rocksdb/include/rocksdb/env.h

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// Copyright (c) 2013, Facebook, Inc. All rights reserved.
// This source code is licensed under the BSD-style license found in the
// LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. An additional grant
// of patent rights can be found in the PATENTS file in the same directory.
// Copyright (c) 2011 The LevelDB Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file. See the AUTHORS file for names of contributors.
//
// An Env is an interface used by the rocksdb implementation to access
// operating system functionality like the filesystem etc. Callers
// may wish to provide a custom Env object when opening a database to
// get fine gain control; e.g., to rate limit file system operations.
//
// All Env implementations are safe for concurrent access from
// multiple threads without any external synchronization.
#ifndef STORAGE_ROCKSDB_INCLUDE_ENV_H_
#define STORAGE_ROCKSDB_INCLUDE_ENV_H_
#include <stdint.h>
#include <cstdarg>
#include <limits>
#include <memory>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include "rocksdb/status.h"
#include "rocksdb/thread_status.h"
#ifdef _WIN32
// Windows API macro interference
#undef DeleteFile
#undef GetCurrentTime
#endif
namespace rocksdb {
class FileLock;
class Logger;
class RandomAccessFile;
class SequentialFile;
class Slice;
class WritableFile;
class Directory;
struct DBOptions;
class RateLimiter;
class ThreadStatusUpdater;
struct ThreadStatus;
using std::unique_ptr;
using std::shared_ptr;
// Options while opening a file to read/write
struct EnvOptions {
// construct with default Options
EnvOptions();
// construct from Options
explicit EnvOptions(const DBOptions& options);
// If true, then allow caching of data in environment buffers
bool use_os_buffer = true;
// If true, then use mmap to read data
bool use_mmap_reads = false;
// If true, then use mmap to write data
bool use_mmap_writes = true;
// If true, set the FD_CLOEXEC on open fd.
bool set_fd_cloexec = true;
// Allows OS to incrementally sync files to disk while they are being
// written, in the background. Issue one request for every bytes_per_sync
// written. 0 turns it off.
// Default: 0
uint64_t bytes_per_sync = 0;
// If true, we will preallocate the file with FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE flag, which
// means that file size won't change as part of preallocation.
// If false, preallocation will also change the file size. This option will
// improve the performance in workloads where you sync the data on every
// write. By default, we set it to true for MANIFEST writes and false for
// WAL writes
bool fallocate_with_keep_size = true;
// If not nullptr, write rate limiting is enabled for flush and compaction
RateLimiter* rate_limiter = nullptr;
};
class Env {
public:
Env() : thread_status_updater_(nullptr) {}
virtual ~Env();
// Return a default environment suitable for the current operating
// system. Sophisticated users may wish to provide their own Env
// implementation instead of relying on this default environment.
//
// The result of Default() belongs to rocksdb and must never be deleted.
static Env* Default();
// Create a brand new sequentially-readable file with the specified name.
// On success, stores a pointer to the new file in *result and returns OK.
// On failure stores nullptr in *result and returns non-OK. If the file does
// not exist, returns a non-OK status.
//
// The returned file will only be accessed by one thread at a time.
virtual Status NewSequentialFile(const std::string& fname,
unique_ptr<SequentialFile>* result,
const EnvOptions& options)
= 0;
// Create a brand new random access read-only file with the
// specified name. On success, stores a pointer to the new file in
// *result and returns OK. On failure stores nullptr in *result and
// returns non-OK. If the file does not exist, returns a non-OK
// status.
//
// The returned file may be concurrently accessed by multiple threads.
virtual Status NewRandomAccessFile(const std::string& fname,
unique_ptr<RandomAccessFile>* result,
const EnvOptions& options)
= 0;
// Create an object that writes to a new file with the specified
// name. Deletes any existing file with the same name and creates a
// new file. On success, stores a pointer to the new file in
// *result and returns OK. On failure stores nullptr in *result and
// returns non-OK.
//
// The returned file will only be accessed by one thread at a time.
virtual Status NewWritableFile(const std::string& fname,
unique_ptr<WritableFile>* result,
const EnvOptions& options) = 0;
// Create an object that represents a directory. Will fail if directory
// doesn't exist. If the directory exists, it will open the directory
// and create a new Directory object.
