Multipath configuration options and overview¶
It is recommended that you first read the device mapper multipathing introduction if you are unfamiliar with the concepts and terms. For consistency, we refer to device mapper multipathing as multipath.
Multipath usually works out-of-the-box with most common storages. This doesn’t mean the default configuration variables should be used in production: they don’t treat important parameters your storage might need.
It’s a good idea to consult your storage manufacturer’s install guide for the Linux Multipath configuration options. Storage vendors often provide the most adequate options for Linux, including minimal versions required for kernel and multipath-tools.
Default multipath configuration values can be overridden by editing the /etc/multipath.conf
file and restarting the multipathd
service. This page provides information on parsing and modifying the multipath.conf
file.
Configuration file overview¶
The multipath.conf
configuration file contains entries of the form:
<section> {
<attribute> <value>
...
<subsection> {
<attribute> <value>
...
}
}
The following keywords are recognised:
defaults
: Defines default values for attributes used whenever no values are given in the appropriate device or multipath sections.blacklist
: Defines which devices should be excluded from the multipath topology discovery.blacklist_exceptions
: Defines which devices should be included in the multipath topology discovery, despite being listed in the blacklist section.multipaths
: Defines the multipath topologies. They are indexed by a World Wide Identifier (WWID). Attributes set in this section take precedence over all others.devices
: Defines the device-specific settings. Devices are identified by vendor, product, and revision.overrides
: This section defines values for attributes that should override the device-specific settings for all devices.
Configuration file defaults¶
Currently, the multipath configuration file ONLY includes a minor defaults
section that sets the user_friendly_names
parameter to ‘yes’:
defaults {
user_friendly_names yes
}
This overwrites the default value of the user_friendly_names
parameter.
All the multipath attributes that can be set in the defaults
section of the multipath.conf
file can be found in the man pages with an explanation of what they mean. The attributes are:
verbosity
polling_interval
max_polling_interval
reassign_maps
multipath_dir
path_selector
path_grouping_policy
uid_attrs
uid_attribute
getuid_callout
prio
prio_args
features
path_checker
alias_prefix
failback
rr_min_io
rr_min_io_rq
max_fds
rr_weight
no_path_retry
queue_without_daemon
checker_timeout
flush_on_last_del
user_friendly_names
fast_io_fail_tmo
dev_loss_tmo
bindings_file
wwids_file
prkeys_file
log_checker_err
reservation_key
all_tg_pt
retain_attached_hw_handler
detect_prio
detect_checker
force_sync
strict_timing
deferred_remove
partition_delimiter
config_dir
san_path_err_threshold
san_path_err_forget_rate
san_path_err_recovery_time
marginal_path_double_failed_time
marginal_path_err_sample_time
marginal_path_err_rate_threshold
marginal_path_err_recheck_gap_time
delay_watch_checks
delay_wait_checks
marginal_pathgroups
find_multipaths
find_multipaths_timeout
uxsock_timeout
retrigger_tries
retrigger_delay
missing_uev_wait_timeout
skip_kpartx
disable_changed_wwids
remove_retries
max_sectors_kb
ghost_delay
enable_foreign
Note: Previously, the
multipath-tools
project provided a complete configuration file with all the most commonly used options for each of the most-used storage devices. Currently, you can see all those default options by runningsudo multipath -t
. This will dump a used configuration file including all the embedded default options.
Configuration file blacklist and exceptions¶
The blacklist section is used to exclude specific devices from the multipath topology. It is most commonly used to exclude local disks, non-multipathed devices, or non-disk devices.
By devnode
¶
The default blacklist consists of the regular expressions "^(ram|zram|raw|loop|fd|md|dm-|sr|scd|st|dcssblk)[0-9]"
and "^(td|hd|vd)[a-z]"
. This causes virtual devices, non-disk devices, and some other device types to be excluded from multipath handling by default.
blacklist {
devnode "^(ram|zram|raw|loop|fd|md|dm-|sr|scd|st|dcssblk)[0-9]"
devnode "^(td|hd|vd)[a-z]"
devnode "^cciss!c[0-9]d[0-9]*"
}
By wwid
¶
Regular expression for the World Wide Identifier of a device to be excluded/included
By device¶
Subsection for the device description. This subsection recognises the vendor
and product
keywords. Both are regular expressions.
device {
vendor "LENOVO"
product "Universal Xport"
}
By property¶
Regular expression for an udev property. All devices that have matching udev properties will be excluded/included. The handling of the property keyword is special, because devices must have at least one whitelisted udev property; otherwise they’re treated as blacklisted, and the message “blacklisted, udev property missing” is displayed in the logs.
Blacklist by protocol¶
The protocol strings that multipath recognises are scsi:fcp
, scsi:spi
, scsi:ssa
, scsi:sbp
, scsi:srp
, scsi:iscsi
, scsi:sas
, scsi:adt
, scsi:ata
, scsi:unspec
, ccw
, cciss
, nvme
, and undef
. The protocol that a path is using can be viewed by running:
multipathd show paths format "%d %P"
Blacklist exceptions¶
The blacklist_exceptions
section is used to revert the actions of the blacklist section. This allows one to selectively include (“whitelist”) devices which would normally be excluded via the blacklist section.
blacklist_exceptions {
property "(SCSI_IDENT_|ID_WWN)"
}
Note: A common use is to blacklist “everything” using a catch-all regular expression, and create specific
blacklist_exceptions
entries for those devices that should be handled bymultipath-tools
.
