Tuesday, May 26, 2009

creating opportunity



If opportunity does not knock on the door, open the door and drag the opportunity inside...

Saturday, May 23, 2009

mount linux drive on windows

Earlier there used to be a software known as explore2fs which used to allow the users to scan all file-systems in read-only mode and copy files from the linux drive to windows. I had used it long time ago...

Now-a-days things have changed quite a lot. When i googled for mount ext3 file system on windows, i got tons of links and tons of tools. For some time i was confused how to go about all of it.

But then after going thru all the tools, i came across something known as ext2fsd. I got the 0.46 version downloaded - only 973KB and installed it.

Once you start the ext2fsd volume manager, you could see all the file systems on your disk. All you have got to do is

1. right click on the drive you want to mount and assign it a drive letter.
2. go to the ext2 management and choose the drive letter as mount point for fixed boot
3. ask the program to automatically mount the drive on boot
4. enable ext2fsd to auto-start during boot.

A simple reboot and i could see my linux partition as a drive on the windows explorer. No need to copy files to read them (like i used to do when i used explore2fs). It runs like a charm...

I still have to look at how to go about mounting ext4 file system on windows. Though ext4 is not that common, but it should become common soon...

Monday, May 11, 2009

The other Stall

This could happen to you tooo.........

I was barely sitting down when I heard a voice from the other stall saying:
'Hi, how are you?'

I'm not the type to start a conversation in the restroom. I don't know what got into me, but I answered, somewhat embarrassed, 'Doin' just fine!'

And the other person says:
'So what are you up to?'

What kind of question is that? At that point, I'm thinking this is too bizarre so I say:
'Uhhh, I'm like you, just sitting here.'

At this point I am just trying to get out as fast as I can when I hear another question:
'Can I come over?'

Ok, this question is just too weird for me. I figured I could politely end the conversation. I say:
'No........I'm a little busy right now!!!'

Then I hear the person say, nervously:
'Listen, I'll have to call you back. There's an idiot in the other stall who keeps answering all my questions!!'


Avoid using the mobile when you are answering a nature's call

Friday, May 01, 2009

How facebook stores billions of photos?

The new photo infrastructure merges the photo serving tier and storage tier into one physical tier. It implements a HTTP based photo server which stores photos in a generic object store called Haystack. The main requirement for the new tier was to eliminate any unnecessary metadata overhead for photo read operations, so that each read I/O operation was only reading actual photo data (instead of filesystem metadata). Haystack can be broken down into these functional layers -

* HTTP server
* Photo Store
* Haystack Object Store
* Filesystem
* Storage

In the following sections we look closely at each of the functional layers from the bottom up.

Storage

Haystack is deployed on top of commodity storage blades. The typical hardware configuration of a 2U storage blade is –

* 2 x quad-core CPUs
* 16GB – 32GB memory
* hardware raid controller with 256MB – 512MB of NVRAM cache
* 12+ 1TB SATA drives

Each storage blade provides around 10TB of usable space, configured as a RAID-6 partition managed by the hardware RAID controller. RAID-6 provides adequate redundancy and excellent read performance while keeping the storage cost down. The poor write performance is partially mitigated by the RAID controller NVRAM write-back cache. Since the reads are mostly random, the NVRAM cache is fully reserved for writes. The disk caches are disabled in order to guarantee data consistency in the event of a crash or a power loss.

Filesystem

Haystack object stores are implemented on top of files stored in a single filesystem created on top of the 10TB volume.

Photo read requests result in read() system calls at known offsets in these files, but in order to execute the reads, the filesystem must first locate the data on the actual physical volume. Each file in the filesystem is represented by a structure called an inode which contains a block map that maps the logical file offset to the physical block offset on the physical volume. For large files, the block map can be quite large depending on the type of the filesystem in use.

Block based filesystems maintain mappings for each logical block, and for large files, this information will not typically fit into the cached inode and is stored in indirect address blocks instead, which must be traversed in order to read the data for a file. There can be several layers of indirection, so a single read could result in several I/Os depending on whether or not the indirect address blocks are cached.

Extent based filesystems maintain mappings only for contiguous ranges of blocks (extents). A block map for a contiguous large file could consist of only one extent which would fit in the inode itself. However, if the file is severely fragmented and its blocks are not contiguous on the underlying volume, its block map can grow large as well. With extent based filesystems, fragmentation can be mitigated by aggressively allocating a large chunk of space whenever growing the physical file.

Currently, the filesystem of choice is XFS, an extent based filesystem providing efficient file preallocation.