//
// On success, stores a pointer to the new Directory in
// *result and returns OK. On failure stores nullptr in *result and
// returns non-OK.
virtual Status NewDirectory(const std::string& name,
unique_ptr<Directory>* result) = 0;
// Returns OK if the named file exists.
// NotFound if the named file does not exist,
// the calling process does not have permission to determine
// whether this file exists, or if the path is invalid.
// IOError if an IO Error was encountered
virtual Status FileExists(const std::string& fname) = 0;
// Store in *result the names of the children of the specified directory.
// The names are relative to "dir".
// Original contents of *results are dropped.
virtual Status GetChildren(const std::string& dir,
std::vector<std::string>* result) = 0;
// Delete the named file.
virtual Status DeleteFile(const std::string& fname) = 0;
// Create the specified directory. Returns error if directory exists.
virtual Status CreateDir(const std::string& dirname) = 0;
// Creates directory if missing. Return Ok if it exists, or successful in
// Creating.
virtual Status CreateDirIfMissing(const std::string& dirname) = 0;
// Delete the specified directory.
virtual Status DeleteDir(const std::string& dirname) = 0;
// Store the size of fname in *file_size.
virtual Status GetFileSize(const std::string& fname, uint64_t* file_size) = 0;
// Store the last modification time of fname in *file_mtime.
virtual Status GetFileModificationTime(const std::string& fname,
uint64_t* file_mtime) = 0;
// Rename file src to target.
virtual Status RenameFile(const std::string& src,
const std::string& target) = 0;
// Hard Link file src to target.
virtual Status LinkFile(const std::string& src, const std::string& target) {
return Status::NotSupported("LinkFile is not supported for this Env");
}
// Lock the specified file. Used to prevent concurrent access to
// the same db by multiple processes. On failure, stores nullptr in
// *lock and returns non-OK.
//
// On success, stores a pointer to the object that represents the
// acquired lock in *lock and returns OK. The caller should call
// UnlockFile(*lock) to release the lock. If the process exits,
// the lock will be automatically released.
//
// If somebody else already holds the lock, finishes immediately
// with a failure. I.e., this call does not wait for existing locks
// to go away.
//
// May create the named file if it does not already exist.
virtual Status LockFile(const std::string& fname, FileLock** lock) = 0;
// Release the lock acquired by a previous successful call to LockFile.
// REQUIRES: lock was returned by a successful LockFile() call
// REQUIRES: lock has not already been unlocked.
virtual Status UnlockFile(FileLock* lock) = 0;
// Priority for scheduling job in thread pool
enum Priority { LOW, HIGH, TOTAL };
// Priority for requesting bytes in rate limiter scheduler
enum IOPriority {
IO_LOW = 0,
IO_HIGH = 1,
IO_TOTAL = 2
};
// Arrange to run "(*function)(arg)" once in a background thread, in
// the thread pool specified by pri. By default, jobs go to the 'LOW'
// priority thread pool.
// "function" may run in an unspecified thread. Multiple functions
// added to the same Env may run concurrently in different threads.
// I.e., the caller may not assume that background work items are
// serialized.
virtual void Schedule(void (*function)(void* arg), void* arg,
Priority pri = LOW, void* tag = nullptr) = 0;
// Arrange to remove jobs for given arg from the queue_ if they are not
// already scheduled. Caller is expected to have exclusive lock on arg.
virtual int UnSchedule(void* arg, Priority pri) { return 0; }
// Start a new thread, invoking "function(arg)" within the new thread.
// When "function(arg)" returns, the thread will be destroyed.
virtual void StartThread(void (*function)(void* arg), void* arg) = 0;
// Wait for all threads started by StartThread to terminate.
virtual void WaitForJoin() {}
// Get thread pool queue length for specific thrad pool.
virtual unsigned int GetThreadPoolQueueLen(Priority pri = LOW) const {
return 0;
}
// *path is set to a temporary directory that can be used for testing. It may
// or many not have just been created. The directory may or may not differ
// between runs of the same process, but subsequent calls will return the
// same directory.
virtual Status GetTestDirectory(std::string* path) = 0;
// Create and return a log file for storing informational messages.
virtual Status NewLogger(const std::string& fname,
shared_ptr<Logger>* result) = 0;
// Returns the number of micro-seconds since some fixed point in time. Only
// useful for computing deltas of time.
