cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
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bcache.rst (24630B)


      1============================
      2A block layer cache (bcache)
      3============================
      4
      5Say you've got a big slow raid 6, and an ssd or three. Wouldn't it be
      6nice if you could use them as cache... Hence bcache.
      7
      8The bcache wiki can be found at:
      9  https://bcache.evilpiepirate.org
     10
     11This is the git repository of bcache-tools:
     12  https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/colyli/bcache-tools.git/
     13
     14The latest bcache kernel code can be found from mainline Linux kernel:
     15  https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/
     16
     17It's designed around the performance characteristics of SSDs - it only allocates
     18in erase block sized buckets, and it uses a hybrid btree/log to track cached
     19extents (which can be anywhere from a single sector to the bucket size). It's
     20designed to avoid random writes at all costs; it fills up an erase block
     21sequentially, then issues a discard before reusing it.
     22
     23Both writethrough and writeback caching are supported. Writeback defaults to
     24off, but can be switched on and off arbitrarily at runtime. Bcache goes to
     25great lengths to protect your data - it reliably handles unclean shutdown. (It
     26doesn't even have a notion of a clean shutdown; bcache simply doesn't return
     27writes as completed until they're on stable storage).
     28
     29Writeback caching can use most of the cache for buffering writes - writing
     30dirty data to the backing device is always done sequentially, scanning from the
     31start to the end of the index.
     32
     33Since random IO is what SSDs excel at, there generally won't be much benefit
     34to caching large sequential IO. Bcache detects sequential IO and skips it;
     35it also keeps a rolling average of the IO sizes per task, and as long as the
     36average is above the cutoff it will skip all IO from that task - instead of
     37caching the first 512k after every seek. Backups and large file copies should
     38thus entirely bypass the cache.
     39
     40In the event of a data IO error on the flash it will try to recover by reading
     41from disk or invalidating cache entries.  For unrecoverable errors (meta data
     42or dirty data), caching is automatically disabled; if dirty data was present
     43in the cache it first disables writeback caching and waits for all dirty data
     44to be flushed.
     45
     46Getting started:
     47You'll need bcache util from the bcache-tools repository. Both the cache device
     48and backing device must be formatted before use::
     49
     50  bcache make -B /dev/sdb
     51  bcache make -C /dev/sdc
     52
     53`bcache make` has the ability to format multiple devices at the same time - if
     54you format your backing devices and cache device at the same time, you won't
     55have to manually attach::
     56
     57  bcache make -B /dev/sda /dev/sdb -C /dev/sdc
     58
     59If your bcache-tools is not updated to latest version and does not have the
     60unified `bcache` utility, you may use the legacy `make-bcache` utility to format
     61bcache device with same -B and -C parameters.
     62
     63bcache-tools now ships udev rules, and bcache devices are known to the kernel
     64immediately.  Without udev, you can manually register devices like this::
     65
     66  echo /dev/sdb > /sys/fs/bcache/register
     67  echo /dev/sdc > /sys/fs/bcache/register
     68
     69Registering the backing device makes the bcache device show up in /dev; you can
     70now format it and use it as normal. But the first time using a new bcache
     71device, it'll be running in passthrough mode until you attach it to a cache.
     72If you are thinking about using bcache later, it is recommended to setup all your
     73slow devices as bcache backing devices without a cache, and you can choose to add
     74a caching device later.
     75See 'ATTACHING' section below.
     76
     77The devices show up as::
     78
     79  /dev/bcache<N>
     80
     81As well as (with udev)::
     82
     83  /dev/bcache/by-uuid/<uuid>
     84  /dev/bcache/by-label/<label>
     85
     86To get started::
     87
     88  mkfs.ext4 /dev/bcache0
     89  mount /dev/bcache0 /mnt
     90
     91You can control bcache devices through sysfs at /sys/block/bcache<N>/bcache .
     92You can also control them through /sys/fs//bcache/<cset-uuid>/ .
     93
     94Cache devices are managed as sets; multiple caches per set isn't supported yet
     95but will allow for mirroring of metadata and dirty data in the future. Your new
     96cache set shows up as /sys/fs/bcache/<UUID>
     97
     98Attaching
     99---------
    100
    101After your cache device and backing device are registered, the backing device
    102must be attached to your cache set to enable caching. Attaching a backing
    103device to a cache set is done thusly, with the UUID of the cache set in
    104/sys/fs/bcache::
    105
    106  echo <CSET-UUID> > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/attach
    107
    108This only has to be done once. The next time you reboot, just reregister all
    109your bcache devices. If a backing device has data in a cache somewhere, the
    110/dev/bcache<N> device won't be created until the cache shows up - particularly
    111important if you have writeback caching turned on.
    112
    113If you're booting up and your cache device is gone and never coming back, you
    114can force run the backing device::
    115
    116  echo 1 > /sys/block/sdb/bcache/running
    117
    118(You need to use /sys/block/sdb (or whatever your backing device is called), not
    119/sys/block/bcache0, because bcache0 doesn't exist yet. If you're using a
    120partition, the bcache directory would be at /sys/block/sdb/sdb2/bcache)
    121
    122The backing device will still use that cache set if it shows up in the future,
    123but all the cached data will be invalidated. If there was dirty data in the
    124cache, don't expect the filesystem to be recoverable - you will have massive
    125filesystem corruption, though ext4's fsck does work miracles.
    126
    127Error Handling
    128--------------
    129
    130Bcache tries to transparently handle IO errors to/from the cache device without
    131affecting normal operation; if it sees too many errors (the threshold is
    132configurable, and defaults to 0) it shuts down the cache device and switches all
    133the backing devices to passthrough mode.
    134
    135 - For reads from the cache, if they error we just retry the read from the
    136   backing device.
    137
    138 - For writethrough writes, if the write to the cache errors we just switch to
    139   invalidating the data at that lba in the cache (i.e. the same thing we do for
    140   a write that bypasses the cache)
    141
    142 - For writeback writes, we currently pass that error back up to the
    143   filesystem/userspace. This could be improved - we could retry it as a write
    144   that skips the cache so we don't have to error the write.
    145
    146 - When we detach, we first try to flush any dirty data (if we were running in
    147   writeback mode). It currently doesn't do anything intelligent if it fails to
    148   read some of the dirty data, though.
    149
    150
    151Howto/cookbook
    152--------------
    153
    154A) Starting a bcache with a missing caching device
    155
    156If registering the backing device doesn't help, it's already there, you just need
    157to force it to run without the cache::
    158
    159	host:~# echo /dev/sdb1 > /sys/fs/bcache/register
    160	[  119.844831] bcache: register_bcache() error opening /dev/sdb1: device already registered
    161
    162Next, you try to register your caching device if it's present. However
    163if it's absent, or registration fails for some reason, you can still
    164start your bcache without its cache, like so::
    165
    166	host:/sys/block/sdb/sdb1/bcache# echo 1 > running
    167
    168Note that this may cause data loss if you were running in writeback mode.
    169
    170
    171B) Bcache does not find its cache::
    172
    173	host:/sys/block/md5/bcache# echo 0226553a-37cf-41d5-b3ce-8b1e944543a8 > attach
    174	[ 1933.455082] bcache: bch_cached_dev_attach() Couldn't find uuid for md5 in set
    175	[ 1933.478179] bcache: __cached_dev_store() Can't attach 0226553a-37cf-41d5-b3ce-8b1e944543a8
    176	[ 1933.478179] : cache set not found
    177
    178In this case, the caching device was simply not registered at boot
    179or disappeared and came back, and needs to be (re-)registered::
    180
    181	host:/sys/block/md5/bcache# echo /dev/sdh2 > /sys/fs/bcache/register
    182
    183
    184C) Corrupt bcache crashes the kernel at device registration time:
    185
    186This should never happen.  If it does happen, then you have found a bug!
    187Please report it to the bcache development list: linux-bcache@vger.kernel.org
    188
    189Be sure to provide as much information that you can including kernel dmesg
    190output if available so that we may assist.
    191
    192
    193D) Recovering data without bcache:
    194
    195If bcache is not available in the kernel, a filesystem on the backing
    196device is still available at an 8KiB offset. So either via a loopdev
    197of the backing device created with --offset 8K, or any value defined by
    198--data-offset when you originally formatted bcache with `bcache make`.
    199
    200For example::
    201
    202	losetup -o 8192 /dev/loop0 /dev/your_bcache_backing_dev
    203
    204This should present your unmodified backing device data in /dev/loop0
    205
    206If your cache is in writethrough mode, then you can safely discard the
    207cache device without loosing data.
