out, ensure that all SAN connections are set
up properly and the system is multipathed.
For further information on the multipath command output, see Section 5.5, “Multipath
Command Output”.
5. Execute the following command to ensure sure that the multipath daemon starts on bootup:
chkconfig multipathd on
Since the value of user_friendly_name is set to yes in the configuration file the multipath devices
will be created as /dev/mapper/mpathn. For information on setting the name of the device to an
alias of your choosing, see Chapter 4, The DM-Multipath Configuration File.
1. Determine which disks are the internal disks and mark them as the ones to blacklist.
In this example, /dev/sda is the internal disk. Note that as originally configured in the default
multipath configuration file, executing the multipath -v2 shows the local disk, /dev/sda, in
the multipath map.
For further information on the multipath command output, see Section 5.5, “Multipath
Command Output”.
create: 3600a0b80001327510000009a436215ec
8
Ignoring Local Disks when Generating Multipath Devices
[size=12 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0
\_ 2:0:0:1 sdc 8:32
\_ 3:0:0:1 sdg 8:96
create: 3600a0b80001327d800000070436216b3
[size=12 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0
\_ 2:0:0:2 sdd 8:48
\_ 3:0:0:2 sdh 8:112
create: 3600a0b80001327510000009b4362163e
[size=12 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0
\_ 2:0:0:3 sde 8:64
\_ 3:0:0:3 sdi 8:128
2. In order to prevent the device mapper from mapping /dev/sda in its multipath maps, edit the
blacklist section of the /etc/multipath.conf file to include this device. Although you could
blacklist the sda device using a devnode type, that would not be safe procedure since /dev/sda
is not guaranteed to be the same on reboot. To blacklist individual devices, you can blacklist using
the WWID of that device.
Note that in the output to the multipath -v2 command, the WWID of the /dev/sda device is
SIBM-ESXSST336732LC____F3ET0EP0Q000072428BX1. To blacklist this device, include the
following in the /etc/multipath.conf file.
blacklist {
wwid SIBM-ESXSST336732LC____F3ET0EP0Q000072428BX1
}
3. After you have updated the /etc/multipath.conf file, you must manually tell the
multipathd daemon to reload the file. The following command reloads the updated /etc/
multipath.conf file.
multipath -F
multipath -v2
The local disk or disks should no longer be listed in the new multipath maps, as shown in the
following example.
9
Chapter 3. Setting Up DM-Multipath
create: 3600a0b80001327510000009a436215ec
[size=12 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0
\_ 2:0:0:1 sdc 8:32
\_ 3:0:0:1 sdg 8:96
create: 3600a0b80001327d800000070436216b3
[size=12 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0
\_ 2:0:0:2 sdd 8:48
\_ 3:0:0:2 sdh 8:112
create: 3600a0b80001327510000009b4362163e
[size=12 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0
\_ 2:0:0:3 sde 8:64
\_ 3:0:0:3 sdi 8:128
If you need to add a storage device that is not supported by default as a known multipath device, edit
the /etc/multipath.conf file and insert the appropriate device information.
For example, to add information about the HP Open-V series the entry looks like this:
devices {
device {
vendor "HP"
product "OPEN-V."
getuid_callout "/sbin/scsi_id -g -u -p0x80 -s /block/%n"
}
}
For more information on the devices section of the configuration file, see Section 4.5, “Configuration
File Devices”.
10
Chapter 4.
You can override the default configuration values for DM-Multipath by editing the /etc/
multipath.conf configuration file. If necessary, you can also add a storage array that is not
supported by default to the configuration file. This chapter provides information on parsing and
modifying the multipath.conf file. It contains sections on the following topics:
In the multipath configuration file, you need to specify only the sections that you need
for your configuration, or that you wish to change from the default values specified in the
multipath.conf.defaults file. If there are sections of the file that are not relevant to your
environment or for which you do not need to override the default values, you can leave them
commented out, as they are in the initial file.
blacklist
Listing of specific devices that will not be considered for multipath. By default all devices are
blacklisted. Usually the default blacklist section is commented out.
blacklist_exceptions
Listing of multipath candidates that would otherwise be blacklisted according to the parameters of
the blacklist section.
defaults
General default settings for DM-Multipath.
multipaths
Settings for the characteristics of individual multipath devices. These values overwrite what is
specified in the defaults and devices sections of the configuration file.
11
Chapter 4. The DM-Multipath Configuration File
devices
Settings for the individual storage controllers. These values overwrite what is specified in the
defaults section of the configuration file. If you are using a storage array that is not supported
by default, you may need to create a devices subsection for your array.
When the system determines the attributes of a multipath device, first it checks the multipath settings,
then the per devices settings, then the multipath system defaults.
By default, all devices are blacklisted, since the following lines appear in the initial configuration file.
blacklist {
devnode "*"
}
To enable multipathing on all of the devices that are supported by default, comment out those lines, as
described in Section 3.1, “Setting Up DM-Multipath”.
After commenting out the universal blacklist, you can specify general device types and individual
devices to blacklist. You can blacklist devices according to the following criteria:
By default, a variety of device types are blacklisted, even after you comment out the initial blacklist
section of the configuration file. For information, see Section 4.2.2, “Blacklisting By Device Name”.
The following example shows the lines in the configuration file that would blacklist a device with a
WWID of 26353900f02796769.
blacklist {
wwid 26353900f02796769
}
12
Blacklisting By Device Type
The following example shows the lines in the configuration file that would blacklist all SCSI devices,
since it blacklists are sd* devices.
blacklist {
devnode "^sd[a-z]"
}
You can use a devnode entry in the blacklist section of the configuraion file to specify individual
devices to blacklist rather than all devices of specific type; this is not recommended, however. Unless
it is statically mapped by udev rules, there is no guarantee that a specific device will have the same
name on reboot. For example, a device name could change from /dev/sda to /dev/sdb on reboot.
By default, the following devnode entries are compiled in the default blacklist; the devices that these
entires blacklist do not generally support DM-Multipath. To enable multipathing on any of these
devices, you would need to specify them in the blacklist_exceptions section of the configuration
file, as described in Section 4.2.4, “Blacklist Exceptions”.
blacklist {
devnode "^(ram|raw|loop|fd|md|dm-|sr|scd|st)[0-9]*"
devnode "^hd[a-z]"
}
blacklist {
device {
vendor "IBM"
product "3S42" #DS4200 Product 10
}
device {
vendor "HP"
product "*"
}
}
13
Chapter 4. The DM-Multipath Configuration File
blacklist_exceptions {
device {
vendor "IBM"
product "S/390.*"
}
}
When specifying devices in the blacklist_exceptions section of the configuration file, you must
specify the exceptions in the same way they were specified in the blacklist. For example, a WWID
exception will not apply to devices specified by a devnode blacklist entry, even if the blacklisted
device is associated with that WWID. Similarly, devnode exceptions apply only to devnode entries,
and device exceptions apply only to device entries.
defaults {
user_friendly_names yes
}
The configuration file includes a template of configuration defaults. This section is commented out, as
follows.
#defaults {
# udev_dir /dev
# polling_interval 10
# selector "round-robin 0"
# path_grouping_policy multibus
# getuid_callout "/sbin/scsi_id -g -u -s /block/%n"
# prio_callout /bin/true
# path_checker readsector0
# rr_min_io 100
# max_fds 8192
# rr_weight priorities
# failback immediate
# no_path_retry fail
# user_friendly_names yes
#}
To overwrite the default value for any of the configuration parameters, you can copy the relevant
line from this template into the defaults section and uncomment it. For example, to overwrite
the path_grouping_policy parameter so that it is multibus rather than the default value
of failover, copy the appropriate line from the template to the initial defaults section of the
configuration file, and uncomment it, as follows.
14
Configuration File Defaults
defaults {
user_friendly_names yes
path_grouping_policy multibus
}
Table 4.1, “Multipath Configuration Defaults” describes the attributes that are set in the defaults
section of the multipath.conf configuration file. These values are used by DM-Multipath unless
they are overwritten by the attributes specified in the devices and multipaths sections of the
multipath.conf file.
Attribute Description
udev_dir Specifies the directory where udev device nodes are created. The
default value is /udev.
polling_interval Specifies the interval between two path checks in seconds. The
default value is 5.
selector Specifies the default algorithm to use in determining what path to
use for the next I/O operation. The default value is round-robin
0.
path_grouping_policy Specifies the default path grouping policy to apply to unspecified
multipaths. Possible values include:
failover = 1 path per priority group
multibus = all valid paths in 1 priority group
group_by_serial = 1 priority group per detected serial number
group_by_prio = 1 priority group per path priority value
group_by_node_name = 1 priority group per target node name
The default value is failover.
getuid_callout Specifies the default program and arguments to call out to obtain a
unique path identifier. An absolute path is required.
