summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/doc/user-guide/user-guide.texi
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/user-guide/user-guide.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/user-guide/user-guide.texi2226
1 files changed, 2226 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/user-guide/user-guide.texi b/doc/user-guide/user-guide.texi
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..8365419a6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/user-guide/user-guide.texi
@@ -0,0 +1,2226 @@
+\input texinfo
+@setfilename user-guide.info
+@settitle GlusterFS 2.0 User Guide
+@afourpaper
+
+@direntry
+* GlusterFS: (user-guide). GlusterFS distributed filesystem user guide
+@end direntry
+
+@copying
+This is the user manual for GlusterFS 2.0.
+
+Copyright @copyright{} 2008,2007 @email{@b{Z}} Research, Inc. Permission is granted to
+copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the
+@acronym{GNU} Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later
+version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant
+Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the
+license is included in the chapter entitled ``@acronym{GNU} Free
+Documentation License''.
+@end copying
+
+@titlepage
+@title GlusterFS 2.0 User Guide [DRAFT]
+@subtitle January 15, 2008
+@author http://gluster.org/core-team.php
+@author @email{@b{Z}} @b{Research}
+
+@page
+@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
+@insertcopying
+@end titlepage
+
+@c Info stuff
+@ifnottex
+@node Top
+@top GlusterFS 2.0 User Guide
+
+@insertcopying
+@menu
+* Acknowledgements::
+* Introduction::
+* Installation and Invocation::
+* Concepts::
+* Translators::
+* Usage Scenarios::
+* Troubleshooting::
+* GNU Free Documentation Licence::
+* Index::
+
+@detailmenu
+ --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
+
+Installation and Invocation
+
+* Pre requisites::
+* Getting GlusterFS::
+* Building::
+* Running GlusterFS::
+* A Tutorial Introduction::
+
+Running GlusterFS
+
+* Server::
+* Client::
+
+Concepts
+
+* Filesystems in Userspace::
+* Translator::
+* Volume specification file::
+
+Translators
+
+* Storage Translators::
+* Client and Server Translators::
+* Clustering Translators::
+* Performance Translators::
+* Features Translators::
+
+Storage Translators
+
+* POSIX::
+
+Client and Server Translators
+
+* Transport modules::
+* Client protocol::
+* Server protocol::
+
+Clustering Translators
+
+* Unify::
+* Replicate::
+* Stripe::
+
+Performance Translators
+
+* Read Ahead::
+* Write Behind::
+* IO Threads::
+* IO Cache::
+
+Features Translators
+
+* POSIX Locks::
+* Fixed ID::
+
+Miscellaneous Translators
+
+* ROT-13::
+* Trace::
+
+@end detailmenu
+@end menu
+
+@end ifnottex
+@c Info stuff end
+
+@contents
+
+@node Acknowledgements
+@unnumbered Acknowledgements
+GlusterFS continues to be a wonderful and enriching experience for all
+of us involved.
+
+GlusterFS development would not have been possible at this pace if
+not for our enthusiastic users. People from around the world have
+helped us with bug reports, performance numbers, and feature suggestions.
+A huge thanks to them all.
+
+Matthew Paine - for RPMs & general enthu
+
+Leonardo Rodrigues de Mello - for DEBs
+
+Julian Perez & Adam D'Auria - for multi-server tutorial
+
+Paul England - for HA spec
+
+Brent Nelson - for many bug reports
+
+Jacques Mattheij - for Europe mirror.
+
+Patrick Negri - for TCP non-blocking connect.
+@flushright
+http://gluster.org/core-team.php (@email{list-hacking@@zresearch.com})
+@email{@b{Z}} Research
+@end flushright
+
+@node Introduction
+@chapter Introduction
+
+GlusterFS is a distributed filesystem. It works at the file level,
+not block level.
+
+A network filesystem is one which allows us to access remote files. A
+distributed filesystem is one that stores data on multiple machines
+and makes them all appear to be a part of the same filesystem.
+
+Need for distributed filesystems
+
+@itemize @bullet
+@item Scalability: A distributed filesystem allows us to store more data than what can be stored on a single machine.
+
+@item Redundancy: We might want to replicate crucial data on to several machines.
+
+@item Uniform access: One can mount a remote volume (for example your home directory) from any machine and access the same data.
+@end itemize
+
+@section Contacting us
+You can reach us through the mailing list @strong{gluster-devel}
+(@email{gluster-devel@@nongnu.org}).
+@cindex GlusterFS mailing list
+
+You can also find many of the developers on @acronym{IRC}, on the @code{#gluster}
+channel on Freenode (@indicateurl{irc.freenode.net}).
+@cindex IRC channel, #gluster
+
+The GlusterFS documentation wiki is also useful: @*
+@indicateurl{http://gluster.org/docs/index.php/GlusterFS}
+
+For commercial support, you can contact @email{@b{Z}} Research at:
+@cindex commercial support
+@cindex Z Research, Inc.
+
+@display
+3194 Winding Vista Common
+Fremont, CA 94539
+USA.
+
+Phone: +1 (510) 354 6801
+Toll free: +1 (888) 813 6309
+Fax: +1 (510) 372 0604
+@end display
+
+You can also email us at @email{support@@zresearch.com}.
+
+@node Installation and Invocation
+@chapter Installation and Invocation
+
+@menu
+* Pre requisites::
+* Getting GlusterFS::
+* Building::
+* Running GlusterFS::
+* A Tutorial Introduction::
+@end menu
+
+@node Pre requisites
+@section Pre requisites
+
+Before installing GlusterFS make sure you have the
+following components installed.
+
+@subsection @acronym{FUSE}
+You'll need @acronym{FUSE} version 2.6.0 or higher to
+use GlusterFS. You can omit installing @acronym{FUSE} if you want to
+build @emph{only} the server. Note that you won't be able to mount
+a GlusterFS filesystem on a machine that does not have @acronym{FUSE}
+installed.
+
+@acronym{FUSE} can be downloaded from: @indicateurl{http://fuse.sourceforge.net/}
+
+To get the best performance from GlusterFS, however, it is recommended that you use
+our patched version of @acronym{FUSE}. See Patched FUSE for details.
+
+@subsection Patched FUSE
+
+The GlusterFS project maintains a patched version of @acronym{FUSE} meant to be used
+with GlusterFS. The patches increase GlusterFS performance. It is recommended that
+all users use the patched @acronym{FUSE}.
+
+The patched @acronym{FUSE} tarball can be downloaded from:
+
+@indicateurl{ftp://ftp.zresearch.com/pub/gluster/glusterfs/fuse/}
+
+The specific changes made to @acronym{FUSE} are:
+
+@itemize
+@item The communication channel size between @acronym{FUSE} kernel module and GlusterFS has been increased to 1MB, permitting large reads and writes to be sent in bigger chunks.
+
+@item The kernel's read-ahead boundry has been extended upto 1MB.
+
+@item Block size returned in the @command{stat()}/@command{fstat()} calls tuned to 1MB, to make cp and similar commands perform I/O using that block size.
+
+@item @command{flock()} locking support has been added (although some rework in GlusterFS is needed for perfect compliance).
+@end itemize
+
+@subsection libibverbs (optional)
+@cindex InfiniBand, installation
+@cindex libibverbs
+This is only needed if you want GlusterFS to use InfiniBand as the
+interconnect mechanism between server and client. You can get it from:
+
+@indicateurl{http://www.openfabrics.org/downloads.htm}.
+
+@subsection Bison and Flex
+These should be already installed on most Linux systems. If not, use your distribution's
+normal software installation procedures to install them. Make sure you install the
+relevant developer packages also.
+
+@node Getting GlusterFS
+@section Getting GlusterFS
+@cindex arch
+There are many ways to get hold of GlusterFS. For a production deployment,
+the recommended method is to download the latest release tarball.
+Release tarballs are available at: @indicateurl{http://gluster.org/download.php}.
+
+If you want the bleeding edge development source, you can get them
+from the @acronym{GNU}
+Arch@footnote{@indicateurl{http://www.gnu.org/software/gnu-arch/}}
+repository. First you must install @acronym{GNU} Arch itself. Then
+register the GlusterFS archive by doing:
+
+@example
+$ tla register-archive http://arch.sv.gnu.org/archives/gluster
+@end example
+
+Now you can check out the source itself:
+
+@example
+$ tla get -A gluster@@sv.gnu.org glusterfs--mainline--3.0
+@end example
+
+@node Building
+@section Building
+You can skip this section if you're installing from @acronym{RPM}s
+or @acronym{DEB}s.
+
+GlusterFS uses the Autotools mechanism to build. As such, the procedure
+is straight-forward. First, change into the GlusterFS source directory.