// However, it is often used as system time such as in GenericRateLimiter
// and other places so a port needs to return system time in order to work.
virtual uint64_t NowMicros() = 0;
// Returns the number of nano-seconds since some fixed point in time. Only
// useful for computing deltas of time in one run.
// Default implementation simply relies on NowMicros
virtual uint64_t NowNanos() {
return NowMicros() * 1000;
}
// Sleep/delay the thread for the perscribed number of micro-seconds.
virtual void SleepForMicroseconds(int micros) = 0;
// Get the current host name.
virtual Status GetHostName(char* name, uint64_t len) = 0;
// Get the number of seconds since the Epoch, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 (UTC).
virtual Status GetCurrentTime(int64_t* unix_time) = 0;
// Get full directory name for this db.
virtual Status GetAbsolutePath(const std::string& db_path,
std::string* output_path) = 0;
// The number of background worker threads of a specific thread pool
// for this environment. 'LOW' is the default pool.
// default number: 1
virtual void SetBackgroundThreads(int number, Priority pri = LOW) = 0;
// Enlarge number of background worker threads of a specific thread pool
// for this environment if it is smaller than specified. 'LOW' is the default
// pool.
virtual void IncBackgroundThreadsIfNeeded(int number, Priority pri) = 0;
// Lower IO priority for threads from the specified pool.
virtual void LowerThreadPoolIOPriority(Priority pool = LOW) {}
// Converts seconds-since-Jan-01-1970 to a printable string
virtual std::string TimeToString(uint64_t time) = 0;
Dbid feature Summary: Create a new type of file on startup if it doesn't already exist called DBID. This will store a unique number generated from boost library's uuid header file. The use-case is to identify the case of a db losing all its data and coming back up either empty or from an image(backup/live replica's recovery) the key point to note is that DBID is not stored in a backup or db snapshot It's preferable to use Boost for uuid because: 1) A non-standard way of generating uuid is not good 2) /proc/sys/kernel/random/uuid generates a uuid but only on linux environments and the solution would not be clean 3) c++ doesn't have any direct way to get a uuid 4) Boost is a very good library that was already having linkage in rocksdb from third-party Note: I had to update the TOOLCHAIN_REV in build files to get latest verison of boost from third-party as the older version had a bug. I had to put Wno-uninitialized in Makefile because boost-1.51 has an unitialized variable and rocksdb would not comiple otherwise. Latet open-source for boost is 1.54 but is not there in third-party. I have notified the concerned people in fbcode about it. @kailiu : While releasing to third-party, an additional dependency will need to be created for boost in TARGETS file. I can help identify. Test Plan: Expand db_test to test 2 cases 1) Restarting db with Id file present - verify that no change to Id 2)Restarting db with Id file deleted - verify that a different Id is there after reopen Also run make all check Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, kailiu, sdong Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D13587
2013-10-18 23:50:54 +02:00
// Generates a unique id that can be used to identify a db
virtual std::string GenerateUniqueId();
// OptimizeForLogWrite will create a new EnvOptions object that is a copy of
// the EnvOptions in the parameters, but is optimized for writing log files.
// Default implementation returns the copy of the same object.
virtual EnvOptions OptimizeForLogWrite(const EnvOptions& env_options,
const DBOptions& db_options) const;
// OptimizeForManifestWrite will create a new EnvOptions object that is a copy
// of the EnvOptions in the parameters, but is optimized for writing manifest
// files. Default implementation returns the copy of the same object.
virtual EnvOptions OptimizeForManifestWrite(const EnvOptions& env_options)
const;
// Returns the status of all threads that belong to the current Env.
virtual Status GetThreadList(std::vector<ThreadStatus>* thread_list) {
return Status::NotSupported("Not supported.");
}
// Returns the pointer to ThreadStatusUpdater. This function will be
// used in RocksDB internally to update thread status and supports
// GetThreadList().
virtual ThreadStatusUpdater* GetThreadStatusUpdater() const {
return thread_status_updater_;
}
// Returns the ID of the current thread.
virtual uint64_t GetThreadID() const;
protected:
// The pointer to an internal structure that will update the
// status of each thread.
