Operating Systems 2015F Lecture 9
Video
The video from the lecture given on October 7, 2015 is now available.
Notes
Lecture 9 --------- Beyond filesystems (& better filesystems) - what happens when they get corrupted? - what happens when we need to recover old data - what about multiple storage devices? Journaled filesystems - avoid long fsck's - strategy: write everything TWICE - write once sequentially, the second time randomly - first write pass is to a log called the journal: sequential data structure of updates to FS - example: changed inode 2203, updated data block 18523, blah - to get a full view of the FS, you have to check the journal and the regular fs - limit the size of the journal and periodically commit its changes to the rest of the FS - why it helps: corruption happens from interrupted writes - with this, an fsck is just playing back the journal Journaled filesystems work well when workload is mostly reads. But what if they are mostly writes? - bad because we're writing twice, so half (or much less) performance) - but what if we only wrote once to the log? => log-structured filesystems log-structured filesystems have a nice feature: - they don't write to the same block too often - writing to the same block with flash storage too many times is BAD, destroys the block - flash firmware implements a log-structured like "filesystem" (layer) Logical Volume Management (LVM) - filesystem just needs an array of blocks - why not merge arrays of blocks from multiple devices? Modern filesystems is to combine LVM and regular FS