setup-storage(8) System Manager's Manual setup-storage(8)

setup-storage - automatically prepare storage devices

setup-storage [-X] [-f filename] [-d] [-h] [-s] [-D disks] [-L directory]

Using FAI disk_config files, setup-storage Computes effective partition and volume sizes and executes the necessary commands to configure storage devices. It manages disk drives, RAID and LVM volumes, along with encryption and tmpfs. Disks and partitions are designated by disk1.2, disk3.1 etc. and may thus be referenced as such. Currently, setup-storage handles following filesystems: ext2/3/4, vFAT(FAT32), msdos(FAT16), reiserFS, XFS and BTRFS but could easily be extended to further types as well. Once the storage devices are prepared, an appropriate fstab(5) (and possibly also a crypttab(5) file is generated.

Without the -X parameter setup-storage runs in test-only mode and does not execute commands other than writing disk labels to a blank disk.

The exit code of setup-storage is 0 if all operations were performed successfully and non-zero if an error occurs.

Really write the configuration to disk. Otherwise setup-storage runs in test-only mode.

Normally setup-storage selects an appropriate configuration from $FAI/disk_config/ by picking the class with the highest priority from classes that has an existing file. If however -f is given the configuration in filename is used.

Enable debugging output. Equivalent to environment variable debug set to a non-zero value. See below for further details.

Perform syntax check of disk_config file only and exit.

Specify the list of disk drives to be configured using setup-storage. Overrides the variable disklist. Do not forget to quote this space separated list.

Use the specified directory instead of LOGDIR.

Display the synopsis and version info and exit.

Print disk variables as YAML file into disk_var.yml

setup-storage will use the following environment variables:

If option -D is not used, the disklist variable may contain a space separated list of disk drives available in the system. Their order matters as they may be referred to as disk1, and so on, in disk_config. If unset, fai-disk-info will be called to determine the list.
If debug is set to a non-zero value all actions and details to track the operation of setup-storage are printed to stderr.
The location of the config space to find the disk_config directory.
The list of FAI classes to determine the appropriate configuration to choose.
setup-storage generates disk_var.sh, fstab, and possibly crypttab (see below) in this directory. Defaults to /tmp/fai if unset. Option -L overrides this.
This variable determines if partitions should be preserved when they are tagged with preserve_reinstall (see below for details). Normally set by the list of FAI flags (FAI_FLAGS).
This variable may contain a list of volume groups, that are ignored by setup-storage. The list can be comma or space separated. It's used by fai-diskimage.

If setup-storage executes successfully, an fstab(5) file matching the specified configuration is generated as $LOGDIR/fstab. Furthermore the file $LOGDIR/disk_var.sh is generated. This file defines the following variables, if not yet set: SWAPLIST, ROOT_PARTITION, BOOT_PARTITION (which is only set in case this resides on a disk drive), BOOT_DEVICE and PHYSICAL_BOOT_DEVICES (which contains the list of all physical devices having a bootable partition). Both BOOT_PARTITION and BOOT_DEVICE describe the partition and disk/RAID/LVM device hosting the mount point for /boot. If /boot has no extra mount point, / is used instead. PHYSICAL_BOOT_DEVICES can be used to determine where a bootloader should be installed (this is useful if / is on a LVM or RAID device). You may source $LOGDIR/disk_var.sh to get the variables set. The example config space shipped with FAI sources this file in scripts/GRUB_PC/10-setup. If encryption was configured, a proper crypttab(5) file plus key files will be generated.

