The gfs_jadd command is used to add journals to a GFS file system after the device where the file system resides has been expanded. Running a gfs_jadd command on a GFS file system uses space between the current end of the file system and the end of the device where the file system resides. When the fill operation is completed, the journal index is updated.
The gfs_jadd command can only be run on a mounted file system, but it only needs to be run on one node in the cluster. All the other nodes sense that the expansion has occurred.
To verify that the changes were successful, you can use the gfs_jadd command with the -T (test) and -v (verbose) flags. Running the command with those flags displays the current state of the mounted GFS file system.
gfs_jadd -j Number MountPoint |
Specifies the number of new journals to be added.
Specifies the directory where the GFS file system is mounted.
Before running the gfs_jadd command:
Back up important data on the file system.
Run a gfs_tool df MountPoint command to display the pool volume used by the file system where journals will be added.
Expand the underlying pool volume with a pool_tool -g command. Refer to Section 5.8 Growing a Pool Volume for additional information.
After running the gfs_jadd command, run a gfs_jadd command with the -T and -v flags enabled to check that the new journals have been added to the file system.
In this example, one journal is added to the file system on the /gfs1/ directory.
gfs_jadd -j1 /gfs1 |
In this example, two journals are added to the file system on the /gfs1/ directory.
gfs_jadd -j2 /gfs1 |
In this example, the current state of the file system on the /gfs1/ directory can be checked for the new journals.
gfs_jadd -Tv /gfs1 |
gfs_jadd [Options] {MountPoint | Device} [MountPoint | Device] |
Specifies the directory where the GFS file system is mounted.
Specifies the device node of the file system.
Table 9-4 describes the GFS-specific options that can be used when adding journals to a GFS file system.
Flag | Parameter | Description |
---|---|---|
-h | Help. Displays short usage message, then exits. | |
-J | MegaBytes | Specifies the size of the new journals in MBytes. Default journal size is 128 MBytes. The minimum size is 32 MBytes. To add journals of different sizes to the file system, the gfs_jadd command must be run for each size journal. The size specified is rounded down so that it is a multiple of the journal-segment size that was specified when the file system was created. |
-j | Number | Specifies the number of new journals to be added by the gfs_jadd command. The default value is 1. |
-T | Test. Do all calculations, but do not write any data to the disk and do not add journals to the file system. Enabling this flag helps discover what the gfs_jadd command would have done if it were run without this flag. Using the -v flag with the -T flag turns up the verbosity level to display more information. | |
-q | Quiet. Turns down the verbosity level. | |
-V | Display command version information, then exit. | |
-v | Turn up the verbosity of messages. |
Table 9-4. GFS-specific Options Available When Adding Journals