- Managing File Layout (Striping) and Free Space
This chapter describes file layout (striping) and I/O options, and includes the following sections:
- the section called “ How Lustre File System Striping Works”
- the section called “ Lustre File Layout (Striping) Considerations”
- the section called “Setting the File Layout/Striping Configuration (
lfs setstripe
)” - the section called “Retrieving File Layout/Striping Information (getstripe)”
- the section called “Managing Free Space”
- the section called “Lustre Striping Internals”
In a Lustre file system, the MDS allocates objects to OSTs using either a round-robin algorithm or a weighted algorithm. When the amount of free space is well balanced (i.e., by default, when the free space across OSTs differs by less than 17%), the round-robin algorithm is used to select the next OST to which a stripe is to be written. Periodically, the MDS adjusts the striping layout to eliminate some degenerated cases in which applications that create very regular file layouts (striping patterns) preferentially use a particular OST in the sequence.
Normally the usage of OSTs is well balanced. However, if users create a small number of exceptionally large files or incorrectly specify striping parameters, imbalanced OST usage may result. When the free space across OSTs differs by more than a specific amount (17% by default), the MDS then uses weighted random allocations with a preference for allocating objects on OSTs with more free space. (This can reduce I/O performance until space usage is rebalanced again.) For a more detailed description of how striping is allocated, see the section called “Managing Free Space”.
Files can only be striped over a finite number of OSTs, based on the maximum size of the attributes that can be stored on the MDT. If the MDT is ldiskfs-based without the ea_inode
feature, a file can be striped across at most 160 OSTs. With a ZFS-based MDT, or if the ea_inode
feature is enabled for an ldiskfs-based MDT, a file can be striped across up to 2000 OSTs. For more information, see the section called “Lustre Striping Internals”.
Whether you should set up file striping and what parameter values you select depends on your needs. A good rule of thumb is to stripe over as few objects as will meet those needs and no more.
Some reasons for using striping include:
-
Providing high-bandwidth access. Many applications require high-bandwidth access to a single file, which may be more bandwidth than can be provided by a single OSS. Examples are a scientific application that writes to a single file from hundreds of nodes, or a binary executable that is loaded by many nodes when an application starts.
In cases like these, a file can be striped over as many OSSs as it takes to achieve the required peak aggregate bandwidth for that file. Striping across a larger number of OSSs should only be used when the file size is very large and/or is accessed by many nodes at a time. Currently, Lustre files can be striped across up to 2000 OSTs, the maximum stripe count for an
ldiskfs
file system. -
Improving performance when OSS bandwidth is exceeded. Striping across many OSSs can improve performance if the aggregate client bandwidth exceeds the server bandwidth and the application reads and writes data fast enough to take advantage of the additional OSS bandwidth. The largest useful stripe count is bounded by the I/O rate of the clients/jobs divided by the performance per OSS.
-
Providing space for very large files. Striping is useful when a single OST does not have enough free space to hold the entire file.
Some reasons to minimize or avoid striping:
-
Increased overhead. Striping results in more locks and extra network operations during common operations such as
stat
andunlink
. Even when these operations are performed in parallel, one network operation takes less time than 100 operations.Increased overhead also results from server contention. Consider a cluster with 100 clients and 100 OSSs, each with one OST. If each file has exactly one object and the load is distributed evenly, there is no contention and the disks on each server can manage sequential I/O. If each file has 100 objects, then the clients all compete with one another for the attention of the servers, and the disks on each node seek in 100 different directions resulting in needless contention.
-
Increased risk. When files are striped across all servers and one of the servers breaks down, a small part of each striped file is lost. By comparison, if each file has exactly one stripe, fewer files are lost, but they are lost in their entirety. Many users would prefer to lose some of their files entirely than all of their files partially.
Choosing a stripe size is a balancing act, but reasonable defaults are described below. The stripe size has no effect on a single-stripe file.
- The stripe size must be a multiple of the page size. Lustre software tools enforce a multiple of 64 KB (the maximum page size on ia64 and PPC64 nodes) so that users on platforms with smaller pages do not accidentally create files that might cause problems for ia64 clients.
- The smallest recommended stripe size is 512 KB. Although you can create files with a stripe size of 64 KB, the smallest practical stripe size is 512 KB because the Lustre file system sends 1MB chunks over the network. Choosing a smaller stripe size may result in inefficient I/O to the disks and reduced performance.
- A good stripe size for sequential I/O using high-speed networks is between 1 MB and 4 MB. In most situations, stripe sizes larger than 4 MB may result in longer lock hold times and contention during shared file access.
- The maximum stripe size is 4 GB. Using a large stripe size can improve performance when accessing very large files. It allows each client to have exclusive access to its own part of a file. However, a large stripe size can be counterproductive in cases where it does not match your I/O pattern.
- Choose a stripe pattern that takes into account the write patterns of your application. Writes that cross an object boundary are slightly less efficient than writes that go entirely to one server. If the file is written in a consistent and aligned way, make the stripe size a multiple of the
write()
size.