    208
    209
    210E) Wiping a cache device
    211
    212::
    213
    214	host:~# wipefs -a /dev/sdh2
    215	16 bytes were erased at offset 0x1018 (bcache)
    216	they were: c6 85 73 f6 4e 1a 45 ca 82 65 f5 7f 48 ba 6d 81
    217
    218After you boot back with bcache enabled, you recreate the cache and attach it::
    219
    220	host:~# bcache make -C /dev/sdh2
    221	UUID:                   7be7e175-8f4c-4f99-94b2-9c904d227045
    222	Set UUID:               5bc072a8-ab17-446d-9744-e247949913c1
    223	version:                0
    224	nbuckets:               106874
    225	block_size:             1
    226	bucket_size:            1024
    227	nr_in_set:              1
    228	nr_this_dev:            0
    229	first_bucket:           1
    230	[  650.511912] bcache: run_cache_set() invalidating existing data
    231	[  650.549228] bcache: register_cache() registered cache device sdh2
    232
    233start backing device with missing cache::
    234
    235	host:/sys/block/md5/bcache# echo 1 > running
    236
    237attach new cache::
    238
    239	host:/sys/block/md5/bcache# echo 5bc072a8-ab17-446d-9744-e247949913c1 > attach
    240	[  865.276616] bcache: bch_cached_dev_attach() Caching md5 as bcache0 on set 5bc072a8-ab17-446d-9744-e247949913c1
    241
    242
    243F) Remove or replace a caching device::
    244
    245	host:/sys/block/sda/sda7/bcache# echo 1 > detach
    246	[  695.872542] bcache: cached_dev_detach_finish() Caching disabled for sda7
    247
    248	host:~# wipefs -a /dev/nvme0n1p4
    249	wipefs: error: /dev/nvme0n1p4: probing initialization failed: Device or resource busy
    250	Ooops, it's disabled, but not unregistered, so it's still protected
    251
    252We need to go and unregister it::
    253
    254	host:/sys/fs/bcache/b7ba27a1-2398-4649-8ae3-0959f57ba128# ls -l cache0
    255	lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Feb 25 18:33 cache0 -> ../../../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/0000:70:00.0/nvme/nvme0/nvme0n1/nvme0n1p4/bcache/
    256	host:/sys/fs/bcache/b7ba27a1-2398-4649-8ae3-0959f57ba128# echo 1 > stop
    257	kernel: [  917.041908] bcache: cache_set_free() Cache set b7ba27a1-2398-4649-8ae3-0959f57ba128 unregistered
    258
    259Now we can wipe it::
    260
    261	host:~# wipefs -a /dev/nvme0n1p4
    262	/dev/nvme0n1p4: 16 bytes were erased at offset 0x00001018 (bcache): c6 85 73 f6 4e 1a 45 ca 82 65 f5 7f 48 ba 6d 81
    263
    264
    265G) dm-crypt and bcache
    266
    267First setup bcache unencrypted and then install dmcrypt on top of
    268/dev/bcache<N> This will work faster than if you dmcrypt both the backing
    269and caching devices and then install bcache on top. [benchmarks?]
    270
    271
    272H) Stop/free a registered bcache to wipe and/or recreate it
    273
    274Suppose that you need to free up all bcache references so that you can
    275fdisk run and re-register a changed partition table, which won't work
    276if there are any active backing or caching devices left on it:
    277
    2781) Is it present in /dev/bcache* ? (there are times where it won't be)
    279
    280   If so, it's easy::
    281
    282	host:/sys/block/bcache0/bcache# echo 1 > stop
    283
    2842) But if your backing device is gone, this won't work::
    285
    286	host:/sys/block/bcache0# cd bcache
    287	bash: cd: bcache: No such file or directory
    288
    289   In this case, you may have to unregister the dmcrypt block device that
    290   references this bcache to free it up::
    291
    292	host:~# dmsetup remove oldds1
    293	bcache: bcache_device_free() bcache0 stopped
    294	bcache: cache_set_free() Cache set 5bc072a8-ab17-446d-9744-e247949913c1 unregistered
    295
    296   This causes the backing bcache to be removed from /sys/fs/bcache and
    297   then it can be reused.  This would be true of any block device stacking
    298   where bcache is a lower device.