ThreadStatusUpdater* thread_status_updater_;
private:
// No copying allowed
Env(const Env&);
void operator=(const Env&);
};
// The factory function to construct a ThreadStatusUpdater. Any Env
// that supports GetThreadList() feature should call this function in its
// constructor to initialize thread_status_updater_.
ThreadStatusUpdater* CreateThreadStatusUpdater();
// A file abstraction for reading sequentially through a file
class SequentialFile {
public:
SequentialFile() { }
virtual ~SequentialFile();
// Read up to "n" bytes from the file. "scratch[0..n-1]" may be
// written by this routine. Sets "*result" to the data that was
// read (including if fewer than "n" bytes were successfully read).
// May set "*result" to point at data in "scratch[0..n-1]", so
// "scratch[0..n-1]" must be live when "*result" is used.
// If an error was encountered, returns a non-OK status.
//
// REQUIRES: External synchronization
virtual Status Read(size_t n, Slice* result, char* scratch) = 0;
// Skip "n" bytes from the file. This is guaranteed to be no
// slower that reading the same data, but may be faster.
//
// If end of file is reached, skipping will stop at the end of the
// file, and Skip will return OK.
//
// REQUIRES: External synchronization
virtual Status Skip(uint64_t n) = 0;
// Remove any kind of caching of data from the offset to offset+length
// of this file. If the length is 0, then it refers to the end of file.
// If the system is not caching the file contents, then this is a noop.
virtual Status InvalidateCache(size_t offset, size_t length) {
return Status::NotSupported("InvalidateCache not supported.");
}
};
// A file abstraction for randomly reading the contents of a file.
class RandomAccessFile {
public:
RandomAccessFile() { }
virtual ~RandomAccessFile();
// Read up to "n" bytes from the file starting at "offset".
// "scratch[0..n-1]" may be written by this routine. Sets "*result"
// to the data that was read (including if fewer than "n" bytes were
// successfully read). May set "*result" to point at data in
// "scratch[0..n-1]", so "scratch[0..n-1]" must be live when
// "*result" is used. If an error was encountered, returns a non-OK
// status.
//
// Safe for concurrent use by multiple threads.
virtual Status Read(uint64_t offset, size_t n, Slice* result,
char* scratch) const = 0;
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
// Used by the file_reader_writer to decide if the ReadAhead wrapper
// should simply forward the call and do not enact buffering or locking.
virtual bool ShouldForwardRawRequest() const {
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
return false;
}
// Tries to get an unique ID for this file that will be the same each time
// the file is opened (and will stay the same while the file is open).
// Furthermore, it tries to make this ID at most "max_size" bytes. If such an
// ID can be created this function returns the length of the ID and places it
// in "id"; otherwise, this function returns 0, in which case "id"
// may not have been modified.
//
// This function guarantees, for IDs from a given environment, two unique ids
// cannot be made equal to eachother by adding arbitrary bytes to one of
// them. That is, no unique ID is the prefix of another.
//
// This function guarantees that the returned ID will not be interpretable as
// a single varint.
//
// Note: these IDs are only valid for the duration of the process.
virtual size_t GetUniqueId(char* id, size_t max_size) const {
return 0; // Default implementation to prevent issues with backwards
// compatibility.
};
enum AccessPattern { NORMAL, RANDOM, SEQUENTIAL, WILLNEED, DONTNEED };
virtual void Hint(AccessPattern pattern) {}
// Remove any kind of caching of data from the offset to offset+length
// of this file. If the length is 0, then it refers to the end of file.
