From: Daniel Phillips <phillips@phunq.net>
To: tux3@tux3.org
Cc: Martin Steigerwald <Martin@lichtvoll.de>,
linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
"Justin P. Mattock" <justinmattock@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Tux3] Tux3 report: A Golden Copy
Date: Fri, 2 Jan 2009 14:45:36 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200901021445.37062.phillips@phunq.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200901022117.24504.Martin@Lichtvoll.de>
On Friday 02 January 2009 12:17, Martin Steigerwald wrote:
> Am Mittwoch 31 Dezember 2008 schrieb Justin P. Mattock:
> > I guess this is what is confusing to me:
> > atomic commit, btree-based versioning.
>
> Ah, the buzz words. ;)
>
> The tux3 mailing list contains quite some design notes about these
> concepts. I think others can give better answers about these concepts - I
> think I understood what it is for, not the implementation details. But
> basically "atomic commit" is a strategy to have the filesystem always in
> a consistent state
Right. Atomic commit is a term that came from the database world and
was first applied to filesystems in an LKML message from Victor
Yodaiken back in 1998 as I dimly recall, and I adopted it to describe
the tree ased atomic update strategy I was developing for Tux2 at the
time. Tux3 uses a new logging variant that is supposed to avoid the
write-twice behaviour of journalling and the recursive copy behavior of
WAFL, ZFS and Btrfs, so should be pretty good at synchronous write
loads and generally reduce write traffic.
> and btree-based versioning allows to keep different
> versions of a file / directory around. And unlike other filesystem tux3
> has this per inode and not for the complete filesystem. At least if I
> understand correctly.
You do.
"Btree-based" and "versioning" are separate buzzwords. Tux3 is a btree
of btrees: the inode table is a btree, containing files that are
btrees. It was conceived to demonstrate a new method of versioning
files that puts the versioning information at the btree leaves instead
of having multiple independently rooted trees sharing subtrees:
Versioned pointers: a new method of representing snapshots
http://lwn.net/Articles/288896/
This approach lends itself to per-object versioning: each data pointer
and each inode attribute has its own version label. Making it work
per file and even per directory is a matter of clever mapping tricks to
turn global version numbers into per pointer version numbers.
But note that versioning support is still just a nice demo: the focus
has shifted to Tux3 as general purpose filesystem, with versioning
seen as a feature to be integrated after the basic Ext3-class
functionality is solid and reviewed.
> But at least it should clear that tux3 is a filesystem and not a video
> game ;).
It's kind of like a video game where you sneak through IRC channels
trying to frag bugs with your BFG.
Regards,
Daniel
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-01-02 22:45 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 31+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2008-12-31 3:35 Tux3 report: A Golden Copy Daniel Phillips
2008-12-31 7:34 ` sniper
2008-12-31 8:00 ` [Tux3] " Daniel Phillips
2008-12-31 8:14 ` Justin P. Mattock
2008-12-31 10:09 ` Martin Steigerwald
2008-12-31 17:41 ` Justin P. Mattock
2009-01-02 20:17 ` Martin Steigerwald
2009-01-02 20:36 ` Justin P. Mattock
2009-01-02 22:45 ` Daniel Phillips [this message]
2009-01-02 23:11 ` Justin P. Mattock
2009-01-03 1:19 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-03 1:32 ` Justin P. Mattock
2009-01-03 3:03 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-03 3:39 ` Justin P. Mattock
2009-01-04 3:17 ` Jamie Lokier
2009-01-04 4:15 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-04 4:29 ` Justin P. Mattock
2009-01-04 13:04 ` Theodore Tso
2009-01-05 1:10 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-05 2:13 ` Jamie Lokier
2009-01-08 2:50 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-08 4:38 ` Evgeniy Polyakov
2008-12-31 8:16 ` sniper
2008-12-31 8:31 ` Dave Chinner
2008-12-31 9:40 ` Daniel Phillips
2008-12-31 14:26 ` Andi Kleen
2008-12-31 18:14 ` sniper
2008-12-31 18:18 ` sniper
2009-01-01 9:56 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-01 14:46 ` Daniel Phillips
2009-01-01 23:58 ` Dave Chinner
Reply instructions:
You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:
* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
and reply-to-all from there: mbox
Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style
* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
switches of git-send-email(1):
git send-email \
--in-reply-to=200901021445.37062.phillips@phunq.net \
--to=phillips@phunq.net \
--cc=Martin@lichtvoll.de \
--cc=justinmattock@gmail.com \
--cc=linux-fsdevel@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org \
--cc=tux3@tux3.org \
/path/to/YOUR_REPLY
https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html
* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line
before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox