Commit Graph

16 Commits (4dc00816285e5e1aa01dc96980c729ce41e963ec)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nathan Hjelm 4dc0081628 First cut at using the IOR backends for mdtest
This commit makes changes to the AIORI backends to add support for
abstacting statfs, mkdir, rmdir, stat, and access. These new
abstractions are used by a modified mdtest. Some changes:

 - Require C99. Its 2017 and most compilers now support C11. The
   benefits of using C99 include subobject naming (for aiori backend
   structs), and fixed size integers (uint64_t). There is no reason to
   use the non-standard long long type.

 - Moved some of the aiori code into aiori.c so it can be used by both
   mdtest and ior.

 - Code cleanup of mdtest. This is mostly due to the usage of the IOR
   backends rather than a mess of #if code.

Signed-off-by: Nathan Hjelm <hjelmn@lanl.gov>
2017-10-19 15:29:12 -06:00
Jeff Inman 37738dab26 Numerous changes to file-modes, small build-tweaks, and a tweak to aiori-S3.c
(Only rank-0 should create the bucket, if it doesn't already exist.)

Prepping this for a push (as an experimental S3 build) to github.
2015-05-19 09:36:28 -06:00
Jeffrey Thornton Inman b26f308191 Algorithms 'S3', 'S3_plus', and 'S3_EMC' all available.
These are variants on S3.  S3 uses the "pure" S3 interface, e.g. using
Multi-Part-Upload.  The "plus" variant enables EMC-extensions in the aws4c
library.  This allows the N:N case to use "append", in the case where
"transfer_size" != "block_size" for IOR.  In pure S3, the N:N case will
fail, because the EMC-extensions won't be enabled, and appending (which
attempts to use the EMC byte-range tricks to do this) will throw an error.

In the S3_EMC alg, N:1 uses EMCs other byte-range tricks to write different
parts of an N:1 file, and also uses append to write the parts of an N:N
file.  Preliminary tests show these EMC extensions look to improve BW by
~20%.

I put all three algs in aiori-S3.c, because it seemed some code was getting
reused.  Not sure if that's still going to make sense after the TBD, below.

TBD: Recently realized that the "pure' S3 shouldn't be trying to use
appends for anything.  In the N:N case, it should just use MPU, within each
file.  Then, there's no need for S3_plus.  We just have S3, which does MPU
for all writes where transfer_size != block_size, and uses (standard)
byte-range reads for reading.  Then S3_EMC uses "appends for N:N writes,
and byte-range writes for N:1 writes.  This separates the code for the two
algs a little more, but we might still want them in the same file.
2014-10-29 16:04:30 -06:00
Jeffrey Thornton Inman 2f066624f0 S3 with Multi-Part Upload for N:1 is working.
Testing on our EMC ViPR installation.  Therefore, we also have available
some EMC extensions.  For example, EMC supports a special "byte-range"
header-option ("Range: bytes=-1-") which allows appending to an object.
This is not needed for N:1 (where every write creates an independent part),
but is vital for N:N (where every write is considered an append, unless
"transfer-size" is the same as "block-size").

We also use a LANL-extended implementation of aws4c 0.5, which provides
some special features, and allows greater efficiency.  That is included in
this commit as a tarball.  Untar it somewhere else and build it, to produce
a library, which is linked with IOR.  (configure with --with-S3).

TBD: EMC also supports a simpler alternative to Multi-Part Upload, which
appears to have several advantages.  We'll add that in next, but wanted to
capture this as is, before I break it.
2014-10-27 13:29:44 -06:00
Jeffrey Thornton Inman ca801fe0ec First-cut at PLFS support, integrating Brett K's code.
Builds, but not running yet.  Requires 'configure ... --with-plfs', so it seems okay to leave this in as an optional build, pending further work.
2014-09-18 11:20:37 -06:00
Jeff Inman 0743eaf3fd Changed constants in aiori.h from decimal to hex
This makes for easier comparison with flags observed at runtime via gdb.
Also, it's just more ledgible this way.
2014-08-28 15:35:51 -06:00
Jeff Inman 0be8973c0e Initial commit of the new aiori-HDFS module.
This provides an HDFS back-end, allowing IOR to exercise a Hadoop
Distributed File-System, plus corresponding changes throughout, to
integrate the new module into the build.  The commit compiles at LANL, but
hasn't been run yet.  We're currently waiting for some configuration on
machines that will eventually provide HDFS.  By default, configure ignores
the HDFS module.  You have to explicitly add --with-hdfs.
2014-08-13 17:02:43 -06:00
Christopher J. Morrone 8e06f07b28 Add header to set code preferences for vi and emacs. 2012-01-08 19:43:41 -08:00
Christopher J. Morrone a60ad0b088 Impose proper file scoping and header usage.
Clean up the header files to only contain those things that
need to be shared between .c files.

Functions that are not shared are now declared static to
make their file scope explicit.  Functions that ARE shared
are declared in appropriate headers.

I am not going to claim that I caugh everything, but at
least it is a good start.
2011-11-11 17:30:20 -08:00
Christopher J. Morrone e7fea4f102 Fix prototype locations 2011-11-11 15:18:17 -08:00
Christopher J. Morrone 4ae5742f87 Replace defaults.h with a simple initializer function. 2011-11-09 16:30:01 -08:00
Christopher J. Morrone 877fcd305b Clean up lustre striping support.
Error out immediately if a lustre option was specified,
but no lustre support was compiled in.

Set a flag when any lustre string options are set, to
make the code cleaner.
2011-11-09 14:30:21 -08:00
Christopher J. Morrone 08d5629302 Rename IOR.[ch] to ior.[ch]. I don't like CAPS. 2011-10-27 18:46:29 -07:00
Christopher J. Morrone ca832bb46e Give ior a more reasonable plugin system. 2011-10-27 18:46:18 -07:00
Christopher J. Morrone 5eed1723f0 Remove comment cruft from beginnings of files. 2011-10-27 17:45:14 -07:00
Christopher J. Morrone 02fda88fd0 Begin conversion to autoconf 2011-10-27 17:45:09 -07:00