+
+@example
+$ cd glusterfs-<version>
+@end example
+
+If you checked out the source from the Arch repository, you'll need
+to run @command{./autogen.sh} first. Note that you'll need to have
+Autoconf and Automake installed for this.
+
+Run @command{configure}.
+
+@example
+$ ./configure
+@end example
+
+The configure script accepts the following options:
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+
+@item --disable-ibverbs
+Disable the InfiniBand transport mechanism.
+
+@item --disable-fuse-client
+Disable the @acronym{FUSE} client.
+
+@item --disable-server
+Disable building of the GlusterFS server.
+
+@item --disable-bdb
+Disable building of Berkeley DB based storage translator.
+
+@item --disable-mod_glusterfs
+Disable building of Apache/lighttpd glusterfs plugins.
+
+@item --disable-epoll
+Use poll instead of epoll.
+
+@item --disable-libglusterfsclient
+Disable building of libglusterfsclient
+
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+Build and install GlusterFS.
+
+@example
+# make install
+@end example
+
+The binaries (@command{glusterfsd} and @command{glusterfs}) will be by
+default installed in @command{/usr/local/sbin/}. Translator,
+scheduler, and transport shared libraries will be installed in
+@command{/usr/local/lib/glusterfs/<version>/}. Sample volume
+specification files will be in @command{/usr/local/etc/glusterfs/}.
+This document itself can be found in
+@command{/usr/local/share/doc/glusterfs/}. If you passed the @command{--prefix}
+argument to the configure script, then replace @command{/usr/local} in the preceding
+paths with the prefix.
+
+@node Running GlusterFS
+@section Running GlusterFS
+
+@menu
+* Server::
+* Client::
+@end menu
+
+@node Server
+@subsection Server
+@cindex GlusterFS server
+
+The GlusterFS server is necessary to export storage volumes to remote clients
+(See @ref{Server protocol} for more info). This section documents the invocation
+of the GlusterFS server program and all the command-line options accepted by it.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+Basic Options
+@item -f, --volfile=<path>
+ Use the volume file as the volume specification.
+
+@item -s, --volfile-server=<hostname>
+ Server to get volume file from. This option overrides --volfile option.
+
+@item -l, --log-file=<path>
+ Specify the path for the log file.
+
+@item -L, --log-level=<level>
+ Set the log level for the server. Log level should be one of @acronym{DEBUG},
+@acronym{WARNING}, @acronym{ERROR}, @acronym{CRITICAL}, or @acronym{NONE}.
+
+Advanced Options
+@item --debug
+ Run in debug mode. This option sets --no-daemon, --log-level to DEBUG and
+ --log-file to console.
+
+@item -N, --no-daemon
+ Run glusterfsd as a foreground process.
+
+@item -p, --pid-file=<path>
+ Path for the @acronym{PID} file.
+
+@item --volfile-id=<key>
+ 'key' of the volfile to be fetched from server.
+
+@item --volfile-server-port=<port-number>
+ Listening port number of volfile server.
+
+@item --volfile-server-transport=[socket|ib-verbs]
+ Transport type to get volfile from server. [default: @command{socket}]
+
+@item --xlator-options=<volume-name.option=value>
+ Add/override a translator option for a volume with specified value.
+
+Miscellaneous Options
+@item -?, --help
+ Show this help text.
+
+@item --usage
+ Display a short usage message.
+
+@item -V, --version
+ Show version information.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Client
+@subsection Client
+@cindex GlusterFS client
+
+The GlusterFS client process is necessary to access remote storage volumes and
+mount them locally using @acronym{FUSE}. This section documents the invocation of the
+client process and all its command-line arguments.
+
+@example
+ # glusterfs [options] <mountpoint>
+@end example
+
+The @command{mountpoint} is the directory where you want the GlusterFS
+filesystem to appear. Example:
+
+@example
+ # glusterfs -f /usr/local/etc/glusterfs-client.vol /mnt
+@end example
+
+The command-line options are detailed below.
+
+@tex
+\vfill
+@end tex
+@page
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+
+Basic Options
+@item -f, --volfile=<path>
+ Use the volume file as the volume specification.
+
+@item -s, --volfile-server=<hostname>
+ Server to get volume file from. This option overrides --volfile option.
+
+@item -l, --log-file=<path>
+ Specify the path for the log file.
+
+@item -L, --log-level=<level>
+ Set the log level for the server. Log level should be one of @acronym{DEBUG},
+@acronym{WARNING}, @acronym{ERROR}, @acronym{CRITICAL}, or @acronym{NONE}.
+
+Advanced Options
+@item --debug
+ Run in debug mode. This option sets --no-daemon, --log-level to DEBUG and
+ --log-file to console.
+
+@item -N, --no-daemon
+ Run @command{glusterfs} as a foreground process.
+
+@item -p, --pid-file=<path>
+ Path for the @acronym{PID} file.
+
+@item --volfile-id=<key>
+ 'key' of the volfile to be fetched from server.
+
+@item --volfile-server-port=<port-number>
+ Listening port number of volfile server.
+
+@item --volfile-server-transport=[socket|ib-verbs]
+ Transport type to get volfile from server. [default: @command{socket}]
+
+@item --xlator-options=<volume-name.option=value>
+ Add/override a translator option for a volume with specified value.
+
+@item --volume-name=<volume name>
+ Volume name in client spec to use. Defaults to the root volume.
+
+@acronym{FUSE} Options
+@item --attribute-timeout=<n>
+ Attribute timeout for inodes in the kernel, in seconds. Defaults to 1 second.
+
+@item --disable-direct-io-mode
+ Disable direct @acronym{I/O} mode in @acronym{FUSE} kernel module.
+
+@item -e, --entry-timeout=<n>
+ Entry timeout for directory entries in the kernel, in seconds.
+ Defaults to 1 second.
+
+Missellaneous Options
+@item -?, --help
+ Show this help information.
+
+@item -V, --version
+ Show version information.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node A Tutorial Introduction
+@section A Tutorial Introduction
+
+This section will show you how to quickly get GlusterFS up and running. We'll
+configure GlusterFS as a simple network filesystem, with one server and one client.
+In this mode of usage, GlusterFS can serve as a replacement for NFS.
+
+We'll make use of two machines; call them @emph{server} and
+@emph{client} (If you don't want to setup two machines, just run
+everything that follows on the same machine). In the examples that
+follow, the shell prompts will use these names to clarify the machine
+on which the command is being run. For example, a command that should
+be run on the server will be shown with the prompt:
+
+@example
+[root@@server]#
+@end example
+
+Our goal is to make a directory on the @emph{server} (say, @command{/export})
+accessible to the @emph{client}.
+
+First of all, get GlusterFS installed on both the machines, as described in the
+previous sections. Make sure you have the @acronym{FUSE} kernel module loaded. You
+can ensure this by running:
+
+@example
+[root@@server]# modprobe fuse
+@end example
+
+Before we can run the GlusterFS client or server programs, we need to write
+two files called @emph{volume specifications} (equivalently refered to as @emph{volfiles}).
+The volfile describes the @emph{translator tree} on a node. The next chapter will
+explain the concepts of `translator' and `volume specification' in detail. For now,
+just assume that the volfile is like an NFS @command{/etc/export} file.
+
+On the server, create a text file somewhere (we'll assume the path
+@command{/tmp/glusterfsd.vol}) with the following contents.
+
+@cartouche
+@example
+volume colon-o
+ type storage/posix
+ option directory /export
+end-volume
+
+volume server
+ type protocol/server
+ subvolumes colon-o
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option auth.addr.colon-o.allow *
+end-volume
+@end example
+@end cartouche
+
+A brief explanation of the file's contents. The first section defines a storage
+volume, named ``colon-o'' (the volume names are arbitrary), which exports the
+@command{/export} directory. The second section defines options for the translator
+which will make the storage volume accessible remotely. It specifies @command{colon-o} as
+a subvolume. This defines the @emph{translator tree}, about which more will be said
+in the next chapter. The two options specify that the @acronym{TCP} protocol is to be
+used (as opposed to InfiniBand, for example), and that access to the storage volume
+is to be provided to clients with any @acronym{IP} address at all. If you wanted to
+restrict access to this server to only your subnet for example, you'd specify
+something like @command{192.168.1.*} in the second option line.
+
+On the client machine, create the following text file (again, we'll assume
+the path to be @command{/tmp/glusterfs-client.vol}). Replace
+@emph{server-ip-address} with the @acronym{IP} address of your server machine. If you
+are doing all this on a single machine, use @command{127.0.0.1}.
+
+@cartouche
+@example
+volume client
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host @emph{server-ip-address}
+ option remote-subvolume colon-o
+end-volume
+@end example
+@end cartouche
+
+Now we need to start both the server and client programs. To start the server:
+
+@example
+[root@@server]# glusterfsd -f /tmp/glusterfs-server.vol
+@end example
+
+To start the client:
+
+@example
+[root@@client]# glusterfs -f /tmp/glusterfs-client.vol /mnt/glusterfs
+@end example
+
+You should now be able to see the files under the server's @command{/export} directory
+in the @command{/mnt/glusterfs} directory on the client. That's it; GlusterFS is now
+working as a network file system.
+
+@node Concepts
+@chapter Concepts
+
+@menu
+* Filesystems in Userspace::
+* Translator::
+* Volume specification file::
+@end menu
+
+@node Filesystems in Userspace
+@section Filesystems in Userspace
+
+A filesystem is usually implemented in kernel space. Kernel space
+development is much harder than userspace development. @acronym{FUSE}
+is a kernel module/library that allows us to write a filesystem
+completely in userspace.
+
+@acronym{FUSE} consists of a kernel module which interacts with the userspace
+implementation using a device file @code{/dev/fuse}. When a process
+makes a syscall on a @acronym{FUSE} filesystem, @acronym{VFS} hands the request to the
+@acronym{FUSE} module, which writes the request to @code{/dev/fuse}. The
+userspace implementation polls @code{/dev/fuse}, and when a request arrives,
+processes it and writes the result back to @code{/dev/fuse}. The kernel then
+reads from the device file and returns the result to the user process.
+
+In case of GlusterFS, the userspace program is the GlusterFS client.
+The control flow is shown in the diagram below. The GlusterFS client
+services the request by sending it to the server, which in turn
+hands it to the local @acronym{POSIX} filesystem.
+
+@center @image{fuse,44pc,,,.pdf}
+@center Fig 1. Control flow in GlusterFS
+
+@node Translator
+@section Translator
+
+The @emph{translator} is the most important concept in GlusterFS. In
+fact, GlusterFS is nothing but a collection of translators working
+together, forming a translator @emph{tree}.
+
+The idea of a translator is perhaps best understood using an
+analogy. Consider the @acronym{VFS} in the Linux kernel. The
+@acronym{VFS} abstracts the various filesystem implementations (such
+as @acronym{EXT3}, ReiserFS, @acronym{XFS}, etc.) supported by the
+kernel. When an application calls the kernel to perform an operation
+on a file, the kernel passes the request on to the appropriate
+filesystem implementation.
+
+For example, let's say there are two partitions on a Linux machine:
+@command{/}, which is an @acronym{EXT3} partition, and @command{/usr},
+which is a ReiserFS partition. Now if an application wants to open a
+file called, say, @command{/etc/fstab}, then the kernel will
+internally pass the request to the @acronym{EXT3} implementation. If
+on the other hand, an application wants to read a file called
+@command{/usr/src/linux/CREDITS}, then the kernel will call upon the
+ReiserFS implementation to do the job.
+
+The ``filesystem implementation'' objects are analogous to GlusterFS
+translators. A GlusterFS translator implements all the filesystem
+operations. Whereas in @acronym{VFS} there is a two-level tree (with
+the kernel at the root and all the filesystem implementation as its
+children), in GlusterFS there exists a more elaborate tree structure.
+
+We can now define translators more precisely. A GlusterFS translator
+is a shared object (@command{.so}) that implements every filesystem
+call. GlusterFS translators can be arranged in an arbitrary tree
+structure (subject to constraints imposed by the translators). When
+GlusterFS receives a filesystem call, it passes it on to the
+translator at the root of the translator tree. The root translator may
+in turn pass it on to any or all of its children, and so on, until the
+leaf nodes are reached. The result of a filesystem call is
+communicated in the reverse fashion, from the leaf nodes up to the
+root node, and then on to the application.
+
+So what might a translator tree look like?
+
+@tex
+\vfill
+@end tex
+@page
+
+@center @image{xlator,44pc,,,.pdf}
+@center Fig 2. A sample translator tree
+
+The diagram depicts three servers and one GlusterFS client. It is important
+to note that conceptually, the translator tree spans machine boundaries.
+Thus, the client machine in the diagram, @command{10.0.0.1}, can access
+the aggregated storage of the filesystems on the server machines @command{10.0.0.2},
+@command{10.0.0.3}, and @command{10.0.0.4}. The translator diagram will make more
+sense once you've read the next chapter and understood the functions of the
+various translators.
+
+@node Volume specification file
+@section Volume specification file
+The volume specification file describes the translator tree for both the
+server and client programs.
+
+A volume specification file is a sequence of volume definitions.
+The syntax of a volume definition is explained below:
+
+@cartouche
+@example
+@strong{volume} @emph{volume-name}
+ @strong{type} @emph{translator-name}
+ @strong{option} @emph{option-name} @emph{option-value}
+ @dots{}
+ @strong{subvolumes} @emph{subvolume1} @emph{subvolume2} @dots{}
+@strong{end-volume}
+@end example
+
+@dots{}
+@end cartouche
+
+@table @asis
+@item @emph{volume-name}
+ An identifier for the volume. This is just a human-readable name,
+and can contain any alphanumeric character. For instance, ``storage-1'', ``colon-o'',
+or ``forty-two''.
+
+@item @emph{translator-name}
+ Name of one of the available translators. Example: @command{protocol/client},
+@command{cluster/unify}.
+
+@item @emph{option-name}
+ Name of a valid option for the translator.
+
+@item @emph{option-value}
+ Value for the option. Everything following the ``option'' keyword to the end of the
+line is considered the value; it is up to the translator to parse it.
+
+@item @emph{subvolume1}, @emph{subvolume2}, @dots{}
+ Volume names of sub-volumes. The sub-volumes must already have been defined earlier
+in the file.
+@end table
+
+There are a few rules you must follow when writing a volume specification file:
+
+@itemize
+@item Everything following a `@command{#}' is considered a comment and is ignored. Blank lines are also ignored.
+@item All names and keywords are case-sensitive.
+@item The order of options inside a volume definition does not matter.
+@item An option value may not span multiple lines.
+@item If an option is not specified, it will assume its default value.
+@item A sub-volume must have already been defined before it can be referenced. This means you have to write the specification file ``bottom-up'', starting from the leaf nodes of the translator tree and moving up to the root.
+@end itemize
+
+A simple example volume specification file is shown below:
+
+@cartouche
+@example
+# This is a comment line
+volume client
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host localhost # Also a comment
+ option remote-subvolume brick
+# The subvolumes line may be absent
+end-volume
+
+volume iot
+ type performance/io-threads
+ option thread-count 4
+ subvolumes client
+end-volume
+
+volume wb
+ type performance/write-behind
+ subvolumes iot
+end-volume
+@end example
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Translators
+@chapter Translators
+
+@menu
+* Storage Translators::
+* Client and Server Translators::
+* Clustering Translators::
+* Performance Translators::
+* Features Translators::
+* Miscellaneous Translators::
+@end menu
+
+This chapter documents all the available GlusterFS translators in detail.
+Each translator section will show its name (for example, @command{cluster/unify}),
+briefly describe its purpose and workings, and list every option accepted by
+that translator and their meaning.
+
+@node Storage Translators
+@section Storage Translators
+
+The storage translators form the ``backend'' for GlusterFS. Currently,
+the only available storage translator is the @acronym{POSIX}
+translator, which stores files on a normal @acronym{POSIX}
+filesystem. A pleasant consequence of this is that your data will
+still be accessible if GlusterFS crashes or cannot be started.
+
+Other storage backends are planned for the future. One of the possibilities is an
+Amazon S3 translator. Amazon S3 is an unlimited online storage service accessible
+through a web services @acronym{API}. The S3 translator will allow you to access
+the storage as a normal @acronym{POSIX} filesystem.
+@footnote{Some more discussion about this can be found at:
+
+http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/message.jspa?messageID=52873}
+
+@menu
+* POSIX::
+* BDB::
+@end menu
+
+@node POSIX
+@subsection POSIX
+@example
+type storage/posix
+@end example
+
+The @command{posix} translator uses a normal @acronym{POSIX}
+filesystem as its ``backend'' to actually store files and
+directories. This can be any filesystem that supports extended
+attributes (@acronym{EXT3}, ReiserFS, @acronym{XFS}, ...). Extended
+attributes are used by some translators to store metadata, for
+example, by the replicate and stripe translators. See
+@ref{Replicate} and @ref{Stripe}, respectively for details.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item directory <path>
+The directory on the local filesystem which is to be used for storage.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node BDB
+@subsection BDB
+@example
+type storage/bdb
+@end example
+
+The @command{BDB} translator uses a @acronym{Berkeley DB} database as its
+``backend'' to actually store files as key-value pair in the database and
+directories as regular @acronym{POSIX} directories. Note that @acronym{BDB}
+does not provide extended attribute support for regular files. Do not use
+@acronym{BDB} as storage translator while using any translator that demands
+extended attributes on ``backend''.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item directory <path>
+The directory on the local filesystem which is to be used for storage.