The default value is /sbin/scsi_id -g -u -s.
prio_callout Specifies the the default program and arguments to call out to
obtain a path priority value. For example, the ALUA bits in SPC-3
provide an exploitable prio value for example. "none" is a valid
value. The default value is no callout, indicating all paths are equal
path_checker Specifies the default method used to determine the state
of the paths. Possible values include: readsector0, tur,
emc_clariion, hp_sw, and directio. The default value is
readsector0.
rr_min_io Specifies the number of I/O requests to route to a path before
switching to the next path in the current path group. The default
value is 1000.
max_fds (RHEL 5.2 and later) Sets the maximum number of open file
descriptors for the multipathd process. In RHEL 5.3, this
option allows a value of max, which sets the number of open file
descriptors to the system maximum.
rr_weight If set to priorities, then instead of sending rr_min_io
requests to a path before calling selector to choose the
15
Chapter 4. The DM-Multipath Configuration File
Attribute Description
next path, the number of requests to send is determined by
rr_min_io times the path's priority, as determined by the
prio_callout program. Currently, there are priority callouts only
for devices that use the group_by_prio path grouping policy,
which means that all the paths in a path group will always have the
same priority.
If set to uniform, all path weights are equal. The default value is
uniform.
failback Specifies path group failback.
A value of 0 or immediate specifies that as soon as there is a
path group with a higher priority than the current path group the
system switches to that path group.
A numeric value greater than zero specifies deferred failback,
expressed in seconds.
A value of manual specifies that failback can happen only with
operator intervention.
The default value is manual.
no_path_retry A numeric value for this attribute specifies the number of times
the system should attempt to use a failed path before disabling
queueing.
A value of fail indicates immediate failure, without queuing.
A value of queue indicates that queuing should not stop until the
path is fixed.
The default value is (null).
flush_on_last_del (RHEL 5.3 and later) If set to yes, the multipathd daemon will
disable queueing when the last path to a device has been deleted.
The default value is no.
queue_without_daemon (RHEL 5.3 and later) If set to no, the multipathd daemon will
disable queueing for all devices when it is shut down. The default
value is yes.
user_friendly_names If set to yes, specifies that the system should using the bindings
file to assign a persistent and unique alias to the multipath, in
the form of mpathn. The default location of the bindings file is
/var/lib/multipath/bindings, but this can be changed
with the bindings_file option. If set to no, specifies that the
system should use use the WWID as the alias for the multipath. In
either case, what is specified here will be overriden by any device-
specific aliases you specify in the multipaths section of the
configuration file. The default value is no.
bindings_file (RHEL 5.2 and later) The location of the bindings file that is
used with the user_friend_names option. The default value is /
var/lib/multipath/bindings.
mode (RHEL 5.3 and later) The mode to use for the multipath device
nodes, in octal. The default value is determined by the process.
uid (RHEL 5.3 and later) The user ID to use for the multipath device
nodes. You must use the numeric user ID. The default value is
determined by the process.
16
Multipaths Device Configuration Attributes
Attribute Description
gid (RHEL 5.3 and later) The group ID to use for the multipath device
nodes. You must use the numeric group ID. The default value is
determined by the process.
Table 4.1. Multipath Configuration Defaults
Attribute Description
wwid Specifies the WWID of the multipath device to which the
multipath attributes apply.
alias Specifies the symbolic name for the multipath device to which the
multipath attributes apply.
path_grouping_policy Specifies the default path grouping policy to apply to unspecified
multipaths. Possible values include:
failover = 1 path per priority group
multibus = all valid paths in 1 priority group
group_by_serial = 1 priority group per detected serial number
group_by_prio = 1 priority group per path priority value
group_by_node_name = 1 priority group per target node name
path_selector Specifies the default algorithm to use in determining what path to
use for the next I/O operation.
failback Specifies path group failback.
A value of 0 or immediate specifies that as soon as there is a
path group with a higher priority than the current path group the
system switches to that path group.
A numeric value greater than zero specifies deferred failback,
expressed in seconds.
A value of manual specifies that failback can happen only with
operator intervention.
rr_weight If set to priorities, then instead of sending rr_min_io
requests to a path before calling selector to choose the
next path, the number of requests to send is determined by
rr_min_io times the path's priority, as determined by the
prio_callout program. Currently, there are priority callouts only
for devices that use the group_by_prio path grouping policy,
which means that all the paths in a path group will always have the
same priority.
If set to uniform, all path weights are equal.
no_path_retry A numeric value for this attribute specifies the number of times
the system should attempt to use a failed path before disabling
queueing.
