NAME¶
thin_check - repair thin provisioning metadata on device or file
SYNOPSIS¶
thin_check [
options]
{device|file}
DESCRIPTION¶
thin_check checks thin provisioning metadata created by the device-mapper
thin provisioning target on a
device or
file.
OPTIONS¶
- -q, --quiet
- Suppress output messages, return only exit code.
- -h, --help
- Print help and exit.
- -V, --version
- Output version information and exit.
- --super-block-only
- Only check the superblock is present.
- --skip-mappings
- Skip checking of the block mappings which make up the bulk of the
metadata.
- --ignore-non-fatal-errors
- thin_check will only return a non-zero exit code if it finds a
fatal error. An example of a on fatal error is an incorrect data block
reference count causing a block to be considered allocated when it in fact
isn't. Ignoring errors for a long time is not advised, you really should
be using thin_repair to fix them.
EXAMPLE¶
Analyses and repairs thin provisioning metadata on logical volume
/dev/vg/metadata:
thin_check /dev/vg/metadata
The device may not be actively used by the target when running.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
thin_check returns an exit code of 0 for success or 1 for error.
SEE ALSO¶
thin_dump(8) thin_repair(8) thin_restore(8)
thin_rmap(8) thin_metadata_size(8)
AUTHOR¶
Joe Thornber <ejt@redhat.com>
Heinz Mauelshagen <HeinzM@RedHat.com>