Commit Graph

57 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Igor Canadi
249e736bc5 portable %lu printing 2013-12-12 08:13:47 -08:00
Igor Canadi
5e4ab767cf BackupableDB delete backups with newer seq number
Summary: We now delete backups with newer sequence number, so the clients don't have to handle confusing situations when they restore from backup.

Test Plan: added a unit test

Reviewers: dhruba

Reviewed By: dhruba

CC: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14547
2013-12-10 20:49:28 -08:00
Siying Dong
4815468be4 Fix another sign and unsign comparison in test 2013-12-10 10:52:47 -08:00
Igor Canadi
cbe7ffef9a fix comparison between signed and unsigned 2013-12-10 10:48:49 -08:00
Igor Canadi
7cf5728440 Cleaning up BackupableDB + fix valgrind errors
Summary: Valgrind complained about BackupableDB. This fixes valgrind errors. Also, I cleaned up some code.

Test Plan: valgrind does not complain anymore

Reviewers: dhruba

Reviewed By: dhruba

CC: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14529
2013-12-10 10:35:06 -08:00
Igor Canadi
784e62f98d Fix unused variable warning 2013-12-09 16:44:47 -08:00
Igor Canadi
fb9fce4fc3 [RocksDB] BackupableDB
Summary:
In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you.
Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes.

There are multiple things you can configure:
1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like.
2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot
3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files.
4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup.
5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions

Here is the directory structure I use:

   backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot
               0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files
               files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file
               files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files

All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope.

Some other stuff in this diff:
1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do.
2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB.

Test Plan:
I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff.

Also, `make asan_check`

Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke

Reviewed By: dhruba

CC: leveldb, haobo

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
2013-12-09 14:06:52 -08:00