    299
    3003) In other cases, you can also look in /sys/fs/bcache/::
    301
    302	host:/sys/fs/bcache# ls -l */{cache?,bdev?}
    303	lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Mar  5 09:39 0226553a-37cf-41d5-b3ce-8b1e944543a8/bdev1 -> ../../../devices/virtual/block/dm-1/bcache/
    304	lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Mar  5 09:39 0226553a-37cf-41d5-b3ce-8b1e944543a8/cache0 -> ../../../devices/virtual/block/dm-4/bcache/
    305	lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 0 Mar  5 09:39 5bc072a8-ab17-446d-9744-e247949913c1/cache0 -> ../../../devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:01.0/0000:01:00.0/ata10/host9/target9:0:0/9:0:0:0/block/sdl/sdl2/bcache/
    306
    307   The device names will show which UUID is relevant, cd in that directory
    308   and stop the cache::
    309
    310	host:/sys/fs/bcache/5bc072a8-ab17-446d-9744-e247949913c1# echo 1 > stop
    311
    312   This will free up bcache references and let you reuse the partition for
    313   other purposes.
    314
    315
    316
    317Troubleshooting performance
    318---------------------------
    319
    320Bcache has a bunch of config options and tunables. The defaults are intended to
    321be reasonable for typical desktop and server workloads, but they're not what you
    322want for getting the best possible numbers when benchmarking.
    323
    324 - Backing device alignment
    325
    326   The default metadata size in bcache is 8k.  If your backing device is
    327   RAID based, then be sure to align this by a multiple of your stride
    328   width using `bcache make --data-offset`. If you intend to expand your
    329   disk array in the future, then multiply a series of primes by your
    330   raid stripe size to get the disk multiples that you would like.
    331
    332   For example:  If you have a 64k stripe size, then the following offset
    333   would provide alignment for many common RAID5 data spindle counts::
    334
    335	64k * 2*2*2*3*3*5*7 bytes = 161280k
    336
    337   That space is wasted, but for only 157.5MB you can grow your RAID 5
    338   volume to the following data-spindle counts without re-aligning::
    339
    340	3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,14,15,18,20,21 ...
    341
    342 - Bad write performance
    343
    344   If write performance is not what you expected, you probably wanted to be
    345   running in writeback mode, which isn't the default (not due to a lack of
    346   maturity, but simply because in writeback mode you'll lose data if something
    347   happens to your SSD)::
    348
    349	# echo writeback > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/cache_mode
    350
    351 - Bad performance, or traffic not going to the SSD that you'd expect
    352
    353   By default, bcache doesn't cache everything. It tries to skip sequential IO -
    354   because you really want to be caching the random IO, and if you copy a 10
    355   gigabyte file you probably don't want that pushing 10 gigabytes of randomly
    356   accessed data out of your cache.
    357
    358   But if you want to benchmark reads from cache, and you start out with fio
    359   writing an 8 gigabyte test file - so you want to disable that::
    360
    361	# echo 0 > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/sequential_cutoff
    362
    363   To set it back to the default (4 mb), do::
    364
    365	# echo 4M > /sys/block/bcache0/bcache/sequential_cutoff
    366
    367 - Traffic's still going to the spindle/still getting cache misses
    368
    369   In the real world, SSDs don't always keep up with disks - particularly with
    370   slower SSDs, many disks being cached by one SSD, or mostly sequential IO. So
    371   you want to avoid being bottlenecked by the SSD and having it slow everything
    372   down.
    373
    374   To avoid that bcache tracks latency to the cache device, and gradually
    375   throttles traffic if the latency exceeds a threshold (it does this by
    376   cranking down the sequential bypass).
    377
    378   You can disable this if you need to by setting the thresholds to 0::
    379
    380	# echo 0 > /sys/fs/bcache/<cache set>/congested_read_threshold_us
    381	# echo 0 > /sys/fs/bcache/<cache set>/congested_write_threshold_us
    382
    383   The default is 2000 us (2 milliseconds) for reads, and 20000 for writes.
    384
    385 - Still getting cache misses, of the same data
    386
    387   One last issue that sometimes trips people up is actually an old bug, due to
    388   the way cache coherency is handled for cache misses. If a btree node is full,
    389   a cache miss won't be able to insert a key for the new data and the data
    390   won't be written to the cache.
    391
    392   In practice this isn't an issue because as soon as a write comes along it'll
    393   cause the btree node to be split, and you need almost no write traffic for
    394   this to not show up enough to be noticeable (especially since bcache's btree
    395   nodes are huge and index large regions of the device). But when you're
    396   benchmarking, if you're trying to warm the cache by reading a bunch of data
    397   and there's no other traffic - that can be a problem.
