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authorkshithijiyer <kshithij.ki@gmail.com>2019-06-05 19:40:29 +0530
committerAmar Tumballi <amarts@redhat.com>2019-06-08 05:45:35 +0000
commit2eaf8e846afd71c30f2a6ff6f863a39b1145b8b6 (patch)
tree333b3494bf767ab195717fe4e8cdf48398681a7f /doc/developer-guide
parent2ff76fa45c53b8e291cf70c98b28800f3ed5f6fc (diff)
Fixing formatting errors in markdown files
There are a lot of fromatting error is markdown files peresent under /doc directiory of the project. Fixing formatting errors and sending a patch. Fixes: bz#1718273 Change-Id: I08f938088bbaaafddf634f73616ea0dbfe7aedf3 Signed-off-by: kshithijiyer <kshithij.ki@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/developer-guide')
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/Language-Bindings.md1
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/Using-Gluster-Test-Framework.md1
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/afr-locks-evolution.md6
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/afr-self-heal-daemon.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/bd-xlator.md494
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/brickmux-thread-reduction.md8
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/coding-standard.md28
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/datastructure-inode.md61
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/datastructure-iobuf.md36
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/datastructure-mem-pool.md8
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/dirops-transactions-in-dht.md3
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/network_compression.md20
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/syncop.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/developer-guide/translator-development.md2
14 files changed, 329 insertions, 343 deletions
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/Language-Bindings.md b/doc/developer-guide/Language-Bindings.md
index 33f2e58504c..951f5fae2f6 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/Language-Bindings.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/Language-Bindings.md
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+# Language Bindings
GlusterFS 3.4 introduced the libgfapi client API for C programs. This
page lists bindings to the libgfapi C library from other languages.
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/Using-Gluster-Test-Framework.md b/doc/developer-guide/Using-Gluster-Test-Framework.md
index 96fa9247e84..d2bb1c391da 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/Using-Gluster-Test-Framework.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/Using-Gluster-Test-Framework.md
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+# USing Gluster Test Framwork
Description
-----------
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/afr-locks-evolution.md b/doc/developer-guide/afr-locks-evolution.md
index 7d2a136d871..2dabbcfeb13 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/afr-locks-evolution.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/afr-locks-evolution.md
@@ -32,10 +32,10 @@ AFR makes use of locks xlator extensively:
* For Entry self-heal, it is `entrylk(NULL name, parent inode)`. Specifying NULL for the name takes full lock on the directory referred to by the inode.
* For data self-heal, there is a bit of history as to how locks evolved:
-###Initial version (say version 1) :
+### Initial version (say version 1) :
There was no concept of selfheal daemon (shd). Only client lookups triggered heals. so AFR always took `inodelk(0,0,DATA_DOMAIN)` for healing. The issue with this approach was that when heal was in progress, I/O from clients was blocked .
-###version 2:
+### version 2:
shd was introduced. We needed to allow I/O to go through when heal was going,provided the ranges did not overlap. To that extent, the following approach was adopted:
+ 1.shd takes (full inodelk in DATA_DOMAIN). Thus client FOPS are blocked and cannot modify changelog-xattrs
@@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ It modifies data but the FOP succeeds only on brick 2. writev returns success, a
and thus goes ahead and copies stale 128Kb from brick 1 to brick2. Thus as far as application is concerned, `writev` returned success but bricks have stale data.
What needs to be done is `writev` must return success only if it succeeded on atleast one source brick (brick b1 in this case). Otherwise The heal still happens in reverse direction but as far as the application is concerned, it received an error.
-###Note on lock **domains**
+### Note on lock **domains**
We have used conceptual names in this document like DATA_DOMAIN/ METADATA_DOMAIN/ SELF_HEAL_DOMAIN. In the code, these are mapped to strings that are based on the AFR xlator name like so:
DATA_DOMAIN --->"vol_name-replicate-n"
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/afr-self-heal-daemon.md b/doc/developer-guide/afr-self-heal-daemon.md
index b85ddd1c856..65940d420b7 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/afr-self-heal-daemon.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/afr-self-heal-daemon.md
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ When a client (mount) performs an operation on the file, the index xlator presen
and removes it in post-op phase if the operation is successful. Thus if an entry is present inside the .glusterfs/indices/xattrop/ directory when there is no I/O
happening on the file, it means the file needs healing (or atleast an examination if the brick crashed after the post-op completed but just before the removal of the hardlink).
-####Index heal steps:
+#### Index heal steps:
<pre><code>
In shd process of *each node* {
opendir +readdir (.glusterfs/indices/xattrop/)
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/bd-xlator.md b/doc/developer-guide/bd-xlator.md
index 1771fb6e24b..f087efbe361 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/bd-xlator.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/bd-xlator.md
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
-#Block device translator
+# Block device translator
Block device translator (BD xlator) is a translator added to GlusterFS which provides block backend for GlusterFS. This replaces the existing bd_map translator in GlusterFS that provided similar but very limited functionality. GlusterFS expects the underlying brick to be formatted with a POSIX compatible file system. BD xlator changes that and allows for having bricks that are raw block devices like LVM which needn’t have any file systems on them. Hence with BD xlator, it becomes possible to build a GlusterFS volume comprising of bricks that are logical volumes (LV).
-##bd
+## bd
BD xlator maps underlying LVs to files and hence the LVs appear as files to GlusterFS clients. Though BD volume externally appears very similar to the usual Posix volume, not all operations are supported or possible for the files on a BD volume. Only those operations that make sense for a block device are supported and the exact semantics are described in subsequent sections.
