rocksdb/utilities/env_librados_test.cc

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// Copyright (c) Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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// Copyright (c) 2016, Red Hat, Inc. All rights reserved.
// This source code is licensed under both the GPLv2 (found in the
// COPYING file in the root directory) and Apache 2.0 License
// (found in the LICENSE.Apache file in the root directory).
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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#ifndef ROCKSDB_LITE
#include "rocksdb/utilities/env_librados.h"
#include <rados/librados.hpp>
#include "env/mock_env.h"
#include "test_util/testharness.h"
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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#include "rocksdb/db.h"
#include "rocksdb/slice.h"
#include "rocksdb/options.h"
#include "util/random.h"
#include <chrono>
#include <ostream>
#include "rocksdb/utilities/transaction_db.h"
class Timer {
using high_resolution_clock = std::chrono::high_resolution_clock;
using milliseconds = std::chrono::milliseconds;
public:
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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explicit Timer(bool run = false)
{
if (run)
Reset();
}
void Reset()
{
_start = high_resolution_clock::now();
}
milliseconds Elapsed() const
{
return std::chrono::duration_cast<milliseconds>(high_resolution_clock::now() - _start);
}
template <typename T, typename Traits>
friend std::basic_ostream<T, Traits>& operator<<(std::basic_ostream<T, Traits>& out, const Timer& timer)
{
return out << timer.Elapsed().count();
}
private:
high_resolution_clock::time_point _start;
};
namespace ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE {
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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class EnvLibradosTest : public testing::Test {
public:
// we will use all of these below
const std::string db_name = "env_librados_test_db";
const std::string db_pool = db_name + "_pool";
const char *keyring = "admin";
const char *config = "../ceph/src/ceph.conf";
EnvLibrados* env_;
const EnvOptions soptions_;
EnvLibradosTest()
: env_(new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool)) {
}
~EnvLibradosTest() {
delete env_;
librados::Rados rados;
int ret = 0;
do {
ret = rados.init("admin"); // just use the client.admin keyring
if (ret < 0) { // let's handle any error that might have come back
std::cerr << "couldn't initialize rados! error " << ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
ret = rados.conf_read_file(config);
if (ret < 0) {
// This could fail if the config file is malformed, but it'd be hard.
std::cerr << "failed to parse config file " << config
<< "! error" << ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
/*
* next, we actually connect to the cluster
*/
ret = rados.connect();
if (ret < 0) {
std::cerr << "couldn't connect to cluster! error " << ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
/*
* And now we're done, so let's remove our pool and then
* shut down the connection gracefully.
*/
int delete_ret = rados.pool_delete(db_pool.c_str());
if (delete_ret < 0) {
// be careful not to
std::cerr << "We failed to delete our test pool!" << db_pool << delete_ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
}
} while (0);
}
};
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, Basics) {
uint64_t file_size;
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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std::vector<std::string> children;
ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir("/dir"));
// Check that the directory is empty.
ASSERT_EQ(Status::NotFound(), env_->FileExists("/dir/non_existent"));
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->GetFileSize("/dir/non_existent", &file_size).ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetChildren("/dir", &children));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, children.size());
// Create a file.
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/f", &writable_file, soptions_));
writable_file.reset();
// Check that the file exists.
ASSERT_OK(env_->FileExists("/dir/f"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetFileSize("/dir/f", &file_size));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, file_size);
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetChildren("/dir", &children));
ASSERT_EQ(1U, children.size());
ASSERT_EQ("f", children[0]);
// Write to the file.
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/f", &writable_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("abc"));
writable_file.reset();
// Check for expected size.
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetFileSize("/dir/f", &file_size));
ASSERT_EQ(3U, file_size);
// Check that renaming works.
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->RenameFile("/dir/non_existent", "/dir/g").ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->RenameFile("/dir/f", "/dir/g"));
ASSERT_EQ(Status::NotFound(), env_->FileExists("/dir/f"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->FileExists("/dir/g"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetFileSize("/dir/g", &file_size));
ASSERT_EQ(3U, file_size);
// Check that opening non-existent file fails.
std::unique_ptr<SequentialFile> seq_file;
std::unique_ptr<RandomAccessFile> rand_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_TRUE(
!env_->NewSequentialFile("/dir/non_existent", &seq_file, soptions_).ok());
ASSERT_TRUE(!seq_file);
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->NewRandomAccessFile("/dir/non_existent", &rand_file,
soptions_).ok());
ASSERT_TRUE(!rand_file);
// Check that deleting works.
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->DeleteFile("/dir/non_existent").ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->DeleteFile("/dir/g"));
ASSERT_EQ(Status::NotFound(), env_->FileExists("/dir/g"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetChildren("/dir", &children));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, children.size());
ASSERT_OK(env_->DeleteDir("/dir"));
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, ReadWrite) {
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
std::unique_ptr<SequentialFile> seq_file;
std::unique_ptr<RandomAccessFile> rand_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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Slice result;
char scratch[100];
ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir("/dir"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/f", &writable_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("hello "));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("world"));
writable_file.reset();
// Read sequentially.
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewSequentialFile("/dir/f", &seq_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(5, &result, scratch)); // Read "hello".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("hello"));
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Skip(1));
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(1000, &result, scratch)); // Read "world".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("world"));
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(1000, &result, scratch)); // Try reading past EOF.
ASSERT_EQ(0U, result.size());
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Skip(100)); // Try to skip past end of file.
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(1000, &result, scratch));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, result.size());
// Random reads.
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewRandomAccessFile("/dir/f", &rand_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(rand_file->Read(6, 5, &result, scratch)); // Read "world".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("world"));
ASSERT_OK(rand_file->Read(0, 5, &result, scratch)); // Read "hello".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("hello"));
ASSERT_OK(rand_file->Read(10, 100, &result, scratch)); // Read "d".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("d"));
// Too high offset.
ASSERT_OK(rand_file->Read(1000, 5, &result, scratch));
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, Locks) {
FileLock* lock = nullptr;
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir("/dir"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/f", &writable_file, soptions_));
// These are no-ops, but we test they return success.
ASSERT_OK(env_->LockFile("some file", &lock));
ASSERT_OK(env_->UnlockFile(lock));
ASSERT_OK(env_->LockFile("/dir/f", &lock));
ASSERT_OK(env_->UnlockFile(lock));
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, Misc) {
std::string test_dir;
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetTestDirectory(&test_dir));
ASSERT_TRUE(!test_dir.empty());
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->NewWritableFile("/a/b", &writable_file, soptions_).ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/a", &writable_file, soptions_));
// These are no-ops, but we test they return success.
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Sync());
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Flush());
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Close());
writable_file.reset();
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, LargeWrite) {
const size_t kWriteSize = 300 * 1024;
char* scratch = new char[kWriteSize * 2];
std::string write_data;
for (size_t i = 0; i < kWriteSize; ++i) {
write_data.append(1, 'h');
}
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir("/dir"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/g", &writable_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("foo"));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append(write_data));
writable_file.reset();
std::unique_ptr<SequentialFile> seq_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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Slice result;
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewSequentialFile("/dir/g", &seq_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(3, &result, scratch)); // Read "foo".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("foo"));
size_t read = 0;
std::string read_data;
while (read < kWriteSize) {
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(kWriteSize - read, &result, scratch));
read_data.append(result.data(), result.size());
read += result.size();
}
ASSERT_TRUE(write_data == read_data);
delete[] scratch;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, FrequentlySmallWrite) {
const size_t kWriteSize = 1 << 10;
char* scratch = new char[kWriteSize * 2];
std::string write_data;
for (size_t i = 0; i < kWriteSize; ++i) {
write_data.append(1, 'h');
}
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir("/dir"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/g", &writable_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("foo"));
for (size_t i = 0; i < kWriteSize; ++i) {
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("h"));
}
writable_file.reset();
std::unique_ptr<SequentialFile> seq_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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Slice result;
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewSequentialFile("/dir/g", &seq_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(3, &result, scratch)); // Read "foo".