The output of setup-storage is also written to the log file format.log.

setup-storage configures storage devices according to a FAI disk_config file. The full grammar describing the syntax of these disk_config files is given below. The syntax is similar to the structure of an fstab file. First we show a number of examples to give an intuition what these should look like.

disk_config disk1 disklabel:msdos bootable:3
primary	/boot	20-100	ext4	rw
primary	swap	1G	swap	sw
primary	/	12G	ext4	rw,noatime
logical	/backup	10%-	xfs	rw	

    

disk_config sda
primary	-	20G	-	-
primary	-	4G	-	-
disk_config sdb sameas: sda
disk_config raid
raid1	/	sda1,sdb1	ext4	rw
raid1	swap	sda2,sdb2	swap	sw

    

disk_config raid
raid1	/	sda1,sdd1	ext4	rw,errors=remount-ro	
raid0	-	disk2.2,sdc1,sde1:spare:missing ext4 default	

    

disk_config	sda	bootable:1
primary	/boot	500	ext4	rw	
primary	-	4096-	-	-	
disk_config lvm
vg	my_pv	sda2
my_pv_swap	swap	2048	swap	sw
my_pv_root	/	2048	ext4	rw

    

disk_config disk1
primary	-	350	-	-
primary	swap	2G	swap	sw,pri=1
primary	-	0-	-	-
disk_config disk2  sameas:disk1
disk_config raid fstabkey:uuid
raid1	/boot	disk1.1,disk2.1	ext4	rw,noatime,errors=remount-ro
raid1	-	disk1.3,disk2.3	-	-
disk_config lvm fstabkey:uuid
vg	vg_system	md1
vg_system-root	/	8G	ext4	rw,noatime
vg_system-var	/var	20G	ext4	rw,noatime
vg_system-home	/home	10G	ext4	rw,noatime,nosuid,nodev
vg_system-tmp	/tmp	30G	ext4	rw,noatime,nosuid,nodev

    

disk_config /dev/sdb
primary	/	21750	ext4	defaults,errors=remount-ro
primary	/boot	250	ext4	defaults
logical	-	4000	-	-
logical	-	2000	-	-
logical	-	10-	-	-
disk_config cryptsetup
swap	swap	/dev/sdb5	swap	defaults
tmp	/tmp	/dev/sdb6	ext2	defaults
luks	/local00	/dev/sdb7	ext4	defaults,errors=remount-ro  createopts="-m 0"

    

disk_config disk1 disklabel:gpt bootable:1 fstabkey:uuid align-at:1M
primary	-	100%	-	-
disk_config cryptsetup
luks:"passwd"	-	disk1.1	-	-
disk_config lvm fstabkey:uuid
vg	vg1	disk1.1
vg1-root	/	30%-	ext4	defaults,errors=remount-ro,noatime,rw

    

disk_config tmpfs
tmpfs	/tmp	RAM:20%	defaults
tmpfs	/scratch	3GiB	defaults
tmpfs	/scratch2	-	defaults

    

disk_config nfs
nfs 11.22.33.44:/export/vm-root/HOSTNAME	/	defaults

    
A diskless client setup. Mount the whole OS file system via NFS from an NFS server onto /.

disk_config disk1
primary	/boot	500	ext4	rw
primary	-	2G-	-	-
disk_config disk2
primary	-	2G-	-	-
disk_config disk3 sameas:disk2
disk_config disk4 sameas:disk2
disk_config btrfs fstabkey:uuid
btrfs	raid1	/	disk1.2,disk2.1	noatime,subvol=@/
btrfs	raid1	/home	disk3.1,disk4.1	subvol=@home,noatime

    

disk_config /dev/sda fstabkey:uuid bootable:2
primary	/	20GiB	ext3	defaults
primary	/boot	250	ext2	defaults
primary	swap	4GiB	swap	defaults
logical	-	256	ext3_journal	-
logical	-	256	ext4_journal	-
logical	-	256	xfs_journal	-
disk_config /dev/sdb fstabkey:uuid
primary	/mnt/ext3	33%	ext3:journal=/dev/sda5	defaults
primary	/mnt/ext4	33%	ext4:journal=/dev/sda6	defaults
primary	/mnt/xfs	33%	xfs:journal=/dev/sda7	defaults