Use the lfs setstripe
command to create new files with a specific file layout (stripe pattern) configuration.
lfs setstripe [--size|-s stripe_size] [--count|-c stripe_count] \
[--index|-i start_ost] [--pool|-p pool_name] filename|dirname
stripe_size
The stripe_size
indicates how much data to write to one OST before moving to the next OST. The default stripe_size
is 1 MB. Passing a stripe_size
of 0 causes the default stripe size to be used. Otherwise, the stripe_size
value must be a multiple of 64 KB.
stripe_count
The stripe_count
indicates how many OSTs to use. The default stripe_count
value is 1. Setting stripe_count
to 0 causes the default stripe count to be used. Setting stripe_count
to -1 means stripe over all available OSTs (full OSTs are skipped).
start_ost
The start OST is the first OST to which files are written. The default value for start_ost
is -1, which allows the MDS to choose the starting index. This setting is strongly recommended, as it allows space and load balancing to be done by the MDS as needed. If the value of start_ost
is set to a value other than -1, the file starts on the specified OST index. OST index numbering starts at 0.
Note
If the specified OST is inactive or in a degraded mode, the MDS will silently choose another target.
Note
If you pass a start_ost
value of 0 and a stripe_count
value of 1, all files are written to OST 0, until space is exhausted. This is probably not what you meant to do. If you only want to adjust the stripe count and keep the other parameters at their default settings, do not specify any of the other parameters:
client# lfs setstripe -c stripe_count filename
pool_name
The pool_name
specifies the OST pool to which the file will be written. This allows limiting the OSTs used to a subset of all OSTs in the file system. For more details about using OST pools, see Creating and Managing OST Pools.
It is possible to specify the file layout when a new file is created using the command lfs setstripe
. This allows users to override the file system default parameters to tune the file layout more optimally for their application. Execution of an lfs setstripe
command fails if the file already exists.
The command to create a new file with a specified stripe size is similar to:
[client]# lfs setstripe -s 4M /mnt/lustre/new_file
This example command creates the new file /mnt/lustre/new_file
with a stripe size of 4 MB.
Now, when the file is created, the new stripe setting creates the file on a single OST with a stripe size of 4M:
[client]# lfs getstripe /mnt/lustre/new_file
/mnt/lustre/4mb_file
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 4194304
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 1
obdidx objid objid group
1 690550 0xa8976 0
In this example, the stripe size is 4 MB.
The command below creates a new file with a stripe count of -1
to specify striping over all available OSTs:
[client]# lfs setstripe -c -1 /mnt/lustre/full_stripe
The example below indicates that the file full_stripe
is striped over all six active OSTs in the configuration:
[client]# lfs getstripe /mnt/lustre/full_stripe
/mnt/lustre/full_stripe
obdidx objid objid group
0 8 0x8 0
1 4 0x4 0
2 5 0x5 0
3 5 0x5 0
4 4 0x4 0
5 2 0x2 0
This is in contrast to the output in the section called “Setting the Stripe Size”, which shows only a single object for the file.
In a directory, the lfs setstripe
command sets a default striping configuration for files created in the directory. The usage is the same as lfs setstripe
for a regular file, except that the directory must exist prior to setting the default striping configuration. If a file is created in a directory with a default stripe configuration (without otherwise specifying striping), the Lustre file system uses those striping parameters instead of the file system default for the new file.
To change the striping pattern for a sub-directory, create a directory with desired file layout as described above. Sub-directories inherit the file layout of the root/parent directory.
Setting the striping specification on the root
directory determines the striping for all new files created in the file system unless an overriding striping specification takes precedence (such as a striping layout specified by the application, or set using lfs setstripe
, or specified for the parent directory).
Note
The striping settings for a root
directory are, by default, applied to any new child directories created in the root directory, unless striping settings have been specified for the child directory.
You can use lfs setstripe
to create a file on a specific OST. In the following example, the file file1
is created on the first OST (OST index is 0).
$ lfs setstripe --count 1 --index 0 file1
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=file1 count=1 bs=100M
1+0 records in
1+0 records out
$ lfs getstripe file1
/mnt/testfs/file1
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
obdidx objid objid group
0 37364 0x91f4 0
The lfs getstripe
command is used to display information that shows over which OSTs a file is distributed. For each OST, the index and UUID is displayed, along with the OST index and object ID for each stripe in the file. For directories, the default settings for files created in that directory are displayed.
To see the current stripe size for a Lustre file or directory, use the lfs getstripe
command. For example, to view information for a directory, enter a command similar to:
[client]# lfs getstripe /mnt/lustre
This command produces output similar to:
/mnt/lustre
(Default) stripe_count: 1 stripe_size: 1M stripe_offset: -1
In this example, the default stripe count is 1
(data blocks are striped over a single OST), the default stripe size is 1 MB, and the objects are created over all available OSTs.
To view information for a file, enter a command similar to:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/lustre/foo
/mnt/lustre/foo
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
obdidx objid objid group
2 835487 m0xcbf9f 0
In this example, the file is located on obdidx 2
, which corresponds to the OST lustre-OST0002
. To see which node is serving that OST, run:
$ lctl get_param osc.lustre-OST0002-osc.ost_conn_uuid
osc.lustre-OST0002-osc.ost_conn_uuid=192.168.20.1@tcp
To inspect an entire tree of files, use the lfs find
command:
lfs find [--recursive | -r] file|directory ...