+@item mode [cache|persistent] (cache)
+When @acronym{BDB} is run in @command{cache} mode, recovery of back-end is not completely
+guaranteed. @command{persistent} guarantees that @acronym{BDB} can recover back-end from
+@acronym{Berkeley DB} even if GlusterFS crashes.
+@item errfile <path>
+The path of the file to be used as @command{errfile} for @acronym{Berkeley DB} to report
+detailed error messages, if any. Note that all the contents of this file will be written
+by @acronym{Berkeley DB}, not GlusterFS.
+@item logdir <path>
+
+
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Client and Server Translators, Clustering Translators, Storage Translators, Translators
+@section Client and Server Translators
+
+The client and server translator enable GlusterFS to export a
+translator tree over the network or access a remote GlusterFS
+server. These two translators implement GlusterFS's network protocol.
+
+@menu
+* Transport modules::
+* Client protocol::
+* Server protocol::
+@end menu
+
+@node Transport modules
+@subsection Transport modules
+The client and server translators are capable of using any of the
+pluggable transport modules. Currently available transport modules are
+@command{tcp}, which uses a @acronym{TCP} connection between client
+and server to communicate; @command{ib-sdp}, which uses a
+@acronym{TCP} connection over InfiniBand, and @command{ibverbs}, which
+uses high-speed InfiniBand connections.
+
+Each transport module comes in two different versions, one to be used on
+the server side and the other on the client side.
+
+@subsubsection TCP
+
+The @acronym{TCP} transport module uses a @acronym{TCP/IP} connection between
+the server and the client.
+
+@example
+ option transport-type tcp
+@end example
+
+The @acronym{TCP} client module accepts the following options:
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item non-blocking-connect [no|off|on|yes] (on)
+Whether to make the connection attempt asynchronous.
+@item remote-port <n> (6996)
+Server port to connect to.
+@cindex DNS round robin
+@item remote-host <hostname> *
+Hostname or @acronym{IP} address of the server. If the host name resolves to
+multiple IP addresses, all of them will be tried in a round-robin fashion. This
+feature can be used to implement fail-over.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+The @acronym{TCP} server module accepts the following options:
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item bind-address <address> (0.0.0.0)
+The local interface on which the server should listen to requests. Default is to
+listen on all interfaces.
+@item listen-port <n> (6996)
+The local port to listen on.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@subsubsection IB-SDP
+@example
+ option transport-type ib-sdp
+@end example
+
+kernel implements socket interface for ib hardware. SDP is over ib-verbs.
+This module accepts the same options as @command{tcp}
+
+@subsubsection ibverbs
+
+@example
+ option transport-type tcp
+@end example
+
+@cindex infiniband transport
+
+InfiniBand is a scalable switched fabric interconnect mechanism
+primarily used in high-performance computing. InfiniBand can deliver
+data throughput of the order of 10 Gbit/s, with latencies of 4-5 ms.
+
+The @command{ib-verbs} transport accesses the InfiniBand hardware through
+the ``verbs'' @acronym{API}, which is the lowest level of software access possible
+and which gives the highest performance. On InfiniBand hardware, it is always
+best to use @command{ib-verbs}. Use @command{ib-sdp} only if you cannot get
+@command{ib-verbs} working for some reason.
+
+The @command{ib-verbs} client module accepts the following options:
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item non-blocking-connect [no|off|on|yes] (on)
+Whether to make the connection attempt asynchronous.
+@item remote-port <n> (6996)
+Server port to connect to.
+@cindex DNS round robin
+@item remote-host <hostname> *
+Hostname or @acronym{IP} address of the server. If the host name resolves to
+multiple IP addresses, all of them will be tried in a round-robin fashion. This
+feature can be used to implement fail-over.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+The @command{ib-verbs} server module accepts the following options:
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item bind-address <address> (0.0.0.0)
+The local interface on which the server should listen to requests. Default is to
+listen on all interfaces.
+@item listen-port <n> (6996)
+The local port to listen on.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+The following options are common to both the client and server modules:
+
+If you are familiar with InfiniBand jargon,
+the mode is used by GlusterFS is ``reliable connection-oriented channel transfer''.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item ib-verbs-work-request-send-count <n> (64)
+Length of the send queue in datagrams. [Reason to increase/decrease?]
+
+@item ib-verbs-work-request-recv-count <n> (64)
+Length of the receive queue in datagrams. [Reason to increase/decrease?]
+
+@item ib-verbs-work-request-send-size <size> (128KB)
+Size of each datagram that is sent. [Reason to increase/decrease?]
+
+@item ib-verbs-work-request-recv-size <size> (128KB)
+Size of each datagram that is received. [Reason to increase/decrease?]
+
+@item ib-verbs-port <n> (1)
+Port number for ib-verbs.
+
+@item ib-verbs-mtu [256|512|1024|2048|4096] (2048)
+The Maximum Transmission Unit [Reason to increase/decrease?]
+
+@item ib-verbs-device-name <device-name> (first device in the list)
+InfiniBand device to be used.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+For maximum performance, you should ensure that the send/receive counts on both
+the client and server are the same.
+
+ib-verbs is preferred over ib-sdp.
+
+@node Client protocol
+@subsection Client
+@example
+type procotol/client
+@end example
+
+The client translator enables the GlusterFS client to access a remote server's
+translator tree.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+
+@item transport-type [tcp,ib-sdp,ib-verbs] (tcp)
+The transport type to use. You should use the client versions of all the
+transport modules (@command{tcp}, @command{ib-sdp},
+@command{ib-verbs}).
+@item remote-subvolume <volume_name> *
+The name of the volume on the remote host to attach to. Note that
+this is @emph{not} the name of the @command{protocol/server} volume on the
+server. It should be any volume under the server.
+@item transport-timeout <n> (120- seconds)
+Inactivity timeout. If a reply is expected and no activity takes place
+on the connection within this time, the transport connection will be
+broken, and a new connection will be attempted.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Server protocol
+@subsection Server
+@example
+type protocol/server
+@end example
+
+The server translator exports a translator tree and makes it accessible to
+remote GlusterFS clients.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item client-volume-filename <path> (<CONFDIR>/glusterfs-client.vol)
+The volume specification file to use for the client. This is the file the
+client will receive when it is invoked with the @command{--server} option
+(@ref{Client}).
+
+@item transport-type [tcp,ib-verbs,ib-sdp] (tcp)
+The transport to use. You should use the server versions of all the transport
+modules (@command{tcp}, @command{ib-sdp}, @command{ib-verbs}).
+
+@item auth.addr.<volume name>.allow <IP address wildcard pattern>
+IP addresses of the clients that are allowed to attach to the specified volume.
+This can be a wildcard. For example, a wildcard of the form @command{192.168.*.*}
+allows any host in the @command{192.168.x.x} subnet to connect to the server.
+
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Clustering Translators
+@section Clustering Translators
+
+The clustering translators are the most important GlusterFS
+translators, since it is these that make GlusterFS a cluster
+filesystem. These translators together enable GlusterFS to access an
+arbitrarily large amount of storage, and provide @acronym{RAID}-like
+redundancy and distribution over the entire cluster.
+
+There are three clustering translators: @strong{unify}, @strong{replicate},
+and @strong{stripe}. The unify translator aggregates storage from
+many server nodes. The replicate translator provides file replication. The stripe
+translator allows a file to be spread across many server nodes. The following sections
+look at each of these translators in detail.
+
+@menu
+* Unify::
+* Replicate::
+* Stripe::
+@end menu
+
+@node Unify
+@subsection Unify
+@cindex unify (translator)
+@cindex scheduler (unify)
+@example
+type cluster/unify
+@end example
+
+The unify translator presents a `unified' view of all its sub-volumes. That is,
+it makes the union of all its sub-volumes appear as a single volume. It is the
+unify translator that gives GlusterFS the ability to access an arbitrarily
+large amount of storage.
+
+For unify to work correctly, certain invariants need to be maintained across
+the entire network. These are:
+
+@cindex unify invariants
+@itemize
+@item The directory structure of all the sub-volumes must be identical.
+@item A particular file can exist on only one of the sub-volumes. Phrasing it in another way, a pathname such as @command{/home/calvin/homework.txt}) is unique across the entire cluster.
+@end itemize
+
+@tex
+\vfill
+@end tex
+@page
+
+@center @image{unify,44pc,,,.pdf}
+
+Looking at the second requirement, you might wonder how one can
+accomplish storing redundant copies of a file, if no file can exist
+multiple times. To answer, we must remember that these invariants are
+from @emph{unify's perspective}. A translator such as replicate at a lower
+level in the translator tree than unify may subvert this picture.
+
+The first invariant might seem quite tedious to ensure. We shall see
+later that this is not so, since unify's @emph{self-heal} mechanism
+takes care of maintaining it.
