#! /bin/sh # # Calomel.org # https://calomel.org/zfs_health_check_script.html # FreeBSD ZFS Health Check script # zfs_health.sh @ Version 0.18 # Check health of ZFS volumes and drives. On any faults send email. # 99 problems but ZFS aint one problems=0 # Health - Check if all zfs volumes are in good condition. We are looking for # any keyword signifying a degraded or broken array. condition=$(/sbin/zpool status | egrep -i '(DEGRADED|FAULTED|OFFLINE|UNAVAIL|REMOVED|FAIL|DESTROYED|corrupt|cannot|unrecover)') if [ "${condition}" ]; then emailSubject="`hostname` - ZFS pool - HEALTH fault" problems=1 fi # Capacity - Make sure the pool capacity is below 80% for best performance. The # percentage really depends on how large your volume is. If you have a 128GB # SSD then 80% is reasonable. If you have a 60TB raid-z2 array then you can # probably set the warning closer to 95%. # # ZFS uses a copy-on-write scheme. The file system writes new data to # sequential free blocks first and when the uberblock has been updated the new # inode pointers become valid. This method is true only when the pool has # enough free sequential blocks. If the pool is at capacity and space limited, # ZFS will be have to randomly write blocks. This means ZFS can not create an # optimal set of sequential writes and write performance is severely impacted. maxCapacity=85 if [ ${problems} -eq 0 ]; then capacity=$(/sbin/zpool list -H -o capacity | cut -d'%' -f1) for line in ${capacity} do if [ $line -ge $maxCapacity ]; then emailSubject="`hostname` - ZFS pool - Capacity Exceeded" problems=1 fi done fi # Errors - Check the columns for READ, WRITE and CKSUM (checksum) drive errors # on all volumes and all drives using "zpool status". If any non-zero errors # are reported an email will be sent out. You should then look to replace the # faulty drive and run "zpool scrub" on the affected volume after resilvering. if [ ${problems} -eq 0 ]; then errors=$(/sbin/zpool status | grep ONLINE | grep -v state | awk '{print $3 $4 $5}' | grep -v 000) if [ "${errors}" ]; then emailSubject="`hostname` - ZFS pool - Drive Errors" problems=1 fi fi # Scrub Expired - Check if all volumes have been scrubbed in at least the last # 40 days. The general guide is to scrub volumes on desktop quality drives once # a week and volumes on enterprise class drives once a month. You can always # use cron to schedual "zpool scrub" in off hours. We scrub our volumes every # Sunday morning for example. # # Scrubbing traverses all the data in the pool once and verifies all blocks can # be read. Scrubbing proceeds as fast as the devices allows, though the # priority of any I/O remains below that of normal calls. This operation might # negatively impact performance, but the file system will remain usable and # responsive while scrubbing occurs. To initiate an explicit scrub, use the # "zpool scrub" command. # # The scrubExpire variable is in seconds. So for 40 days we calculate 40 days # times 24 hours times 3600 seconds to equal 3456000 seconds. # 10 days #scrubExpire=864000 # 40 days scrubExpire=3456000 if [ ${problems} -eq 0 ]; then currentDate=$(date +%s) zfsVolumes=$(/sbin/zpool list -H -o name) for volume in ${zfsVolumes} do if [ $(/sbin/zpool status $volume | egrep -c "none requested") -ge 1 ]; then printf "ERROR: You need to run \"zpool scrub $volume\" before this script can monitor the scrub expiration time." break fi if [ $(/sbin/zpool status $volume | egrep -c "scrub in progress|resilver") -ge 1 ]; then break fi ### Ubuntu with GNU supported date format #scrubRawDate=$(/sbin/zpool status $volume | grep scrub | awk '{print $11" "$12" " $13" " $14" "$15}') #scrubDate=$(date -d "$scrubRawDate" +%s) ### FreeBSD 11.2 with *nix supported date format #scrubRawDate=$(/sbin/zpool status $volume | grep scrub | awk '{print $15 $12 $13}') #scrubDate=$(date -j -f '%Y%b%e-%H%M%S' $scrubRawDate'-000000' +%s) ### FreeBSD 12.0 with *nix supported date format scrubRawDate=$(/sbin/zpool status $volume | grep scrub | awk '{print $17 $14 $15}') scrubDate=$(date -j -f '%Y%b%e-%H%M%S' $scrubRawDate'-000000' +%s) if [ $(($currentDate - $scrubDate)) -ge $scrubExpire ]; then emailSubject="`hostname` - ZFS pool - Scrub Time Expired. Scrub Needed on Volume(s)" problems=1 fi done fi # Email - On any problems send email with drive status information and # capacities including a helpful subject line. Also use logger to write the # email subject to the local logs. This is also the place you may want to put # any other notifications like playing a sound file, beeping the internal # speaker, paging someone or updating Nagios or even BigBrother. if [ "$problems" -ne 0 ]; then printf '%s\n' "$emailSubject" "" "`/sbin/zpool list`" "" "`/sbin/zpool status`" | /usr/bin/mail -s "$emailSubject" jail-root@ahlawat.com logger $emailSubject fi ### EOF ###