ASSERT_EQ(0, result.compare("foo"));
size_t read = 0;
std::string read_data;
while (read < kWriteSize) {
ASSERT_OK(seq_file->Read(kWriteSize - read, &result, scratch));
read_data.append(result.data(), result.size());
read += result.size();
}
ASSERT_TRUE(write_data == read_data);
delete[] scratch;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, Truncate) {
const size_t kWriteSize = 300 * 1024;
const size_t truncSize = 1024;
std::string write_data;
for (size_t i = 0; i < kWriteSize; ++i) {
write_data.append(1, 'h');
}
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir("/dir"));
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile("/dir/g", &writable_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append(write_data));
ASSERT_EQ(writable_file->GetFileSize(), kWriteSize);
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Truncate(truncSize));
ASSERT_EQ(writable_file->GetFileSize(), truncSize);
writable_file.reset();
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, DBBasics) {
std::string kDBPath = "/tmp/DBBasics";
DB* db;
Options options;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options.IncreaseParallelism();
options.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options.create_if_missing = true;
options.env = env_;
// open DB
Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db);
assert(s.ok());
// Put key-value
s = db->Put(WriteOptions(), "key1", "value");
assert(s.ok());
std::string value;
// get value
s = db->Get(ReadOptions(), "key1", &value);
assert(s.ok());
assert(value == "value");
// atomically apply a set of updates
{
WriteBatch batch;
batch.Delete("key1");
batch.Put("key2", value);
s = db->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
}
s = db->Get(ReadOptions(), "key1", &value);
assert(s.IsNotFound());
db->Get(ReadOptions(), "key2", &value);
assert(value == "value");
delete db;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, DBLoadKeysInRandomOrder) {
char key[20] = {0}, value[20] = {0};
int max_loop = 1 << 10;
Timer timer(false);
std::cout << "Test size : loop(" << max_loop << ")" << std::endl;
/**********************************
use default env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath1 = "/tmp/DBLoadKeysInRandomOrder1";
DB* db1;
Options options1;
// Optimize Rocksdb. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options1.IncreaseParallelism();
options1.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options1.create_if_missing = true;
// open DB
Status s1 = DB::Open(options1, kDBPath1, &db1);
assert(s1.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r1(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
// Put key-value
s1 = db1->Put(WriteOptions(), key, value);
assert(s1.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by default : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db1;
/**********************************
use librados env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath2 = "/tmp/DBLoadKeysInRandomOrder2";
DB* db2;
Options options2;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options2.IncreaseParallelism();
options2.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options2.create_if_missing = true;
options2.env = env_;
// open DB
Status s2 = DB::Open(options2, kDBPath2, &db2);
assert(s2.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r2(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
// Put key-value
s2 = db2->Put(WriteOptions(), key, value);
assert(s2.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by librados : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db2;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, DBBulkLoadKeysInRandomOrder) {
char key[20] = {0}, value[20] = {0};
int max_loop = 1 << 6;
int bulk_size = 1 << 15;
Timer timer(false);
std::cout << "Test size : loop(" << max_loop << "); bulk_size(" << bulk_size << ")" << std::endl;
/**********************************
use default env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath1 = "/tmp/DBBulkLoadKeysInRandomOrder1";
DB* db1;
Options options1;
// Optimize Rocksdb. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options1.IncreaseParallelism();
options1.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options1.create_if_missing = true;
// open DB
Status s1 = DB::Open(options1, kDBPath1, &db1);
assert(s1.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r1(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s1 = db1->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s1.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by default : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db1;
/**********************************
use librados env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath2 = "/tmp/DBBulkLoadKeysInRandomOrder2";
DB* db2;
Options options2;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options2.IncreaseParallelism();
options2.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options2.create_if_missing = true;
options2.env = env_;
// open DB
Status s2 = DB::Open(options2, kDBPath2, &db2);
assert(s2.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r2(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s2 = db2->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s2.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by librados : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db2;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, DBBulkLoadKeysInSequentialOrder) {
char key[20] = {0}, value[20] = {0};
int max_loop = 1 << 6;
int bulk_size = 1 << 15;
Timer timer(false);
std::cout << "Test size : loop(" << max_loop << "); bulk_size(" << bulk_size << ")" << std::endl;
/**********************************
use default env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath1 = "/tmp/DBBulkLoadKeysInSequentialOrder1";
