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Documentation/device-mapper/zero.txt 1.65 KB
1da177e4c   Linus Torvalds   Linux-2.6.12-rc2
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  dm-zero
  =======
  
  Device-Mapper's "zero" target provides a block-device that always returns
  zero'd data on reads and silently drops writes. This is similar behavior to
  /dev/zero, but as a block-device instead of a character-device.
  
  Dm-zero has no target-specific parameters.
  
  One very interesting use of dm-zero is for creating "sparse" devices in
  conjunction with dm-snapshot. A sparse device reports a device-size larger
  than the amount of actual storage space available for that device. A user can
  write data anywhere within the sparse device and read it back like a normal
  device. Reads to previously unwritten areas will return a zero'd buffer. When
  enough data has been written to fill up the actual storage space, the sparse
  device is deactivated. This can be very useful for testing device and
  filesystem limitations.
  
  To create a sparse device, start by creating a dm-zero device that's the
  desired size of the sparse device. For this example, we'll assume a 10TB
  sparse device.
  
  TEN_TERABYTES=`expr 10 \* 1024 \* 1024 \* 1024 \* 2`   # 10 TB in sectors
  echo "0 $TEN_TERABYTES zero" | dmsetup create zero1
  
  Then create a snapshot of the zero device, using any available block-device as
  the COW device. The size of the COW device will determine the amount of real
  space available to the sparse device. For this example, we'll assume /dev/sdb1
  is an available 10GB partition.
  
  echo "0 $TEN_TERABYTES snapshot /dev/mapper/zero1 /dev/sdb1 p 128" | \
     dmsetup create sparse1
  
  This will create a 10TB sparse device called /dev/mapper/sparse1 that has
  10GB of actual storage space available. If more than 10GB of data is written
  to this device, it will start returning I/O errors.