+
+The second invariant implies that unify needs some way to decide which file goes where.
+Unify makes use of @emph{scheduler} modules for this purpose.
+
+When a file needs to be created, unify's scheduler decides upon the
+sub-volume to be used to store the file. There are many schedulers
+available, each using a different algorithm and suitable for different
+purposes.
+
+The various schedulers are described in detail in the sections that follow.
+
+@subsubsection ALU
+@cindex alu (scheduler)
+
+@example
+ option scheduler alu
+@end example
+
+ALU stands for "Adaptive Least Usage". It is the most advanced
+scheduler available in GlusterFS. It balances the load across volumes
+taking several factors in account. It adapts itself to changing I/O
+patterns according to its configuration. When properly configured, it
+can eliminate the need for regular tuning of the filesystem to keep
+volume load nicely balanced.
+
+The ALU scheduler is composed of multiple least-usage
+sub-schedulers. Each sub-scheduler keeps track of a certain type of
+load, for each of the sub-volumes, getting statistics from
+the sub-volumes themselves. The sub-schedulers are these:
+
+@itemize
+@item disk-usage: The used and free disk space on the volume.
+
+@item read-usage: The amount of reading done from this volume.
+
+@item write-usage: The amount of writing done to this volume.
+
+@item open-files-usage: The number of files currently open from this volume.
+
+@item disk-speed-usage: The speed at which the disks are spinning. This is a constant value and therefore not very useful.
+@end itemize
+
+The ALU scheduler needs to know which of these sub-schedulers to use,
+and in which order to evaluate them. This is done through the
+@command{option alu.order} configuration directive.
+
+Each sub-scheduler needs to know two things: when to kick in (the
+entry-threshold), and how long to stay in control (the
+exit-threshold). For example: when unifying three disks of 100GB,
+keeping an exact balance of disk-usage is not necesary. Instead, there
+could be a 1GB margin, which can be used to nicely balance other
+factors, such as read-usage. The disk-usage scheduler can be told to
+kick in only when a certain threshold of discrepancy is passed, such
+as 1GB. When it assumes control under this condition, it will write
+all subsequent data to the least-used volume. If it is doing so, it is
+unwise to stop right after the values are below the entry-threshold
+again, since that would make it very likely that the situation will
+occur again very soon. Such a situation would cause the ALU to spend
+most of its time disk-usage scheduling, which is unfair to the other
+sub-schedulers. The exit-threshold therefore defines the amount of
+data that needs to be written to the least-used disk, before control
+is relinquished again.
+
+In addition to the sub-schedulers, the ALU scheduler also has "limits"
+options. These can stop the creation of new files on a volume once
+values drop below a certain threshold. For example, setting
+@command{option alu.limits.min-free-disk 5GB} will stop the scheduling
+of files to volumes that have less than 5GB of free disk space,
+leaving the files on that disk some room to grow.
+
+The actual values you assign to the thresholds for sub-schedulers and
+limits depend on your situation. If you have fast-growing files,
+you'll want to stop file-creation on a disk much earlier than when
+hardly any of your files are growing. If you care less about
+disk-usage balance than about read-usage balance, you'll want a bigger
+disk-usage scheduler entry-threshold and a smaller read-usage
+scheduler entry-threshold.
+
+For thresholds defining a size, values specifying "KB", "MB" and "GB"
+are allowed. For example: @command{option alu.limits.min-free-disk 5GB}.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item alu.order <order> * ("disk-usage:write-usage:read-usage:open-files-usage:disk-speed")
+@item alu.disk-usage.entry-threshold <size> (1GB)
+@item alu.disk-usage.exit-threshold <size> (512MB)
+@item alu.write-usage.entry-threshold <%> (25)
+@item alu.write-usage.exit-threshold <%> (5)
+@item alu.read-usage.entry-threshold <%> (25)
+@item alu.read-usage.exit-threshold <%> (5)
+@item alu.open-files-usage.entry-threshold <n> (1000)
+@item alu.open-files-usage.exit-threshold <n> (100)
+@item alu.limits.min-free-disk <%>
+@item alu.limits.max-open-files <n>
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@subsubsection Round Robin (RR)
+@cindex rr (scheduler)
+
+@example
+ option scheduler rr
+@end example
+
+Round-Robin (RR) scheduler creates files in a round-robin
+fashion. Each client will have its own round-robin loop. When your
+files are mostly similar in size and I/O access pattern, this
+scheduler is a good choice. RR scheduler checks for free disk space
+on the server before scheduling, so you can know when to add
+another server node. The default value of min-free-disk is 5% and is
+checked on file creation calls, with atleast 10 seconds (by default)
+elapsing between two checks.
+
+Options:
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item rr.limits.min-free-disk <%> (5)
+Minimum free disk space a node must have for RR to schedule a file to it.
+@item rr.refresh-interval <t> (10 seconds)
+Time between two successive free disk space checks.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@subsubsection Random
+@cindex random (scheduler)
+
+@example
+ option scheduler random
+@end example
+
+The random scheduler schedules file creation randomly among its child nodes.
+Like the round-robin scheduler, it also checks for a minimum amount of free disk
+space before scheduling a file to a node.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item random.limits.min-free-disk <%> (5)
+Minimum free disk space a node must have for random to schedule a file to it.
+@item random.refresh-interval <t> (10 seconds)
+Time between two successive free disk space checks.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@subsubsection NUFA
+@cindex nufa (scheduler)
+
+@example
+ option scheduler nufa
+@end example
+
+It is common in many GlusterFS computing environments for all deployed
+machines to act as both servers and clients. For example, a
+research lab may have 40 workstations each with its own storage. All
+of these workstations might act as servers exporting a volume as well
+as clients accessing the entire cluster's storage. In such a
+situation, it makes sense to store locally created files on the local
+workstation itself (assuming files are accessed most by the
+workstation that created them). The Non-Uniform File Allocation (@acronym{NUFA})
+scheduler accomplishes that.
+
+@acronym{NUFA} gives the local system first priority for file creation
+over other nodes. If the local volume does not have more free disk space
+than a specified amount (5% by default) then @acronym{NUFA} schedules files
+among the other child volumes in a round-robin fashion.
+
+@acronym{NUFA} is named after the similar strategy used for memory access,
+@acronym{NUMA}@footnote{Non-Uniform Memory Access:
+@indicateurl{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-Uniform_Memory_Access}}.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item nufa.limits.min-free-disk <%> (5)
+Minimum disk space that must be free (local or remote) for @acronym{NUFA} to schedule a
+file to it.
+@item nufa.refresh-interval <t> (10 seconds)
+Time between two successive free disk space checks.
+@item nufa.local-volume-name <volume>
+The name of the volume corresponding to the local system. This volume must be
+one of the children of the unify volume. This option is mandatory.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@cindex namespace
+@subsubsection Namespace
+Namespace volume needed because:
+ - persistent inode numbers.
+ - file exists even when node is down.
+
+namespace files are simply touched. on every lookup it is checked.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item namespace <volume> *
+Name of the namespace volume (which should be one of the unify volume's children).
+@item self-heal [on|off] (on)
+Enable/disable self-heal. Unless you know what you are doing, do not disable self-heal.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@cindex self heal (unify)
+@subsubsection Self Heal
+ * When a 'lookup()/stat()' call is made on directory for the first
+time, a self-heal call is made, which checks for the consistancy of
+its child nodes. If an entry is present in storage node, but not in
+namespace, that entry is created in namespace, and vica-versa. There
+is an writedir() API introduced which is used for the same. It also
+checks for permissions, and uid/gid consistencies.
+
+ * This check is also done when an server goes down and comes up.
+
+ * If one starts with an empty namespace export, but has data in
+storage nodes, a 'find .>/dev/null' or 'ls -lR >/dev/null' should help
+to build namespace in one shot. Even otherwise, namespace is built on
+demand when a file is looked up for the first time.
+
+NOTE: There are some issues (Kernel 'Oops' msgs) seen with fuse-2.6.3,
+when someone deletes namespace in backend, when glusterfs is
+running. But with fuse-2.6.5, this issue is not there.
+
+@node Replicate
+@subsection Replicate (formerly AFR)
+@cindex Replicate
+@example
+type cluster/replicate
+@end example
+
+Replicate provides @acronym{RAID}-1 like functionality for
+GlusterFS. Replicate replicates files and directories across the
+subvolumes. Hence if Replicate has four subvolumes, there will be
+four copies of all files and directories. Replicate provides
+high-availability, i.e., in case one of the subvolumes go down
+(e. g. server crash, network disconnection) Replicate will still
+service the requests using the redundant copies.
+
+Replicate also provides self-heal functionality, i.e., in case the
+crashed servers come up, the outdated files and directories will be
+updated with the latest versions. Replicate uses extended
+attributes of the backend file system to track the versioning of files
+and directories and provide the self-heal feature.
