Provided by: lvm2_2.03.07-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       lvmvdo — EXPERIMENTAL LVM Virtual Data Optimizer support

DESCRIPTION

       VDO   (which  includes  kvdo  and  vdo)  is  software  that  provides  inline  block-level
       deduplication, compression, and thin provisioning capabilities for primary storage.

       Deduplication is a  technique  for  reducing  the  consumption  of  storage  resources  by
       eliminating  multiple  copies of duplicate blocks. Compression takes the individual unique
       blocks and shrinks them with coding algorithms; these reduced blocks are then  efficiently
       packed  together  into  physical  blocks.  Thin provisioning manages the mapping from LBAs
       presented by VDO to where the data has actually  been  stored,  and  also  eliminates  any
       blocks of all zeroes.

       With  deduplication,  instead of writing the same data more than once each duplicate block
       is detected and recorded as a reference to the original block.  VDO  maintains  a  mapping
       from  logical  block  addresses  (used  by  the storage layer above VDO) to physical block
       addresses (used by the storage layer under VDO).  After  deduplication,  multiple  logical
       block  addresses may be mapped to the same physical block address; these are called shared
       blocks and are reference-counted by the software.

       With VDO's compression, multiple blocks (or shared blocks) are compressed  with  the  fast
       LZ4  algorithm,  and binned together where possible so that multiple compressed blocks fit
       within a 4 KB block on the underlying storage. Mapping from LBA is  to  a  physical  block
       address  and  index  within  it for the desired compressed data. All compressed blocks are
       individually reference counted for correctness.

       Block sharing and block compression are invisible to applications using the storage, which
       read  and  write  blocks  as  they  would  if VDO were not present. When a shared block is
       overwritten, a new physical block is allocated for storing the new block  data  to  ensure
       that  other  logical  block addresses that are mapped to the shared physical block are not
       modified.

       For usage of VDO with lvm(8) standard VDO userspace tools vdoformat(8) and currently  non-
       standard kernel VDO module "kvdo" needs to be installed on the system.

       The "kvdo" module implements fine-grained storage virtualization, thin provisioning, block
       sharing,  and  compression;  the  "uds"   module   provides   memory-efficient   duplicate
       identification.  The  userspace  tools  include vdostats(8) for extracting statistics from
       those volumes.

VDO Terms

       VDODataLV
              VDO data LV
              large hidden LV with suffix _vdata created in a VG.
              used by VDO target to store all data and metadata blocks.

       VDOPoolLV
              VDO pool LV
              maintains virtual for LV(s) stored in attached VDO data LV and it has same size.
              contains VDOLV(s) (currently supports only a single VDOLV).

       VDOLV
              VDO LV
              created from VDOPoolLV
              appears blank after creation

VDO Usage

       The primary methods for using VDO with lvm2:

   1. Create VDOPoolLV with VDOLV
       Create an VDOPoolLV that will holds VDO data together with virtual size VDOLV,  that  user
       can use. When the virtual size is not specified, then such LV is created with maximum size
       that always fits into data volume even  if  there  cannot  happen  any  deduplication  and
       compression  (i.e.  it can hold uncompressible content of /dev/urandom).  When the name of
       VDOPoolLV is not specified, it tales name from sequence of vpool0, vpool1 ...

       Note: As the performance of TRIM/Discard operation is slow for large volumes of VDO  type,
       please  try to avoid sending discard requests unless necessary as it may take considerable
       amount of time to finish discard operation.

       lvcreate --type vdo -n VDOLV -L DataSize -V LargeVirtualSize VG/VDOPoolLV
       lvcreate --vdo -L DataSize VG

       Example
       # lvcreate --type vdo -n vdo0 -L 10G -V 100G vg/vdopool0
       # mkfs.ext4 -E nodiscard /dev/vg/vdo0

   2. Create VDOPoolLV and convert existing LV into VDODataLV
       Convert an already created/existing LV into a volume that can hold VDO data  and  metadata
       (a volume reference by VDOPoolLV).  User will be prompted to confirm such conversion as it
       is IRREVERSIBLY DESTROYING content of such volume, as it's being immediately formatted  by
       vdoformat(8)  as  VDO  pool data volume. User can specify virtual size of associated VDOLV
       with this VDOPoolLV.  When the virtual size is not specified, it will set to  the  maximum
       size that can keep 100% uncompressible data there.

       lvconvert --type vdo-pool -n VDOLV -V VirtualSize VG/VDOPoolLV
       lvconvert --vdopool VG/VDOPoolLV

       Example
       # lvconvert --type vdo-pool -n vdo0 -V10G vg/existinglv

   3. Change default setting used for creating VDOPoolLV
       VDO  allows  to  set  large  variety  of option. Lots of these setting can be specified by
       lvm.conf or profile settings. User can prepare  number  of  different  profiles  and  just
       specify profile file name.  Check output of lvmconfig --type full for detailed description
       of all individual vdo settings.