Introduced in Lustre 2.4Lustre software release 2.4 can be configured with multiple MDTs in the same file system. Each sub-directory can have a different MDT. To identify on which MDT a given subdirectory is located, pass the getstripe [--mdt-index|-M]
parameters to lfs
. An example of this command is provided in the section the section called “Removing an MDT from the File System”.
Introduced in Lustre 2.10
The Lustre Progressive File Layout (PFL) feature simplifies the use of Lustre so that users can expect reasonable performance for a variety of normal file IO patterns without the need to explicitly understand their IO model or Lustre usage details in advance. In particular, users do not necessarily need to know the size or concurrency of output files in advance of their creation and explicitly specify an optimal layout for each file in order to achieve good performance for both highly concurrent shared-single-large-file IO or parallel IO to many smaller per-process files.
The layout of a PFL file is stored on disk as composite layout
. A PFL file is essentially an array of sub-layout components
, with each sub-layout component being a plain layout covering different and non-overlapped extents of the file. For PFL files, the file layout is composed of a series of components, therefore it's possible that there are some file extents are not described by any components.
An example of how data blocks of PFL files are mapped to OST objects of components is shown in the following PFL object mapping diagram:
The PFL file in Figure 10, “PFL object mapping diagram” has 3 components and shows the mapping for the blocks of a 2055MB file. The stripe size for the first two components is 1MB, while the stripe size for the third component is 4MB. The stripe count is increasing for each successive component. The first component only has two 1MB blocks and the single object has a size of 2MB. The second component holds the next 254MB of the file spread over 4 separate OST objects in RAID-0, each one will have a size of 256MB / 4 objects = 64MB per object. Note the first two objects obj 2,0
and obj 2,1
have a 1MB hole at the start where the data is stored in the first component. The final component holds the next 1800MB spread over 32 OST objects. There is a 256MB / 32 = 8MB hole at the start each one for the data stored in the first two components. Each object will be 2048MB / 32 objects = 64MB per object, except the obj 3,0
that holds an extra 4MB chunk and obj 3,1
that holds an extra 3MB chunk. If more data was written to the file, only the objects in component 3 would increase in size.
When a file range with defined but not instantiated component is accessed, clients will send a Layout Intent RPC to the MDT, and the MDT would instantiate the objects of the components covering that range.
Next, some commands for user to operate PFL files are introduced and some examples of possible composite layout are illustrated as well. Lustre provides commands lfs setstripe
and lfs migrate
for users to operate PFL files. lfs setstripe
commands are used to create PFL files, add or delete components to or from an existing composite file; lfs migrate
commands are used to re-layout the data in existing files using the new layout parameter by copying the data from the existing OST(s) to the new OST(s). Also, as introduced in the previous sections, lfs getstripe
commands can be used to list the striping/component information for a given PFL file, and lfs find
commands can be used to search the directory tree rooted at the given directory or file name for the files that match the given PFL component parameters.
Note
Using PFL files requires both the client and server to understand the PFL file layout, which isn't available for Lustre 2.9 and earlier. And it will not prevent older clients from accessing non-PFL files in the filesystem.
lfs setstripe
commands are used to create PFL files, add or delete components to or from an existing composite file. (Suppose we have 8 OSTs in the following examples and stripe size is 1MB by default.)
Command
lfs setstripe
[--component-end|-E end1] [STRIPE_OPTIONS]
[--component-end|-E end2] [STRIPE_OPTIONS] ... filename
The -E
option is used to specify the end offset (in bytes or using a suffix “kMGTP”, e.g. 256M) of each component, and it also indicates the following STRIPE_OPTIONS
are for this component. Each component defines the stripe pattern of the file in the range of [start, end). The first component must start from offset 0 and all components must be adjacent with each other, no holes are allowed, so each extent will start at the end of previous extent. A -1
end offset or eof
indicates this is the last component extending to the end of file.
Example
$ lfs setstripe -E 4M -c 1 -E 64M -c 4 -E -1 -c -1 -i 4 \
/mnt/testfs/create_comp
This command creates a file with composite layout illustrated in the following figure. The first component has 1 stripe and covers [0, 4M), the second component has 4 stripes and covers [4M, 64M), and the last component stripes start at OST4, cross over all available OSTs and covers [64M, EOF).
Figure 11. Example: create a composite file
The composite layout can be output by the following command:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/create_comp
/mnt/testfs/create_comp
lcm_layout_gen: 3
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: 1
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 4194304
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 2
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304
lcme_extent.e_end: 67108864
lmm_stripe_count: 4
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: -1
lcme_id: 3
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: -1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 4
Note
Only the first component’s OST objects of the PFL file are instantiated when the layout is being set. Other instantiation is delayed to later write/truncate operations.