A value of fail indicates immediate failure, without queueing.
17
Chapter 4. The DM-Multipath Configuration File
Attribute Description
A value of queue indicates that queuing should not stop until the
path is fixed.
flush_on_last_del (RHEL 5.3 and later) If set to yes, the multipathd daemon will
disable queueing when the last path to a device has been deleted.
The default value is no.
rr_min_io Specifies the number of I/O requests to route to a path before
switching to the next path in the current path group.
mode (RHEL 5.3 and later) The mode to use for the multipath device
nodes, in octal. The default value is determined by the process.
uid (RHEL 5.3 and later) The user ID to use for the multipath device
nodes. You must use the numeric user ID. The default value is
determined by the process.
gid (RHEL 5.3 and later) The group ID to use for the multipath device
nodes. You must use the numeric group ID. The default value is
determined by the process.
Table 4.2. Multipath Attributes
The following example shows multipath attributes specified in the configuration file for two specific
multipath devices. The first device has a WWID of 3600508b4000156d70001200000b0000 and a
symbolic name of yellow.
The second multipath device in the example has a WWID of 1DEC_____321816758474 and a
symbolic name of red. In this example, the rr_weight attributes is set to priorities.
multipaths {
multipath {
wwid 3600508b4000156d70001200000b0000
alias yellow
path_grouping_policy multibus
path_checker readsector0
path_selector "round-robin 0"
failback manual
rr_weight priorities
no_path_retry 5
}
multipath {
wwid 1DEC_____321816758474
alias red
rr_weight priorities
}
}
18
Configuration File Devices
multipath.conf file for paths that contain the device. These attributes override the attributes set in
the defaults section of the multipath.conf file.
Many devices that support multipathing are included by default in a multipath configuration. The values
for the devices that are supported by default are listed in the multipath.conf.defaults file.
You probably will not need to modify the values for these devices, but if you do you can overwrite the
default values by including an entry in the the configuration file for the device that overwrites those
values. You can copy the device configuration defaults from the multipath.conf.defaults file for
the device and override the values that you want to change.
To add a device to this section of the configuration file that is not configured automatically by default,
you need to set the vendor and product parameters. You can find these values by looking at /sys/
block/device_name/device/vendor and /sys/block/device_name/device/model where
device_name is the device to be multipathed, as in the following example:
The additional parameters to specify depend on your specific device. If the device is active/active, you
will usually not need to set additional parameters. You may want to set path_grouping_policy
to multibus. Other parameters you may need to set are no_path_retry and rr_min_io, as
described in Table 4.3, “Device Attributes”.
If the device is active/passive, but it automatically switches paths with I/O to the passive path,
you need to change the checker function to one that does not send IO/ to the path to test if it is
working (otherwise, your device will keep failing over). This almost always means that you set the
path_checker to tur; this works for all SCSI devices that support the Test Unit Ready command,
which most do.
If the device needs a special command to switch paths, then configuring this device for multipath
requires a hardware handler kernel module. The current hardware handlers are emc and "rdac. If
these are not sufficient for your device, you may not be able to configure the device for multipath.
Attribute Description
vendor Specifies the vendor name of the storage device to which the
device attributes apply, for example COMPAQ.
product Specifies the product name of the storage device to which the
device attributes apply, for example HSV110 (C)COMPAQ.
path_grouping_policy Specifies the default path grouping policy to apply to unspecified
multipaths. Possible values include:
failover = 1 path per priority group
multibus = all valid paths in 1 priority group
group_by_serial = 1 priority group per detected serial number
group_by_prio = 1 priority group per path priority value
group_by_node_name = 1 priority group per target node name
getuid_callout Specifies the default program and arguments to call out to obtain a
unique path identifier. An absolute path is required.
19
Chapter 4. The DM-Multipath Configuration File
Attribute Description
prio_callout Specifies the the default program and arguments to call out to
obtain a path weight. Weights are summed for each path group to
determine the next path group to use in case of failue. "none" is a
valid value.
path_checker Specifies the default method used to determine the state of
the paths. Possible values include readsector0 and tur,
emc_clariion, hp_sw, and directio.
path_selector Specifies the default algorithm to use in determining what path to
use for the next I/O operation.
features The extra features of multipath devices. The only existing
feature is queue_if_no_path, which is the same as setting
no_path_retry to queue. For information on issues that may
arise when using this feature, see Section 5.4, “Issues with
queue_if_no_path feature”.
hardware_handler Specifies a module that will be used to perform hardware specific
actions when switching path groups or handling I/O errors.
