mirror of
https://github.com/schoebel/mars
synced 2024-12-13 02:05:44 +00:00
Asynchronous Block-Level Storage Replication
docu | ||
kernel | ||
pre-patches | ||
testing | ||
userspace | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
ChangeLog | ||
COPYING | ||
INSTALL | ||
NEWS | ||
README |
GPLed software AS IS, sponsored by 1&1 Internet AG (www.1und1.de). Contact: tst@1und1.de -------------------------------- Abstract: MARS Light is almost a drop-in replacement for DRBD (that is, block-level storage replication). In contrast to plain DRBD, it works _asynchronously_ and over arbitrary distances. My regular testing runs between datacenters in the US and Europe. MARS uses very different technology under the hood, similar to transaction logging of database systems. Reliability: application and replication are completely decoupled. Networking problems (e.g. packet loss, bottlenecks) have no impact onto your application at the primary side. Anytime consistency: on a secondary node, its version of the block device is always consistent in itself, but may be outdated (represent a former state from the primary side). Thanks to incremental replication of the transaction logfiles, usually the lag-behind will be only a few seconds, or parts of a second. Synchronous or near-synchronous operating modes are planned for the future, but are expected to _reliably_ work only over short distances (less than 50km), due to fundamental properties of the network. WARNING! Current stage is BETA. Don't put productive data on it! Documentation: currently very rudimentary, some even in German. This will be fixed soon. Concepts: There is a 2-years old concept paper in German which is so much outdated, that I don't want to publish it. Please be patient until I write a comprehensive paper at the concept level in English. For the meantime, please look at my presentation about MARS at LCA2013 (linux.conf.au or look into ./docu/). History: As you can see in the git log, it evolved from a very experimental concept study, starting in the Summer of 2010. At this time, I was working on it in my spare time. In Summer 2011, an "official" internal 1&1 project started, which aimed to deliver a proof of concept. In February 2012, a pilot system was rolled out to an internal statistics server, which collects statistics data from thousands of other servers, and thus produces a very heavy random-access write load, formerly replicated with DRBD (which led to performance problems due to massive randomness). After switching to MARS, the performance was provably better. This server was selected because potential loss of statistics data would be not be that critical as with other productive data, but nevertheless it operates on productive data and loads. After curing some small infancy problems, this server runs until today (end of January 2013) without problems. Our sysadmins even switched the primary side a few times, without informing me, so I could sleep better at night without knowing what they did ;) In Summer 2012, the next "official" internal 1&1 project started. Its goal is to reach enterprise grade, and therefore to rollout MARS Light on ~10 productive servers, starting with less critical systems like ones for test webspaces etc. This project will continue until Summer 2013. Hopefully, there will be a followup project for mass rollout to some thousands of servers. In December 2012 (shortly before Christmas), I got the official permission from our CTO Henning Kettler to publish MARS under GPL on github. Many thanks to him! Before that point, I was bound to my working contract which keeps internal software as secret by default (when there is no explicit permission). Now there is a chance to build up an opensource community for MARS, partially outside of 1&1. Please contribute! I will be open. I also try to respect the guidelines from Linus, but probably this will need more work. Help is always welcome!