If we write 128M data to this PFL file, the second and third components will be instantiated:
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/testfs/create_comp bs=1M count=128
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/create_comp
/mnt/testfs/create_comp
lcm_layout_gen: 5
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: 1
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 4194304
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 2
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304
lcme_extent.e_end: 67108864
lmm_stripe_count: 4
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 1
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 1, l_fid: [0x100010000:0x2:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 2, l_fid: [0x100020000:0x2:0x0] }
- 2: { l_ost_idx: 3, l_fid: [0x100030000:0x2:0x0] }
- 3: { l_ost_idx: 4, l_fid: [0x100040000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 3
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: 8
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 4
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 4, l_fid: [0x100040000:0x3:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 5, l_fid: [0x100050000:0x2:0x0] }
- 2: { l_ost_idx: 6, l_fid: [0x100060000:0x2:0x0] }
- 3: { l_ost_idx: 7, l_fid: [0x100070000:0x2:0x0] }
- 4: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x3:0x0] }
- 5: { l_ost_idx: 1, l_fid: [0x100010000:0x3:0x0] }
- 6: { l_ost_idx: 2, l_fid: [0x100020000:0x3:0x0] }
- 7: { l_ost_idx: 3, l_fid: [0x100030000:0x3:0x0] }
Command
lfs setstripe --component-add
[--component-end|-E end1] [STRIPE_OPTIONS]
[--component-end|-E end2] [STRIPE_OPTIONS] ... filename
The option --component-add
is used to add components to an existing composite file. The extent start of the first component to be added is equal to the extent end of last component in the existing file, and all components to be added must be adjacent with each other.
Note
If the last existing component is specified by -E -1
or -E eof
, which covers to the end of the file, it must be deleted before a new one is added.
Example
$ lfs setstripe -E 4M -c 1 -E 64M -c 4 /mnt/testfs/add_comp
$ lfs setstripe --component-add -E -1 -c 4 -o 6-7,0,5 \
/mnt/testfs/add_comp
This command adds a new component which starts from the end of the last existing component to the end of file. The layout of this example is illustrated in Figure 12, “Example: add a component to an existing composite file”. The last component stripes across 4 OSTs in sequence OST6, OST7, OST0 and OST5, covers [64M, EOF).
Example: add a component to an existing composite file
The layout can be printed out by the following command:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/add_comp
/mnt/testfs/add_comp
lcm_layout_gen: 5
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: 1
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 4194304
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 2
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304
lcme_extent.e_end: 67108864
lmm_stripe_count: 4
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 1
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 1, l_fid: [0x100010000:0x2:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 2, l_fid: [0x100020000:0x2:0x0] }
- 2: { l_ost_idx: 3, l_fid: [0x100030000:0x2:0x0] }
- 3: { l_ost_idx: 4, l_fid: [0x100040000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 5
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: 4
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: -1
The component ID "lcme_id" changes as layout generation changes. It is not necessarily sequential and does not imply ordering of individual components.
Note
Similar to specifying a full-file composite layout at file creation time, --component-add
won't instantiate OST objects, the instantiation is delayed to later write/truncate operations. For example, after writing beyond the 64MB start of the file's last component, the new component has had objects allocated:
$ lfs getstripe -I5 /mnt/testfs/add_comp
/mnt/testfs/add_comp
lcm_layout_gen: 6
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: 5
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: 4
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 6
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 6, l_fid: [0x100060000:0x4:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 7, l_fid: [0x100070000:0x4:0x0] }
- 2: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x5:0x0] }
- 3: { l_ost_idx: 5, l_fid: [0x100050000:0x4:0x0] }
Command
lfs setstripe --component-del
[--component-id|-I comp_id | --component-flags comp_flags]
filename
The option --component-del
is used to remove the component(s) specified by component ID or flags from an existing file. This operation will result in any data stored in the deleted component will be lost.
The ID specified by -I
option is the numerical unique ID of the component, which can be obtained by command lfs getstripe -I
command, and the flag specified by --component-flags
option is a certain type of components, which can be obtained by command lfs getstripe --component-flags
. For now, we only have two flags init
and ^init
for instantiated and un-instantiated components respectively.
Note
Deletion must start with the last component because hole is not allowed.
Example
$ lfs getstripe -I /mnt/testfs/del_comp
1
2
5
$ lfs setstripe --component-del -I 5 /mnt/testfs/del_comp
This example deletes the component with ID 5 from file /mnt/testfs/del_comp
. If we still use the last example, the final result is illustrated in Figure 13, “Example: delete a component from an existing file”.
If you try to delete a non-last component, you will see the following error:
$ lfs setstripe -component-del -I 2 /mnt/testfs/del_comp
Delete component 0x2 from /mnt/testfs/del_comp failed. Invalid argument
error: setstripe: delete component of file '/mnt/testfs/del_comp' failed: Invalid argument
Similar to create a PFL file, you can set default PFL layout to an existing directory. After that, all the files created will inherit this layout by default.