@@ -20,18 +20,18 @@ BD xlator was mainly developed to use block devices directly as VM images when G
Though BD xlator is primarily intended to be used with block devices, it does provide full Posix xlator compatibility for files that are created on BD volume but are not backed by or mapped to a block device. Such files which don’t have a block device mapping exist on the Posix directory that is specified during BD volume creation. BD xlator is available from GlusterFS-3.5 release.
-###Compiling BD translator
+### Compiling BD translator
BD xlator needs lvm2 development library. –enable-bd-xlator option can be used with `./configure` script to explicitly enable BD translator. The following snippet from the output of configure script shows that BD xlator is enabled for compilation.
-#####GlusterFS configure summary
+##### GlusterFS configure summary
Block Device xlator : yes
-###Creating a BD volume
+### Creating a BD volume
BD supports hosting of both linear LV and thin LV within the same volume. However seperate examples are provided below. As noted above, the prerequisite for a BD volume is VG which is created from a loop device here, but it can be any other device too.
@@ -39,270 +39,259 @@ BD supports hosting of both linear LV and thin LV within the same volume. Howeve
* Creating BD volume with linear LV backend
* Create a loop device
-
-
- [root@node ~]# dd if=/dev/zero of=bd-loop count=1024 bs=1M
-
- [root@node ~]# losetup /dev/loop0 bd-loop
-
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# dd if=/dev/zero of=bd-loop count=1024 bs=1M
+[root@node ~]# losetup /dev/loop0 bd-loop
+```
* Prepare a brick by creating a VG
-
- [root@node ~]# pvcreate /dev/loop0
-
- [root@node ~]# vgcreate bd-vg /dev/loop0
-
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# pvcreate /dev/loop0
+[root@node ~]# vgcreate bd-vg /dev/loop0
+```
* Create the BD volume
* Create a POSIX directory first
-
-
- [root@node ~]# mkdir /bd-meta
+```
+[root@node ~]# mkdir /bd-meta
+```
It is recommended that this directory is created on an LV in the brick VG itself so that both data and metadata live together on the same device.
* Create and mount the volume
-
- [root@node ~]# gluster volume create bd node:/bd-meta?bd-vg force
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# gluster volume create bd node:/bd-meta?bd-vg force
+```
The general syntax for specifying the brick is `host:/posix-dir?volume-group-name` where “?” is the separator.
-
-
-
- [root@node ~]# gluster volume start bd
- [root@node ~]# gluster volume info bd
- Volume Name: bd
- Type: Distribute
- Volume ID: cb042d2a-f435-4669-b886-55f5927a4d7f
- Status: Started
- Xlator 1: BD
- Capability 1: offload_copy
- Capability 2: offload_snapshot
- Number of Bricks: 1
- Transport-type: tcp
- Bricks:
- Brick1: node:/bd-meta
- Brick1 VG: bd-vg
-
-
-
- [root@node ~]# mount -t glusterfs node:/bd /mnt
+```
+[root@node ~]# gluster volume start bd
+[root@node ~]# gluster volume info bd
+Volume Name: bd
+Type: Distribute
+Volume ID: cb042d2a-f435-4669-b886-55f5927a4d7f
+Status: Started
+Xlator 1: BD
+Capability 1: offload_copy
+Capability 2: offload_snapshot
+Number of Bricks: 1
+Transport-type: tcp
+Bricks:
+Brick1: node:/bd-meta
+Brick1 VG: bd-vg
+
+[root@node ~]# mount -t glusterfs node:/bd /mnt
+```
* Create a file that is backed by an LV
-
- [root@node ~]# ls /mnt
-
- [root@node ~]#
+```
+[root@node ~]# ls /mnt
+```
Since the volume is empty now, so is the underlying VG.
-
- [root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg
- [root@node ~]#
+```
+[root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg
+```
Creating a file that is mapped to an LV is a 2 step operation. First the file should be created on the mount point and a specific extended attribute should be set to map the file to LV.
-
- [root@node ~]# touch /mnt/lv
- [root@node ~]# setfattr -n “user.glusterfs.bd” -v “lv” /mnt/lv
+```
+[root@node ~]# touch /mnt/lv
+[root@node ~]# setfattr -n “user.glusterfs.bd” -v “lv” /mnt/lv
+```
Now an LV got created in the VG brick and the file /mnt/lv maps to this LV. Any read/write to this file ends up as read/write to the underlying LV.
- [root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg
- — Logical volume —
- LV Path /dev/bd-vg/6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
- LV Name 6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
- VG Name bd-vg
- LV UUID PjMPcc-RkD5-RADz-6ixG-UYsk-oclz-vL0nv6
- LV Write Access read/write
- LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:15:45 +0530
- LV Status available
- open 0
- LV Size 4.00 MiB
- Current LE 1
- Segments 1
- Allocation inherit
- Read ahead sectors 0
- Block device 253:6
+```
+[root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg
+— Logical volume —
+LV Path /dev/bd-vg/6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
+LV Name 6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
+VG Name bd-vg
+LV UUID PjMPcc-RkD5-RADz-6ixG-UYsk-oclz-vL0nv6
+LV Write Access read/write
+LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:15:45 +0530
+LV Status available
+open 0
+LV Size 4.00 MiB
+Current LE 1
+Segments 1
+Allocation inherit
+Read ahead sectors 0
+Block device 253:6
+```
The file gets created with default LV size which is 1 LE which is 4MB in this case.