    

disk_config disk1 disklabel:gpt fstabkey:partlabel bootable:1
p=efi	/boot/efi	200	vfat	rw
p=root	/	1G-20G	ext4	rw
p=	/data	1G-	ext4	rw

    
Creating a ESP partition for UEFI boot is very simple. Use a GPT partition table, create a vfat partition for /boot/efi which is also bootable. That's it. A name after p= is used as the partition label. Remember that GPT does not use logical partition. Just use p= for each partition. The fstab entries will use the partition labels if defined. Otherwise it will fall back to the file system UUID or the device name. Setting fstabkey:partuuid will use the UUID of the partition (not the UUID of the file system) for the fstab entries.

This section describes the syntax of disk_config files

file ::= <lines> EOF

lines ::= EOL
/* empty lines or whitespace only */
| <comment> EOL
| <config> EOL

comment ::= #.*

config ::= disk_config lvm( <lvmoption>)*
| disk_config raid( <raidoption>)*
| disk_config cryptsetup( <cryptsetupoption>)*
| disk_config tmpfs
| disk_config end
| disk_config disk[[:digit:]]+( <option>)*
| disk_config [^[:space:]]+( <option>)*
/* fully qualified device-path or short form, like sda, whereby full
* path is assumed to be /dev/sda; may contain shell globbing such
* as /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-* */
| <volume>

lvmoption ::= /* empty */
| preserve_always:([^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+(,[^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+)*|all)
/* preserve volumes -- always */
| preserve_reinstall:([^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+(,[^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+)*|all)
/* preserve volumes -- unless the system is installed for the
first time */
| preserve_lazy:([^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+(,[^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+)*|all)
/* preserve volumes -- unless these don't exist yet */
| always_format:([^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+(,[^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+)*|all)
/* run mkfs on the volumes, even if marked as preserve */
| resize:([^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+(,[^/,\s\-]+-[^/,\s\-]+)*|all)
/* attempt to resize partitions */
| fstabkey:(device|label|uuid)
/* when creating the fstab, the key used for defining the device
may be the device (/dev/xxx), a label given using -L,
the filesystem uuid, partition label (only when using GPT) or partition uuid
*/

raidoption ::= /* empty */
| preserve_always:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* preserve volumes -- always */
| preserve_reinstall:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* preserve volumes -- unless the system is installed for the
first time */
| preserve_lazy:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* preserve volumes -- unless these don't exist yet */
| always_format:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* run mkfs on the volumes, even if marked as preserve */
| fstabkey:(device|label|uuid)
/* when creating the fstab the key used for defining the device
may be the device (/dev/xxx), a label given using -L, or the uuid
*/

cryptsetupoption ::= /* empty */
| randinit
/* initialise all encrypted partitions with random data */

option ::= /* empty */
| preserve_always:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* preserve partitions -- always; the numbers refer to partition
numbers, i.e., preserve_always:5 for /dev/sda refers to /dev/sda5,
which may not necessarily be the 5th line of the configuration */
| preserve_reinstall:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* preserve partitions -- unless the system is installed for the
first time. See preserve_always above for the semantics of numbers
used for referring to partitions. */
| preserve_lazy:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* preserve partitions -- unless these don't exist yet */
| always_format:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* run mkfs on the partitions, even if marked as preserve */
| resize:([[:digit:]]+(,[[:digit:]]+)*|all)
/* attempt to resize partitions */
| disklabel:(msdos|gpt|gpt-bios)
/* write a disklabel - default is msdos */
| bootable:[[:digit:]]+
/* mark a partition bootable, default is / */
| virtual
/* do not assume the disk to be a physical device, use with xen */
| fstabkey:(device|label|uuid|partuuid|partlabel)
/* when creating the fstab the key used for defining the device
may be the device (/dev/xxx), a label given using -L, or the uuid
*/
| sameas:(disk[[:digit:]]+|[^[:space:]]+)
/* Indicate that this disk will use the same scheme
as the given device. The referenced device must be
defined before the device using this option. Use only
with identical hardware.
*/
| align-at:([[:digit:]]+[kKMGTPiB]*)
/* Align partitions at multiples of the given block size (unit
defaults to MiB, if omitted). Such an alignment, e.g., 4K, might be
important for proper performance of RAID arrays which use a logical
block size other than the sector size of the underlying disks. It
must, however, always be a multiple of this sector size.
*/

