mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
synced 2024-12-27 05:53:20 +00:00
8fad5a5810
Signed-off-by: Chen Zhenghua <chen.zhenghua@zte.com.cn>
96 lines
4.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
96 lines
4.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
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===================================
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Configuring Directory fragmentation
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===================================
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In CephFS, directories are *fragmented* when they become very large
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or very busy. This splits up the metadata so that it can be shared
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between multiple MDS daemons, and between multiple objects in the
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metadata pool.
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In normal operation, directory fragmentation is invisible to
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users and administrators, and all the configuration settings mentioned
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here should be left at their default values.
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While directory fragmentation enables CephFS to handle very large
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numbers of entries in a single directory, application programmers should
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remain conservative about creating very large directories, as they still
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have a resource cost in situations such as a CephFS client listing
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the directory, where all the fragments must be loaded at once.
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All directories are initially created as a single fragment. This fragment
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may be *split* to divide up the directory into more fragments, and these
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fragments may be *merged* to reduce the number of fragments in the directory.
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Splitting and merging
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=====================
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When an MDS identifies a directory fragment to be split, it does not
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do the split immediately. Because splitting interrupts metadata IO,
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a short delay is used to allow short bursts of client IO to complete
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before the split begins. This delay is configured with
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``mds_bal_fragment_interval``, which defaults to 5 seconds.
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When the split is done, the directory fragment is broken up into
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a power of two number of new fragments. The number of new
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fragments is given by two to the power ``mds_bal_split_bits``, i.e.
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if ``mds_bal_split_bits`` is 2, then four new fragments will be
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created. The default setting is 3, i.e. splits create 8 new fragments.
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The criteria for initiating a split or a merge are described in the
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following sections.
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Size thresholds
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===============
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A directory fragment is eligible for splitting when its size exceeds
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``mds_bal_split_size`` (default 10000). Ordinarily this split is
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delayed by ``mds_bal_fragment_interval``, but if the fragment size
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exceeds a factor of ``mds_bal_fragment_fast_factor`` the split size,
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the split will happen immediately (holding up any client metadata
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IO on the directory).
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``mds_bal_fragment_size_max`` is the hard limit on the size of
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directory fragments. If it is reached, clients will receive
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ENOSPC errors if they try to create files in the fragment. On
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a properly configured system, this limit should never be reached on
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ordinary directories, as they will have split long before. By default,
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this is set to 10 times the split size, giving a dirfrag size limit of
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100000. Increasing this limit may lead to oversized directory fragment
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objects in the metadata pool, which the OSDs may not be able to handle.
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A directory fragment is eligible for merging when its size is less
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than ``mds_bal_merge_size``. There is no merge equivalent of the
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"fast splitting" explained above: fast splitting exists to avoid
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creating oversized directory fragments, there is no equivalent issue
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to avoid when merging. The default merge size is 50.
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Activity thresholds
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===================
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In addition to splitting fragments based
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on their size, the MDS may split directory fragments if their
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activity exceeds a threshold.
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The MDS maintains separate time-decaying load counters for read and write
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operations on directory fragments. The decaying load counters have an
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exponential decay based on the ``mds_decay_halflife`` setting.
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On writes, the write counter is
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incremented, and compared with ``mds_bal_split_wr``, triggering a
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split if the threshold is exceeded. Write operations include metadata IO
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such as renames, unlinks and creations.
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The ``mds_bal_split_rd`` threshold is applied based on the read operation
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load counter, which tracks readdir operations.
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By the default, the read threshold is 25000 and the write threshold is
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10000, i.e. 2.5x as many reads as writes would be required to trigger
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a split.
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After fragments are split due to the activity thresholds, they are only
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merged based on the size threshold (``mds_bal_merge_size``), so
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a spike in activity may cause a directory to stay fragmented
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forever unless some entries are unlinked.
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