Skip to content

dmuth/zfs-playground

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

74 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

ZFS Playground

Learn ZFS the easy way with this lab environment where disk failures and corruption can be simulated!

Quick Start

  • Clone this repo
  • vagrant up - This will create a VM with 2 cores and 1 GB of RAM.
    • 10 1 GB virtual disks will be created in the directory /disks/.
  • vagrant ssh - All scripts are in /vagrant/bin/ which is in the $PATH.
  • Optionally run zfs-lab-create to create a ZFS pool and filesystem in /zfs/lab1/.

Poking Under The Hood

The way this project works is by creating 10 1 GB files in the /disks/ directory on the VM, named disk0 through disk9. Because in UNIX, devices have file paths, there's no reason that files themselves cannot be treated as devices. This means that entire ZFS filesystems can be created, using these files as standins for multiple physical disks.

Obviously you don't want to use this for production, but having an error of files-pretending-to-be-disks works great for learning how to admin a ZFS filesystem, simulating hardware failures and disk corruption, etc.

This README includes a list of the incldued utilities and how they are used, along with some sample exercises to become better familiar with ZFS.

Utilities

This repo ships with a number of utilities to automate and semi-automate work related to playing around with ZFS. All scripts are in /vagrant/bin/ in the VM which is also in your path:

  • break-disk - Used to break a specific disk file to simulate disk failure.
  • create - Create a sample file full of X's. Useful for testing file corruption as the corruption will be obvious when viewing it with less.
  • corrupt - Corrupt a file at a certain offset with a certain character for a certain length, optionally repeated a certain number of times. Useful for running against disks in /disks/ to simulate disk corruption.
  • populate-zfs-filesystem - Uses create to populate a target directory with a series of files and directories with 1 MB files. Useful for testing files for corrption when corrupting a ZFS disk.
  • sha1-save-files - Compute SHA1 hashes recursively of a directory and its files and save the files in /data/.
  • sha1-check-files - Check against previously computed hashes recursively and look for corruption. Output is written in diff format.
  • truncate-disk - Used to truncate a specific disk image to a specific number of bytes. Useful to simulate disk failures.
  • zfs-lab-create - Stand up a ZFS pool in /zfs/, a ZFS filesystem in /zfs/lab1/, and populate it with files with populate-zfs-filesystem.
  • zfs-lab-destroy - Remove a ZFS pool and filesystem created wiht zfs-lab-create.
  • Internal Utilities. These are used by the playground itself but could be useful if you want to change the environment substantially:
    • zfs-add-disk-file - Creates a file in /disks/ which can be added to ZFS as a disk. Used during provisioning of the Vagrant instance.
    • zfs-rm-disk-file - Removes a file created by zfs-add-disk-file.
    • zfs-create-pool - Create a ZFS pool of disks. Used by zfs-lab-create.
    • zfs-destroy-pool - Destroy a ZFS pool of disks.
    • zfs-destroy-pool-if-exists - Destory a ZFS pool only if it already exists.

Exercises to Better Learn ZFS

For all exercises, the Zpool should be called zfspool. When the pool is created, a ZFS filesystem will be created mounted to /zfspool/ by default.

Basic Exercises

  • Create a single disk Zpool with disk /disks/disk0. Now destroy it.
  • Create a Zpool with disk /disks/disk0 through /disks/disk2.
  • Craete a ZFS filesystem in the Zpool you just created.
    • Hints:
      • Use zfs set canmount=off ZPOOL_NAME to disable the mountpoint on the Zpool itself.
      • ...and try zfs create to create a ZFS filesystem under the Zpool.
  • Answers

Less Basic Exercises

  • Create a mirrored Zpool with disks /disks/disk0 and /disks/disk1.
    • Hint: You should only have two disks in a mirrored Zpool.
  • Create a RAID5/RAIDZ Zpool with disks /disks/disk0 through /disks/disk2.
    • Hint: You should have at least 3 disks.
  • Create a RAID6/RAIDZ2 Zpool with disks /disks/disk0 through /disks/disk3.
    • Hint: You should have at least 4 disks.
  • Create a RAID7/RAIDZ3 Zpool with disks /disks/disk0 through /disks/disk4.
    • Hint: You should have at least 5 disks.
  • Answers

Simulating Hardware Failure

  • Create an unmirroed Zpool called zfspool, remove /disks/disk0, catch the error in ZFS, confirm that the pool is utterly broken and that your files are unrecoverable.

    • Hints:
      • Run populate-zfs-filesystem /zfspool/ 5 5 to create sample files in the ZFS filesystem and save SHA1 hashes of those files.
      • Simulate breaking the disk with the command break-disk disk0
      • Run sha1-check-files to verify that files are corrupted
      • Run zfs-add-disk-file disk0 1024 to (re)create the disk0 file when done with this exercise
  • Created a mirrored Zpool called zfspool, remove /disks/disk0, catch the error in ZFS, fix the pool, verify that files are unharmed.

    • Hints:
      • Run populate-zfs-filesystem /zfspool/ 5 5 to create sample files in the ZFS filesystem and save SHA1 hashes of those files.
      • Simulate breaking the disk with the command break-disk disk0
      • After recovery, run sha1-check-files to verify that file contents were unharmed
      • Run zfs-add-disk-file disk0 1024 to (re)create the disk0 file when done with this exercise
  • Answers

Simulating Disk Corruption

  • Create a RAIDZ Zpool with 3 disks, corrupt disk0, catch the error in ZFS, and repair the pool. Verify the files are unaffected.
    • Hints:
      • Run populate-zfs-filesystem /zfspool/ 5 5 to create sample files in the ZFS filesystem and save SHA1 hashes of those files.
      • Try corrupting a disk with: corrupt --offset 1000 --repeat 1000000 /disks/disk0. This will swiss-cheese the disk in about a few 10s of seconds.
      • Run sha1-check-files /path/to/zfs/filesystem to catch corrupted files and verify the repairs were successful.
  • Create a RAIDZ Zpool with 3 disks, corrupt disk0 and disk1. Verify the Zpool is unrecoverable.
    • Hints:
      • Run populate-zfs-filesystem /zfspool/ 5 5 to create sample files in the ZFS filesystem and save SHA1 hashes of those files.
      • Try corrupting a disk with: corrupt --offset 1000 --repeat 1000000 /disks/disk0. This will swiss-cheese the disk in about a few 10s of seconds.
      • Run sha1-check-files /path/to/zfs/filesystem to catch corrupted files and verify that will need to restore from a backup.
  • Answers

Future Exercise Ideas

  • Play with snapshots and rollbacks.
  • Disk quotas for ZFS filesystems
  • Create a raw device in the Zpool and put ext4 on it. (rollback from a snapshot)
  • Stream one ZFS filessytem to another

FAQ

Q: Why SHA1 and now SHA512?

A: It's a UI consideration--I want checksums a little smaller, which will be easier to read. Keep in mind that the context is "simulating a filesystem", versus "code that is being run in production". But hey--if this is useful enough that you're looking at using this in production(!), come talk to me and I'll see what I can do. :-)

Resources

Credits

Who built this? / Contact

My name is Douglas Muth, and I am a software engineer in Philadelphia, PA.

There are several ways to get in touch with me:

Feel free to reach out to me if you have any comments, suggestions, or bug reports.

About

Learn ZFS the easy way with this lab environment where disk failures and corruption can be simulated!

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Sponsor this project

 

Packages

No packages published