Bobcares

Create and mount an XFS file system on Linux

by | Dec 3, 2021

Wondering how to create and mount an XFS file system on Linux? We can help you.

As part of our Server Management Services, we assist our customers with similar queries.

Today, let us see how our Support techs perform this.

How to create and mount an XFS file system on Linux?

XFS is a high-performance file system which was design by SGI for their IRIX platform.

XFS has a number of unique features that make it stand out among the file system crowd, such as scalable/parallel I/O, journaling for metadata operations, online defragmentation, suspend/resume I/O, delayed allocation for performance, etc.

Today, let us see the steps followed by our Support Techs to create and mount an XFS file system.

Install XFS System Utilities

Firstly, you need to install XFS system utilities, which allow you to perform various XFS related administration tasks.

Debian, Ubuntu or Linux Mint:

$ sudo apt-get install xfsprogs

Fedora, CentOS or RHEL:

$ sudo yum install xfsprogs

Arch Linux:

$ sudo pacman -S xfsprogs

Create an XFS-Formatted Disk Partition

Now let’s first prepare a disk partition to create XFS on.

Assuming that your disk is locate at /dev/sdb, create a partition by:

$ sudo fdisk /dev/sdb

Let’s say the created partition is assigned /dev/sdb1 device name.

Next, format the partition as XFS using mkfs.xfs command.

The -f option is needed if the partition has any other file system created on it, and you want to overwrite it.

$ sudo mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sdb1

Now you are ready to mount the formatted partition. Let’s assume that /storage is a local mount point for XFS.

Go ahead and mount the partition by running:

$ sudo mount -t xfs /dev/sdb1 /storage

Verify that XFS mount is succesful by running:

$ df -Th /storage

If you want the XFS partition to mount at /storage automatically upon boot, add the following line to /etc/fstab.

/dev/sdb1 /storage xfs defaults 0 0

[Stuck in between? We’d be glad to assist you]

Conclusion

In short, today we saw steps followed by our Support Techs to create and mount an XFS file system on Linux.

PREVENT YOUR SERVER FROM CRASHING!

Never again lose customers to poor server speed! Let us help you.

Our server experts will monitor & maintain your server 24/7 so that it remains lightning fast and secure.

GET STARTED

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Never again lose customers to poor
server speed! Let us help you.

Privacy Preference Center

Necessary

Necessary cookies help make a website usable by enabling basic functions like page navigation and access to secure areas of the website. The website cannot function properly without these cookies.

PHPSESSID - Preserves user session state across page requests.

gdpr[consent_types] - Used to store user consents.

gdpr[allowed_cookies] - Used to store user allowed cookies.

PHPSESSID, gdpr[consent_types], gdpr[allowed_cookies]
PHPSESSID
WHMCSpKDlPzh2chML

Statistics

Statistic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.

_ga - Preserves user session state across page requests.

_gat - Used by Google Analytics to throttle request rate

_gid - Registers a unique ID that is used to generate statistical data on how you use the website.

smartlookCookie - Used to collect user device and location information of the site visitors to improve the websites User Experience.

_ga, _gat, _gid
_ga, _gat, _gid
smartlookCookie
_clck, _clsk, CLID, ANONCHK, MR, MUID, SM

Marketing

Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.

IDE - Used by Google DoubleClick to register and report the website user's actions after viewing or clicking one of the advertiser's ads with the purpose of measuring the efficacy of an ad and to present targeted ads to the user.

test_cookie - Used to check if the user's browser supports cookies.

1P_JAR - Google cookie. These cookies are used to collect website statistics and track conversion rates.

NID - Registers a unique ID that identifies a returning user's device. The ID is used for serving ads that are most relevant to the user.

DV - Google ad personalisation

_reb2bgeo - The visitor's geographical location

_reb2bloaded - Whether or not the script loaded for the visitor

_reb2bref - The referring URL for the visit

_reb2bsessionID - The visitor's RB2B session ID

_reb2buid - The visitor's RB2B user ID

IDE, test_cookie, 1P_JAR, NID, DV, NID
IDE, test_cookie
1P_JAR, NID, DV
NID
hblid
_reb2bgeo, _reb2bloaded, _reb2bref, _reb2bsessionID, _reb2buid

Security

These are essential site cookies, used by the google reCAPTCHA. These cookies use an unique identifier to verify if a visitor is human or a bot.

SID, APISID, HSID, NID, PREF
SID, APISID, HSID, NID, PREF