    398
    399   Solution: warm the cache by doing writes, or use the testing branch (there's
    400   a fix for the issue there).
    401
    402
    403Sysfs - backing device
    404----------------------
    405
    406Available at /sys/block/<bdev>/bcache, /sys/block/bcache*/bcache and
    407(if attached) /sys/fs/bcache/<cset-uuid>/bdev*
    408
    409attach
    410  Echo the UUID of a cache set to this file to enable caching.
    411
    412cache_mode
    413  Can be one of either writethrough, writeback, writearound or none.
    414
    415clear_stats
    416  Writing to this file resets the running total stats (not the day/hour/5 minute
    417  decaying versions).
    418
    419detach
    420  Write to this file to detach from a cache set. If there is dirty data in the
    421  cache, it will be flushed first.
    422
    423dirty_data
    424  Amount of dirty data for this backing device in the cache. Continuously
    425  updated unlike the cache set's version, but may be slightly off.
    426
    427label
    428  Name of underlying device.
    429
    430readahead
    431  Size of readahead that should be performed.  Defaults to 0.  If set to e.g.
    432  1M, it will round cache miss reads up to that size, but without overlapping
    433  existing cache entries.
    434
    435running
    436  1 if bcache is running (i.e. whether the /dev/bcache device exists, whether
    437  it's in passthrough mode or caching).
    438
    439sequential_cutoff
    440  A sequential IO will bypass the cache once it passes this threshold; the
    441  most recent 128 IOs are tracked so sequential IO can be detected even when
    442  it isn't all done at once.
    443
    444sequential_merge
    445  If non zero, bcache keeps a list of the last 128 requests submitted to compare
    446  against all new requests to determine which new requests are sequential
    447  continuations of previous requests for the purpose of determining sequential
    448  cutoff. This is necessary if the sequential cutoff value is greater than the
    449  maximum acceptable sequential size for any single request.
    450
    451state
    452  The backing device can be in one of four different states:
    453
    454  no cache: Has never been attached to a cache set.
    455
    456  clean: Part of a cache set, and there is no cached dirty data.
    457
    458  dirty: Part of a cache set, and there is cached dirty data.
    459
    460  inconsistent: The backing device was forcibly run by the user when there was
    461  dirty data cached but the cache set was unavailable; whatever data was on the
    462  backing device has likely been corrupted.
    463
    464stop
    465  Write to this file to shut down the bcache device and close the backing
    466  device.
    467
    468writeback_delay
    469  When dirty data is written to the cache and it previously did not contain
    470  any, waits some number of seconds before initiating writeback. Defaults to
    471  30.
    472
    473writeback_percent
    474  If nonzero, bcache tries to keep around this percentage of the cache dirty by
    475  throttling background writeback and using a PD controller to smoothly adjust
    476  the rate.
    477
    478writeback_rate
    479  Rate in sectors per second - if writeback_percent is nonzero, background
    480  writeback is throttled to this rate. Continuously adjusted by bcache but may
    481  also be set by the user.
    482
    483writeback_running
    484  If off, writeback of dirty data will not take place at all. Dirty data will
    485  still be added to the cache until it is mostly full; only meant for
    486  benchmarking. Defaults to on.
    487
    488Sysfs - backing device stats
    489~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    490
    491There are directories with these numbers for a running total, as well as
    492versions that decay over the past day, hour and 5 minutes; they're also
    493aggregated in the cache set directory as well.
    494
    495bypassed
    496  Amount of IO (both reads and writes) that has bypassed the cache
    497
    498cache_hits, cache_misses, cache_hit_ratio
    499  Hits and misses are counted per individual IO as bcache sees them; a
    500  partial hit is counted as a miss.
    501
    502cache_bypass_hits, cache_bypass_misses
    503  Hits and misses for IO that is intended to skip the cache are still counted,
    504  but broken out here.
    505
    506cache_miss_collisions
    507  Counts instances where data was going to be inserted into the cache from a
    508  cache miss, but raced with a write and data was already present (usually 0
    509  since the synchronization for cache misses was rewritten)
    510
    511cache_readaheads
    512  Count of times readahead occurred.
    513
    514Sysfs - cache set
    515~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    516
    517Available at /sys/fs/bcache/<cset-uuid>
    518
    519average_key_size
    520  Average data per key in the btree.
    521
    522bdev<0..n>
    523  Symlink to each of the attached backing devices.
    524
    525block_size
    526  Block size of the cache devices.
    527
    528btree_cache_size
    529  Amount of memory currently used by the btree cache
    530
    531bucket_size
    532  Size of buckets
    533
    534cache<0..n>
    535  Symlink to each of the cache devices comprising this cache set.
    536
    537cache_available_percent
    538  Percentage of cache device which doesn't contain dirty data, and could
    539  potentially be used for writeback.  This doesn't mean this space isn't used
    540  for clean cached data; the unused statistic (in priority_stats) is typically
    541  much lower.