Possible values include 0, 1 emc, and 1 rdac. The default value
is 0.
rr_weight If set to priorities, then instead of sending rr_min_io
requests to a path before calling selector to choose the
next path, the number of requests to send is determined by
rr_min_io times the path's priority, as determined by the
prio_callout program. Currently, there are priority callouts only
for devices that use the group_by_prio path grouping policy,
which means that all the paths in a path group will always have the
same priority.
If set to uniform, all path weights are equal. The default value is
uniform.
no_path_retry A numeric value for this attribute specifies the number of times
the system should attempt to use a failed path before disabling
queueing.
A value of fail indicates immediate failure, without queuing.
A value of queue indicates that queuing should not stop until the
path is fixed.
The default value is (null).
failback Specifies path group failback.
A value of 0 or immediate specifies that as soon as there is a
path group with a higher priority than the current path group the
system switches to that path group.
A numeric value greater than zero specifies deferred failback,
expressed in seconds.
A value of manual specifies that failback can happen only with
operator intervention.
rr_min_io Specifies the number of I/O requests to route to a path before
switching to the next path in the current path group. The default
value is 1000.
20
Configuration File Devices
Attribute Description
flush_on_last_del (RHEL 5.3 and later) If set to yes, the multipathd daemon will
disable queueing when the last path to a device has been deleted.
The default value is no.
product_blacklist Specifies a regular expression used to blacklist devices by
product.
Table 4.3. Device Attributes
The following example shows a device entry in the multipath configuration file.
# }
# device {
# vendor "COMPAQ "
# product "MSA1000 "
# path_grouping_policy multibus
# path_checker tur
# rr_weight priorities
# }
#}
21
22
Chapter 5.
# multipath -l
3. Resize your paths. For SCSI devices, writing a 1 to the rescan file for the device causes the
SCSI driver to rescan, as in the following command:
# resize2fs /dev/mapper/mpath0
23
Chapter 5. DM-Multipath Administration and Troubleshooting
For further information on resizing an online LUN, see the Online Storage Reconfiguration Guide.
This line causes the udev device manager to run multipath every time a block device is added
to the node. Even with this line removed, the multipathd daemon will still automatically create
multipathed devices, and multipath will still be called during the boot process for nodes with
multipathed root file systems. The only change is that multipathed devices will not be automatically
created when the multipathd daemon is not running, which should not be a problem for the vast
majority of multipath users.
When you set the no_path_retry parameter, remove the features "1 queue_if_no_path"
option from the /etc/multipath.conf file as well. If, however, you are using a multipathed device
for which the features "1 queue_if_no_path" option is set as a compiled-in default, as it is for
many SAN devices, you must explicitly add features "0" to override this default. You can do this
by copying the existing devices section for your device from /usr/share/doc/device-mapper-
multipath-0.4.7/multipath.conf.defaults into /etc/multipath.conf and editing it to
suit your needs.
If you need to use the features "1 queue_if_no_path" option and you experience the issue
noted here, use the dmsetup command to edit the policy at runtime for a particular LUN (that is, for
which all the paths are unavailable). For example, if you want to change the policy on the multipath
device mpath2 from "queue_if_no_path" to "fail_if_no_path", execute the following
command.
Note that you must specify the mpathn alias rather than the path.
24
Multipath Command Output
\_ scheduling_policy [path_group_priority_if_known]
[path_group_status_if_known]
If the path is up and ready for I/O, the status of the path is ready or active. If the path is down, the
status is faulty or failed. The path status is updated periodically by the multipathd daemon
based on the polling interval defined in the /etc/multipath.conf file.
The dm status is similar to the path status, but from the kernel's point of view. The dm status has
two states: failed, which is analogous to faulty, and active which covers all other path states.
Occasionally, the path state and the dm state of a device will temporarily not agree.
Note
When a multipath device is being created or modified, the path group status and the dm
status are not known. Also, the features are not always correct. When a multipath device
is being listed, the path group priority is not known.
25
Chapter 5. DM-Multipath Administration and Troubleshooting
the device mapper. The -ll option displays the information the -l displays in addition to all other
available components of the system.
When displaying the multipath configuration, there are three verbosity levels you can specify with the
-v option of the multipath command. Specifying -v0 yields no output. Specifying -v1 outputs the
created or updated multipath names only, which you can then feed to other tools such as kpartx.
Specifying -v2 prints all detected paths, multipaths, and device maps.
