CS计算机代考程序代写 FTP scheme file system data structure cache concurrency algorithm 1.01

1.01

Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition,

File System Implementation

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File System Implementation
File-System Structure
File-System Implementation
Directory Implementation
Allocation Methods
Free-Space Management
Efficiency and Performance
Recovery
Log-Structured File Systems
NFS
Example: WAFL File System

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Objectives
To describe the details of implementing local file systems and directory structures
To describe the implementation of remote file systems
To discuss block allocation and free-block algorithms and trade-offs

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File-System Structure
File structure
Logical storage unit
Collection of related information
File system resides on secondary storage (disks)
File system organized into layers
File control block – storage structure consisting of information about a file

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Layered File System

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A Typical File Control Block

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In-Memory File System Structures
Opening a file
Reading a file

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Virtual File Systems
Virtual File Systems (VFS) provide an object-oriented way of implementing file systems.

VFS allows the same system call interface (the API) to be used for different types of file systems.

The API is to the VFS interface, rather than any specific type of file system.

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Schematic View of Virtual File System

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Directory Implementation
Linear list of file names with pointer to the data blocks.
simple to program
time-consuming to execute

Hash Table – linear list with hash data structure.
decreases directory search time
collisions – situations where two file names hash to the same location
fixed size

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Allocation Methods
An allocation method refers to how disk blocks are allocated for files:

Contiguous allocation

Linked allocation

Indexed allocation

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Contiguous Allocation
Each file occupies a set of contiguous blocks on the disk

Simple – only starting location (block #) and length (number of blocks) are required

Random access

Wasteful of space (dynamic storage-allocation problem)

Files cannot grow

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Contiguous Allocation of Disk Space

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Extent-Based Systems
Many newer file systems (e.g., Veritas File System) use a modified contiguous allocation scheme

Extent-based file systems allocate disk blocks in extents

An extent is a contiguous block of disks
Extents are allocated for file allocation
A file consists of one or more extents.

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Linked Allocation
Each file is a linked list of disk blocks: blocks may be scattered anywhere on the disk.

pointer

block =

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Linked Allocation

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File-Allocation Table

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Indexed Allocation
Brings all pointers together into the index block.
Logical view.

index table

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Example of Indexed Allocation

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Indexed Allocation – Mapping (Cont.)


outer-index
index table
file

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Combined Scheme: UNIX (4K bytes per block)

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Free-Space Management
Bit vector (n blocks)

0
1
2
n-1
bit[i] =

0  block[i] free
1  block[i] occupied
Block number calculation
(number of bits per word) *
(number of 0-value words) +
offset of first 1 bit

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Free-Space Management (Cont.)
Bit map requires extra space
Example:

block size = 212 bytes
disk size = 230 bytes (1 gigabyte)
n = 230/212 = 218 bits (or 32K bytes)
Easy to get contiguous files
Linked list (free list)
Cannot get contiguous space easily
No waste of space
Grouping
Counting

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Free-Space Management (Cont.)
Need to protect:
Pointer to free list
Bit map
Must be kept on disk
Copy in memory and disk may differ
Cannot allow for block[i] to have a situation where bit[i] = 1 in memory and bit[i] = 0 on disk
Solution:
Set bit[i] = 1 in disk
Allocate block[i]
Set bit[i] = 1 in memory

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Linked Free Space List on Disk

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Efficiency and Performance
Efficiency dependent on:
disk allocation and directory algorithms
types of data kept in file’s directory entry

Performance
disk cache – separate section of main memory for frequently used blocks
free-behind and read-ahead – techniques to optimize sequential access
improve PC performance by dedicating section of memory as virtual disk, or RAM disk

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Page Cache
A page cache caches pages rather than disk blocks using virtual memory techniques

Memory-mapped I/O uses a page cache

Routine I/O through the file system uses the buffer (disk) cache

This leads to the following figure

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I/O Without a Unified Buffer Cache

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Unified Buffer Cache
A unified buffer cache uses the same page cache to cache both memory-mapped pages and ordinary file system I/O

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I/O Using a Unified Buffer Cache