Configuration file multipath section¶
The multipaths
section allows setting attributes of multipath maps. The attributes set via the multipaths section (see list below) take precedence over all other configuration settings, including those from the overrides section.
The only recognised attribute for the multipaths section is the multipath subsection. If there is more than one multipath subsection matching a given WWID, the contents of these sections are merged, and settings from later entries take precedence.
The multipath subsection recognises the following attributes:
wwid
: (Mandatory) World Wide Identifier. Detected multipath maps are matched against this attribute. Note that, unlike thewwid
attribute in the blacklist section, this is not a regular expression or a substring; WWIDs must match exactly inside the multipaths section.alias
: Symbolic name for the multipath map. This takes precedence over an entry for the same WWID in thebindings_file
.
Optional attributes¶
The following attributes are optional; if not set, the default values are taken from the overrides, devices, or defaults section:
path_grouping_policy
path_selector
prio
prio_args
failback
rr_weight
no_path_retry
rr_min_io
rr_min_io_rq
flush_on_last_del
features
reservation_key
user_friendly_names
deferred_remove
san_path_err_threshold
san_path_err_forget_rate
san_path_err_recovery_time
marginal_path_err_sample_time
marginal_path_err_rate_threshold
marginal_path_err_recheck_gap_time
marginal_path_double_failed_time
delay_watch_checks
delay_wait_checks
skip_kpartx
max_sectors_kb
ghost_delay
Example¶
multipaths {
multipath {
wwid 3600508b4000156d700012000000b0000
alias yellow
path_grouping_policy multibus
path_selector "round-robin 0"
failback manual
rr_weight priorities
no_path_retry 5
}
multipath {
wwid 1DEC_____321816758474
alias red
}
}
Configuration file devices section¶
multipath-tools
has a built-in device table with reasonable defaults for more than 100 known multipath-capable storage devices. The devices
section can be used to override these settings. If there are multiple matches for a given device, the attributes of all matching entries are applied to it. If an attribute is specified in several matching device subsections, later entries take precedence.
The only recognised attribute for the devices
section is the device
subsection. Devices detected in the system are matched against the device entries using the vendor, product, and revision fields.
The vendor, product, and revision fields that multipath or multipathd
detect for devices in a system depend on the device type. For SCSI devices, they correspond to the respective fields of the “SCSI INQUIRY” page. In general, the command multipathd show paths format "%d %s"
command can be used to see the detected properties for all devices in the system.
The device subsection recognises the following attributes:
vendor
: (Mandatory) Regular expression to match the vendor name.product
: (Mandatory) Regular expression to match the product name.revision
: Regular expression to match the product revision.product_blacklist
: Products with the given vendor matching this string are blacklisted.alias_prefix
: Theuser_friendly_names
prefix to use for this device type, instead of the defaultmpath
.hardware_handler
: The hardware handler to use for this device type. The following hardware handlers are implemented (all of these are hardware-dependent):1 emc
: Hardware handler for DGC class arrays as CLARiiON CX/AX and EMC VNX and Unity families.1 rdac
: Hardware handler for LSI / Engenio / NetApp RDAC class as NetApp SANtricity E/EF Series, and OEM arrays from IBM DELL SGI STK and SUN.1 hp_sw
: Hardware handler for HP/COMPAQ/DEC HSG80 and MSA/HSV arrays with Active/Standby mode exclusively.1 alua
: Hardware handler for SCSI-3 ALUA-compatible arrays.1 ana
: Hardware handler for NVMe ANA-compatible arrays.
Optional attributes¶
The following attributes are optional – if not set, the default values are taken from the defaults section:
path_grouping_policy
uid_attribute
getuid_callout
path_selector
path_checker
prio
prio_args
features
failback
rr_weight
no_path_retry
rr_min_io
rr_min_io_rq
fast_io_fail_tmo
dev_loss_tmo
flush_on_last_del
user_friendly_names
retain_attached_hw_handler
detect_prio
detect_checker
deferred_remove
san_path_err_threshold
san_path_err_forget_rate
san_path_err_recovery_time
marginal_path_err_sample_time
marginal_path_err_rate_threshold
marginal_path_err_recheck_gap_time
marginal_path_double_failed_time
delay_watch_checks
delay_wait_checks
skip_kpartx
max_sectors_kb
ghost_delay
all_tg_pt
Example¶
devices {
device {
vendor "3PARdata"
product "VV"
path_grouping_policy "group_by_prio"
hardware_handler "1 alua"
prio "alua"
failback "immediate"
no_path_retry 18
fast_io_fail_tmo 10
dev_loss_tmo "infinity"
}
device {
vendor "DEC"
product "HSG80"
path_grouping_policy "group_by_prio"
path_checker "hp_sw"
hardware_handler "1 hp_sw"
prio "hp_sw"
no_path_retry "queue"
}
}