DB* db1;
Options options1;
// Optimize Rocksdb. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options1.IncreaseParallelism();
options1.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options1.create_if_missing = true;
// open DB
Status s1 = DB::Open(options1, kDBPath1, &db1);
assert(s1.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r1(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%019lld",
(long long)(i * bulk_size + j));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s1 = db1->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s1.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by default : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db1;
/**********************************
use librados env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath2 = "/tmp/DBBulkLoadKeysInSequentialOrder2";
DB* db2;
Options options2;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options2.IncreaseParallelism();
options2.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options2.create_if_missing = true;
options2.env = env_;
// open DB
Status s2 = DB::Open(options2, kDBPath2, &db2);
assert(s2.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r2(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s2 = db2->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s2.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by librados : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db2;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosTest, DBRandomRead) {
char key[20] = {0}, value[20] = {0};
int max_loop = 1 << 6;
int bulk_size = 1 << 10;
int read_loop = 1 << 20;
Timer timer(false);
std::cout << "Test size : keys_num(" << max_loop << ", " << bulk_size << "); read_loop(" << read_loop << ")" << std::endl;
/**********************************
use default env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath1 = "/tmp/DBRandomRead1";
DB* db1;
Options options1;
// Optimize Rocksdb. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options1.IncreaseParallelism();
options1.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options1.create_if_missing = true;
// open DB
Status s1 = DB::Open(options1, kDBPath1, &db1);
assert(s1.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r1(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%019lld",
(long long)(i * bulk_size + j));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s1 = db1->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s1.ok());
}
timer.Reset();
int base1 = 0, offset1 = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < read_loop; ++i) {
base1 = r1.Uniform(max_loop);
offset1 = r1.Uniform(bulk_size);
std::string value1;
snprintf(key,
20,
"%019lld",
(long long)(base1 * bulk_size + offset1));
s1 = db1->Get(ReadOptions(), key, &value1);
assert(s1.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by default : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db1;
/**********************************
use librados env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath2 = "/tmp/DBRandomRead2";
DB* db2;
Options options2;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options2.IncreaseParallelism();
options2.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options2.create_if_missing = true;
options2.env = env_;
// open DB
Status s2 = DB::Open(options2, kDBPath2, &db2);
assert(s2.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r2(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%019lld",
(long long)(i * bulk_size + j));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s2 = db2->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s2.ok());
}
timer.Reset();
int base2 = 0, offset2 = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < read_loop; ++i) {
base2 = r2.Uniform(max_loop);
offset2 = r2.Uniform(bulk_size);
std::string value2;
snprintf(key,
20,
"%019lld",
(long long)(base2 * bulk_size + offset2));
s2 = db2->Get(ReadOptions(), key, &value2);
if (!s2.ok()) {
std::cout << s2.ToString() << std::endl;
}
assert(s2.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by librados : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db2;
}
class EnvLibradosMutipoolTest : public testing::Test {
public:
// we will use all of these below
const std::string client_name = "client.admin";
const std::string cluster_name = "ceph";
const uint64_t flags = 0;
const std::string db_name = "env_librados_test_db";
const std::string db_pool = db_name + "_pool";
const std::string wal_dir = "/wal";
const std::string wal_pool = db_name + "_wal_pool";
const size_t write_buffer_size = 1 << 20;
const char *keyring = "admin";
const char *config = "../ceph/src/ceph.conf";
EnvLibrados* env_;
const EnvOptions soptions_;
EnvLibradosMutipoolTest() {
env_ = new EnvLibrados(client_name, cluster_name, flags, db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size);
}
~EnvLibradosMutipoolTest() {
delete env_;
librados::Rados rados;
int ret = 0;
do {
ret = rados.init("admin"); // just use the client.admin keyring
if (ret < 0) { // let's handle any error that might have come back
std::cerr << "couldn't initialize rados! error " << ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
ret = rados.conf_read_file(config);
if (ret < 0) {
// This could fail if the config file is malformed, but it'd be hard.
std::cerr << "failed to parse config file " << config
<< "! error" << ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
/*
* next, we actually connect to the cluster
*/
ret = rados.connect();
if (ret < 0) {
std::cerr << "couldn't connect to cluster! error " << ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
/*
* And now we're done, so let's remove our pool and then
* shut down the connection gracefully.
