Although ext4 external journal gives nice performance boost it is not trivial to implement due to some caveats.

First problem is persistence of journal device. On GNU/Linux systems with multiple hard disks device assignment is done in random order. There is no guarantee that /dev/sda will map to the same device on next reboot unless you introduce a custom udev rules. ext4 do not understand UUID so external journal must be placed only to persistent device that do not change on every reboot.
Our solution is to create "linear" mdadm device and put ext4 journal to one of its partitions. The only inconvenience of this method is that (re-)partitioning of mdadm devices may require reboot. It is important to create mdadm device using --metadata=1.0 to put metadata to the end of device in order to avoid suboptimal alignment.

Second very obscure problem is that default mount options will not work with external journal: journal_async_commit mount option must be used if ext4 journal is placed to another device. Without journal_async_commit ext4 partition will eventually become read-only. This may happen after hours in operation or sooner following heavy IO. Apparently external journal can't be updated in synchronous manner so sooner or later ext4 switches to read-only mode following journal commit error. When this happen an offline file system repair i.e. fsck will be required to recover.

Worth mentioning that although external journal uses little bandwidth it is often written so only industrial quality SLC Solid-Stade drives are suitable for external journal unless you decide to use a fast rotational device for that matter.

When the journal device is lost:

Remove invalid journal:

tune2fs -O ^has_journal /dev/ext4-device

and run fsck to check/repair file system.

Internal journal can be created with the following command: tune2fs -O has_journal /dev/ext4-device.

To create ext4 external journal

First format a dedicated partition for ext4 journal:

mke2fs -O journal_dev /dev/ext4-journal-device

Then remove internal journal as described above and make it again:

tune2fs -J device=/dev/ext4-journal-device /dev/ext4-device

New file system can be created as easy as follows:

mkfs.ext4 -J device=/dev/ext4-journal-device /dev/ext4-device

Conclusion:

Knowing the above caveats it is easy enough to activate external journal on ext4. Remember to use persistent device for external journal and always mount with -o journal_async_commit if ext4 is configured with external journal.

See also:

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