LVMCACHE(7) LVMCACHE(7)
NAME
lvmcache -- LVM caching
DESCRIPTION
An lvm(8) cache Logical Volume (LV) uses a small and fast LV to improve
the performance of a large and slow LV. It does this by storing the
frequently used blocks on the faster LV. LVM refers to the small fast
LV as a cache pool LV. The large slow LV is called the origin LV. Due
to requirements from dm-cache (the kernel driver), LVM further splits
the cache pool LV into two devices - the cache data LV and cache meta-
data LV. The cache data LV is where copies of data blocks are kept
from the origin LV to increase speed. The cache metadata LV holds the
accounting information that specifies where data blocks are stored
(e.g. on the origin LV or on the cache data LV). Users should be
familiar with these LVs if they wish to create the best and most robust
cached LVs. All of these associated LVs must be in the same Volume
Group (VG).
Cache Terms
origin LV OriginLV large slow LV
cache data LV CacheDataLV small fast LV for cache pool data
cache metadata LV CacheMetaLV small fast LV for cache pool metadata
cache pool LV CachePoolLV CacheDataLV + CacheMetaLV
cache LV CacheLV OriginLV + CachePoolLV
Cache Usage
The primary method for using a cache type LV:
0. create OriginLV
Create an LV or identify an existing LV to be the origin LV.
lvcreate -n OriginLV -L LargeSize VG SlowPVs
Example
# lvcreate -n lvol0 -L 100G vg /dev/slow
1. create CacheDataLV
Create the cache data LV. This LV will hold data blocks from the
OriginLV. The size of this LV is the size of the cache and will be
reported as the size of the cache pool LV.
lvcreate -n CacheDataLV -L CacheSize VG FastPVs
Example
# lvcreate -n cache0 -L 10G vg /dev/fast
2. create CacheMetaLV
Create the cache metadata LV. This LV will hold cache pool metadata.
The size of this LV should be 1000 times smaller than the cache data
LV, with a minimum size of 8MiB.
lvcreate -n CacheMetaLV -L MetaSize VG FastPVs
Example
# lvcreate -n cache0meta -L 12M vg /dev/fast
# lvs -a vg
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin
cache0 vg -wi-a----- 10.00g
cache0meta vg -wi-a----- 12.00m
lvol0 vg -wi-a----- 100.00g
3. create CachePoolLV
Combine the data and metadata LVs into a cache pool LV. The behavior
of the cache pool LV can be set in this step.
CachePoolLV takes the name of CacheDataLV.
CacheDataLV is renamed CachePoolLV_cdata and becomes hidden.
CacheMetaLV is renamed CachePoolLV_cmeta and becomes hidden.
lvconvert --type cache-pool --poolmetadata VG/CacheMetaLV
VG/CacheDataLV
Example
# lvconvert --type cache-pool --poolmetadata vg/cache0meta vg/cache0
# lvs -a vg
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin
cache0 vg Cwi---C--- 10.00g
[cache0_cdata] vg Cwi------- 10.00g
[cache0_cmeta] vg ewi------- 12.00m
lvol0 vg -wi-a----- 100.00g
4. create CacheLV
Create a cache LV by linking the cache pool LV to the origin LV. The
user accessible cache LV takes the name of the origin LV, while the
origin LV becomes a hidden LV with the name OriginLV_corig. This can
be done while the origin LV is in use.
CacheLV takes the name of OriginLV.