// If the system is not caching the file contents, then this is a noop.
virtual Status InvalidateCache(size_t offset, size_t length) {
return Status::NotSupported("InvalidateCache not supported.");
}
};
// A file abstraction for sequential writing. The implementation
// must provide buffering since callers may append small fragments
// at a time to the file.
class WritableFile {
public:
WritableFile()
: last_preallocated_block_(0),
preallocation_block_size_(0),
io_priority_(Env::IO_TOTAL) {
}
virtual ~WritableFile();
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
// Indicates if the class makes use of unbuffered I/O
virtual bool UseOSBuffer() const {
return true;
}
const size_t c_DefaultPageSize = 4 * 1024;
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
// This is needed when you want to allocate
// AlignedBuffer for use with file I/O classes
// Used for unbuffered file I/O when UseOSBuffer() returns false
virtual size_t GetRequiredBufferAlignment() const {
return c_DefaultPageSize;
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
}
virtual Status Append(const Slice& data) = 0;
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
// Positioned write for unbuffered access default forward
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
// to simple append as most of the tests are buffered by default
virtual Status PositionedAppend(const Slice& /* data */, uint64_t /* offset */) {
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
return Status::NotSupported();
}
// Truncate is necessary to trim the file to the correct size
// before closing. It is not always possible to keep track of the file
// size due to whole pages writes. The behavior is undefined if called
// with other writes to follow.
virtual Status Truncate(uint64_t size) {
return Status::OK();
}
virtual Status Close() = 0;
virtual Status Flush() = 0;
virtual Status Sync() = 0; // sync data
/*
* Sync data and/or metadata as well.
* By default, sync only data.
* Override this method for environments where we need to sync
* metadata as well.
*/
virtual Status Fsync() {
return Sync();
}
// true if Sync() and Fsync() are safe to call concurrently with Append()
// and Flush().
virtual bool IsSyncThreadSafe() const {
return false;
}
// Indicates the upper layers if the current WritableFile implementation
// uses direct IO.
virtual bool UseDirectIO() const { return false; }
/*
* Change the priority in rate limiter if rate limiting is enabled.
* If rate limiting is not enabled, this call has no effect.
*/
virtual void SetIOPriority(Env::IOPriority pri) {
io_priority_ = pri;
}
virtual Env::IOPriority GetIOPriority() { return io_priority_; }
/*
* Get the size of valid data in the file.
*/
virtual uint64_t GetFileSize() {
return 0;
}
/*
* Get and set the default pre-allocation block size for writes to
* this file. If non-zero, then Allocate will be used to extend the
* underlying storage of a file (generally via fallocate) if the Env
* instance supports it.
*/
void SetPreallocationBlockSize(size_t size) {
preallocation_block_size_ = size;
}
virtual void GetPreallocationStatus(size_t* block_size,
size_t* last_allocated_block) {
*last_allocated_block = last_preallocated_block_;
*block_size = preallocation_block_size_;
}
// For documentation, refer to RandomAccessFile::GetUniqueId()
virtual size_t GetUniqueId(char* id, size_t max_size) const {
return 0; // Default implementation to prevent issues with backwards
}
// Remove any kind of caching of data from the offset to offset+length
// of this file. If the length is 0, then it refers to the end of file.
// If the system is not caching the file contents, then this is a noop.
// This call has no effect on dirty pages in the cache.
virtual Status InvalidateCache(size_t offset, size_t length) {
return Status::NotSupported("InvalidateCache not supported.");
}
// Sync a file range with disk.
// offset is the starting byte of the file range to be synchronized.
// nbytes specifies the length of the range to be synchronized.
// This asks the OS to initiate flushing the cached data to disk,
// without waiting for completion.
// Default implementation does nothing.
virtual Status RangeSync(off_t offset, off_t nbytes) { return Status::OK(); }
// PrepareWrite performs any necessary preparation for a write
// before the write actually occurs. This allows for pre-allocation
// of space on devices where it can result in less file
// fragmentation and/or less waste from over-zealous filesystem
// pre-allocation.
void PrepareWrite(size_t offset, size_t len) {
if (preallocation_block_size_ == 0) {
return;
}
// If this write would cross one or more preallocation blocks,
// determine what the last preallocation block necesessary to
// cover this write would be and Allocate to that point.
const auto block_size = preallocation_block_size_;
size_t new_last_preallocated_block =
(offset + len + block_size - 1) / block_size;
if (new_last_preallocated_block > last_preallocated_block_) {
size_t num_spanned_blocks =
new_last_preallocated_block - last_preallocated_block_;
Allocate(static_cast<off_t>(block_size * last_preallocated_block_),
static_cast<off_t>(block_size * num_spanned_blocks));
last_preallocated_block_ = new_last_preallocated_block;
}
}
protected:
/*
* Pre-allocate space for a file.