volume ::= <type> <mountpoint> <size> <filesystem> <mount_options> <luks_options> <fs_options>
| vg <name> <size> <fs_options>
/* lvm vg */
| tmpfs <mountpoint> <tmpfs_size> <mount_options>
/* tmpfs volume */

type ::= primary
/* for physical disks only */
| logical
/* for physical disks only */
| raw-disk
/* for physical disks only: do not partition this disk, use it as-is */
| m{^p=([^/,;]*)
/* p=<NAME> set NAME as gpt partition label, NAME may be empty */
| raid[0156]
/* raid level */
| luks
/* encrypted partition using LUKS and auto-generate a key file */
| luks:"[^"]+"
/* encrypted partition using LUKS and use quoted string as passphrase */
| tmp
/* encrypted partition for /tmp usage, will be
recreated with a random key at each boot and
reformatted as ext2 */
| swap
/* encrypted partition for swap space usage, will
be recreated with a random key at each boot and
reformatted as swap space */
| [^/[:space:]]+-[^/[:space:]]+
/* lvm logical volume: vg name and lv name*/

mountpoint ::= (-|swap|/[^[:space:]]*)
/* do not mount, mount as swap, or mount at fully qualified path */

name ::= [^/[:space:]]+
/* lvm volume group name */

sizespec ::= RAM:[[:digit:]]+%|[[:digit:]]+[kKMGTP%iB]*
/* size in kilo (KiB), mega (default, MiB), giga (GiB), tera (TiB),
* petabytes (PiB) or percentage of disk size or RAM size; integers
* only, no decimal numbers.
* Use KB, MB, GB, ... for a factor of 1000 instead of 1024 as
* multiplier */

size ::= <sizespec>(-(<sizespec>)?)?(:resize|:preserve_(always|reinstall|lazy))?
/* size, possibly given as a range; physical partitions or lvm logical
* volumes only */
| -<sizespec>(:resize|:preserve_(always|reinstall|lazy))?
/* size given as upper limit; physical partitions or lvm logical
* volumes only */
| [^,:[:space:]]+(:(spare|missing))*(,[^,:[:space:]]+(:(spare|missing))*)*
/* devices and options for a raid or lvm vg */

tmpfs_size ::= <sizespec>
/* tmpfs size */

mount_options ::= [^[:space:]]+

filesystem ::= -
| swap
| [^[:space:]]
/* mkfs.xxx must exist */

luks_options ::= (lukscreateopts=".*")
/* options to supply to cryptsetup when creating a LUKS
* encrypted filesystem. If no ciper (-c) is specified, then
* aes-xts-plain64 is used. If no key size (-s) is
* specified then 256 is used. */

fs_options ::= (createopts=".*"|tuneopts=".*"|(pv|vg|lv|md)createopts=".*")*
/* options to append to mkfs.xxx and to the filesystem-specific
* tuning tool, pvcreate, vgcreate, lvcreate or mdadm */

This program is part of FAI (Fully Automatic Installation). The FAI homepage is https://fai-project.org.

Further documentation, including coding related information, is available in a wiki page at https://wiki.fai-project.org/index.php/Setup-storage.

The setup-storage program was written by Michael Tautschnig <mt@debian.org>, with contributions from Christian Kern, Julien Blache <jblache@debian.org>, Kerim Güney, Thomas Lange and others.

The original and primary author of FAI is Thomas Lange <lange@cs.uni-koeln.de>.

May, 2021 FAI 6