-
- [root@node ~]# ls -lh /mnt/lv
- -rw-r–r–. 1 root root 4.0M Nov 26 16:15 /mnt/lv
-
-truncate can be used to set the required file size.
-
- [root@node ~]# truncate /mnt/lv -s 256M
- [root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg
- — Logical volume —
- LV Path /dev/bd-vg/6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
- LV Name 6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
- VG Name bd-vg
- LV UUID PjMPcc-RkD5-RADz-6ixG-UYsk-oclz-vL0nv6
- LV Write Access read/write
- LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:15:45 +0530
- LV Status available
- # open 0
- LV Size 256.00 MiB
- Current LE 64
- Segments 1
- Allocation inherit
- Read ahead sectors 0
- Block device 253:6
-
-
- [root@node ~]# ls -lh /mnt/lv
- -rw-r–r–. 1 root root 256M Nov 26 16:15 /mnt/lv
-
- currently LV size has been set to 256
+```
+[root@node ~]# ls -lh /mnt/lv
+-rw-r–r–. 1 root root 4.0M Nov 26 16:15 /mnt/lv
+```
+
+Truncate can be used to set the required file size.
+
+```
+[root@node ~]# trunc ate /mnt/lv -s 256M
+[root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg
+— Logical volume —
+LV Path /dev/bd-vg/6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
+LV Name 6ff0f25f-2776-4d19-adfb-df1a3cab8287
+VG Name bd-vg
+LV UUID PjMPcc-RkD5-RADz-6ixG-UYsk-oclz-vL0nv6
+LV Write Access read/write
+LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:15:45 +0530
+LV Status available
+# open 0
+LV Size 256.00 MiB
+Current LE 64
+Segments 1
+Allocation inherit
+Read ahead sectors 0
+Block device 253:6
+```
+
+```
+[root@node ~]# ls -lh /mnt/lv
+-rw-r–r–. 1 root root 256M Nov 26 16:15 /mnt/lv
+```
+
+Currently LV size has been set to 256.
The size of the file/LV can be specified during creation/mapping time itself like this:
-
- setfattr -n “user.glusterfs.bd” -v “lv:256MB” /mnt/lv
-
+```
+setfattr -n “user.glusterfs.bd” -v “lv:256MB” /mnt/lv
+```
2. Creating BD volume with thin LV backend
* Create a loop device
-
-
- [root@node ~]# dd if=/dev/zero of=bd-loop-thin count=1024 bs=1M
-
- [root@node ~]# losetup /dev/loop0 bd-loop-thin
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# dd if=/dev/zero of=bd-loop-thin count=1024 bs=1M
+[root@node ~]# losetup /dev/loop0 bd-loop-thin
+```
* Prepare a brick by creating a VG and thin pool
-
-
- [root@node ~]# pvcreate /dev/loop0
-
- [root@node ~]# vgcreate bd-vg-thin /dev/loop0
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# pvcreate /dev/loop0
+[root@node ~]# vgcreate bd-vg-thin /dev/loop0
+```
* Create a thin pool
-
-
- [root@node ~]# lvcreate –thin bd-vg-thin -L 1000M
-
- Rounding up size to full physical extent 4.00 MiB
- Logical volume “lvol0″ created
-
-lvdisplay shows the thin pool
-
- [root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg-thin
- — Logical volume —
- LV Name lvol0
- VG Name bd-vg-thin
- LV UUID HVa3EM-IVMS-QG2g-oqU6-1UxC-RgqS-g8zhVn
- LV Write Access read/write
- LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:39:06 +0530
- LV Pool transaction ID 0
- LV Pool metadata lvol0_tmeta
- LV Pool data lvol0_tdata
- LV Pool chunk size 64.00 KiB
- LV Zero new blocks yes
- LV Status available
- # open 0
- LV Size 1000.00 MiB
- Allocated pool data 0.00%
- Allocated metadata 0.88%
- Current LE 250
- Segments 1
- Allocation inherit
- Read ahead sectors auto
- Block device 253:9
+```
+[root@node ~]# lvcreate –thin bd-vg-thin -L 1000M
+```
+
+Rounding up size to full physical extent 4.00 MiB.
+Logical volume “lvol0″ created.
+
+lvdisplay shows the thin pool.