Command
lfs setstripe
[--component-end|-E end1] [STRIPE_OPTIONS]
[--component-end|-E end2] [STRIPE_OPTIONS] ... dirname
Example
$ mkdir /mnt/testfs/pfldir
$ lfs setstripe -E 256M -c 1 -E 16G -c 4 -E -1 -S 4M -c -1 /mnt/testfs/pfldir
When you run lfs getstripe
, you will see:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/pfldir
/mnt/testfs/pfldir
lcm_layout_gen: 0
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: N/A
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 268435456
stripe_count: 1 stripe_size: 1048576 stripe_offset: -1
lcme_id: N/A
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 268435456
lcme_extent.e_end: 17179869184
stripe_count: 4 stripe_size: 1048576 stripe_offset: -1
lcme_id: N/A
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 17179869184
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
stripe_count: -1 stripe_size: 4194304 stripe_offset: -1
If you create a file under /mnt/testfs/pfldir
, the layout of that file will inherit the layout from its parent directory:
$ touch /mnt/testfs/pfldir/pflfile
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/pfldir/pflfile
/mnt/testfs/pfldir/pflfile
lcm_layout_gen: 2
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: 1
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 268435456
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: raid0
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 1
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 1, l_fid: [0x100010000:0xa:0x0] }
lcme_id: 2
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 268435456
lcme_extent.e_end: 17179869184
lmm_stripe_count: 4
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: raid0
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: -1
lcme_id: 3
lcme_flags: 0
lcme_extent.e_start: 17179869184
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: -1
lmm_stripe_size: 4194304
lmm_pattern: raid0
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: -1
Note
lfs setstripe --component-add/del
can't be run on a directory, because default layout in directory is likea config, which can be arbitrarily changed by lfs setstripe
, while layout in file may have data (OST objects) attached. If you want to delete default layout in a directory, run lfs setstripe -d *dirname*
to return the directory to the filesystem-wide defaults, like:
$ lfs setstripe -d /mnt/testfs/pfldir
$ lfs getstripe -d /mnt/testfs/pfldir
/mnt/testfs/pfldir
stripe_count: 1 stripe_size: 1048576 stripe_offset: -1
/mnt/testfs/pfldir/commonfile
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
obdidx objid objid group
2 9 0x9 0
lfs migrate
commands are used to re-layout the data in the existing files with the new layout parameter by copying the data from the existing OST(s) to the new OST(s).
Command
lfs migrate [--component-end|-E comp_end] [STRIPE_OPTIONS] ...
filename
The difference between migrate
and setstripe
is that migrate
is to re-layout the data in the existing files, while setstripe
is to create new files with the specified layout.
Example
Case1. Migrate a normal one to a composite layout
$ lfs setstripe -c 1 -S 128K /mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp
$ dd if=/dev/urandom of=/mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp bs=1M count=5
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp --yaml
/mnt/testfs/norm_to_comp
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 131072
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 7
lmm_objects:
- l_ost_idx: 7
l_fid: 0x100070000:0x2:0x0
$ lfs migrate -E 1M -S 512K -c 1 -E -1 -S 1M -c 2 \
/mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp
In this example, a 5MB size file with 1 stripe and 128K stripe size is migrated to a composite layout file with 2 components, illustrated in Figure 14, “Example: migrate normal to composite”.
The stripe information after migration is like:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp
/mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp
lcm_layout_gen: 4
lcm_entry_count: 2
lcme_id: 1
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 1048576
lmm_stripe_count: 1
lmm_stripe_size: 524288
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 2
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 1048576
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: 2
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 2
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 2, l_fid: [0x100020000:0x2:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 3, l_fid: [0x100030000:0x2:0x0] }
Case2. Migrate a composite layout to another composite layout
$ lfs setstripe -E 1M -S 512K -c 1 -E -1 -S 1M -c 2 \
/mnt/testfs/2comp_to_3comp
$ dd if=/dev/urandom of=/mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp bs=1M count=5
$ lfs migrate -E 1M -S 1M -c 2 -E 4M -S 1M -c 2 -E -1 -S 3M -c 3 \
/mnt/testfs/2comp_to_3comp
In this example, a composite layout file with 2 components is migrated a composite layout file with 3 components. If we still use the example in case1, the migration process is illustrated in Figure 15, “Example: migrate composite to composite”.
The stripe information is like:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/2comp_to_3comp
/mnt/testfs/2comp_to_3comp
lcm_layout_gen: 6
lcm_entry_count: 3
lcme_id: 1
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 0
lcme_extent.e_end: 1048576
lmm_stripe_count: 2
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 4
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 4, l_fid: [0x100040000:0x2:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 5, l_fid: [0x100050000:0x2:0x0] }
lcme_id: 2
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 1048576
lcme_extent.e_end: 4194304
lmm_stripe_count: 2
lmm_stripe_size: 1048576
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 6
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 6, l_fid: [0x100060000:0x2:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 7, l_fid: [0x100070000:0x3:0x0] }
lcme_id: 3
lcme_flags: init
lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304
lcme_extent.e_end: EOF
lmm_stripe_count: 3
lmm_stripe_size: 3145728
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 0
lmm_stripe_offset: 0
lmm_objects:
- 0: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x3:0x0] }
- 1: { l_ost_idx: 1, l_fid: [0x100010000:0x2:0x0] }
- 2: { l_ost_idx: 2, l_fid: [0x100020000:0x3:0x0] }
Case3. Migrate a composite layout to a normal one
$ lfs migrate -E 1M -S 1M -c 2 -E 4M -S 1M -c 2 -E -1 -S 3M -c 3 \
/mnt/testfs/3comp_to_norm
$ dd if=/dev/urandom of=/mnt/testfs/norm_to_2comp bs=1M count=5
$ lfs migrate -c 2 -S 2M /mnt/testfs/3comp_to_normal
In this example, a composite file with 3 components is migrated to a normal file with 2 stripes and 2M stripe size. If we still use the example in Case2, the migration process is illustrated in Figure 16, “Example: migrate composite to normal”.