    542
    543clear_stats
    544  Clears the statistics associated with this cache
    545
    546dirty_data
    547  Amount of dirty data is in the cache (updated when garbage collection runs).
    548
    549flash_vol_create
    550  Echoing a size to this file (in human readable units, k/M/G) creates a thinly
    551  provisioned volume backed by the cache set.
    552
    553io_error_halflife, io_error_limit
    554  These determines how many errors we accept before disabling the cache.
    555  Each error is decayed by the half life (in # ios).  If the decaying count
    556  reaches io_error_limit dirty data is written out and the cache is disabled.
    557
    558journal_delay_ms
    559  Journal writes will delay for up to this many milliseconds, unless a cache
    560  flush happens sooner. Defaults to 100.
    561
    562root_usage_percent
    563  Percentage of the root btree node in use.  If this gets too high the node
    564  will split, increasing the tree depth.
    565
    566stop
    567  Write to this file to shut down the cache set - waits until all attached
    568  backing devices have been shut down.
    569
    570tree_depth
    571  Depth of the btree (A single node btree has depth 0).
    572
    573unregister
    574  Detaches all backing devices and closes the cache devices; if dirty data is
    575  present it will disable writeback caching and wait for it to be flushed.
    576
    577Sysfs - cache set internal
    578~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    579
    580This directory also exposes timings for a number of internal operations, with
    581separate files for average duration, average frequency, last occurrence and max
    582duration: garbage collection, btree read, btree node sorts and btree splits.
    583
    584active_journal_entries
    585  Number of journal entries that are newer than the index.
    586
    587btree_nodes
    588  Total nodes in the btree.
    589
    590btree_used_percent
    591  Average fraction of btree in use.
    592
    593bset_tree_stats
    594  Statistics about the auxiliary search trees
    595
    596btree_cache_max_chain
    597  Longest chain in the btree node cache's hash table
    598
    599cache_read_races
    600  Counts instances where while data was being read from the cache, the bucket
    601  was reused and invalidated - i.e. where the pointer was stale after the read
    602  completed. When this occurs the data is reread from the backing device.
    603
    604trigger_gc
    605  Writing to this file forces garbage collection to run.
    606
    607Sysfs - Cache device
    608~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    609
    610Available at /sys/block/<cdev>/bcache
    611
    612block_size
    613  Minimum granularity of writes - should match hardware sector size.
    614
    615btree_written
    616  Sum of all btree writes, in (kilo/mega/giga) bytes
    617
    618bucket_size
    619  Size of buckets
    620
    621cache_replacement_policy
    622  One of either lru, fifo or random.
    623
    624discard
    625  Boolean; if on a discard/TRIM will be issued to each bucket before it is
    626  reused. Defaults to off, since SATA TRIM is an unqueued command (and thus
    627  slow).
    628
    629freelist_percent
    630  Size of the freelist as a percentage of nbuckets. Can be written to to
    631  increase the number of buckets kept on the freelist, which lets you
    632  artificially reduce the size of the cache at runtime. Mostly for testing
    633  purposes (i.e. testing how different size caches affect your hit rate), but
    634  since buckets are discarded when they move on to the freelist will also make
    635  the SSD's garbage collection easier by effectively giving it more reserved
    636  space.
    637
    638io_errors
    639  Number of errors that have occurred, decayed by io_error_halflife.
    640
    641metadata_written
    642  Sum of all non data writes (btree writes and all other metadata).
    643
    644nbuckets
    645  Total buckets in this cache
    646
    647priority_stats
    648  Statistics about how recently data in the cache has been accessed.
    649  This can reveal your working set size.  Unused is the percentage of
    650  the cache that doesn't contain any data.  Metadata is bcache's
    651  metadata overhead.  Average is the average priority of cache buckets.
    652  Next is a list of quantiles with the priority threshold of each.
    653
    654written
    655  Sum of all data that has been written to the cache; comparison with
    656  btree_written gives the amount of write inflation in bcache.