*/
int delete_ret = rados.pool_delete(db_pool.c_str());
if (delete_ret < 0) {
// be careful not to
std::cerr << "We failed to delete our test pool!" << db_pool << delete_ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
}
delete_ret = rados.pool_delete(wal_pool.c_str());
if (delete_ret < 0) {
// be careful not to
std::cerr << "We failed to delete our test pool!" << wal_pool << delete_ret << std::endl;
ret = EXIT_FAILURE;
}
} while (0);
}
};
TEST_F(EnvLibradosMutipoolTest, Basics) {
uint64_t file_size;
std::unique_ptr<WritableFile> writable_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
std::vector<std::string> children;
std::vector<std::string> v = {"/tmp/dir1", "/tmp/dir2", "/tmp/dir3", "/tmp/dir4", "dir"};
for (size_t i = 0; i < v.size(); ++i) {
std::string dir = v[i];
std::string dir_non_existent = dir + "/non_existent";
std::string dir_f = dir + "/f";
std::string dir_g = dir + "/g";
ASSERT_OK(env_->CreateDir(dir.c_str()));
// Check that the directory is empty.
ASSERT_EQ(Status::NotFound(), env_->FileExists(dir_non_existent.c_str()));
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->GetFileSize(dir_non_existent.c_str(), &file_size).ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetChildren(dir.c_str(), &children));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, children.size());
// Create a file.
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile(dir_f.c_str(), &writable_file, soptions_));
writable_file.reset();
// Check that the file exists.
ASSERT_OK(env_->FileExists(dir_f.c_str()));
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetFileSize(dir_f.c_str(), &file_size));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, file_size);
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetChildren(dir.c_str(), &children));
ASSERT_EQ(1U, children.size());
ASSERT_EQ("f", children[0]);
// Write to the file.
ASSERT_OK(env_->NewWritableFile(dir_f.c_str(), &writable_file, soptions_));
ASSERT_OK(writable_file->Append("abc"));
writable_file.reset();
// Check for expected size.
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetFileSize(dir_f.c_str(), &file_size));
ASSERT_EQ(3U, file_size);
// Check that renaming works.
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->RenameFile(dir_non_existent.c_str(), dir_g.c_str()).ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->RenameFile(dir_f.c_str(), dir_g.c_str()));
ASSERT_EQ(Status::NotFound(), env_->FileExists(dir_f.c_str()));
ASSERT_OK(env_->FileExists(dir_g.c_str()));
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetFileSize(dir_g.c_str(), &file_size));
ASSERT_EQ(3U, file_size);
// Check that opening non-existent file fails.
std::unique_ptr<SequentialFile> seq_file;
std::unique_ptr<RandomAccessFile> rand_file;
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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ASSERT_TRUE(
!env_->NewSequentialFile(dir_non_existent.c_str(), &seq_file, soptions_).ok());
ASSERT_TRUE(!seq_file);
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->NewRandomAccessFile(dir_non_existent.c_str(), &rand_file,
soptions_).ok());
ASSERT_TRUE(!rand_file);
// Check that deleting works.
ASSERT_TRUE(!env_->DeleteFile(dir_non_existent.c_str()).ok());
ASSERT_OK(env_->DeleteFile(dir_g.c_str()));
ASSERT_EQ(Status::NotFound(), env_->FileExists(dir_g.c_str()));
ASSERT_OK(env_->GetChildren(dir.c_str(), &children));
ASSERT_EQ(0U, children.size());
ASSERT_OK(env_->DeleteDir(dir.c_str()));
}
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosMutipoolTest, DBBasics) {
std::string kDBPath = "/tmp/DBBasics";
std::string walPath = "/tmp/wal";
DB* db;
Options options;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options.IncreaseParallelism();
options.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options.create_if_missing = true;
options.env = env_;
options.wal_dir = walPath;
// open DB
Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db);
assert(s.ok());
// Put key-value
s = db->Put(WriteOptions(), "key1", "value");
assert(s.ok());
std::string value;
// get value
s = db->Get(ReadOptions(), "key1", &value);
assert(s.ok());
assert(value == "value");
// atomically apply a set of updates
{
WriteBatch batch;
batch.Delete("key1");
batch.Put("key2", value);
s = db->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
}
s = db->Get(ReadOptions(), "key1", &value);
assert(s.IsNotFound());
db->Get(ReadOptions(), "key2", &value);
assert(value == "value");
delete db;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosMutipoolTest, DBBulkLoadKeysInRandomOrder) {
char key[20] = {0}, value[20] = {0};
int max_loop = 1 << 6;
int bulk_size = 1 << 15;
Timer timer(false);
std::cout << "Test size : loop(" << max_loop << "); bulk_size(" << bulk_size << ")" << std::endl;
/**********************************
use default env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath1 = "/tmp/DBBulkLoadKeysInRandomOrder1";
std::string walPath = "/tmp/wal";
DB* db1;
Options options1;
// Optimize Rocksdb. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options1.IncreaseParallelism();
options1.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options1.create_if_missing = true;
// open DB
Status s1 = DB::Open(options1, kDBPath1, &db1);
assert(s1.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r1(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r1.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s1 = db1->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s1.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by default : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db1;
/**********************************
use librados env
***********************************/
std::string kDBPath2 = "/tmp/DBBulkLoadKeysInRandomOrder2";
DB* db2;
Options options2;
// Optimize RocksDB. This is the easiest way to get RocksDB to perform well
options2.IncreaseParallelism();
options2.OptimizeLevelStyleCompaction();
// create the DB if it's not already present
options2.create_if_missing = true;
options2.env = env_;
options2.wal_dir = walPath;
// open DB
Status s2 = DB::Open(options2, kDBPath2, &db2);
if (!s2.ok()) {
std::cerr << s2.ToString() << std::endl;
}
assert(s2.ok());
ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::Random64 r2(time(nullptr));
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
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timer.Reset();
for (int i = 0; i < max_loop; ++i) {
WriteBatch batch;
for (int j = 0; j < bulk_size; ++j) {
snprintf(key,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
snprintf(value,
20,
"%16lx",
(unsigned long)r2.Uniform(std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()));
batch.Put(key, value);
}
s2 = db2->Write(WriteOptions(), &batch);
assert(s2.ok());
}
std::cout << "Time by librados : " << timer << "ms" << std::endl;
delete db2;
}
TEST_F(EnvLibradosMutipoolTest, DBTransactionDB) {
std::string kDBPath = "/tmp/DBTransactionDB";
// open DB
Options options;
TransactionDBOptions txn_db_options;
options.create_if_missing = true;
options.env = env_;
TransactionDB* txn_db;
Status s = TransactionDB::Open(options, txn_db_options, kDBPath, &txn_db);
assert(s.ok());
WriteOptions write_options;
ReadOptions read_options;
TransactionOptions txn_options;
std::string value;
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// Simple OptimisticTransaction Example ("Read Committed")
//
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Start a transaction
Transaction* txn = txn_db->BeginTransaction(write_options);
assert(txn);
// Read a key in this transaction
s = txn->Get(read_options, "abc", &value);
assert(s.IsNotFound());
// Write a key in this transaction
s = txn->Put("abc", "def");
assert(s.ok());
// Read a key OUTSIDE this transaction. Does not affect txn.
s = txn_db->Get(read_options, "abc", &value);
// Write a key OUTSIDE of this transaction.
// Does not affect txn since this is an unrelated key. If we wrote key 'abc'
// here, the transaction would fail to commit.
s = txn_db->Put(write_options, "xyz", "zzz");
// Commit transaction
s = txn->Commit();
assert(s.ok());
delete txn;
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// "Repeatable Read" (Snapshot Isolation) Example
// -- Using a single Snapshot
//
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Set a snapshot at start of transaction by setting set_snapshot=true
txn_options.set_snapshot = true;
txn = txn_db->BeginTransaction(write_options, txn_options);
const Snapshot* snapshot = txn->GetSnapshot();
// Write a key OUTSIDE of transaction
s = txn_db->Put(write_options, "abc", "xyz");
assert(s.ok());
// Attempt to read a key using the snapshot. This will fail since
// the previous write outside this txn conflicts with this read.
read_options.snapshot = snapshot;
s = txn->GetForUpdate(read_options, "abc", &value);
assert(s.IsBusy());
txn->Rollback();
delete txn;
// Clear snapshot from read options since it is no longer valid
read_options.snapshot = nullptr;
snapshot = nullptr;
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// "Read Committed" (Monotonic Atomic Views) Example
// --Using multiple Snapshots
//
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// In this example, we set the snapshot multiple times. This is probably
// only necessary if you have very strict isolation requirements to
// implement.