+```
+[root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg-thin
+— Logical volume —
+LV Name lvol0
+VG Name bd-vg-thin
+LV UUID HVa3EM-IVMS-QG2g-oqU6-1UxC-RgqS-g8zhVn
+LV Write Access read/write
+LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:39:06 +0530
+LV Pool transaction ID 0
+LV Pool metadata lvol0_tmeta
+LV Pool data lvol0_tdata
+LV Pool chunk size 64.00 KiB
+LV Zero new blocks yes
+LV Status available
+# open 0
+LV Size 1000.00 MiB
+Allocated pool data 0.00%
+Allocated metadata 0.88%
+Current LE 250
+Segments 1
+Allocation inherit
+Read ahead sectors auto
+Block device 253:9
+```
* Create the BD volume
* Create a POSIX directory first
-
-
- [root@node ~]# mkdir /bd-meta-thin
+```
+[root@node ~]# mkdir /bd-meta-thin
+```
* Create and mount the volume
-
- [root@node ~]# gluster volume create bd-thin node:/bd-meta-thin?bd-vg-thin force
-
- [root@node ~]# gluster volume start bd-thin
-
-
- [root@node ~]# gluster volume info bd-thin
- Volume Name: bd-thin
- Type: Distribute
- Volume ID: 27aa7eb0-4ffa-497e-b639-7cbda0128793
- Status: Started
- Xlator 1: BD
- Capability 1: thin
- Capability 2: offload_copy
- Capability 3: offload_snapshot
- Number of Bricks: 1
- Transport-type: tcp
- Bricks:
- Brick1: node:/bd-meta-thin
- Brick1 VG: bd-vg-thin
-
-
- [root@node ~]# mount -t glusterfs node:/bd-thin /mnt
+```
+[root@node ~]# gluster volume create bd-thin node:/bd-meta-thin?bd-vg-thin force
+
+[root@node ~]# gluster volume start bd-thin
+
+[root@node ~]# gluster volume info bd-thin
+Volume Name: bd-thin
+Type: Distribute
+Volume ID: 27aa7eb0-4ffa-497e-b639-7cbda0128793
+Status: Started
+Xlator 1: BD
+Capability 1: thin
+Capability 2: offload_copy
+Capability 3: offload_snapshot
+Number of Bricks: 1
+Transport-type: tcp
+Bricks:
+Brick1: node:/bd-meta-thin
+Brick1 VG: bd-vg-thin
+
+[root@node ~]# mount -t glusterfs node:/bd-thin /mnt
+```
* Create a file that is backed by a thin LV
-
-
- [root@node ~]# ls /mnt
-
- [root@node ~]#
+```
+[root@node ~]# ls /mnt
+```
Creating a file that is mapped to a thin LV is a 2 step operation. First the file should be created on the mount point and a specific extended attribute should be set to map the file to a thin LV.
+```
+[root@node ~]# touch /mnt/thin-lv
- [root@node ~]# touch /mnt/thin-lv
-
- [root@node ~]# setfattr -n “user.glusterfs.bd” -v “thin:256MB” /mnt/thin-lv
-
+[root@node ~]# setfattr -n “user.glusterfs.bd” -v “thin:256MB” /mnt/thin-lv
+```
Now /mnt/thin-lv is a thin provisioned file that is backed by a thin LV and size has been set to 256.
-
- [root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg-thin
- — Logical volume —
- LV Name lvol0
- VG Name bd-vg-thin
- LV UUID HVa3EM-IVMS-QG2g-oqU6-1UxC-RgqS-g8zhVn
- LV Write Access read/write
- LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:39:06 +0530
- LV Pool transaction ID 1
- LV Pool metadata lvol0_tmeta
- LV Pool data lvol0_tdata
- LV Pool chunk size 64.00 KiB
- LV Zero new blocks yes
- LV Status available
- # open 0
- LV Size 000.00 MiB
- Allocated pool data 0.00%
- Allocated metadata 0.98%
- Current LE 250
- Segments 1
- Allocation inherit
- Read ahead sectors auto
- Block device 253:9
-
-
-
-
- — Logical volume —
- LV Path dev/bd-vg-thin/081b01d1-1436-4306-9baf-41c7bf5a2c73
- LV Name 081b01d1-1436-4306-9baf-41c7bf5a2c73
- VG Name bd-vg-thin
- LV UUID coxpTY-2UZl-9293-8H2X-eAZn-wSp6-csZIeB
- LV Write Access read/write
- LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:43:19 +0530
- LV Pool name lvol0
- LV Status available
- # open 0
- LV Size 256.00 MiB
- Mapped size 0.00%
- Current LE 64
- Segments 1
- Allocation inherit
- Read ahead sectors auto
- Block device 253:10
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# lvdisplay bd-vg-thin
+— Logical volume —
+LV Name lvol0
+VG Name bd-vg-thin
+LV UUID HVa3EM-IVMS-QG2g-oqU6-1UxC-RgqS-g8zhVn
+LV Write Access read/write
+LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:39:06 +0530
+LV Pool transaction ID 1
+LV Pool metadata lvol0_tmeta
+LV Pool data lvol0_tdata
+LV Pool chunk size 64.00 KiB
+LV Zero new blocks yes
+LV Status available
+# open 0
+LV Size 000.00 MiB
+Allocated pool data 0.00%
+Allocated metadata 0.98%
+Current LE 250
+Segments 1
+Allocation inherit
+Read ahead sectors auto
+Block device 253:9
+
+— Logical volume —
+LV Path dev/bd-vg-thin/081b01d1-1436-4306-9baf-41c7bf5a2c73
+LV Name 081b01d1-1436-4306-9baf-41c7bf5a2c73
+VG Name bd-vg-thin
+LV UUID coxpTY-2UZl-9293-8H2X-eAZn-wSp6-csZIeB
+LV Write Access read/write
+LV Creation host, time node, 2013-11-26 16:43:19 +0530
+LV Pool name lvol0
+LV Status available
+# open 0
+LV Size 256.00 MiB
+Mapped size 0.00%
+Current LE 64
+Segments 1
+Allocation inherit
+Read ahead sectors auto
+Block device 253:10
+```
@@ -310,7 +299,7 @@ Now /mnt/thin-lv is a thin provisioned file that is backed by a thin LV and size
As can be seen from above, creation of a file resulted in creation of a thin LV in the brick.
-###Improvisation on BD translator:
+### Improvisation on BD translator:
First version of BD xlator ( block backend) had few limitations such as
@@ -356,42 +345,40 @@ is mapped to BD.