+
+@example
+volume replicate-example
+ type cluster/replicate
+ subvolumes brick1 brick2 brick3
+end-volume
+@end example
+
+This sample configuration will replicate all directories and files on
+brick1, brick2 and brick3.
+
+All the read operations happen from the first alive child. If all the
+three sub-volumes are up, reads will be done from brick1; if brick1 is
+down read will be done from brick2. In case read() was being done on
+brick1 and it goes down, replicate transparently falls back to
+brick2.
+
+The next release of GlusterFS will add the following features:
+@itemize
+@item Ability to specify the sub-volume from which read operations are to be done (this will help users who have one of the sub-volumes as a local storage volume).
+@item Allow scheduling of read operations amongst the sub-volumes in a round-robin fashion.
+@end itemize
+
+The order of the subvolumes list should be same across all the 'replicate's as
+they will be used for locking purposes.
+
+@cindex self heal (replicate)
+@subsubsection Self Heal
+Replicate has self-heal feature, which updates the outdated file and
+directory copies by the most recent versions. For example consider the
+following config:
+
+@example
+volume replicate-example
+ type cluster/replicate
+ subvolumes brick1 brick2
+end-volume
+@end example
+
+@subsubsection File self-heal
+
+Now if we create a file foo.txt on replicate-example, the file will be created
+on brick1 and brick2. The file will have two extended attributes associated
+with it in the backend filesystem. One is trusted.afr.createtime and the
+other is trusted.afr.version. The trusted.afr.createtime xattr has the
+create time (in terms of seconds since epoch) and trusted.afr.version
+is a number that is incremented each time a file is modified. This increment
+happens during close (incase any write was done before close).
+
+If brick1 goes down, we edit foo.txt the version gets incremented. Now
+the brick1 comes back up, when we open() on foo.txt replicate will check if
+their versions are same. If they are not same, the outdated copy is
+replaced by the latest copy and its version is updated. After the sync
+the open() proceeds in the usual manner and the application calling open()
+can continue on its access to the file.
+
+If brick1 goes down, we delete foo.txt and create a file with the same
+name again i.e foo.txt. Now brick1 comes back up, clearly there is a
+chance that the version on brick1 being more than the version on brick2,
+this is where createtime extended attribute helps in deciding which
+the outdated copy is. Hence we need to consider both createtime and
+version to decide on the latest copy.
+
+The version attribute is incremented during the close() call. Version
+will not be incremented in case there was no write() done. In case the
+fd that the close() gets was got by create() call, we also create
+the createtime extended attribute.
+
+@subsubsection Directory self-heal
+
+Suppose brick1 goes down, we delete foo.txt, brick1 comes back up, now
+we should not create foo.txt on brick2 but we should delete foo.txt
+on brick1. We handle this situation by having the createtime and version
+attribute on the directory similar to the file. when lookup() is done
+on the directory, we compare the createtime/version attributes of the
+copies and see which files needs to be deleted and delete those files
+and update the extended attributes of the outdated directory copy.
+Each time a directory is modified (a file or a subdirectory is created
+or deleted inside the directory) and one of the subvols is down, we
+increment the directory's version.
+
+lookup() is a call initiated by the kernel on a file or directory
+just before any access to that file or directory. In glusterfs, by
+default, lookup() will not be called in case it was called in the
+past one second on that particular file or directory.
+
+The extended attributes can be seen in the backend filesystem using
+the @command{getfattr} command. (@command{getfattr -n trusted.afr.version <file>})
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item debug [on|off] (off)
+@item self-heal [on|off] (on)
+@item replicate <pattern> (*:1)
+@item lock-node <child_volume> (first child is used by default)
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Stripe
+@subsection Stripe
+@cindex stripe (translator)
+@example
+type cluster/stripe
+@end example
+
+The stripe translator distributes the contents of a file over its
+sub-volumes. It does this by creating a file equal in size to the
+total size of the file on each of its sub-volumes. It then writes only
+a part of the file to each sub-volume, leaving the rest of it empty.
+These empty regions are called `holes' in Unix terminology. The holes
+do not consume any disk space.
+
+The diagram below makes this clear.
+
+@center @image{stripe,44pc,,,.pdf}
+
+You can configure stripe so that only filenames matching a pattern
+are striped. You can also configure the size of the data to be stored
+on each sub-volume.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item block-size <pattern>:<size> (*:0 no striping)
+Distribute files matching @command{<pattern>} over the sub-volumes,
+storing at least @command{<size>} on each sub-volume. For example,
+
+@example
+ option block-size *.mpg:1M
+@end example
+
+distributes all files ending in @command{.mpg}, storing at least 1 MB on
+each sub-volume.
+
+Any number of @command{block-size} option lines may be present, specifying
+different sizes for different file name patterns.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Performance Translators
+@section Performance Translators
+
+@menu
+* Read Ahead::
+* Write Behind::
+* IO Threads::
+* IO Cache::
+* Booster::
+@end menu
+
+@node Read Ahead
+@subsection Read Ahead
+@cindex read-ahead (translator)
+@example
+type performance/read-ahead
+@end example
+
+The read-ahead translator pre-fetches data in advance on every read.
+This benefits applications that mostly process files in sequential order,
+since the next block of data will already be available by the time the
+application is done with the current one.
+
+Additionally, the read-ahead translator also behaves as a read-aggregator.
+Many small read operations are combined and issued as fewer, larger read
+requests to the server.
+
+Read-ahead deals in ``pages'' as the unit of data fetched. The page size
+is configurable, as is the ``page count'', which is the number of pages
+that are pre-fetched.
+
+Read-ahead is best used with InfiniBand (using the ib-verbs transport).
+On FastEthernet and Gigabit Ethernet networks,
+GlusterFS can achieve the link-maximum throughput even without
+read-ahead, making it quite superflous.
+
+Note that read-ahead only happens if the reads are perfectly
+sequential. If your application accesses data in a random fashion,
+using read-ahead might actually lead to a performance loss, since
+read-ahead will pointlessly fetch pages which won't be used by the
+application.
+
+@cartouche
+Options:
+@table @code
+@item page-size <n> (256KB)
+The unit of data that is pre-fetched.
+@item page-count <n> (2)
+The number of pages that are pre-fetched.
+@item force-atime-update [on|off|yes|no] (off|no)
+Whether to force an access time (atime) update on the file on every read. Without
+this, the atime will be slightly imprecise, as it will reflect the time when
+the read-ahead translator read the data, not when the application actually read it.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Write Behind
+@subsection Write Behind
+@cindex write-behind (translator)
+@example
+type performance/write-behind
+@end example
+
+The write-behind translator improves the latency of a write operation.
+It does this by relegating the write operation to the background and
+returning to the application even as the write is in progress. Using the
+write-behind translator, successive write requests can be pipelined.
+This mode of write-behind operation is best used on the client side, to
+enable decreased write latency for the application.
+
+The write-behind translator can also aggregate write requests. If the
+@command{aggregate-size} option is specified, then successive writes upto that
+size are accumulated and written in a single operation. This mode of operation
+is best used on the server side, as this will decrease the disk's head movement
+when multiple files are being written to in parallel.
+
+The @command{aggregate-size} option has a default value of 128KB. Although
+this works well for most users, you should always experiment with different values
+to determine the one that will deliver maximum performance. This is because the
+performance of write-behind depends on your interconnect, size of RAM, and the
+work load.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item aggregate-size <n> (128KB)
+Amount of data to accumulate before doing a write
+@item flush-behind [on|yes|off|no] (off|no)
+
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node IO Threads
+@subsection IO Threads
+@cindex io-threads (translator)
+@example
+type performance/io-threads
+@end example
+
+The IO threads translator is intended to increase the responsiveness
+of the server to metadata operations by doing file I/O (read, write)
+in a background thread. Since the GlusterFS server is
+single-threaded, using the IO threads translator can significantly
+improve performance. This translator is best used on the server side,
+loaded just below the server protocol translator.
+
+IO threads operates by handing out read and write requests to a separate thread.
+The total number of threads in existence at a time is constant, and configurable.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item thread-count <n> (1)
+Number of threads to use.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node IO Cache
+@subsection IO Cache
+@cindex io-cache (translator)
+@example
+type performance/io-cache
+@end example
+
+The IO cache translator caches data that has been read. This is useful
+if many applications read the same data multiple times, and if reads
+are much more frequent than writes (for example, IO caching may be
+useful in a web hosting environment, where most clients will simply
+read some files and only a few will write to them).
+
+The IO cache translator reads data from its child in @command{page-size} chunks.
+It caches data upto @command{cache-size} bytes. The cache is maintained as
+a prioritized least-recently-used (@acronym{LRU}) list, with priorities determined
+by user-specified patterns to match filenames.
