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(4 révisions intermédiaires par le même utilisateur non affichées) |
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− | Draft squashfs/mountimg
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− | == How can I use many small files efficiently? ==
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− |
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− | You can gain in performance and minimize the pressure under /data in
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− | the following cases:
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− | * '''case1''' your jobs are only reading under the directories where your zotfiles reside
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− | * '''case2''' your jobs are reading your zotfiles but add new files in them
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− | * '''case3''' your jobs generate zotfiles, but they will be accessed only for reading or adding new files afterwards
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− |
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− | For '''case1''':
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− | * convert your zotfiles directories to squashfs images
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− | * in your jobs:
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− | ** mount those images using '''sudo mountimg'''
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− | ** use those mounted directories for processing
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− |
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− | For '''case2''':
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− | * convert your zotfiles directories to squashfs images
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− | * in your jobs:
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− | ** mount those images using '''sudo mountimg'''
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− | ** use those mounted directories for processing but generate new files on the local filesystems of the node (ex: /tmp)
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− | ** unmount the images with '''sudo mounting -u'''
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− | ** add the new files to the images with '''mksquashfs-no-compression'''
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− |
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− | For '''case3''':
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− | * in your jobs:
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− | ** generates your zotfiles on the local filesystems of the node (ex: /tmp)
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− | ** convert them to squashfs images under /data with '''mksquashfs-no-compression'''
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− |
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− | === Creating squashfs images ===
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− | To convert your zotfiles to images, choose first the granularity
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− | apropriate to your case.
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− |
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− | '''sudo mounting''' allows actually to mount at most 4000 images on a node.
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− |
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− | If you have for example a really big directoy /data/.../DDD/DD/
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− | containing hundreds of sub-directories D1 D2 ... DN, you may prefer to
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− | make one image per such directory.
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− |
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− | Example (in bash):
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− |
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− | cd /data/.../DDD
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− | # Build a separate directory for the images and the mountpoints
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− | mkdir DD-img DD-mnt
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− | cd DD
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− | for i in D*; do
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− | # Create the image
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− | mksquashfs-no-compression $i ../DD-img/$i.squashfs
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− | # Create the mountpoint for your jobs
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− | mkdir ../DD-mnt/$i
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− | done
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− |
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− | then in your jobs, if you need to mount all those images:
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− |
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− | cd /data/.../DDD/DD-mnt || exit
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− | for i in *; do
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− | sudo mounting ../DD-img/$i.squashfs $i || exit
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− | done
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− |
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− | Some mksquashfs hints:
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− | * if the destination image exist, the source files/directories will be added (appended) to the image.
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− | ** use the '''-noappend''' if you want to re-create completely the image, or remove it first.
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− | * If a single directory is specified (i.e. mksquashfs source output_fs) the squashfs filesystem will consist of that directory, with the top-level root directory corresponding to the source directory.
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− | ** use the '''-keep-as-directory''' option to circumvent that.
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− | * If multiple source directories or files are specified, mksquashfs will merge the specified sources into a single filesystem, with the root directory containing each of the source files/directories. The name of each directory entry will be the basename of the source path. If more than one source entry maps to the same name, the conflicts are named xxx_1, xxx_2, etc. where xxx is the original name.
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− |
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− | '''mksquashfs-no-compression''' is a simple wrapper to mksquashfs that
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− | disable any kind of compression to focus on speed. Feel free to try
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− | '''mksquashfs''' directly with other options like '''-comp lzo''' to
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− | save disk space.
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− |
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− | Refs:
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− | * man mksquashfs
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− | * sudo mountimg --help
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