*/
virtual Status Allocate(off_t offset, off_t len) {
return Status::OK();
}
size_t preallocation_block_size() { return preallocation_block_size_; }
private:
size_t last_preallocated_block_;
size_t preallocation_block_size_;
// No copying allowed
WritableFile(const WritableFile&);
void operator=(const WritableFile&);
protected:
friend class WritableFileWrapper;
Env::IOPriority io_priority_;
};
// Directory object represents collection of files and implements
// filesystem operations that can be executed on directories.
class Directory {
public:
virtual ~Directory() {}
// Fsync directory. Can be called concurrently from multiple threads.
virtual Status Fsync() = 0;
};
enum InfoLogLevel : unsigned char {
DEBUG_LEVEL = 0,
INFO_LEVEL,
WARN_LEVEL,
ERROR_LEVEL,
FATAL_LEVEL,
HEADER_LEVEL,
NUM_INFO_LOG_LEVELS,
};
// An interface for writing log messages.
class Logger {
public:
size_t kDoNotSupportGetLogFileSize = std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max();
explicit Logger(const InfoLogLevel log_level = InfoLogLevel::INFO_LEVEL)
: log_level_(log_level) {}
virtual ~Logger();
// Write a header to the log file with the specified format
// It is recommended that you log all header information at the start of the
// application. But it is not enforced.
virtual void LogHeader(const char* format, va_list ap) {
// Default implementation does a simple INFO level log write.
// Please override as per the logger class requirement.
Logv(format, ap);
}
// Write an entry to the log file with the specified format.
virtual void Logv(const char* format, va_list ap) = 0;
// Write an entry to the log file with the specified log level
// and format. Any log with level under the internal log level
// of *this (see @SetInfoLogLevel and @GetInfoLogLevel) will not be
// printed.
virtual void Logv(const InfoLogLevel log_level, const char* format, va_list ap);
virtual size_t GetLogFileSize() const { return kDoNotSupportGetLogFileSize; }
// Flush to the OS buffers
virtual void Flush() {}
virtual InfoLogLevel GetInfoLogLevel() const { return log_level_; }
virtual void SetInfoLogLevel(const InfoLogLevel log_level) {
log_level_ = log_level;
}
private:
// No copying allowed
Logger(const Logger&);
void operator=(const Logger&);
InfoLogLevel log_level_;
};
// Identifies a locked file.
class FileLock {
public:
FileLock() { }
virtual ~FileLock();
private:
// No copying allowed
FileLock(const FileLock&);
void operator=(const FileLock&);
};
extern void LogFlush(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log);
extern void Log(const InfoLogLevel log_level,
const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
// a set of log functions with different log levels.
extern void Header(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Debug(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Info(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Warn(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Error(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Fatal(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...);
// Log the specified data to *info_log if info_log is non-nullptr.
// The default info log level is InfoLogLevel::ERROR.
extern void Log(const shared_ptr<Logger>& info_log, const char* format, ...)
# if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
__attribute__((__format__ (__printf__, 2, 3)))
# endif
;
extern void LogFlush(Logger *info_log);
extern void Log(const InfoLogLevel log_level, Logger* info_log,
const char* format, ...);
// The default info log level is InfoLogLevel::ERROR.
extern void Log(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...)
# if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
__attribute__((__format__ (__printf__, 2, 3)))
# endif
;
// a set of log functions with different log levels.
extern void Header(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Debug(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Info(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Warn(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Error(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...);
extern void Fatal(Logger* info_log, const char* format, ...);
// A utility routine: write "data" to the named file.
extern Status WriteStringToFile(Env* env, const Slice& data,
const std::string& fname,
bool should_sync = false);
// A utility routine: read contents of named file into *data
extern Status ReadFileToString(Env* env, const std::string& fname,
std::string* data);
// An implementation of Env that forwards all calls to another Env.