Haystack Object Store

Haystack is a simple log structured (append-only) object store containing needles representing the stored objects. A Haystack consists of two files – the actual haystack store file containing the needles, plus an index file. The following figure shows the layout of the haystack store file:


The first 8KB of the haystack store is occupied by the superblock. Immediately following the superblock are needles, with each needle consisting of a header, the data, and a footer:


A needle is uniquely identified by its <Offset, Key, Alternate Key, Cookie> tuple, where the offset is the needle offset in the haystack store. Haystack doesn’t put any restriction on the values of the keys, and there can be needles with duplicate keys. Following figure shows the layout of the index file -





There is a corresponding index record for each needle in the haystack store file, and the order of the needle index records must match the order of the associated needles in the haystack store file. The index file provides the minimal metadata required to locate a particular needle in the haystack store file. Loading and organizing index records into a data structure for efficient lookup is the responsibility of the Haystack application (Photo Store in our case). The index file is not critical, as it can be rebuilt from the haystack store file if required. The main purpose of the index is to allow quick loading of the needle metadata into memory without traversing the larger Haystack store file, since the index is usually less than 1% the size of the store file.

Haystack Write Operation

A Haystack write operation synchronously appends new needles to the haystack store file. After the needles are committed to the larger Haystack store file, the corresponding index records are then written to the index file. Since the index file is not critical, the index records are written asynchronously for faster performance.

The index file is also periodically flushed to the underlying storage to limit the extent of the recovery operations caused by hardware failures. In the case of a crash or a sudden power loss, the haystack recovery process discards any partial needles in the store and truncates the haystack store file to the last valid needle. Next, it writes missing index records for any trailing orphan needles at the end of the haystack store file.

Haystack doesn’t allow overwrite of an existing needle offset, so if a needle’s data needs to be modified, a new version of it must be written using the same tuple. Applications can then assume that among the needles with duplicate keys, the one with the largest offset is the most recent one.

Haystack Read Operation

The parameters passed to the haystack read operation include the needle offset, key, alternate key, cookie and the data size. Haystack then adds the header and footer lengths to the data size and reads the whole needle from the file. The read operation succeeds only if the key, alternate key and cookie match the ones passed as arguments, if the data passes checksum validation, and if the needle has not been previously deleted (see below).

Haystack Delete Operation

The delete operation is simple – it marks the needle in the haystack store as deleted by setting a “deleted” bit in the flags field of the needle. However, the associated index record is not modified in any way so an application could end up referencing a deleted needle. A read operation for such a needle will see the “deleted” flag and fail the operation with an appropriate error. The space of a deleted needle is not reclaimed in any way. The only way to reclaim space from deleted needles is to compact the haystack (see below).

Photo Store Server.

Photo Store Server is responsible for accepting HTTP requests and translating them to the corresponding Haystack store operations. In order to minimize the number of I/Os required to retrieve photos, the server keeps an in-memory index of all photo offsets in the haystack store file. At startup, the server reads the haystack index file and populates the in-memory index. With hundreds of millions of photos per node (and the number will only grow with larger capacity drives), we need to make sure that the index will fit into the available memory. This is achieved by keeping a minimal amount of metadata in memory, just the information required to locate the images.

When a user uploads a photo, it is assigned a unique 64-bit id. The photo is then scaled down to 4 different sizes. Each scaled image has the same random cookie and 64-bit key, and the logical image size (large, medium, small, thumbnail) is stored in the alternate key. The upload server then calls the photo store server to store all four images in the Haystack.

The in-memory index keeps the following information for each photo:

Haystack uses the open source Google sparse hash data structure to keep the in-memory index small, since it only has 2 bits of overhead per entry.

Photo Store Write/Modify Operation

A write operation writes photos to the haystack and updates the in-memory index with the new entries. If the index already contains records with the same keys then this is a modification of existing photos and only the index records offsets are modified to reflect the location of the new images in the haystack store file. Photo store always assumes that if there are duplicate images (images with the same key) it is the one stored at a larger offset which is valid.

Photo Store Read Operation

The parameters passed to a read operation include haystack id and a photo key, size and cookie. The server performs a lookup in the in-memory index based on the photo key and retrieves the offset of the needle containing the requested image. If found it calls the haystack read operation to get the image. As noted above haystack delete operation doesn’t update the haystack index file record. Therefore a freshly populated in-memory index can contain stale entries for the previously deleted photos. Read of a previously deleted photo will fail and the in-memory index is updated to reflect that by setting the offset of the particular image to zero.

Photo Store Delete Operation

After calling the haystack delete operation the in-memory index is updated by setting the image offset to zero signifying that the particular image has been deleted.

Compaction

Compaction is an online operation which reclaims the space used by the deleted and duplicate needles (needles with the same key). It creates a new haystack by copying needles while skipping any duplicate or deleted entries. Once done it swaps the files and in-memory structures.

HTTP Server

The HTTP framework we use is the simple evhttp server provided with the open source libevent library. We use multiple threads, with each thread being able to serve a single HTTP request at a time. Because our workload is mostly I/O bound, the performance of the HTTP server is not critical.

Summary

Haystack presents a generic HTTP-based object store containing needles that map to stored opaque objects. Storing photos as needles in the haystack eliminates the metadata overhead by aggregating hundreds of thousands of images in a single haystack store file. This keeps the metadata overhead very small and allows us to store each needle’s location in the store file in an in-memory index. This allows retrieval of an image’s data in a minimal number of I/O operations, eliminating all unnecessary metadata overhead.