+
+When the IO cache translator detects a write operation, the
+cache for that file is flushed.
+
+The IO cache translator periodically verifies the consistency of
+cached data, using the modification times on the files. The verification timeout
+is configurable.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item page-size <n> (128KB)
+Size of a page.
+@item cache-size (n) (32MB)
+Total amount of data to be cached.
+@item force-revalidate-timeout <n> (1)
+Timeout to force a cache consistency verification, in seconds.
+@item priority <pattern> (*:0)
+Filename patterns listed in order of priority.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Booster
+@subsection Booster
+@cindex booster
+@example
+ type performance/booster
+@end example
+
+The booster translator gives applications a faster path to communicate
+read and write requests to GlusterFS. Normally, all requests to GlusterFS from
+applications go through FUSE, as indicated in @ref{Filesystems in Userspace}.
+Using the booster translator in conjunction with the GlusterFS booster shared
+library, an application can bypass the FUSE path and send read/write requests
+directly to the GlusterFS client process.
+
+The booster mechanism consists of two parts: the booster translator,
+and the booster shared library. The booster translator is meant to be
+loaded on the client side, usually at the root of the translator tree.
+The booster shared library should be @command{LD_PRELOAD}ed with the
+application.
+
+The booster translator when loaded opens a Unix domain socket and
+listens for read/write requests on it. The booster shared library
+intercepts read and write system calls and sends the requests to the
+GlusterFS process directly using the Unix domain socket, bypassing FUSE.
+This leads to superior performance.
+
+Once you've loaded the booster translator in your volume specification file, you
+can start your application as:
+
+@example
+ $ LD_PRELOAD=/usr/local/bin/glusterfs-booster.so your_app
+@end example
+
+The booster translator accepts no options.
+
+@node Features Translators
+@section Features Translators
+
+@menu
+* POSIX Locks::
+* Fixed ID::
+@end menu
+
+@node POSIX Locks
+@subsection POSIX Locks
+@cindex record locking
+@cindex fcntl
+@cindex posix-locks (translator)
+@example
+type features/posix-locks
+@end example
+
+This translator provides storage independent POSIX record locking
+support (@command{fcntl} locking). Typically you'll want to load this on the
+server side, just above the @acronym{POSIX} storage translator. Using this
+translator you can get both advisory locking and mandatory locking
+support. It also handles @command{flock()} locks properly.
+
+Caveat: Consider a file that does not have its mandatory locking bits
+(+setgid, -group execution) turned on. Assume that this file is now
+opened by a process on a client that has the write-behind xlator
+loaded. The write-behind xlator does not cache anything for files
+which have mandatory locking enabled, to avoid incoherence. Let's say
+that mandatory locking is now enabled on this file through another
+client. The former client will not know about this change, and
+write-behind may erroneously report a write as being successful when
+in fact it would fail due to the region it is writing to being locked.
+
+There seems to be no easy way to fix this. To work around this
+problem, it is recommended that you never enable the mandatory bits on
+a file while it is open.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item mandatory [on|off] (on)
+Turns mandatory locking on.
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Fixed ID
+@subsection Fixed ID
+@cindex fixed-id (translator)
+@example
+type features/fixed-id
+@end example
+
+The fixed ID translator makes all filesystem requests from the client
+to appear to be coming from a fixed, specified
+@acronym{UID}/@acronym{GID}, regardless of which user actually
+initiated the request.
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item fixed-uid <n> [if not set, not used]
+The @acronym{UID} to send to the server
+@item fixed-gid <n> [if not set, not used]
+The @acronym{GID} to send to the server
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Miscellaneous Translators
+@section Miscellaneous Translators
+
+@menu
+* ROT-13::
+* Trace::
+@end menu
+
+@node ROT-13
+@subsection ROT-13
+@cindex rot-13 (translator)
+@example
+type encryption/rot-13
+@end example
+
+@acronym{ROT-13} is a toy translator that can ``encrypt'' and ``decrypt'' file
+contents using the @acronym{ROT-13} algorithm. @acronym{ROT-13} is a trivial
+algorithm that rotates each alphabet by thirteen places. Thus, 'A' becomes 'N',
+'B' becomes 'O', and 'Z' becomes 'M'.
+
+It goes without saying that you shouldn't use this translator if you need
+@emph{real} encryption (a future release of GlusterFS will have real encryption
+translators).
+
+@cartouche
+@table @code
+@item encrypt-write [on|off] (on)
+Whether to encrypt on write
+@item decrypt-read [on|off] (on)
+Whether to decrypt on read
+@end table
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Trace
+@subsection Trace
+@cindex trace (translator)
+@example
+type debug/trace
+@end example
+
+The trace translator is intended for debugging purposes. When loaded, it
+logs all the system calls received by the server or client (wherever
+trace is loaded), their arguments, and the results. You must use a GlusterFS log
+level of DEBUG (See @ref{Running GlusterFS}) for trace to work.
+
+Sample trace output (lines have been wrapped for readability):
+@cartouche
+@example
+2007-10-30 00:08:58 D [trace.c:1579:trace_opendir] trace: callid: 68
+(*this=0x8059e40, loc=0x8091984 @{path=/iozone3_283, inode=0x8091f00@},
+ fd=0x8091d50)
+
+2007-10-30 00:08:58 D [trace.c:630:trace_opendir_cbk] trace:
+(*this=0x8059e40, op_ret=4, op_errno=1, fd=0x8091d50)
+
+2007-10-30 00:08:58 D [trace.c:1602:trace_readdir] trace: callid: 69
+(*this=0x8059e40, size=4096, offset=0 fd=0x8091d50)
+
+2007-10-30 00:08:58 D [trace.c:215:trace_readdir_cbk] trace:
+(*this=0x8059e40, op_ret=0, op_errno=0, count=4)
+
+2007-10-30 00:08:58 D [trace.c:1624:trace_closedir] trace: callid: 71
+(*this=0x8059e40, *fd=0x8091d50)
+
+2007-10-30 00:08:58 D [trace.c:809:trace_closedir_cbk] trace:
+(*this=0x8059e40, op_ret=0, op_errno=1)
+@end example
+@end cartouche
+
+@node Usage Scenarios
+@chapter Usage Scenarios
+
+@section Advanced Striping
+
+This section is based on the Advanced Striping tutorial written by
+Anand Avati on the GlusterFS wiki
+@footnote{http://gluster.org/docs/index.php/Mixing_Striped_and_Regular_Files}.
+
+@subsection Mixed Storage Requirements
+
+There are two ways of scheduling the I/O. One at file level (using
+unify translator) and other at block level (using stripe
+translator). Striped I/O is good for files that are potentially large
+and require high parallel throughput (for example, a single file of
+400GB being accessed by 100s and 1000s of systems simultaneously and
+randomly). For most of the cases, file level scheduling works best.
+
+In the real world, it is desirable to mix file level and block level
+scheduling on a single storage volume. Alternatively users can choose
+to have two separate volumes and hence two mount points, but the
+applications may demand a single storage system to host both.
+
+This document explains how to mix file level scheduling with stripe.
+
+@subsection Configuration Brief
+
+This setup demonstrates how users can configure unify translator with
+appropriate I/O scheduler for file level scheduling and strip for only
+matching patterns. This way, GlusterFS chooses appropriate I/O profile
+and knows how to efficiently handle both the types of data.
+
+A simple technique to achieve this effect is to create a stripe set of
+unify and stripe blocks, where unify is the first sub-volume. Files
+that do not match the stripe policy passed on to first unify
+sub-volume and inturn scheduled arcoss the cluster using its file
+level I/O scheduler.
+
+@image{advanced-stripe,44pc,,,.pdf}
+
+@subsection Preparing GlusterFS Envoronment
+
+Create the directories /export/namespace, /export/unify and
+/export/stripe on all the storage bricks.
+
+ Place the following server and client volume spec file under
+/etc/glusterfs (or appropriate installed path) and replace the IP
+addresses / access control fields to match your environment.
