xref: /freebsd/sbin/mdconfig/mdconfig.8 (revision 4f52dfbb8d6c4d446500c5b097e3806ec219fbd4)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1993 University of Utah.
2.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1989, 1991, 1993
3.\"	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
4.\" Copyright (c) 2000
5.\"	Poul-Henning Kamp  All rights reserved.
6.\"
7.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
8.\" the Systems Programming Group of the University of Utah Computer
9.\" Science Department.
10.\"
11.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
12.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
13.\" are met:
14.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
15.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
16.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
17.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
18.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
19.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
20.\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
21.\"    without specific prior written permission.
22.\"
23.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
24.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
25.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
26.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
27.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
28.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
29.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
30.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
31.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
32.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
33.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
34.\"
35.\"     @(#)vnconfig.8	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/5/93
36.\" from: src/usr.sbin/vnconfig/vnconfig.8,v 1.19 2000/12/27 15:30:29
37.\"
38.\" $FreeBSD$
39.\"
40.Dd August 28, 2017
41.Dt MDCONFIG 8
42.Os
43.Sh NAME
44.Nm mdconfig
45.Nd create and control memory disks
46.Sh SYNOPSIS
47.Nm
48.Fl a
49.Fl t Ar type
50.Op Fl n
51.Oo Fl o Oo Cm no Oc Ns Ar option Oc ...
52.Op Fl f Ar file
53.Op Fl s Ar size
54.Op Fl S Ar sectorsize
55.Op Fl u Ar unit
56.Op Fl x Ar sectors/track
57.Op Fl y Ar heads/cylinder
58.Op Fl L Ar label
59.Nm
60.Fl d
61.Fl u Ar unit
62.Op Fl o Oo Cm no Oc Ns Ar force
63.Nm
64.Fl r
65.Fl u Ar unit
66.Fl s Ar size
67.Op Fl o Oo Cm no Oc Ns Ar force
68.Nm
69.Fl l
70.Op Fl n
71.Op Fl v
72.Op Fl f Ar file
73.Op Fl u Ar unit
74.Nm
75.Ar file
76.Sh DESCRIPTION
77The
78.Nm
79utility creates and controls
80.Xr md 4
81devices.
82.Pp
83Options indicate an action to be performed:
84.Bl -tag -width indent
85.It Fl a
86Attach a memory disk.
87This will configure and attach a memory disk with the
88parameters specified and attach it to the system.
89If the
90.Fl u Ar unit
91option is not provided, the newly created device name will be printed on stdout.
92.It Fl d
93Detach a memory disk from the system and release all resources.
94.It Fl r
95Resize a memory disk.
96.It Fl t Ar type
97Select the type of the memory disk.
98.Bl -tag -width "malloc"
99.It Cm malloc
100Storage for this type of memory disk is allocated with
101.Xr malloc 9 .
102This limits the size to the malloc bucket limit in the kernel.
103If the
104.Fl o Cm reserve
105option is not set, creating and filling a large
106malloc-backed memory disk is a very easy way to
107panic the system.
108.It Cm vnode
109A file specified with
110.Fl f Ar file
111becomes the backing store for this memory disk.
112.It Cm swap
113Storage for this type of memory disk is allocated from buffer
114memory.
115Pages get pushed out to swap when the system is under memory
116pressure, otherwise they stay in the operating memory.
117Using
118.Cm swap
119backing is generally preferred instead of using
120.Cm malloc
121backing.
122.It Cm null
123Bitsink; all writes do nothing, all reads return zeroes.
124.El
125.It Fl f Ar file
126Filename to use for the vnode type memory disk.
127The
128.Fl a
129and
130.Fl t Ar vnode
131options are implied if not specified.
132.It Fl l
133List configured devices.
134If given with
135.Fl u ,
136display details about that particular device.
137If given with
138.Fl f Ar file ,
139display
140.Xr md 4
141device names of which
142.Ar file
143is used as the backing store.
144If both of
145.Fl u
146and
147.Fl f
148options are specified,
149display devices which match the two conditions.
150If the
151.Fl v
152option is specified, show all details.
153.It Fl n
154When printing
155.Xr md 4
156device names, print only the unit number without the
157.Xr md 4
158prefix.
159.It Fl s Ar size
160Size of the memory disk.
161.Ar Size
162is the number of 512 byte sectors unless suffixed with a
163.Cm b , k , m , g , t ,
164or
165.Cm p
166which
167denotes byte, kilobyte, megabyte, gigabyte, terabyte and petabyte respectively.
168When used without the
169.Fl r
170option, the
171.Fl a
172and
173.Fl t Ar swap
174options are implied if not specified.
