What: /sys/block//stat Date: February 2008 Contact: Jerome Marchand Description: The /sys/block//stat files displays the I/O statistics of disk . They contain 11 fields: 1 - reads completed succesfully 2 - reads merged 3 - sectors read 4 - time spent reading (ms) 5 - writes completed 6 - writes merged 7 - sectors written 8 - time spent writing (ms) 9 - I/Os currently in progress 10 - time spent doing I/Os (ms) 11 - weighted time spent doing I/Os (ms) For more details refer Documentation/iostats.txt What: /sys/block///stat Date: February 2008 Contact: Jerome Marchand Description: The /sys/block///stat files display the I/O statistics of partition . The format is the same as the above-written /sys/block//stat format. What: /sys/block//integrity/format Date: June 2008 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Metadata format for integrity capable block device. E.g. T10-DIF-TYPE1-CRC. What: /sys/block//integrity/read_verify Date: June 2008 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Indicates whether the block layer should verify the integrity of read requests serviced by devices that support sending integrity metadata. What: /sys/block//integrity/tag_size Date: June 2008 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Number of bytes of integrity tag space available per 512 bytes of data. What: /sys/block//integrity/write_generate Date: June 2008 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Indicates whether the block layer should automatically generate checksums for write requests bound for devices that support receiving integrity metadata. What: /sys/block//alignment_offset Date: April 2009 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Storage devices may report a physical block size that is bigger than the logical block size (for instance a drive with 4KB physical sectors exposing 512-byte logical blocks to the operating system). This parameter indicates how many bytes the beginning of the device is offset from the disk's natural alignment. What: /sys/block///alignment_offset Date: April 2009 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Storage devices may report a physical block size that is bigger than the logical block size (for instance a drive with 4KB physical sectors exposing 512-byte logical blocks to the operating system). This parameter indicates how many bytes the beginning of the partition is offset from the disk's natural alignment. What: /sys/block//queue/logical_block_size Date: May 2009 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: This is the smallest unit the storage device can address. It is typically 512 bytes. What: /sys/block//queue/physical_block_size Date: May 2009 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: This is the smallest unit the storage device can write without resorting to read-modify-write operation. It is usually the same as the logical block size but may be bigger. One example is SATA drives with 4KB sectors that expose a 512-byte logical block size to the operating system. What: /sys/block//queue/minimum_io_size Date: April 2009 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Storage devices may report a preferred minimum I/O size, which is the smallest request the device can perform without incurring a read-modify-write penalty. For disk drives this is often the physical block size. For RAID arrays it is often the stripe chunk size. What: /sys/block//queue/optimal_io_size Date: April 2009 Contact: Martin K. Petersen Description: Storage devices may report an optimal I/O size, which is the device's preferred unit of receiving I/O. This is rarely reported for disk drives. For RAID devices it is usually the stripe width or the internal block size.