// May be useful to clients who wish to override just part of the
// functionality of another Env.
class EnvWrapper : public Env {
public:
// Initialize an EnvWrapper that delegates all calls to *t
explicit EnvWrapper(Env* t) : target_(t) { }
virtual ~EnvWrapper();
// Return the target to which this Env forwards all calls
Env* target() const { return target_; }
// The following text is boilerplate that forwards all methods to target()
Status NewSequentialFile(const std::string& f, unique_ptr<SequentialFile>* r,
const EnvOptions& options) override {
return target_->NewSequentialFile(f, r, options);
}
Status NewRandomAccessFile(const std::string& f,
unique_ptr<RandomAccessFile>* r,
const EnvOptions& options) override {
return target_->NewRandomAccessFile(f, r, options);
}
Status NewWritableFile(const std::string& f, unique_ptr<WritableFile>* r,
const EnvOptions& options) override {
return target_->NewWritableFile(f, r, options);
}
virtual Status NewDirectory(const std::string& name,
unique_ptr<Directory>* result) override {
return target_->NewDirectory(name, result);
}
Status FileExists(const std::string& f) override {
return target_->FileExists(f);
}
Status GetChildren(const std::string& dir,
std::vector<std::string>* r) override {
return target_->GetChildren(dir, r);
}
Status DeleteFile(const std::string& f) override {
return target_->DeleteFile(f);
}
Status CreateDir(const std::string& d) override {
return target_->CreateDir(d);
}
Status CreateDirIfMissing(const std::string& d) override {
return target_->CreateDirIfMissing(d);
}
Status DeleteDir(const std::string& d) override {
return target_->DeleteDir(d);
}
Status GetFileSize(const std::string& f, uint64_t* s) override {
return target_->GetFileSize(f, s);
}
Status GetFileModificationTime(const std::string& fname,
uint64_t* file_mtime) override {
return target_->GetFileModificationTime(fname, file_mtime);
}
Status RenameFile(const std::string& s, const std::string& t) override {
return target_->RenameFile(s, t);
}
Status LinkFile(const std::string& s, const std::string& t) override {
return target_->LinkFile(s, t);
}
Status LockFile(const std::string& f, FileLock** l) override {
return target_->LockFile(f, l);
}
Status UnlockFile(FileLock* l) override { return target_->UnlockFile(l); }
void Schedule(void (*f)(void* arg), void* a, Priority pri,
void* tag = nullptr) override {
return target_->Schedule(f, a, pri, tag);
}
int UnSchedule(void* tag, Priority pri) override {
return target_->UnSchedule(tag, pri);
}
void StartThread(void (*f)(void*), void* a) override {
return target_->StartThread(f, a);
}
void WaitForJoin() override { return target_->WaitForJoin(); }
virtual unsigned int GetThreadPoolQueueLen(
Priority pri = LOW) const override {
return target_->GetThreadPoolQueueLen(pri);
}
virtual Status GetTestDirectory(std::string* path) override {
return target_->GetTestDirectory(path);
}
virtual Status NewLogger(const std::string& fname,
shared_ptr<Logger>* result) override {
return target_->NewLogger(fname, result);
}
uint64_t NowMicros() override { return target_->NowMicros(); }
void SleepForMicroseconds(int micros) override {
target_->SleepForMicroseconds(micros);
}
Status GetHostName(char* name, uint64_t len) override {
return target_->GetHostName(name, len);
}
Status GetCurrentTime(int64_t* unix_time) override {
return target_->GetCurrentTime(unix_time);
}
Status GetAbsolutePath(const std::string& db_path,
std::string* output_path) override {
return target_->GetAbsolutePath(db_path, output_path);
}
void SetBackgroundThreads(int num, Priority pri) override {
return target_->SetBackgroundThreads(num, pri);
}
void IncBackgroundThreadsIfNeeded(int num, Priority pri) override {
return target_->IncBackgroundThreadsIfNeeded(num, pri);
}
void LowerThreadPoolIOPriority(Priority pool = LOW) override {
target_->LowerThreadPoolIOPriority(pool);
}
std::string TimeToString(uint64_t time) override {
return target_->TimeToString(time);
}
Status GetThreadList(std::vector<ThreadStatus>* thread_list) override {
return target_->GetThreadList(thread_list);
}
ThreadStatusUpdater* GetThreadStatusUpdater() const override {
return target_->GetThreadStatusUpdater();
}
uint64_t GetThreadID() const override {
return target_->GetThreadID();
}
private:
Env* target_;
};
// An implementation of WritableFile that forwards all calls to another
// WritableFile. May be useful to clients who wish to override just part of the
// functionality of another WritableFile.
