Trim Filesystem

Since v1.4.0, Longhorn supports trimming filesystem inside Longhorn volumes. Trimming will reclaim space wasted by the removed files of the filesystem.

Note:

  • Trying to trim a removed files from a valid snapshot will do nothing but the filesystem will discard this kind of in-memory trimmable file info. Later on if you mark the snapshot as removed and want to retry the trim, you may need to unmount and remount the filesystem so that the filesystem can recollect the trimmable file info.

  • If you allow automatically removing snapshots during filesystem trim, please be careful of using mount option discard, which will trigger the snapshot removal frequently then interrupt some operations like backup creation.

Prerequisites

  • The Longhorn version must be v1.4.0 or higher.
  • There is a trimmable filesystem like EXT4 or XFS inside the Longhorn volume.
  • The volume is attached and mounted on a mount point before trimming.

Trim the filesystem in a Longhorn volume

You can trim a Longhorn volume using either the Longhorn UI or the fstrim command.

Via Longhorn UI

You can directly click volume operation Trim Filesystem for attached volumes.

Then Longhorn will try its best to figure out the mount point and execute fstrim <the mount point>. If something is wrong or the filesystem does not exist, the UI will return an error.

Via shell command

When using fstrim, you must identify the mount point of the volume and then run the command fstrim <the mount point>.

  • RWO volume: The mount point is either a pod of the workload or the node to which the volume was manually attached.
  • RWX volume: The mount point is the share manager pod of the volume. The share manager pod contains the NFS server and is typically named share-manager-<volume name>.

To trim an RWX volume, perform the following steps:

  1. Identify and then open a shell inside the share manager pod of the volume.
    kubectl -n longhorn-system exec -it <the share manager pod> -- bash
    
  2. Identify the work directory of the NFS server (for example, /export/<volume name>).
    mount | grep <volume name>
    /dev/longhorn/<volume name> on /export/<volume name> type ext4 (rw,relatime)
    
  3. Trim the work directory.
    fstrim /export/<volume name>
    

Periodically trim the filesystem

You can set up a RecurringJob to periodically trim the filesystem.

Automatically Remove Snapshots During Filesystem Trim

By design each valid snapshot of a Longhorn volume is immutable. Hence Longhorn filesystem trim feature can be applied to the volume head and the followed continuous removed or system snapshots only.

The Global Setting “Remove Snapshots During Filesystem Trim”

To help reclaim as much space as possible automatically, Longhorn introduces setting Remove Snapshots During Filesystem Trim. This allows Longhorn filesystem trim feature to automatically mark the latest snapshot and its ancestors as removed and stops at the snapshot containing multiple children. As a result, Longhorn can reclaim space for as more snapshots as possible.

The Volume Spec Field “UnmapMarkSnapChainRemoved”

Of course there is a per-volume field volume.Spec.UnmapMarkSnapChainRemoved would overwrite the global setting mentioned above.

There are 3 options for this volume field: ignored, enabled, and disabled. ignored means following the global setting, which is the default value.

You can directly set this field in the StorageClasses so that the customized value can be applied to all volumes created by the StorageClasses.

Known Issues & Limitations

Encrypted volumes

  • By default, TRIM commands are not enabled by the device-mapper. You can check this doc for details.

  • If you still want to trim an encrypted Longhorn volume, you can:

    1. Enter into the node host the volume is attached to.
    2. Enable flag discards for the encrypted volume. The passphrase is recorded in the corresponding secret:
    cryptsetup --allow-discards --persistent refresh <Longhorn volume name>
    
    1. Directly use Longhorn UI to trim the volume or execute fstrim for the mount point of /dev/mapper/<volume name> manually.

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