ceph/doc/dev/filestore-filesystem-compat.rst

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Filestore filesystem compatilibity
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http://marc.info/?l=ceph-devel&m=131942130322957&w=2
Although running on ext4, xfs, or whatever other non-btrfs you want mostly
works, there are a few important remaining issues:
ext4 limits total xattrs for 4KB
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This can cause problems in some cases, as Ceph uses xattrs
extensively. Most of the time we don't hit this. We do hit the limit
with radosgw pretty easily, though, and may also hit it in exceptional
cases where the OSD cluster is very unhealthy.
There is a large xattr patch for ext4 from the Lustre folks that has been
floating around for (I think) years. Maybe as interest grows in running
Ceph on ext4 this can move upstream.
Previously we were being forgiving about large setxattr failures on ext3,
but we found that was leading to corruption in certain cases (because we
couldn't set our internal metadata), so the next release will assert/crash
in that case (fail-stop instead of fail-maybe-eventually-corrupt).
XFS does not have an xattr size limit and thus does have this problem.
OSD journal replay of non-idempotent transactions
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**Resolved** with full sync but not ideal.
See http://tracker.newdream.net/issues/213
On non-btrfs backends, the Ceph OSDs use a write-ahead journal. After
restart, the OSD does not know exactly which transactions in the
journal may have already been committed to disk, and may reapply a
transaction again during replay. For most operations (write, delete,
truncate) this is fine.
Some operations, though, are non-idempotent. The simplest example is
CLONE, which copies (efficiently, on btrfs) data from one object to
another. If the source object is modified, the osd restarts, and then
the clone is replayed, the target will get incorrect (newer) data. For
example,
- clone A -> B
- modify A
- <osd crash, replay from 1>
B will get new instead of old contents.
(This doesn't happen on btrfs because the snapshots allow us to replay
from a known consistent point in time.)
Possibilities:
- full sync after any non-idempotent operation
- re-evaluate the lower level interface based on needs from higher
levels, construct only safe operations, be very careful; brittle
- use xattrs to add sequence numbers to objects:
- on non-btrfs, we set a xattr on every modified object with the
op_seq, the unique sequence number for the transaction.
- for any (potentially) non-idempotent operation, we fsync() before
continuing to the next transaction, to ensure that xattr hits disk.
- on replay, we skip a transaction if the xattr indicates we already
performed this transaction.
Because every 'transaction' only modifies on a single object (file),
this ought to work. It'll make things like clone slow, but let's
face it: they're already slow on non-btrfs file systems because they
actually copy the data (instead of duplicating the extent refs in
btrfs). And it should make the full ObjectStore iterface safe,
without upper layers having to worry about the kinds and orders of
transactions they perform.