# multipath -1
mpath1 (3600d0230003228bc000339414edb8101)
[size=10 GB][features="0"][hwhandler="0"]
\_ round-robin 0 [prio=1][active]
\_ 2:0:0:6 sdb 8:16 [active][ready]
\_ round-robin 0 [prio=1][enabled]
\_ 3:0:0:6 sdc 8:64 [active][ready]
Option Description
-l Display the current multipath configuration gathered from sysfs and
the device mapper.
-ll Display the current multipath configuration gathered from sysfs, the
device mapper, and all other available components on the system.
-f device Remove the named multipath device.
-F Remove all multipath devices.
Table 5.1. Useful multipath Command Options
The following command displays all the device mapper devices and their major and minor numbers.
The minor numbers determine the name of the dm device. For example, a minor number of 3
corresponds to the multipathed device /dev/dm-3.
# dmsetup ls
mpath2 (253, 4)
mpath4p1 (253, 12)
mpath5p1 (253, 11)
mpath1 (253, 3)
26
Troubleshooting with the multipathd Interactive Console
The multipathd interactive console can be used to troubleshoot problems you may be having with
your system. For example, the following command sequence displays the multipath configuration,
including the defaults, before exiting the console.
# multipathd -k
> > show config
> > CTRL-D
The following command sequence ensures that multipath has picked up any changes to the
multipath.conf,
# multipathd -k
> > reconfigure
> > CTRL-D
Use the following command sequence to ensure that the path checker is working properly.
# multipathd -k
> > show paths
> > CTRL-D
27
28
Appendix A. Revision History
Revision 5.4-1 Tue Aug 18 2009 Steven Levine [email protected]
Resolves: #466970
Adds note clarifying that if a multipathed device contains partitions, you cannot create a logical
volume using the whole device without removing the partitions.
Resolves #513330
Elaborates documentation to address issues with queue_if_no_path features option.
Resolves #510707
Adds a procedure for resizing online multipath devices.
Resolves #498986
Fixes minor typo.
Resolves #498988
Fixes minor typo.
29
30
Index
product_blacklist parameter, 19
queue_without_daemon parameter, 15
rr_min_io parameter, 15, 17
rr_weight parameter, 15, 17, 19
Symbols selector parameter, 15
/etc/multipath.conf package, 7 udev_dir parameter, 15
uid parameter, 15, 17
A user_friendly_names parameter, 14, 15
active/active configuration vendor parameter, 19
definition, 1 wwid parameter, 17
illustration, 2 configuring
active/passive configuration DM-Multipath, 7
definition, 1
illustration, 1 D
alias parameter , 17 defaults section
configuration file, 5 multipath.conf file, 14
dev/mapper directory, 5
B dev/mpath directory, 5
bindings_file parameter, 15 device name, 5
blacklist device-mapper-multipath package, 7
configuration file, 12 devices
default devices, 13 adding, 10, 18
device name, 12 devices section
device type, 13 multipath.conf file, 18
in configuration file, 7 DM-Multipath
WWID, 12 and LVM, 6, 6
blacklist_exceptions section components, 3
multipath.conf file, 13 configuration file, 11
configuring, 7
C definition, 1
device name, 5
chkconfig command, 8
devices, 5
configuration file
failover, 1
alias parameter, 17
overview, 1
bindings_file parameter, 15
redundancy, 1
blacklist, 7, 12
setup, 7
failback parameter, 15, 17, 19
setup, overview, 4
features parameter, 19
dm-multipath kernel module , 3
flush_on_last_del parameter, 15, 17, 19
dm-n devices, 5
getuid_callout parameter, 15, 19
dmsetup command, determining device mapper
gid parameter, 15, 17
entries, 26
hardware_handler parameter, 19
max_fds parameter, 15
mode parameter, 15, 17 F
no_path_retry parameter, 15, 17, 19 failback parameter, 15, 17, 19
overview, 11 failover, 1
path_checker parameter, 15, 19 features parameter, 19
path_grouping_policy parameter, 15, 17, 19 feedback, vi, vi
path_selector parameter, 17, 19 flush_on_last_del parameter, 15, 17, 19
polling-interval parameter, 15
prio_callout parameter, 15, 19 G
product parameter, 19 getuid_callout parameter, 15, 19
31
Index
N
no_path_retry parameter, 15, 17, 19
P
path_checker parameter, 15, 19
path_grouping_policy parameter, 15, 17, 19
path_selector parameter, 17, 19
polling_interval parameter, 15
prio_callout parameter, 15, 19
32