175.It Fl S Ar sectorsize
176Sectorsize to use for the memory disk, in bytes.
177.It Fl x Ar sectors/track
178See the description of the
179.Fl y
180option below.
181.It Fl y Ar heads/cylinder
182For
183.Cm malloc
184or
185.Cm vnode
186backed devices, the
187.Fl x
188and
189.Fl y
190options can be used to specify a synthetic geometry.
191This is useful for constructing bootable images for later download to
192other devices.
193.It Fl L Ar label
194Associate a label (arbitrary string) with the new memory disk.
195The label can then be inspected with
196.Bd -literal -offset indent
197.Nm Fl l v
198.Ed
199.It Fl o Oo Cm no Oc Ns Ar option
200Set or reset options.
201.Bl -tag -width indent
202.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm async
203For
204.Cm vnode
205backed devices: avoid
206.Dv IO_SYNC
207for increased performance but
208at the risk of deadlocking the entire kernel.
209.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm reserve
210Allocate and reserve all needed storage from the start, rather than as needed.
211.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm cluster
212Enable clustering on this disk.
213.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm compress
214Enable/disable compression features to reduce memory usage.
215.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm force
216Disable/enable extra sanity checks to prevent the user from doing something
217that might adversely affect the system.
218This can be used with the
219.Fl d
220flag to forcibly destroy an
221.Xr md 4
222disk that is still in use.
223.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm readonly
224Enable/disable readonly mode.
225.It Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm verify
226For
227.Cm vnode
228backed devices: enable/disable requesting verification of the
229file used for backing store.
230The type of verification depends on which security features are available.
231One example of verification is testing file integrity with
232checksums or cryptographic signatures.
233.El
234.It Fl u Ar unit
235Request a specific unit number or device name for the
236.Xr md 4
237device instead of automatic allocation.
238If a device name is specified, it must be start with
239.Dq md
240followed by the unit number.
241.El
242.Pp
243The last form,
244.Nm
245.Ar file ,
246is provided for convenience as an abbreviation of
247.Nm
248.Fl a
249.Fl t Ar vnode
250.Fl f Ar file .
251.Sh EXAMPLES
252Create a disk with
253.Pa /tmp/boot.flp
254as backing storage.
255The name of the allocated unit will be printed on stdout, such as
256.Dq Li md0 :
257.Bd -literal -offset indent
258mdconfig /tmp/boot.flp
259.Ed
260.Pp
261Create a 1 gigabyte swap backed memory disk named
262.Dq Li md3 :
263.Bd -literal -offset indent
264mdconfig -s 1g -u md3
265.Ed
266.Pp
267Detach and free all resources used by
268.Pa /dev/md3 :
269.Bd -literal -offset indent
270mdconfig -du md3
271.Ed
272.Pp
273Show detailed information on current memory disks:
274.Bd -literal -offset indent
275mdconfig -lv
276.Ed
277.Pp
278Resize the
279.Dq Li md3
280memory disk to 2 gigabytes:
281.Bd -literal -offset indent
282mdconfig -rs 2g -u md3
283.Ed
284.Pp
285Create a 1 gigabyte swap backed disk, initialize an
286.Xr ffs 7
287file system on it, and mount it on
288.Pa /tmp :
289.Bd -literal -offset indent
290mdconfig -s 1g -u md10
291newfs -U /dev/md10
292mount /dev/md10 /tmp
293chmod 1777 /tmp
294.Ed
295.Pp
296Create a memory disk out of an ISO 9660 CD image file,
297using the first available
298.Xr md 4
299device, and then mount it:
300.Bd -literal -offset indent
301mount -t cd9660 /dev/`mdconfig -f cdimage.iso` /mnt
302.Ed
303.Pp
304Create a file-backed device from a hard disk image that begins
305with 512K of raw header information.
306.Xr gnop 8
307is used to skip over the header information, positioning
308.Pa md1.nop
309to the start of the filesystem in the image.
310.Bd -literal -offset indent
311mdconfig -u md1 -f diskimage.img
312gnop create -o 512K md1
313mount /dev/md1.nop /mnt
314.Ed
315.Sh SEE ALSO
316.Xr open 2 ,
317.Xr md 4 ,
318.Xr ffs 7 ,
319.Xr gpart 8 ,
320.Xr mdmfs 8 ,
321.Xr malloc 9
322.Sh HISTORY
323The
324.Nm
325utility first appeared in
326.Fx 5.0
327as a cleaner replacement for the
328.Xr vn 4
329and
330.Xr vnconfig 8
331combo.
332.Sh AUTHORS
333The
334.Nm
335utility was written by
336.An Poul-Henning Kamp Aq Mt phk@FreeBSD.org .
337