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btrfs-progs: docs: document squota
Document the new options in btrfs quota and mkfs.btrfs. Also, add a section to the long form qgroups document about squota. Signed-off-by: Boris Burkov <boris@bur.io> Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
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@ -47,8 +47,16 @@ SUBCOMMAND
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disable <path>
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Disable subvolume quota support for a filesystem.
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enable <path>
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Enable subvolume quota support for a filesystem.
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enable [options] <path>
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Enable subvolume quota support for a filesystem. At this point it's
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possible the two modes of accounting. The *full* means that extent
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ownership by subvolumes will be tracked all the time, *simple* will
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account everything to the first owner. See the section for more details.
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``Options``
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-s|--simple
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use simple quotas (squotas) instead of full qgroup accounting
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rescan [options] <path>
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Trash all qgroup numbers and scan the metadata again with the current config.
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@ -188,3 +188,64 @@ but some snapshots for backup purposes are being created by the system. The
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user's snapshots should be accounted to the user, not the system. The solution
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is similar to the one from section *Accounting snapshots to the user*, but do
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not assign system snapshots to user's qgroup.
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Simple quotas (squota)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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As detailed in this document, qgroups can handle many complex extent sharing
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and unsharing scenarios while maintaining an accurate count of exclusive and
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shared usage. However, this flexibility comes at a cost: many of the
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computations are global, in the sense that we must count up the number of trees
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referring to an extent after its references change. This can slow down
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transaction commits and lead to unacceptable latencies, especially in cases
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where snapshots scale up.
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To work around this limitation of qgroups, btrfs also supports a second set of
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quota semantics: *simple quotas* or *squotas*. Squotas fully share the qgroups API
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and hierarchical model, but do not track shared vs. exclusive usage. Instead,
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they account all extents to the subvolume that first allocated it. With a bit
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of new bookkeeping, this allows all accounting decisions to be local to the
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allocation or freeing operation that deals with the extents themselves, and
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fully avoids the complex and costly back-reference resolutions.
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``Example``
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To illustrate the difference between squotas and qgroups, consider the following
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basic example assuming a nodesize of 16KiB.
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1. create subvolume 256
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2. rack up 1GiB of data and metadata usage in 256
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3. snapshot 256, creating subvolume 257
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4. COW 512MiB of the data and metadata in 257
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5. delete everything in 256
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At each step, qgroups would have the following accounting:
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1. 0/256: 16KiB excl 0 shared
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2. 0/256: 1GiB excl 0 shared
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3. 0/256: 0 excl 1GiB shared; 0/257: 0 excl 1GiB shared
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4. 0/256: 512MiB excl 512MiB shared; 0/257: 512MiB excl 512MiB shared
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5. 0/256: 16KiB excl 0 shared; 0/257: 1GiB excl 0 shared
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Whereas under squotas, the accounting would look like:
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1. 0/256: 16KiB excl 16KiB shared
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2. 0/256: 1GiB excl 1GiB shared
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3. 0/256: 1GiB excl 1GiB shared; 0/257: 16KiB excl 16KiB shared
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4. 0/256: 1GiB excl 1GiB shared; 0/257: 512MiB excl 512MiB shared
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5. 0/256: 512MiB excl 512MiB shared; 0/257: 512MiB excl 512MiB shared
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Note that since the original snapshotted 512MiB are still referenced by 257,
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they cannot be freed from 256, even after 256 is emptied, or even deleted.
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``Summary``
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If you want some of power and flexibility of quotas for tracking and limiting
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subvolume usage, but want to avoid the performance penalty of accurately
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tracking extent ownership life cycles, then squotas can be a useful option.
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Furthermore, squotas is targeted at use cases where the original extent is
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immutable, like image snapshotting for container startup, in which case we avoid
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these awkward scenarios where a subvolume is empty or deleted but still has
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significant extents accounted to it. However, as long as you are aware of the
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accounting semantics, they can handle mutable original extents.
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@ -326,6 +326,13 @@ block-group-tree
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enabled at *mkfs* time is possible, see :doc:`btrfstune`. Online
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conversion is not possible.
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squota
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(kernel support since 6.7)
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Enable simple quota accounting (squotas). This is an alternative to
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qgroups with a smaller performance impact but no notion of shared vs.
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exclusive usage.
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.. _mkfs-section-profiles:
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BLOCK GROUPS, CHUNKS, RAID
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