OriginLV is renamed OriginLV_corig and becomes hidden.
lvconvert --type cache --cachepool VG/CachePoolLV VG/OriginLV
Example
# lvconvert --type cache --cachepool vg/cache0 vg/lvol0
# lvs -a vg
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin
cache0 vg Cwi---C--- 10.00g
[cache0_cdata] vg Cwi-ao---- 10.00g
[cache0_cmeta] vg ewi-ao---- 12.00m
lvol0 vg Cwi-a-C--- 100.00g cache0 [lvol0_corig]
[lvol0_corig] vg -wi-ao---- 100.00g
Cache Removal
Split a cache pool LV off of a cache LV
A cache pool LV can be disconnected from a cache LV, leaving an unused
cache pool LV, and an uncached origin LV. This command writes back
data from the cache pool to the origin LV when necessary.
lvconvert --splitcache VG/CacheLV
Removing a cache pool LV without removing its linked origin LV
This writes back data from the cache pool to the origin LV when neces-
sary, then removes the cache pool LV, leaving the uncached origin LV.
lvremove VG/CachePoolLV
An alternative command that also disconnects the cache pool from the
cache LV, and deletes the cache pool:
lvconvert --uncache VG/CacheLV
Example
# lvs vg
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin
cache0 vg Cwi---C--- 10.00g
lvol0 vg Cwi-a-C--- 100.00g cache0 [lvol0_corig]
# lvremove vg/cache0
# lvs vg
LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin
lvol0 vg -wi-a----- 100.00g
Removing a cache LV: both origin LV and the cache pool LV
Removing a cache LV removes both the origin LV and the linked cache
pool LV.
lvremove VG/CacheLV
Cache Topics
Tolerate device failures in a cache pool LV
Users who are concerned about the possibility of failures in their fast
devices that could lead to data loss might consider making their cache
pool sub-LVs redundant.
Example
0. Create an origin LV we wish to cache
# lvcreate -L 10G -n lv1 vg /dev/slow
1. Create a 2-way RAID1 cache data LV
# lvcreate --type raid1 -m 1 -L 1G -n cache1 vg \
/dev/fast1 /dev/fast2
2. Create a 2-way RAID1 cache metadata LV
# lvcreate --type raid1 -m 1 -L 8M -n cache1meta vg \
/dev/fast1 /dev/fast2
3. Create a cache pool LV combining cache data LV and cache metadata LV
# lvconvert --type cache-pool --poolmetadata vg/cache1meta vg/cache1
4. Create a cached LV by combining the cache pool LV and origin LV
# lvconvert --type cache --cachepool vg/cache1 vg/lv1
Cache mode
The default cache mode is "writethrough". Writethrough ensures that
any data written will be stored both in the cache pool LV and on the
origin LV. The loss of a device associated with the cache pool LV in
this case would not mean the loss of any data.
A second cache mode is "writeback". Writeback delays writing data
blocks from the cache pool back to the origin LV. This mode will
increase performance, but the loss of a device associated with the
cache pool LV can result in lost data.
With the --cachemode option, the cache mode can be set when creating a
cache LV, or changed on an existing cache LV. The current cache mode
of a cache LV can be displayed with the cache_mode reporting option:
lvs -o+cache_mode VG/CacheLV
lvm.conf(5) allocation/cache_mode
defines the default cache mode.
Example
0. Create an origin LV we wish to cache (yours may already exist)
# lvcreate -L 10G -n lv1 vg /dev/slow
1. Create a cache data LV
# lvcreate -L 1G -n cache1 vg /dev/fast
2. Create a cache metadata LV
# lvcreate -L 8M -n cache1meta vg /dev/fast
3. Create a cache pool LV
# lvconvert --type cache-pool --poolmetadata vg/cache1meta vg/cache1
4. Create a cache LV by combining the cache pool LV and origin LV,
and use the writethrough cache mode.
# lvconvert --type cache --cachepool vg/cache1 \
--cachemode writethrough vg/lv1
Cache policy
The cache subsystem has additional per-LV parameters: the cache policy
to use, and possibly tunable parameters for the cache policy. Three
policies are currently available: "smq" is the default policy, "mq" is
an older implementation, and "cleaner" is used to force the cache to
write back (flush) all cached writes to the origin LV.
The "mq" policy has a number of tunable parameters. The defaults are
chosen to be suitable for the majority of systems, but in special cir-
cumstances, changing the settings can improve performance.