Usage:
Server side:
-
- [root@host1 ~]# gluster volume create bdvol host1:/storage/vg1_info?vg1 host2:/storage/vg2_info?vg2
+```
+[root@host1 ~]# gluster volume create bdvol host1:/storage/vg1_info?vg1 host2:/storage/vg2_info?vg2
+```
It creates a distributed gluster volume 'bdvol' with Volume Group vg1
using posix brick /storage/vg1_info in host1 and Volume Group vg2 using
/storage/vg2_info in host2.
-
-
- [root@host1 ~]# gluster volume start bdvol
+```
+[root@host1 ~]# gluster volume start bdvol
+```
Client side:
-
- [root@node ~]# mount -t glusterfs host1:/bdvol /media
- [root@node ~]# touch /media/posix
+```
+[root@node ~]# mount -t glusterfs host1:/bdvol /media
+[root@node ~]# touch /media/posix
+```
It creates regular posix file 'posix' in either host1:/vg1 or host2:/vg2 brick
-
- [root@node ~]# mkdir /media/image
-
- [root@node ~]# touch /media/image/lv1
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# mkdir /media/image
+[root@node ~]# touch /media/image/lv1
+```
It also creates regular posix file 'lv1' in either host1:/vg1 or
host2:/vg2 brick
-
- [root@node ~]# setfattr -n "user.glusterfs.bd" -v "lv" /media/image/lv1
-
- [root@node ~]#
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# setfattr -n "user.glusterfs.bd" -v "lv" /media/image/lv1
+```
Above setxattr results in creating a new LV in corresponding brick's VG
and it sets 'user.glusterfs.bd' with value 'lv:<default-extent-size''
-
-
- [root@node ~]# truncate -s5G /media/image/lv1
-
+```
+[root@node ~]# truncate -s5G /media/image/lv1
+```
It results in resizig LV 'lv1'to 5G
@@ -417,12 +404,14 @@ features can be exploited.
BD xlator exports capability information through gluster volume info (and --xml) output. For eg:
`snip of gluster volume info output for a BD based volume`
-
+ ```
Xlator 1: BD
Capability 1: thin
+```
`snip of gluster volume info --xml output for a BD based volume`
+```
<xlators>
<xlator>
<name>BD</name>
@@ -431,7 +420,7 @@ BD xlator exports capability information through gluster volume info (and --xml)
</capabilities>
</xlator>
</xlators>
-
+```
But this capability information should also exposed through some other means so that a host
which is not part of Gluster peer could also avail this capabilities.
@@ -465,5 +454,4 @@ For example, GlusterFS block driver in qemu need to get the capability list so t
-Parts of this documentation were originally published here
-#http://raobharata.wordpress.com/2013/11/27/glusterfs-block-device-translator/
+Parts of this documentation were originally published [here](http://raobharata.wordpress.com/2013/11/27/glusterfs-block-device-translator/).
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/brickmux-thread-reduction.md b/doc/developer-guide/brickmux-thread-reduction.md
index 83462c06b50..7d76e8ff579 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/brickmux-thread-reduction.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/brickmux-thread-reduction.md
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-#Resource usage reduction in brick multiplexing
+# Resource usage reduction in brick multiplexing
Each brick is regresented with a graph of translators in a brick process.
Each translator in the graph has its own set of threads and mem pools
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ threads:
4. aio-thread
- changelog and bitrot threads(even when the features are not enabled)
-##io-threads
+## io-threads
io-threads should be made global to the process, having 16+ threads for
each brick does not make sense. But io-thread translator is loaded in
@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ This poses performance issues due to lock-contention in the io-threds
layer. This also shall be addressed by having multiple locks instead of
one global lock for io-threads.
-##Posix threads
+## Posix threads
Most of the posix threads execute tasks in a timely manner, hence it can be
replaced with a timer whose handler register a task to synctask framework, once
the task is complete, the timer is registered again. With this we can eliminate
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ api in synctask that can cancel all the tasks from a given translator.
For future, this will be replced to use global thread-pool(once implemented).
-##Changelog and bitrot threads
+## Changelog and bitrot threads
In the initial implementation, the threads are not created if the feature is
not enabled. We need to share threads across changelog instances if we plan
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/coding-standard.md b/doc/developer-guide/coding-standard.md
index a8aa49cc2da..031c6c0da99 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/coding-standard.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/coding-standard.md
@@ -6,23 +6,23 @@ Before you get started
Before starting with other part of coding standard, install `clang-format`
On Fedora:
-
+```
$ dnf install clang
-
+```
On debian/Ubuntu:
-
+```
$ apt-get install clang
-
+```
Once you are done with all the local changes, you need to run below set of commands,
before submitting the patch for review.
