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Dr.Z's FS - Blend of herbology and reflexology rolled into a file system (NOT READY FOR PUBLIC CONSUMPTION)
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dayne/zunkfs
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I. Prerequisites: ================= - FUSE - libevent >= 1.4.1 (http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/) [1] - sqlite3 - openssl Centos: yum install fuse dkms-fuse fuse-devel yum install sqlite-devel yum install openssl-devel # add your user to the fuse group - logout/login Gentoo: emerge -va sys-fs/fuse Ubuntu/Debian: apt-get install libfuse-dev apt-get install libsqlite3-dev apt-get install libssl-dev OSX + MacPorts: port install libfuse port install libevent port install sqlite3 [1] Unfortunately, libevent 1.4.x is not included in Ubuntu Hardy, CentOS 5, and others. But it is needed for zunkfs, which relies heavily on event_base_* functionality. Those peeps should take a look at using local_libevent_installer.sh (just need to have a ~/usr or a ~/local dir as a target) II. Buildling ============== make # hopefully that just works and you don't have any errors If you installed an alternate libevent other than what your system provides, make sure to set the environment variable LIBEVENT_PREFIX. For example: export LIBEVENT_PREFIX=/usr/local Then set LD_LIBRARY_PREFIX so that your dynamic linker knows which libevent to use: export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/lib III. Getting Started ==================== Fetch sample file system root from http://drze.net/junk/testfs Or create your own using mkfs.zunkfs. Create a place for your chunks, and mount the file system. $ wget http://drze.net/junk/testfs $ mkdir .chunks $ mkdir mnt $ ./zunkfs --chunk-db=rw,dir:$PWD/.chunks --chunk-db=ro,cmd:$PWD/fetch.sh \ ./testfs ./mnt Now you can go into mnt and explore. IV. Chunk storage ================= Zunkfs supports multiple back-ends for chunk storage (aka, chunk-db.) Chunk-dbs are specified as: --chunk-db=<rw|ro>,[wt,][nc,]<method:info> More thank one chunk-db may be specified at the command line. As chunks are needed, the dbs will be processed in order. Once a chunk is found, it is written into all preceeding, writable, chunk-dbs that are not marked as not-a-cache (nc). For examlpe: --chunk-db=rw,dir:$PWD/.chunks --chunk-db=ro,cmd:$PWD/fetch.sh will first try to find a chunk in a local directory $PWD/.chunks. If that fails it'll try to launch fetch.sh to get the chunk. If fetch.sh gets the chunk, the chunk will be written to $PWD/.chunks. Writable DBs stop writing as soon as one succeeds, unless it is marked as write-through (wt). ChunkDB backends ---------------- * cmd:/path/to/command This will launch command with one argument -- a hex representation of the chunk name (SHA1 digest.) It expects that the command will spew out chunk contents to stdout. (See sample fetch.sh) This method is read only. Example: ./zunkfs --chunk-db=ro,cmd:$PWD/fetch.sh ./myfs /mount/point * dir:/path/to/chunks/dir This will use a local filesystem for storing chunks. It can be read-only or read-write. Exmaple: mkdir $PWD/.chunks ./zunkfs --chunk-db=rw,dir:$PWD/.chunks ./myfs /mount/point * map:/path/to/sqlite/database A database that stores a mapping between normal file system files, and chunks that compose them. This is read-only. The database must include a table with the following schema: CREATE TABLE chunk_map ( hash CHAR(20) PRIMARY KEY, path VARCHAR(1024), chunk_nr INTEGER ); Example: ./zunkfs --chunk-db=ro,map:$PWD/map.db ./myfs /mount/point * mem:[max count] Stores chunks in memory. Read/write. Can limit the maximum # of chunks stored by passing in the number. * sqlite:/path/to/sqlite/database Stores chunks in an sqlite database. Read/write. Schema is: CREATE TABLE chunk ( hash CHAR(20) PRIMARY KEY UNIQUE, data BLOB ); Example: ./zunkfs --chunk-db=rw,sqlite:$PWD/chunk.db ./myfs /mount/point * zunkdb:ip:port,timeout=<seconds>,use_store Uses a ZunkDB to store and retrieve chunks. Initial zunkdb node is passed in as <ip|name>:port. Options include: timeout=<seconds> Request timeout. use_store Use STORE instead of FORWARD to send chunks to zunkdb. Use this only if you have a fast uplink, as it will end up sending the same chunk to multiple zunkdb nodes. Usage example: ./zunkfs --chunk-db=rw,zunkdb:127.0.0.1:9876 ./myfs /mount/point * file:/path/to/database/file Uses a specially formatted file for chunk storage. If the file does not exist, it'll be created. The first 512MB of the file are reserved for the chunk index. After that, it's all just chunks. Usage example: ./zunkfs --chunk-db=rw,file:/path/to/foo/chunk.db V. ZunkDB usage =============== ZunkDB is the distributed chunk database for zunkfs. It's protocol is briefly discussed in the HACKING document. Just like zunkfs, zunkdb can use other methods for actually storing chunks. So all of the above listed backends work with it too. A simple zunkdb node may use just memory backing for chunks: zunkdb --chunk-db rw,mem:100 Since zunkdb is meant to be distributed, it needs to know a starting point from which it can discover other nodes: zunkdb --chunk-db rw,mem:100 --peer other.host:port By default, zunkdb listens on port 9876, but it can be told to listen to other ports: zunkdb --addr [ip]:port --chunk-db rw,mem:100 --peer other.host:port VI. Hints and other Usage Notes =============================== Use mem: chunk-db as a cache ---------------------------- Since zunkfs will cache chunks found on db N on dbs 1...N-1, it's helpful to always use a memory based db as a cache: zunkfs --chunk-db=rw,wt,mem:100 --chunk-db=rw,zunkdb:some.host.com:9876\ ./myfs /my/mount/point This way, any chunk found in a possibly remote zunkdb node will be cached in memory by zunkfs. Any writes to zunkfs will end up in both the in-memory cache, and on some zunkdb nodes.
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