// Set a snapshot at start of transaction
txn_options.set_snapshot = true;
txn = txn_db->BeginTransaction(write_options, txn_options);
// Do some reads and writes to key "x"
read_options.snapshot = txn_db->GetSnapshot();
s = txn->Get(read_options, "x", &value);
txn->Put("x", "x");
// Do a write outside of the transaction to key "y"
s = txn_db->Put(write_options, "y", "y");
// Set a new snapshot in the transaction
txn->SetSnapshot();
txn->SetSavePoint();
read_options.snapshot = txn_db->GetSnapshot();
// Do some reads and writes to key "y"
// Since the snapshot was advanced, the write done outside of the
// transaction does not conflict.
s = txn->GetForUpdate(read_options, "y", &value);
txn->Put("y", "y");
// Decide we want to revert the last write from this transaction.
txn->RollbackToSavePoint();
// Commit.
s = txn->Commit();
assert(s.ok());
delete txn;
// Clear snapshot from read options since it is no longer valid
read_options.snapshot = nullptr;
// Cleanup
delete txn_db;
DestroyDB(kDBPath, options);
}
} // namespace ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
::testing::InitGoogleTest(&argc, argv);
if (getenv("CIRCLECI")) {
fprintf(stderr,
"TODO: get env_librados_test working in CI. Skipping for now.\n");
return 0;
}
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
return RUN_ALL_TESTS();
}
#else
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
fprintf(stderr, "SKIPPED as EnvLibrados is not supported in ROCKSDB_LITE\n");
Add EnvLibrados - RocksDB Env of RADOS (#1222) EnvLibrados is a customized RocksDB Env to use RADOS as the backend file system of RocksDB. It overrides all file system related API of default Env. The easiest way to use it is just like following: std::string db_name = "test_db"; std::string config_path = "path/to/ceph/config"; DB* db; Options options; options.env = EnvLibrados(db_name, config_path); Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Then EnvLibrados will forward all file read/write operation to the RADOS cluster assigned by config_path. Default pool is db_name+"_pool". There are some options that users could set for EnvLibrados. - write_buffer_size. This variable is the max buffer size for WritableFile. After reaching the buffer_max_size, EnvLibrados will sync buffer content to RADOS, then clear buffer. - db_pool. Rather than using default pool, users could set their own db pool name - wal_dir. The dir for WAL files. Because RocksDB only has 2-level structure (dir_name/file_name), the format of wal_dir is "/dir_name"(CAN'T be "/dir1/dir2"). Default wal_dir is "/wal". - wal_pool. Corresponding pool name for WAL files. Default value is db_name+"_wal_pool" The example of setting options looks like following: db_name = "test_db"; db_pool = db_name+"_pool"; wal_dir = "/wal"; wal_pool = db_name+"_wal_pool"; write_buffer_size = 1 << 20; env_ = new EnvLibrados(db_name, config, db_pool, wal_dir, wal_pool, write_buffer_size); DB* db; Options options; options.env = env_; // The last level dir name should match the dir name in prefix_pool_map options.wal_dir = "/tmp/wal"; // open DB Status s = DB::Open(options, kDBPath, &db); Librados is required to compile EnvLibrados. Then use "$make LIBRADOS=1" to compile RocksDB. If you want to only compile EnvLibrados test, just run "$ make env_librados_test LIBRADOS=1". To run env_librados_test, you need to have a running RADOS cluster with the configure file located in "../ceph/src/ceph.conf" related to "rocksdb/".
2016-07-21 20:16:34 +02:00
return 0;
}
#endif // !ROCKSDB_LITE