-
- $ git add $file # if any
- $ git commit -a -s -m "commit message"
- $ git show --pretty="format:" --name-only | grep -v "contrib/" | egrep "*\.[ch]$" | xargs clang-format -i
- $ git diff # see if there are any changes
- $ git commit -a --amend # get the format changes done
- $ ./submit-for-review.sh
-
+```
+$ git add $file # if any
+$ git commit -a -s -m "commit message"
+$ git show --pretty="format:" --name-only | grep -v "contrib/" | egrep "*\.[ch]$" | xargs clang-format -i
+$ git diff # see if there are any changes
+$ git commit -a --amend # get the format changes done
+$ ./submit-for-review.sh
+```
Structure definitions should have a comment per member
@@ -620,8 +620,8 @@ If a value isn't supposed/expected to change, there's no cost to adding a
### Avoid global variables (including 'static' auto variables)
Almost all state in Gluster is contextual and should be contained in the
-appropriate structure reflecting its scope (e.g. call\_frame\_t, call\_stack\_t,
-xlator\_t, glusterfs\_ctx\_t). With dynamic loading and graph switches in play,
+appropriate structure reflecting its scope (e.g. `call\_frame\_t`, `call\_stack\_t`,
+`xlator\_t`, `glusterfs\_ctx\_t`). With dynamic loading and graph switches in play,
each global requires careful consideration of when it should be initialized or
reinitialized, when it might _accidentally_ be reinitialized, when its value
might become stale, and so on. A few global variables are needed to serve as
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-inode.md b/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-inode.md
index a340ab9ca8e..45d7a941e5f 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-inode.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-inode.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-#Inode and dentry management in GlusterFS:
+# Inode and dentry management in GlusterFS:
-##Background
+## Background
Filesystems internally refer to files and directories via inodes. Inodes
are unique identifiers of the entities stored in a filesystem. Whenever an
application has to operate on a file/directory (read/modify), the filesystem
@@ -41,11 +41,10 @@ struct _inode_table {
};
```
-#Life-cycle
+# Life-cycle
```
-
inode_table_new (size_t lru_limit, xlator_t *xl)
-
+```
This is a function which allocates a new inode table. Usually the top xlators in
the graph such as protocol/server (for bricks), fuse and nfs (for fuse and nfs
mounts) and libgfapi do inode managements. Hence they are the ones which will
@@ -59,11 +58,8 @@ new inode table.
Thus an allocated inode table is destroyed only when the filesystem daemon is
killed or unmounted.
-```
-
-#what it contains.
-```
+# what it contains.
Inode table in glusterfs mainly contains a hash table for maintaining inodes.
In general a file/directory is considered to be existing if there is a
corresponding inode present in the inode table. If a inode for a file/directory
@@ -76,21 +72,21 @@ size of the hash table (as of now it is hard coded to 14057. The hash value of
a inode is calculated using its gfid).
Apart from the hash table, inode table also maintains 3 important list of inodes
-1) Active list:
+1. Active list:
Active list contains all the active inodes (i.e inodes which are currently part
of some fop).
-2) Lru list:
+2. Lru list:
Least recently used inodes list. A limit can be set for the size of the lru
list. For bricks it is 16384 and for clients it is infinity.
-3) Purge list:
+3. Purge list:
List of all the inodes which have to be purged (i.e inodes which have to be
deleted from the inode table due to unlink/rmdir/forget).
And at last it also contains the mem-pool for allocating inodes, dentries so
that frequent malloc/calloc and free of the data structures can be avoided.
-```
-#Data structure (inode)
+
+# Data structure (inode)
```
struct _inode {
inode_table_t *table; /* the table this inode belongs to */
@@ -108,7 +104,7 @@ struct _inode {
struct _inode_ctx *_ctx; /* place holder for keeping the
information about the inode by different xlators */
};
-
+```
As said above, inodes are internal way of identifying the files/directories. A
inode uniquely represents a file/directory. A new inode is created whenever a
create/mkdir/symlink/mknod operations are performed. Apart from that a new inode
@@ -128,9 +124,9 @@ inodes are those inodes whose refcount is greater than zero. Whenever some
operation comes on a file/directory, and the resolver tries to find the inode
for it, it increments the refcount of the inode before returning the inode. The
refcount of an inode can be incremented by calling the below function
-
+```
inode_ref (inode_t *inode)
-
+```
Any xlator which wants to operate on a inode as part of some fop (or wants the
inode in the callback), should hold a ref on the inode.
Once the fop is completed before sending the reply of the fop to the above
@@ -139,18 +135,18 @@ zero, it is removed from the active inodes list and put into LRU list maintained
by the inode table. Thus in short if some fop is happening on a file/directory,
the corresponding inode will be in the active list or it will be in the LRU
list.
-```
-#Life Cycle
+
+# Life Cycle
A new inode is created whenever a new file/directory/symlink is created OR a
successful lookup of an existing entry is done. The xlators which does inode
management (as of now protocol/server, fuse, nfs, gfapi) will perform inode_link
operation upon successful lookup or successful creation of a new entry.
-
+```
inode_link (inode_t *inode, inode_t *parent, const char *name,
struct iatt *buf);
-
+```
inode_link actually adds the inode to the inode table (to be precise it adds
the inode to the hash table maintained by the inode table. The hash value is
calculated based on the gfid). Copies the gfid to the inode (the gfid is
@@ -160,7 +156,7 @@ A inode is removed from the inode table and eventually destroyed when unlink
or rmdir operation is performed on a file/directory, or the the lru limit of
the inode table has been exceeded.
-#Data structure (dentry)
+# Data structure (dentry)
```
struct _dentry {
@@ -170,22 +166,22 @@ struct _dentry {
char *name; /* name of the directory entry */
inode_t *parent; /* directory of the entry */
};
-
+```
A dentry is the presence of an entry for a file/directory within its parent
directory. A dentry usually points to the inode to which it belongs to. In
glusterfs a dentry contains the following fields.
-1) a hook using which it can add itself to the list of
+1. a hook using which it can add itself to the list of
the dentries maintained by the inode to which it points to.
-2) A hash table pointer.
-3) Pointer to the inode to which it belongs to.
-4) Name of the dentry
-5) Pointer to the inode of the parent directory in which the dentry is present
+2. A hash table pointer.
+3. Pointer to the inode to which it belongs to.