// It's declared as friend of WritableFile to allow forwarding calls to
// protected virtual methods.
class WritableFileWrapper : public WritableFile {
public:
explicit WritableFileWrapper(WritableFile* t) : target_(t) { }
Status Append(const Slice& data) override { return target_->Append(data); }
Status PositionedAppend(const Slice& data, uint64_t offset) override {
return target_->PositionedAppend(data, offset);
}
Refactor to support file_reader_writer on Windows. Summary. A change https://reviews.facebook.net/differential/diff/224721/ Has attempted to move common functionality out of platform dependent code to a new facility called file_reader_writer. This includes: - perf counters - Buffering - RateLimiting However, the change did not attempt to refactor Windows code. To mitigate, we introduce new quering interfaces such as UseOSBuffer(), GetRequiredBufferAlignment() and ReaderWriterForward() for pure forwarding where required. Introduce WritableFile got a new method Truncate(). This is to communicate to the file as to how much data it has on close. - When space is pre-allocated on Linux it is filled with zeros implicitly, no such thing exist on Windows so we must truncate file on close. - When operating in unbuffered mode the last page is filled with zeros but we still want to truncate. Previously, Close() would take care of it but now buffer management is shifted to the wrappers and the file has no idea about the file true size. This means that Close() on the wrapper level must always include Truncate() as well as wrapper __dtor should call Close() and against double Close(). Move buffered/unbuffered write logic to the wrapper. Utilize Aligned buffer class. Adjust tests and implement Truncate() where necessary. Come up with reasonable defaults for new virtual interfaces. Forward calls for RandomAccessReadAhead class to avoid double buffering and locking (double locking in unbuffered mode on WIndows).
2015-09-11 18:57:02 +02:00
Status Truncate(uint64_t size) override { return target_->Truncate(size); }
Status Close() override { return target_->Close(); }
Status Flush() override { return target_->Flush(); }
Status Sync() override { return target_->Sync(); }
Status Fsync() override { return target_->Fsync(); }
bool IsSyncThreadSafe() const override { return target_->IsSyncThreadSafe(); }
void SetIOPriority(Env::IOPriority pri) override {
target_->SetIOPriority(pri);
}
Env::IOPriority GetIOPriority() override { return target_->GetIOPriority(); }
uint64_t GetFileSize() override { return target_->GetFileSize(); }
void GetPreallocationStatus(size_t* block_size,
size_t* last_allocated_block) override {
target_->GetPreallocationStatus(block_size, last_allocated_block);
}
size_t GetUniqueId(char* id, size_t max_size) const override {
return target_->GetUniqueId(id, max_size);
}
Status InvalidateCache(size_t offset, size_t length) override {
return target_->InvalidateCache(offset, length);
}
protected:
Status Allocate(off_t offset, off_t len) override {
return target_->Allocate(offset, len);
}
Status RangeSync(off_t offset, off_t nbytes) override {
return target_->RangeSync(offset, nbytes);
}
private:
WritableFile* target_;
};
// Returns a new environment that stores its data in memory and delegates
// all non-file-storage tasks to base_env. The caller must delete the result
// when it is no longer needed.
// *base_env must remain live while the result is in use.
Env* NewMemEnv(Env* base_env);
} // namespace rocksdb
#endif // STORAGE_ROCKSDB_INCLUDE_ENV_H_