This allows to use same command for allocating hugepages on systems with different hugepage sizes. The old NRHUGE variable can be still set on Linux machines, but is currently undocumented. Change-Id: I1fba315d95e9aae8b6a8c9c445deb447fecc65dc Signed-off-by: Hailiang Wang <hailiangx.e.wang@intel.com> Signed-off-by: Dariusz Stojaczyk <dariuszx.stojaczyk@intel.com> Reviewed-on: https://review.gerrithub.io/369546 Tested-by: SPDK Automated Test System <sys_sgsw@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Jim Harris <james.r.harris@intel.com> Reviewed-by: Daniel Verkamp <daniel.verkamp@intel.com>
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BlobFS (Blobstore Filesystem)
BlobFS Getting Started Guide
RocksDB Integration
Clone and build the SPDK repository as per https://github.com/spdk/spdk
git clone https://github.com/spdk/spdk.git
cd spdk
./configure
make
Clone the RocksDB repository from the SPDK GitHub fork into a separate directory.
Make sure you check out the spdk-v5.6.1
branch.
cd ..
git clone -b spdk-v5.6.1 https://github.com/spdk/rocksdb.git
Build RocksDB. Only the db_bench
benchmarking tool is integrated with BlobFS.
(Note: add DEBUG_LEVEL=0
for a release build.)
cd rocksdb
make db_bench SPDK_DIR=path/to/spdk
Copy etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf.in
from the SPDK repository to /usr/local/etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf
.
cd ../spdk
cp etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf.in /usr/local/etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf
Append an NVMe section to the configuration file using SPDK's gen_nvme.sh
script.
scripts/gen_nvme.sh >> /usr/local/etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf
Verify the configuration file has specified the correct NVMe SSD. If there are any NVMe SSDs you do not wish to use for RocksDB/SPDK testing, remove them from the configuration file.
Make sure you have at least 5GB of memory allocated for huge pages.
By default, the SPDK setup.sh
script only allocates 2GB.
The following will allocate 5GB of huge page memory (in addition to binding the NVMe devices to uio/vfio).
HUGEMEM=5120 scripts/setup.sh
Create an empty SPDK blobfs for testing.
test/lib/blobfs/mkfs/mkfs /usr/local/etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf Nvme0n1
At this point, RocksDB is ready for testing with SPDK. Three db_bench
parameters are used to configure SPDK:
spdk
- Defines the name of the SPDK configuration file. If omitted, RocksDB will use the default PosixEnv implementation instead of SpdkEnv. (Required)spdk_bdev
- Defines the name of the SPDK block device which contains the BlobFS to be used for testing. (Required)spdk_cache_size
- Defines the amount of userspace cache memory used by SPDK. Specified in terms of megabytes (MB). Default is 4096 (4GB). (Optional)
SPDK has a set of scripts which will run db_bench
against a variety of workloads and capture performance and profiling
data. The primary script is test/blobfs/rocksdb/run_tests.sh
.
FUSE
BlobFS provides a FUSE plug-in to mount an SPDK BlobFS as a kernel filesystem for inspection or debug purposes. The FUSE plug-in requires fuse3 and will be built automatically when fuse3 is detected on the system.
test/lib/blobfs/fuse/fuse /usr/local/etc/spdk/rocksdb.conf Nvme0n1 /mnt/fuse
Note that the FUSE plug-in has some limitations - see the list below.
Limitations
- BlobFS has primarily been tested with RocksDB so far, so any use cases different from how RocksDB uses a filesystem may run into issues. BlobFS will be tested in a broader range of use cases after this initial release.
- Only a synchronous API is currently supported. An asynchronous API has been developed but not thoroughly tested yet so is not part of the public interface yet. This will be added in a future release.
- File renames are not atomic. This will be fixed in a future release.
- BlobFS currently supports only a flat namespace for files with no directory support. Filenames are currently stored as xattrs in each blob. This means that filename lookup is an O(n) operation. An SPDK btree implementation is underway which will be the underpinning for BlobFS directory support in a future release.
- Writes to a file must always append to the end of the file. Support for writes to any location within the file will be added in a future release.