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2.4. Discard Unused Blocks
Batch discard and online discard operations are features of mounted file systems that discard blocks not in use by the file system. They are useful for both solid-state drives and thinly-provisioned storage.
- Batch discard operations are run explicitly by the user with the
fstrim
command. This command discards all unused blocks in a file system that match the user's criteria. - Online discard operations are specified at mount time, either with the
-o discard
option as part of amount
command or with thediscard
option in the/etc/fstab
file. They run in real time without user intervention. Online discard operations only discard blocks that are transitioning from used to free.
Both operation types are supported for use with ext4 file systems as of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.2 and later and with XFS file systems since Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4. Also, the block device underlying the file system must support physical discard operations. Physical discard operations are supported if the value stored in the
/sys/block/device/queue/discard_max_bytes
file is not zero.
If you are executing the
fstrim
command on:
- a device that does not support discard operations, or
- a logical device (LVM or MD) comprised of multiple devices, where any one of the device does not support discard operations
the following message will be displayed:
fstrim -v /mnt/non_discard
fstrim: /mnt/non_discard: the discard operation is not supported
Note
The
mount
command allows you to mount a device that does not support discard operations with the -o discard
option.
Red Hat recommends batch discard operations unless the system's workload is such that batch discard is not feasible, or online discard operations are necessary to maintain performance.
For more information, see the fstrim(8) and mount(8) man pages.