+4. Name of the dentry
+5. Pointer to the inode of the parent directory in which the dentry is present
A new dentry is created when a new file/directory/symlink is created or a hard
link to an existing file is created.
-
+```
__dentry_create (inode_t *inode, inode_t *parent, const char *name);
-
+```
A dentry holds a refcount on the parent
directory so that the parent inode is never removed from the active inode's list
and put to the lru list (If the lru limit of the lru list is exceeded, there is
@@ -212,15 +208,14 @@ deleted due to file removal or lru limit being exceeded the inode is retired
purge list maintained by the inode table), the nlookup count is set to 0 via
inode_forget api. The inode table, then prunes all the inodes from the purge
list by destroying the inode contexts maintained by each xlator.
-
+```
unlinking of the dentry is done via inode_unlink;
void
inode_unlink (inode_t *inode, inode_t *parent, const char *name);
-
+```
If the inode has multiple hard links, then the unlink operation performed by
the application results just in the removal of the dentry with the name provided
by the application. For the inode to be removed, all the dentries of the inode
should be unlinked.
-```
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-iobuf.md b/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-iobuf.md
index 5f521f1485f..03604e3672c 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-iobuf.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-iobuf.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-#Iobuf-pool
-##Datastructures
-###iobuf
+# Iobuf-pool
+## Datastructures
+### iobuf
Short for IO Buffer. It is one allocatable unit for the consumers of the IOBUF
API, each unit hosts @page_size(defined in arena structure) bytes of memory. As
initial step of processing a fop, the IO buffer passed onto GlusterFS by the
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ struct iobuf {
};
```
-###iobref
+### iobref
There may be need of multiple iobufs for a single fop, like in vectored read/write.
Hence multiple iobufs(default 16) are encapsulated under one iobref.
```
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ struct iobref {
int used; /* number of iobufs added to this iobref */
};
```
-###iobuf_arenas
+### iobuf_arenas
One region of memory MMAPed from the operating system. Each region MMAPs
@arena_size bytes of memory, and hosts @arena_size / @page_size IOBUFs.
The same sized iobufs are grouped into one arena, for sanity of access.
@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ struct iobuf_arena {
};
```
-###iobuf_pool
+### iobuf_pool
Pool of Iobufs. As there may be many Io buffers required by the filesystem,
a pool of iobufs are preallocated and kept, if these preallocated ones are
exhausted only then the standard malloc/free is called, thus improving the
@@ -139,8 +139,8 @@ arenas in the purge list are destroyed only if there is atleast one arena in
(e.g: If there is an arena (page_size=128KB, count=32) in purge list, this arena
is destroyed(munmap) only if there is an arena in 'arenas' list with page_size=128KB).
-##APIs
-###iobuf_get
+## APIs
+### iobuf_get
```
struct iobuf *iobuf_get (struct iobuf_pool *iobuf_pool);
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ Creates a new iobuf of the default page size(128KB hard coded as of yet).
Also takes a reference(increments ref count), hence no need of doing it
explicitly after getting iobuf.
-###iobuf_get2
+### iobuf_get2
```
struct iobuf * iobuf_get2 (struct iobuf_pool *iobuf_pool, size_t page_size);
@@ -179,7 +179,7 @@ if (requested iobuf size > Max iobuf size in the pool(1MB as of yet))
Also takes a reference(increments ref count), hence no need of doing it
explicitly after getting iobuf.
-###iobuf_ref
+### iobuf_ref
```
struct iobuf *iobuf_ref (struct iobuf *iobuf);
@@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ struct iobuf *iobuf_ref (struct iobuf *iobuf);
xlator/function/, its a good practice to take a reference so that iobuf is not
deleted by the allocator.
-###iobuf_unref
+### iobuf_unref
```
void iobuf_unref (struct iobuf *iobuf);
```
@@ -203,33 +203,33 @@ Unreference the iobuf, if the ref count is zero iobuf is considered free.
Every iobuf_ref should have a corresponding iobuf_unref, and also every
iobuf_get/2 should have a correspondning iobuf_unref.
-###iobref_new
+### iobref_new
```
struct iobref *iobref_new ();
```
Creates a new iobref structure and returns its pointer.
-###iobref_ref
+### iobref_ref
```
struct iobref *iobref_ref (struct iobref *iobref);
```
Take a reference on the iobref.
-###iobref_unref
+### iobref_unref
```
void iobref_unref (struct iobref *iobref);
```
Decrements the reference count of the iobref. If the ref count is 0, then unref
all the iobufs(iobuf_unref) in the iobref, and destroy the iobref.
-###iobref_add
+### iobref_add
```
int iobref_add (struct iobref *iobref, struct iobuf *iobuf);
```
Adds the given iobuf into the iobref, it takes a ref on the iobuf before adding
it, hence explicit iobuf_ref is not required if adding to the iobref.
-###iobref_merge
+### iobref_merge
```
int iobref_merge (struct iobref *to, struct iobref *from);
```
@@ -239,13 +239,13 @@ on all the iobufs added to the 'to' iobref. Hence iobref_unref should be
performed both on 'from' and 'to' iobrefs (performing iobref_unref only on 'to'
will not free the iobufs and may result in leak).
-###iobref_clear
+### iobref_clear
```
void iobref_clear (struct iobref *iobref);
```
Unreference all the iobufs in the iobref, and also unref the iobref.