       Example
       # cat <<EOF > vdo.profile
       allocation {
            vdo_use_compression=1
            vdo_use_deduplication=1
            vdo_use_metadata_hints=1
            vdo_minimum_io_size=4096
            vdo_block_map_cache_size_mb=128
            vdo_block_map_period=16380
            vdo_check_point_frequency=0
            vdo_use_sparse_index=0
            vdo_index_memory_size_mb=256
            vdo_slab_size_mb=2048
            vdo_ack_threads=1
            vdo_bio_threads=1
            vdo_bio_rotation=64
            vdo_cpu_threads=2
            vdo_hash_zone_threads=1
            vdo_logical_threads=1
            vdo_physical_threads=1
            vdo_write_policy="auto"
            vdo_max_discard=1
       }
       EOF

       # lvcreate --vdo -L10G --metadataprofile vdo.profile vg/vdopool0
       # lvcreate --vdo -L10G --config 'allocation/vdo_cpu_threads=4' vg/vdopool1

   4. Change compression and deduplication of VDOPoolLV
       Disable or enable compression and deduplication for VDO pool LV (the volume that maintains
       all VDO LV(s) associated with it).

       lvchange --compression [y|n] --deduplication [y|n] VG/VDOPoolLV

       Example
       # lvchange --compression n  vg/vdpool0
       # lvchange --deduplication y vg/vdpool1

   4. Checking usage of VDOPoolLV
       To  quickly  check how much data of VDOPoolLV are already consumed use lvs(8). Field Data%
       will report how much data occupies content of virtual data for VDOLV and how much space is
       already  consumed  with  all  the  data  and metadata blocks in VDOPoolLV.  For a detailed
       description use vdostats(8) command.

       Note: vdostats(8) currently understands only /dev/mapper device names.

       Example
       # lvcreate --type vdo -L10G -V20G -n vdo0 vg/vdopool0
       # mkfs.ext4 -E nodiscard /dev/vg/vdo0
       # lvs -a vg

         LV               VG Attr       LSize  Pool     Origin Data%
         vdo0             vg vwi-a-v--- 20.00g vdopool0        0.01
         vdopool0         vg dwi-ao---- 10.00g                 30.16
         [vdopool0_vdata] vg Dwi-ao---- 10.00g

       # vdostats --all /dev/mapper/vg-vdopool0
       /dev/mapper/vg-vdopool0 :
         version                             : 30
         release version                     : 133524
         data blocks used                    : 79
         ...

   4. Extending VDOPoolLV size
       Adding more space to hold VDO data and metadata can be made  via  extension  of  VDODataLV
       with commands lvresize(8), lvextend(8).

       Note: Size of VDOPoolLV cannot be reduced.

       lvextend -L+AddingSize VG/VDOPoolLV

       Example
       # lvextend -L+50G vg/vdopool0
       # lvresize -L300G vg/vdopool1

   4. Extending or reducing VDOLV size
       VDO  LV  can be extended or reduced as standard LV with commands lvresize(8), lvextend(8),
       lvreduce(8).

       Note: Reduction needs to process TRIM for reduced disk area to unmap used data blocks from
       VDOPoolLV and it may take a long time.

       lvextend -L+AddingSize VG/VDOLV
       lvreduce -L-ReducingSize VG/VDOLV

       Example
       # lvextend -L+50G vg/vdo0
       # lvreduce -L-50G vg/vdo1
       # lvresize -L200G vg/vdo2

   5. Component activation of VDODataLV
       VDODataLV  can  be  activated  separately  as  component  LV  for examination purposes. It
       activates data LV in read-only mode and cannot be modified.  If the VDODataLV is active as
       component,  any  upper  LV  using  this volume CANNOT be activated. User has to deactivate
       VDODataLV first to continue to use VDOPoolLV.

       Example
       # lvchange -ay vg/vpool0_vdata
       # lvchange -an vg/vpool0_vdata

VDO Topics

   1. Stacking VDO
       User can convert/stack VDO with existing volumes.

   2. VDO on top of raid
       Using Raid type LV for VDO Data LV.

       Example
       # lvcreate --type raid1 -L 5G -n vpool vg
       # lvconvert --type vdo-pool -V 10G vg/vpool

   3. Caching VDODataLV, VDOPoolLV
       Cache VDO Data LV (accepts also VDOPoolLV.

       Example
       # lvcreate -L 5G -V 10G -n vdo1 vg/vpool
       # lvcreate --type cache-pool -L 1G -n cpool vg
       # lvconvert --cache --cachepool vg/cpool vg/vpool
       # lvconvert --uncache vg/vpool

   3. Caching VDOLV
       Cache VDO LV.

       Example
       # lvcreate -L 5G -V 10G -n vdo1 vg/vpool
       # lvcreate --type cache-pool -L 1G -n cpool vg
       # lvconvert --cache --cachepool vg/cpool vg/vdo1
       # lvconvert --uncache vg/vdo1

SEE ALSO

       lvm(8), lvm.conf(5), lvmconfig(8), lvcreate(8),  lvconvert(8),  lvchange(8),  lvextend(8),
       lvreduce(8), lvresize(8), lvremove(8), lvs(8), vdo(8), vdoformat(8), vdostats(8), mkfs(8)