+
+@cartouche
+@example
+ ## file: /etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol
+ volume posix-unify
+ type storage/posix
+ option directory /export/for-unify
+ end-volume
+
+ volume posix-stripe
+ type storage/posix
+ option directory /export/for-stripe
+ end-volume
+
+ volume posix-namespace
+ type storage/posix
+ option directory /export/for-namespace
+ end-volume
+
+ volume server
+ type protocol/server
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option auth.addr.posix-unify.allow 192.168.1.*
+ option auth.addr.posix-stripe.allow 192.168.1.*
+ option auth.addr.posix-namespace.allow 192.168.1.*
+ subvolumes posix-unify posix-stripe posix-namespace
+ end-volume
+@end example
+@end cartouche
+
+@cartouche
+@example
+ ## file: /etc/glusterfs/glusterfs.vol
+ volume client-namespace
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.1
+ option remote-subvolume posix-namespace
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-unify-1
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.1
+ option remote-subvolume posix-unify
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-unify-2
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.2
+ option remote-subvolume posix-unify
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-unify-3
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.3
+ option remote-subvolume posix-unify
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-unify-4
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.4
+ option remote-subvolume posix-unify
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-stripe-1
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.1
+ option remote-subvolume posix-stripe
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-stripe-2
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.2
+ option remote-subvolume posix-stripe
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-stripe-3
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.3
+ option remote-subvolume posix-stripe
+ end-volume
+
+ volume client-stripe-4
+ type protocol/client
+ option transport-type tcp
+ option remote-host 192.168.1.4
+ option remote-subvolume posix-stripe
+ end-volume
+
+ volume unify
+ type cluster/unify
+ option scheduler rr
+ subvolumes cluster-unify-1 cluster-unify-2 cluster-unify-3 cluster-unify-4
+ end-volume
+
+ volume stripe
+ type cluster/stripe
+ option block-size *.img:2MB # All files ending with .img are striped with 2MB stripe block size.
+ subvolumes unify cluster-stripe-1 cluster-stripe-2 cluster-stripe-3 cluster-stripe-4
+ end-volume
+@end example
+@end cartouche
+
+
+Bring up the Storage
+
+Starting GlusterFS Server: If you have installed through binary
+package, you can start the service through init.d startup script. If
+not:
+
+@example
+[root@@server]# glusterfsd
+@end example
+
+Mounting GlusterFS Volumes:
+
+@example
+[root@@client]# glusterfs -s [BRICK-IP-ADDRESS] /mnt/cluster
+@end example
+
+Improving upon this Setup
+
+Infiniband Verbs RDMA transport is much faster than TCP/IP GigE
+transport.
+
+Use of performance translators such as read-ahead, write-behind,
+io-cache, io-threads, booster is recommended.
+
+Replace round-robin (rr) scheduler with ALU to handle more dynamic
+storage environments.
+
+@node Troubleshooting
+@chapter Troubleshooting
+
+This chapter is a general troubleshooting guide to GlusterFS. It lists
+common GlusterFS server and client error messages, debugging hints, and
+concludes with the suggested procedure to report bugs in GlusterFS.
+
+@section GlusterFS error messages
+
+@subsection Server errors
+
+@example
+glusterfsd: FATAL: could not open specfile:
+'/etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol'
+@end example
+
+The GlusterFS server expects the volume specification file to be
+at @command{/etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol}. The example
+specification file will be installed as
+@command{/etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol.sample}. You need to edit
+it and rename it, or provide a different specification file using
+the @command{--spec-file} command line option (See @ref{Server}).
+
+@vskip 4ex
+
+@example
+gf_log_init: failed to open logfile "/usr/var/log/glusterfs/glusterfsd.log"
+ (Permission denied)
+@end example
+
+You don't have permission to create files in the
+@command{/usr/var/log/glusterfs} directory. Make sure you are running
+GlusterFS as root. Alternatively, specify a different path for the log
+file using the @command{--log-file} option (See @ref{Server}).
+
+@subsection Client errors
+
+@example
+fusermount: failed to access mountpoint /mnt:
+ Transport endpoint is not connected
+@end example
+
+A previous failed (or hung) mount of GlusterFS is preventing it from being
+mounted again in the same location. The fix is to do:
+
+@example
+# umount /mnt
+@end example
+
+and try mounting again.
+
+@vskip 4ex
+
+@strong{``Transport endpoint is not connected''.}
+
+If you get this error when you try a command such as @command{ls} or @command{cat},
+it means the GlusterFS mount did not succeed. Try running GlusterFS in @command{DEBUG}
+logging level and study the log messages to discover the cause.
+
+@vskip 4ex
+
+@strong{``Connect to server failed'', ``SERVER-ADDRESS: Connection refused''.}
+
+GluserFS Server is not running or dead. Check your network
+connections and firewall settings. To check if the server is reachable,
+try:
+
+@example
+telnet IP-ADDRESS 6996
+@end example
+
+If the server is accessible, your `telnet' command should connect and
+block. If not you will see an error message such as @command{telnet: Unable to
+connect to remote host: Connection refused}. 6996 is the default
+GlusterFS port. If you have changed it, then use the corresponding
+port instead.
+
+@vskip 4ex
+
+@example
+gf_log_init: failed to open logfile "/usr/var/log/glusterfs/glusterfs.log"
+ (Permission denied)
+@end example
+
+You don't have permission to create files in the
+@command{/usr/var/log/glusterfs} directory. Make sure you are running
+GlusterFS as root. Alternatively, specify a different path for the log
+file using the @command{--log-file} option (See @ref{Client}).
+
+@section FUSE error messages
+@command{modprobe fuse} fails with: ``Unknown symbol in module, or unknown parameter''.
+@cindex Redhat Enterprise Linux
+
+If you are using fuse-2.6.x on Redhat Enterprise Linux Work Station 4
+and Advanced Server 4 with 2.6.9-42.ELlargesmp, 2.6.9-42.ELsmp,
+2.6.9-42.EL kernels and get this error while loading @acronym{FUSE} kernel
+module, you need to apply the following patch.
+
+For fuse-2.6.2:
+
+@indicateurl{http://ftp.zresearch.com/pub/gluster/glusterfs/fuse/fuse-2.6.2-rhel-build.patch}
+
+For fuse-2.6.3:
+
+@indicateurl{http://ftp.zresearch.com/pub/gluster/glusterfs/fuse/fuse-2.6.3-rhel-build.patch}
+
+@section AppArmour and GlusterFS
+@cindex AppArmour
+@cindex OpenSuSE
+Under OpenSuSE GNU/Linux, the AppArmour security feature does not
+allow GlusterFS to create temporary files or network socket
+connections even while running as root. You will see error messages
+like `Unable to open log file: Operation not permitted' or `Connection
+refused'. Disabling AppArmour using YaST or properly configuring
+AppArmour to recognize @command{glusterfsd} or @command{glusterfs}/@command{fusermount}
+should solve the problem.
+
+@section Reporting a bug
+
+If you encounter a bug in GlusterFS, please follow the below
+guidelines when you report it to the mailing list. Be sure to report
+it! User feedback is crucial to the health of the project and we value
+it highly.
+
+@subsection General instructions
+
+When running GlusterFS in a non-production environment, be sure to
+build it with the following command:
+
+@example
+ $ make CFLAGS='-g -O0 -DDEBUG'
+@end example
+
+This includes debugging information which will be helpful in getting
+backtraces (see below) and also disable optimization. Enabling
+optimization can result in incorrect line numbers being reported to
+gdb.
+
+@subsection Volume specification files
+
+Attach all relevant server and client spec files you were using when
+you encountered the bug. Also tell us details of your setup, i.e., how
+many clients and how many servers.
+
+@subsection Log files
+
+Set the loglevel of your client and server programs to @acronym{DEBUG} (by
+passing the -L @acronym{DEBUG} option) and attach the log files with your bug
+report. Obviously, if only the client is failing (for example), you
+only need to send us the client log file.
+
+@subsection Backtrace
+
+If GlusterFS has encountered a segmentation fault or has crashed for
+some other reason, include the backtrace with the bug report. You can
+get the backtrace using the following procedure.
+
+Run the GlusterFS client or server inside gdb.
+
+@example
+ $ gdb ./glusterfs
+ (gdb) set args -f client.spec -N -l/path/to/log/file -LDEBUG /mnt/point
+ (gdb) run
+@end example
+
+Now when the process segfaults, you can get the backtrace by typing:
+
+@example
+ (gdb) bt
+@end example
+
+If the GlusterFS process has crashed and dumped a core file (you can
+find this in / if running as a daemon and in the current directory
+otherwise), you can do:
+
+@example
+ $ gdb /path/to/glusterfs /path/to/core.<pid>
+@end example
+
+and then get the backtrace.
+
+If the GlusterFS server or client seems to be hung, then you can get
+the backtrace by attaching gdb to the process. First get the @command{PID} of
+the process (using ps), and then do:
+
+@example
+ $ gdb ./glusterfs <pid>
+@end example
+
+Press Ctrl-C to interrupt the process and then generate the backtrace.
+
+@subsection Reproducing the bug
+
+If the bug is reproducible, please include the steps necessary to do
+so. If the bug is not reproducible, send us the bug report anyway.
+
+@subsection Other information
+
+If you think it is relevant, send us also the version of @acronym{FUSE} you're
+using, the kernel version, platform.
+
+@node GNU Free Documentation Licence
+@appendix GNU Free Documentation Licence
+@include fdl.texi
+
+@node Index
+@unnumbered Index
+@printindex cp
+
+@bye