The stripe information is like:
$ lfs getstripe /mnt/testfs/3comp_to_norm --yaml
/mnt/testfs/3comp_to_norm
lmm_stripe_count: 2
lmm_stripe_size: 2097152
lmm_pattern: 1
lmm_layout_gen: 7
lmm_stripe_offset: 4
lmm_objects:
- l_ost_idx: 4
l_fid: 0x100040000:0x3:0x0
- l_ost_idx: 5
l_fid: 0x100050000:0x3:0x0
lfs getstripe
commands can be used to list the striping/component information for a given PFL file. Here, only those parameters new for PFL files are shown.
Command
lfs getstripe
[--component-id|-I [comp_id]]
[--component-flags [comp_flags]]
[--component-count]
[--component-start [+-][N][kMGTPE]]
[--component-end|-E [+-][N][kMGTPE]]
dirname|filename
Example
Suppose we already have a composite file /mnt/testfs/3comp
, created by the following command:
$ lfs setstripe -E 4M -c 1 -E 64M -c 4 -E -1 -c -1 -i 4 \
/mnt/testfs/3comp
And write some data
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/mnt/testfs/3comp bs=1M count=5
Case1. List component ID and its related information
-
List all the components ID
$ lfs getstripe -I /mnt/testfs/3comp 1 2 3
-
List the detailed striping information of component ID=2
$ lfs getstripe -I2 /mnt/testfs/3comp /mnt/testfs/3comp lcm_layout_gen: 4 lcm_entry_count: 3 lcme_id: 2 lcme_flags: init lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304 lcme_extent.e_end: 67108864 lmm_stripe_count: 4 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 0 lmm_stripe_offset: 5 lmm_objects: - 0: { l_ost_idx: 5, l_fid: [0x100050000:0x2:0x0] } - 1: { l_ost_idx: 6, l_fid: [0x100060000:0x2:0x0] } - 2: { l_ost_idx: 7, l_fid: [0x100070000:0x2:0x0] } - 3: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
-
List the stripe offset and stripe count of component ID=2
$ lfs getstripe -I2 -i -c /mnt/testfs/3comp lmm_stripe_count: 4 lmm_stripe_offset: 5
Case2. List the component which contains the specified flag
-
List the flag of each component
$ lfs getstripe -component-flag -I /mnt/testfs/3comp lcme_id: 1 lcme_flags: init lcme_id: 2 lcme_flags: init lcme_id: 3 lcme_flags: 0
-
List component(s) who is not instantiated
$ lfs getstripe --component-flags=^init /mnt/testfs/3comp /mnt/testfs/3comp lcm_layout_gen: 4 lcm_entry_count: 3 lcme_id: 3 lcme_flags: 0 lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864 lcme_extent.e_end: EOF lmm_stripe_count: -1 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 4 lmm_stripe_offset: 4
Case3. List the total number of all the component(s)
-
List the total number of all the components
$ lfs getstripe --component-count /mnt/testfs/3comp 3
Case4. List the component with the specified extent start or end positions
-
List the start position in bytes of each component
$ lfs getstripe --component-start /mnt/testfs/3comp 0 4194304 67108864
-
List the start position in bytes of component ID=3
$ lfs getstripe --component-start -I3 /mnt/testfs/3comp 67108864
-
List the component with start = 64M
$ lfs getstripe --component-start=64M /mnt/testfs/3comp /mnt/testfs/3comp lcm_layout_gen: 4 lcm_entry_count: 3 lcme_id: 3 lcme_flags: 0 lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864 lcme_extent.e_end: EOF lmm_stripe_count: -1 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 4 lmm_stripe_offset: 4
-
List the component(s) with start > 5M
$ lfs getstripe --component-start=+5M /mnt/testfs/3comp /mnt/testfs/3comp lcm_layout_gen: 4 lcm_entry_count: 3 lcme_id: 3 lcme_flags: 0 lcme_extent.e_start: 67108864 lcme_extent.e_end: EOF lmm_stripe_count: -1 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 4 lmm_stripe_offset: 4
-
List the component(s) with start < 5M
$ lfs getstripe --component-start=-5M /mnt/testfs/3comp /mnt/testfs/3comp lcm_layout_gen: 4 lcm_entry_count: 3 lcme_id: 1 lcme_flags: init lcme_extent.e_start: 0 lcme_extent.e_end: 4194304 lmm_stripe_count: 1 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 0 lmm_stripe_offset: 4 lmm_objects: - 0: { l_ost_idx: 4, l_fid: [0x100040000:0x2:0x0] } lcme_id: 2 lcme_flags: init lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304 lcme_extent.e_end: 67108864 lmm_stripe_count: 4 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 0 lmm_stripe_offset: 5 lmm_objects: - 0: { l_ost_idx: 5, l_fid: [0x100050000:0x2:0x0] } - 1: { l_ost_idx: 6, l_fid: [0x100060000:0x2:0x0] } - 2: { l_ost_idx: 7, l_fid: [0x100070000:0x2:0x0] } - 3: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
-
List the component(s) with start > 3M and end < 70M
$ lfs getstripe --component-start=+3M --component-end=-70M \ /mnt/testfs/3comp /mnt/testfs/3comp lcm_layout_gen: 4 lcm_entry_count: 3 lcme_id: 2 lcme_flags: init lcme_extent.e_start: 4194304 lcme_extent.e_end: 67108864 lmm_stripe_count: 4 lmm_stripe_size: 1048576 lmm_pattern: 1 lmm_layout_gen: 0 lmm_stripe_offset: 5 lmm_objects: - 0: { l_ost_idx: 5, l_fid: [0x100050000:0x2:0x0] } - 1: { l_ost_idx: 6, l_fid: [0x100060000:0x2:0x0] } - 2: { l_ost_idx: 7, l_fid: [0x100070000:0x2:0x0] } - 3: { l_ost_idx: 0, l_fid: [0x100000000:0x2:0x0] }
lfs find
commands can be used to search the directory tree rooted at the given directory or file name for the files that match the given PFL component parameters. Here, only those parameters new for PFL files are shown. Their usages are similar to lfs getstripe
commands.
Command
lfs find directory|filename
[[!] --component-count [+-=]comp_cnt]
[[!] --component-start [+-=]N[kMGTPE]]
[[!] --component-end|-E [+-=]N[kMGTPE]]
[[!] --component-flags=comp_flags]
Note
If you use --component-xxx
options, only the composite files will be searched; but if you use ! --component-xxx
options, all the files will be searched.
Example
We use the following directory and composite files to show how lfs find
works.
$ mkdir /mnt/testfs/testdir
$ lfs setstripe -E 1M -E 10M -E eof /mnt/testfs/testdir/3comp
$ lfs setstripe -E 4M -E 20M -E 30M -E eof /mnt/testfs/testdir/4comp
$ mkdir -p /mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp
$ lfs setstripe -E 6M -E 30M -E eof /mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp
$ lfs setstripe -E 8M -E eof /mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp/2comp
$ lfs setstripe -c 1 /mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp/commnfile
Case1. Find the files that match the specified component count condition
Find the files under directory /mnt/testfs/testdir whose number of components is not equal to 3.
$ lfs find /mnt/testfs/testdir ! --component-count=3
/mnt/testfs/testdir
/mnt/testfs/testdir/4comp
/mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp/2comp
/mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp/commonfile
Case2. Find the files/dirs that match the specified component start/end condition
Find the file(s) under directory /mnt/testfs/testdir with component start = 4M and end < 70M
$ lfs find /mnt/testfs/testdir --component-start=4M -E -30M
/mnt/testfs/testdir/4comp
Case3. Find the files/dirs that match the specified component flag condition
Find the file(s) under directory /mnt/testfs/testdir whose component flags contain init
$ lfs find /mnt/testfs/testdir --component-flag=init
/mnt/testfs/testdir/3comp
/mnt/testfs/testdir/4comp
/mnt/testfs/testdir/dir_3comp/2comp
Note
Since lfs find
uses "!
" to do negative search, we don’t support flag ^init
here.
To optimize file system performance, the MDT assigns file stripes to OSTs based on two allocation algorithms. The round-robin allocator gives preference to location (spreading out stripes across OSSs to increase network bandwidth utilization) and the weighted allocator gives preference to available space (balancing loads across OSTs). Threshold and weighting factors for these two algorithms can be adjusted by the user. The MDT reserves 0.1 percent of total OST space and 32 inodes for each OST. The MDT stops object allocation for the OST if available space is less than reserved or the OST has fewer than 32 free inodes. The MDT starts object allocation when available space is twice as big as the reserved space and the OST has more than 64 free inodes. Note, clients could append existing files no matter what object allocation state is.
Introduced in Lustre 2.9The reserved space for each OST can be adjusted by the user. Use the lctl set_param
command, for example the next command reserve 1GB space for all OSTs.lctl set_param -P osp.*.reserved_mb_low=1024
This section describes how to check available free space on disks and how free space is allocated. It then describes how to set the threshold and weighting factors for the allocation algorithms.
Free space is an important consideration in assigning file stripes. The lfs df
command can be used to show available disk space on the mounted Lustre file system and space consumption per OST. If multiple Lustre file systems are mounted, a path may be specified, but is not required. Options to the lfs df
command are shown below.
Option | Description |
---|---|
-h |
Displays sizes in human readable format (for example: 1K, 234M, 5G). |
-i, --inodes |
Lists inodes instead of block usage. |
Note
The df -i
and lfs df -i
commands show the minimum number of inodes that can be created in the file system at the current time. If the total number of objects available across all of the OSTs is smaller than those available on the MDT(s), taking into account the default file striping, then df -i
will also report a smaller number of inodes than could be created. Running lfs df -i
will report the actual number of inodes that are free on each target.
For ZFS file systems, the number of inodes that can be created is dynamic and depends on the free space in the file system. The Free and Total inode counts reported for a ZFS file system are only an estimate based on the current usage for each target. The Used inode count is the actual number of inodes used by the file system.