With the --cachepolicy and --cachesettings options, the cache policy
and settings can be set when creating a cache LV, or changed on an
existing cache LV (both options can be used together). The current
cache policy and settings of a cache LV can be displayed with the
cache_policy and cache_settings reporting options:
lvs -o+cache_policy,cache_settings VG/CacheLV
Example
Change the cache policy and settings of an existing cache LV.
# lvchange --cachepolicy mq --cachesettings \
'migration_threshold=2048 random_threshold=4' vg/lv1
lvm.conf(5) allocation/cache_policy
defines the default cache policy.
lvm.conf(5) allocation/cache_settings
defines the default cache settings.
Chunk size
The size of data blocks managed by a cache pool can be specified with
the --chunksize option when the cache LV is created. The default unit
is KiB. The value must be a multiple of 32KiB between 32KiB and 1GiB.
Using a chunk size that is too large can result in wasteful use of the
cache, where small reads and writes can cause large sections of an LV
to be mapped into the cache. However, choosing a chunk size that is
too small can result in more overhead trying to manage the numerous
chunks that become mapped into the cache. Overhead can include both
excessive CPU time searching for chunks, and excessive memory tracking
chunks.
Command to display the cache pool LV chunk size:
lvs -o+chunksize VG/CacheLV
lvm.conf(5) cache_pool_chunk_size
controls the default chunk size used when creating a cache LV.
The default value is shown by:
lvmconfig --type default allocation/cache_pool_chunk_size
Spare metadata LV
See lvmthin(7) for a description of the "pool metadata spare" LV. The
same concept is used for cache pools.
Automatic pool metadata LV
A cache data LV can be converted to cache pool LV without specifying a
cache pool metadata LV. LVM will automatically create a metadata LV
from the same VG.
lvcreate -n CacheDataLV -L CacheSize VG
lvconvert --type cache-pool VG/CacheDataLV
Create a new cache LV without an existing origin LV
A cache LV can be created using an existing cache pool without an
existing origin LV. A new origin LV is created and linked to the cache
pool in a single step.
lvcreate --type cache -L LargeSize -n CacheLV
--cachepool VG/CachePoolLV VG SlowPVs
Single step cache pool LV creation
A cache pool LV can be created with a single lvcreate command, rather
than using lvconvert on existing LVs. This one command creates a cache
data LV, a cache metadata LV, and combines the two into a cache pool
LV.
lvcreate --type cache-pool -L CacheSize -n CachePoolLV VG FastPVs
Convert existing LVs to cache types
When an existing origin LV is converted to a cache LV, the specified
cache pool may be a normal LV, rather than a cache pool LV. In this
case, lvm will first convert the normal LV to a cache pool LV. A pool
metadata LV may optionally be specified.
lvcreate -n OriginLV -L LargeSize VG
lvcreate -n CacheDataLV -L CacheSize VG
lvconvert --type cache --cachepool VG/CataDataLV VG/OriginLV
This is equivalent to:
lvcreate -n OriginLV -L LargeSize VG
lvcreate -n CacheDataLV -L CacheSize VG
lvconvert --type cache-pool VG/CacheDataLV
lvconvert --type cache --cachepool VG/CachePoolLV VG/OriginLV
Cache metadata formats
There are two disk formats for cache metadata. The metadata format can
be specified when a cache pool is created, and cannot be changed. For-
mat 2 has better performance; it is more compact, and stores dirty bits
in a separate btree, which improves the speed of shutting down the
cache. With auto, lvm selects the best option provided by the current
dm-cache kernel target.
lvconvert --type cache-pool --cachemetadataformat auto|1|2
VG/CacheDataLV
SEE ALSO
lvm.conf(5), lvchange(8), lvcreate(8), lvdisplay(8), lvextend(8), lvre-
move(8), lvrename(8), lvresize(8), lvs(8), vgchange(8), vgmerge(8),
vgreduce(8), vgsplit(8)
Red Hat, Inc LVM TOOLS 2.02.187(2)-RHEL7 (2020-03-24) LVMCACHE(7)