-##Iobuf Leaks
+## Iobuf Leaks
If all iobuf_refs/iobuf_new do not have correspondning iobuf_unref, then the
iobufs are not freed and recurring execution of such code path may lead to huge
memory leaks. The easiest way to identify if a memory leak is caused by iobufs
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-mem-pool.md b/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-mem-pool.md
index c71aa2a8ddd..225567cbf9f 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-mem-pool.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/datastructure-mem-pool.md
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-#Mem-pool
-##Background
+# Mem-pool
+## Background
There was a time when every fop in glusterfs used to incur cost of allocations/de-allocations for every stack wind/unwind between xlators because stack/frame/*_localt_t in every wind/unwind was allocated and de-allocated. Because of all these system calls in the fop path there was lot of latency and the worst part is that most of the times the number of frames/stacks active at any time wouldn't cross a threshold. So it was decided that this threshold number of frames/stacks would be allocated in the beginning of the process only once. Get one of them from the pool of stacks/frames whenever `STACK_WIND` is performed and put it back into the pool in `STACK_UNWIND`/`STACK_DESTROY` without incurring any extra system calls. The data structures are allocated only when threshold number of such items are in active use i.e. pool is in complete use.% increase in the performance once this was added to all the common data structures (inode/fd/dict etc) in xlators throughout the stack was tremendous.
## Data structure
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ will be served from here until all the elements in the pool are in use i.e. cold
};
```
-##Life-cycle
+## Life-cycle
```
mem_pool_new (data_type, unsigned long count)
@@ -120,5 +120,5 @@ mem_pool_destroy (struct mem_pool *pool)
Deletes this pool from the `global_list` maintained by `glusterfs-ctx` and frees all the memory allocated in `mem_pool_new`.
-###How to pick pool-size
+### How to pick pool-size
This varies from work-load to work-load. Create the mem-pool with some random size and run the work-load. Take the statedump after the work-load is complete. In the statedump if `max_alloc` is always less than `cold_count` may be reduce the size of the pool closer to `max_alloc`. On the otherhand if there are lots of `pool-misses` then increase the `pool_size` by `max_stdalloc` to achieve better 'hit-rate' of the pool.
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/dirops-transactions-in-dht.md b/doc/developer-guide/dirops-transactions-in-dht.md
index 83f63be3f45..909a97001aa 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/dirops-transactions-in-dht.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/dirops-transactions-in-dht.md
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+# dirops transactions in dht
Need for transactions during operations on directories arise from two
basic design elements of DHT:
@@ -269,4 +270,4 @@ And the examples are:
* Both _dst_ and _dst/dst_ have same gfid - _gfid-src_. As observed earlier, symptom might be directory listing being incomplete
- mkdir (dst) vs renamedir ("src", "dst")
- rmdir (src) vs renamedir ("src", "dst")
- - rmdir (dst) vs renamedir ("src", "dst") \ No newline at end of file
+ - rmdir (dst) vs renamedir ("src", "dst")
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/network_compression.md b/doc/developer-guide/network_compression.md
index 7327591ef63..1222a765276 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/network_compression.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/network_compression.md
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
-#On-Wire Compression + Decompression
+# On-Wire Compression + Decompression
The 'compression translator' compresses and decompresses data in-flight
between client and bricks.
-###Working
+### Working
When a writev call occurs, the client compresses the data before sending it to
brick. On the brick, compressed data is decompressed. Similarly, when a readv
call occurs, the brick compresses the data before sending it to client. On the
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ During normal operation, this is the format of data sent over wire:
The trailer contains the CRC32 checksum and length of original uncompressed
data. This is used for validation.
-###Usage
+### Usage
Turning on compression xlator:
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ Turning on compression xlator:
gluster volume set <vol_name> network.compression on
~~~
-###Configurable parameters (optional)
+### Configurable parameters (optional)
**Compression level**
~~~
@@ -35,10 +35,10 @@ gluster volume set <vol_name> network.compression.compression-level 8
~~~
~~~
-0 : no compression
-1 : best speed
-9 : best compression
--1 : default compression
+ 0 : no compression
+ 1 : best speed
+ 9 : best compression
+-1 : default compression
~~~
**Minimum file size**
@@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ Other less frequently used parameters include `network.compression.mem-level`
and `network.compression.window-size`. More details can about these options
can be found by running `gluster volume set help` command.
-###Known Issues and Limitations
+### Known Issues and Limitations
* Compression translator cannot work with striped volumes.
* Mount point hangs when writing a file with write-behind xlator turned on. To
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ set`performance.strict-write-ordering` to on.
distribute volumes. This limitation is caused by AFR not being able to
propagate xdata. This issue has been fixed in glusterfs versions > 3.5
-###TODO
+### TODO
Although zlib offers high compression ratio, it is very slow. We can make the
translator pluggable to add support for other compression methods such as
[lz4 compression](https://code.google.com/p/lz4/)
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/syncop.md b/doc/developer-guide/syncop.md
index 4e30451f30e..bcc8bd08e01 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/syncop.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/syncop.md
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-#syncop framework
+# syncop framework
A coroutines-based, cooperative multi-tasking framework.
## Topics
diff --git a/doc/developer-guide/translator-development.md b/doc/developer-guide/translator-development.md
index 3bf7e153354..8f67bb1cae9 100644
--- a/doc/developer-guide/translator-development.md
+++ b/doc/developer-guide/translator-development.md
@@ -472,7 +472,7 @@ hello
Now let's interrupt the process and see where we are.
```
-^C
+
Program received signal SIGINT, Interrupt.
0x0000003a0060b3dc in pthread_cond_wait@@GLIBC_2.3.2 ()
from /lib64/libpthread.so.0