Examples
[client1] $ lfs df
UUID 1K-blockS Used Available Use% Mounted on
mds-lustre-0_UUID 9174328 1020024 8154304 11% /mnt/lustre[MDT:0]
ost-lustre-0_UUID 94181368 56330708 37850660 59% /mnt/lustre[OST:0]
ost-lustre-1_UUID 94181368 56385748 37795620 59% /mnt/lustre[OST:1]
ost-lustre-2_UUID 94181368 54352012 39829356 57% /mnt/lustre[OST:2]
filesystem summary: 282544104 167068468 39829356 57% /mnt/lustre
[client1] $ lfs df -h
UUID bytes Used Available Use% Mounted on
mds-lustre-0_UUID 8.7G 996.1M 7.8G 11% /mnt/lustre[MDT:0]
ost-lustre-0_UUID 89.8G 53.7G 36.1G 59% /mnt/lustre[OST:0]
ost-lustre-1_UUID 89.8G 53.8G 36.0G 59% /mnt/lustre[OST:1]
ost-lustre-2_UUID 89.8G 51.8G 38.0G 57% /mnt/lustre[OST:2]
filesystem summary: 269.5G 159.3G 110.1G 59% /mnt/lustre
[client1] $ lfs df -i
UUID Inodes IUsed IFree IUse% Mounted on
mds-lustre-0_UUID 2211572 41924 2169648 1% /mnt/lustre[MDT:0]
ost-lustre-0_UUID 737280 12183 725097 1% /mnt/lustre[OST:0]
ost-lustre-1_UUID 737280 12232 725048 1% /mnt/lustre[OST:1]
ost-lustre-2_UUID 737280 12214 725066 1% /mnt/lustre[OST:2]
filesystem summary: 2211572 41924 2169648 1% /mnt/lustre[OST:2]
Two stripe allocation methods are provided:
-
Round-robin allocator - When the OSTs have approximately the same amount of free space, the round-robin allocator alternates stripes between OSTs on different OSSs, so the OST used for stripe 0 of each file is evenly distributed among OSTs, regardless of the stripe count. In a simple example with eight OSTs numbered 0-7, objects would be allocated like this:
File 1: OST1, OST2, OST3, OST4 File 2: OST5, OST6, OST7 File 3: OST0, OST1, OST2, OST3, OST4, OST5 File 4: OST6, OST7, OST0
Here are several more sample round-robin stripe orders (each letter represents a different OST on a single OSS):
3: AAA One 3-OST OSS 3x3: ABABAB Two 3-OST OSSs 3x4: BBABABA One 3-OST OSS (A) and one 4-OST OSS (B) 3x5: BBABBABA One 3-OST OSS (A) and one 5-OST OSS (B) 3x3x3: ABCABCABC Three 3-OST OSSs -
Weighted allocator - When the free space difference between the OSTs becomes significant, the weighting algorithm is used to influence OST ordering based on size (amount of free space available on each OST) and location (stripes evenly distributed across OSTs). The weighted allocator fills the emptier OSTs faster, but uses a weighted random algorithm, so the OST with the most free space is not necessarily chosen each time.
The allocation method is determined by the amount of free-space imbalance on the OSTs. When free space is relatively balanced across OSTs, the faster round-robin allocator is used, which maximizes network balancing. The weighted allocator is used when any two OSTs are out of balance by more than the specified threshold (17% by default). The threshold between the two allocation methods is defined in the file /proc/fs/*fsname*/lov/*fsname*-mdtlov/qos_threshold_rr
.
To set the qos_threshold_r
to 25
, enter this command on the MGS:
lctl set_param lov.fsname-mdtlov.qos_threshold_rr=25
The weighting priority used by the weighted allocator is set in the file /proc/fs/*fsname*/lov/*fsname*-mdtlov/qos_prio_free
. Increasing the value of qos_prio_free
puts more weighting on the amount of free space available on each OST and less on how stripes are distributed across OSTs. The default value is 91
(percent). When the free space priority is set to 100
(percent), weighting is based entirely on free space and location is no longer used by the striping algorithm.
To change the allocator weighting to 100
, enter this command on the MGS:
lctl conf_param fsname-MDT0000.lov.qos_prio_free=100
.
Note
When qos_prio_free
is set to 100
, a weighted random algorithm is still used to assign stripes, so, for example, if OST2 has twice as much free space as OST1, OST2 is twice as likely to be used, but it is not guaranteed to be used.
Individual files can only be striped over a finite number of OSTs, based on the maximum size of the attributes that can be stored on the MDT. If the MDT is ldiskfs-based without the ea_inode
feature, a file can be striped across at most 160 OSTs. With ZFS-based MDTs, or if the ea_inode
feature is enabled for an ldiskfs-based MDT, a file can be striped across up to 2000 OSTs.
Lustre inodes use an extended attribute to record on which OST each object is located, and the identifier each object on that OST. The size of the extended attribute is a function of the number of stripes.
If using an ldiskfs-based MDT, the maximum number of OSTs over which files can be striped can been raised to 2000 by enabling the ea_inode
feature on the MDT:
tune2fs -O ea_inode /dev/mdtdev
Note
The maximum stripe count for a single file does not limit the maximum number of OSTs that are in the filesystem as a whole, only the maximum possible size and maximum aggregate bandwidth for the file.