This guide provides information about how to manage storage devices on a SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
- Preface
- I File systems and mounting
- 1 Overview of file systems in Linux
- 1.1 Terminology
- 1.2 Btrfs
- 1.3 XFS
- 1.4 Ext2
- 1.5 Ext3
- 1.6 Ext4
- 1.7 ReiserFS
- 1.8 OpenZFS and ZFS
- 1.9 tmpfs
- 1.10 Other supported file systems
- 1.11 Blocked file systems
- 1.12 Large file support in Linux
- 1.13 Linux kernel storage limitations
- 1.14 Freeing unused file system blocks
- 1.15 Troubleshooting file systems
- 1.16 More information
- 2 Resizing file systems
- 3 Mounting storage devices
- 4 Multi-tier caching for block device operations
- 1 Overview of file systems in Linux
- II Logical volumes (LVM)
- 5 LVM configuration
- 5.1 Understanding the logical volume manager
- 5.2 Creating volume groups
- 5.3 Creating logical volumes
- 5.4 Automatically activating non-root LVM volume groups
- 5.5 Resizing an existing volume group
- 5.6 Resizing a logical volume
- 5.7 Deleting a volume group or a logical volume
- 5.8 Disabling LVM on boot
- 5.9 Using LVM commands
- 5.10 Tagging LVM2 storage objects
- 6 LVM volume snapshots
- 5 LVM configuration
- III Software RAID
- IV Network storage
- 14 iSNS for Linux
- 15 Mass storage over IP networks: iSCSI
- 15.1 Installing the iSCSI LIO target server and iSCSI initiator
- 15.2 Setting up an iSCSI LIO target server
- 15.3 Configuring iSCSI initiator
- 15.4 Setting up software targets using targetcli-fb
- 15.5 Using iSCSI disks when installing
- 15.6 Troubleshooting iSCSI
- 15.7 iSCSI LIO target terminology
- 15.8 More information
- 16 Fibre Channel storage over Ethernet networks: FCoE
- 17 NVMe-oF
- 18 Managing multipath I/O for devices
- 18.1 Understanding multipath I/O
- 18.2 Hardware support
- 18.3 Planning for multipathing
- 18.4 Installing SUSE Linux Enterprise Server on multipath systems
- 18.5 Updating SLE on multipath systems
- 18.6 Multipath management tools
- 18.7 Configuring the system for multipathing
- 18.8 Multipath configuration
- 18.9 Configuring policies for failover, queuing, and failback
- 18.10 Configuring path grouping and priorities
- 18.11 Selecting devices for multipathing
- 18.12 Multipath device names and WWIDs
- 18.13 Miscellaneous options
- 18.14 Best practice
- 18.15 Troubleshooting MPIO
- 19 Sharing file systems with NFS
- 20 Samba
- 21 On-demand mounting with autofs
- A GNU licenses
- 1.1 Enabling Btrfs quotas
- 1.2 Setting quota for a subvolume
- 1.3 List of subvolumes for a device
- 5.1 Physical partitioning versus LVM
- 5.2 Physical volumes in the volume group named DATA
- 7.1 Example RAID 5 configuration
- 14.1 iSNS discovery domains
- 15.1 iSCSI SAN with an iSNS server
- 16.1 Open Fibre channel over ethernet SAN
- 19.1 NFS server configuration tool
- 20.1 Determining Windows domain membership
- 20.2 Windows Explorer dialog
- 20.3 Windows Explorer directory listing with compressed files
- 20.4 Adding a new Samba share with snapshots enabled
- 20.5 The tab in Windows explorer
- 1.1 File system types in Linux
- 1.2 Maximum sizes of files and file systems (on-disk format, 4 KiB block size)
- 1.3 Storage limitations
- 2.1 File system support for resizing
- 7.1 Comparison of RAID 5 and RAID 6
- 9.1 Nested RAID levels
- 9.2 Scenario for creating a RAID 10 (1+0) by nesting
- 9.3 Scenario for creating a RAID 10 (0+1) by nesting
- 9.4 Complex RAID 10 compared to nested RAID 10
- 9.5 Scenario for creating a RAID 10 using mdadm
- 11.1 Tasks involved in resizing a RAID
- 11.2 Scenario for increasing the size of component partitions
- 12.1 Translation between non-SES-2 patterns and SES-2 patterns
Copyright © 2006–2024 SUSE LLC and contributors. All rights reserved.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or (at your option) version 1.3; with the Invariant Section being this copyright notice and license. A copy of the license version 1.2 is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
For SUSE trademarks, see https://www.suse.com/company/legal/. All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Trademark symbols (®, ™ etc.) denote trademarks of SUSE and its affiliates. Asterisks (*) denote third-party trademarks.
All information found in this book has been compiled with utmost attention to detail. However, this does not guarantee complete accuracy. Neither SUSE LLC, its affiliates, the authors nor the translators shall be held liable for possible errors or the consequences thereof.