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Recovery
Consistency checking – compares data in directory structure with data blocks on disk, and tries to fix inconsistencies

Use system programs to back up data from disk to another storage device (floppy disk, magnetic tape, other magnetic disk, optical)

Recover lost file or disk by restoring data from backup

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Log Structured File Systems
Log structured (or journaling) file systems record each update to the file system as a transaction

All transactions are written to a log
A transaction is considered committed once it is written to the log
However, the file system may not yet be updated

The transactions in the log are asynchronously written to the file system
When the file system is modified, the transaction is removed from the log

If the file system crashes, all remaining transactions in the log must still be performed

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The Sun Network File System (NFS)
An implementation and a specification of a software system for accessing remote files across LANs (or WANs)

The implementation is part of the Solaris and SunOS operating systems running on Sun workstations using an unreliable datagram protocol (UDP/IP protocol and Ethernet

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NFS (Cont.)
Interconnected workstations viewed as a set of independent machines with independent file systems, which allows sharing among these file systems in a transparent manner

A remote directory is mounted over a local file system directory
The mounted directory looks like an integral subtree of the local file system, replacing the subtree descending from the local directory

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NFS (Cont.)
Specification of the remote directory for the mount operation is nontransparent; the host name of the remote directory has to be provided
Files in the remote directory can then be accessed in a transparent manner

Subject to access-rights accreditation, potentially any file system (or directory within a file system), can be mounted remotely on top of any local directory

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NFS (Cont.)
NFS is designed to operate in a heterogeneous environment of different machines, operating systems, and network architectures; the NFS specifications independent of these media

This independence is achieved through the use of RPC primitives built on top of an External Data Representation (XDR) protocol used between two implementation-independent interfaces

The NFS specification distinguishes between the services provided by a mount mechanism and the actual remote-file-access services

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Three Independent File Systems

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Mounting in NFS
Mounts
Cascading mounts

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NFS Mount Protocol
Establishes initial logical connection between server and client
Mount operation includes name of remote directory to be mounted and name of server machine storing it
Mount request is mapped to corresponding RPC and forwarded to mount server running on server machine
Export list – specifies local file systems that server exports for mounting, along with names of machines that are permitted to mount them
changes only the user’s view and does not affect the server side

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NFS Mount Protocol
Following a mount request that conforms to its export list, the server returns a file handle—a key for further accesses
File handle – a file-system identifier, and an inode number to identify the mounted directory within the exported file system
The mount operation changes only the user’s view and does not affect the server side

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NFS Protocol
Provides a set of remote procedure calls for remote file operations. The procedures support the following operations:
searching for a file within a directory
reading a set of directory entries
manipulating links and directories
accessing file attributes
reading and writing files

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NFS Protocol
NFS servers are stateless; each request has to provide a full set of arguments
(NFS V4 – very different, stateful)
Modified data must be committed to the server’s disk before results are returned to the client (lose advantages of caching)
The NFS protocol does not provide concurrency-control mechanisms

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Three Major Layers of NFS Architecture
UNIX file-system interface (based on the open, read, write, and close calls, and file descriptors)

Virtual File System (VFS) layer – distinguishes local files from remote ones, and local files are further distinguished according to their file-system types
The VFS activates file-system-specific operations to handle local requests according to their file-system types
Calls the NFS protocol procedures for remote requests

NFS service layer – bottom layer of the architecture
Implements the NFS protocol

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Schematic View of NFS Architecture

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NFS Path-Name Translation
Performed by breaking the path into component names and performing a separate NFS lookup call for every pair of component name and directory vnode

To make lookup faster, a directory name lookup cache on the client’s side holds the vnodes for remote directory names

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NFS Remote Operations
Nearly one-to-one correspondence between regular UNIX system calls and the NFS protocol RPCs (except opening and closing files)
NFS adheres to the remote-service paradigm, but employs buffering and caching techniques for the sake of performance
File-blocks cache – when a file is opened, the kernel checks with the remote server whether to fetch or revalidate the cached attributes
Cached file blocks are used only if the corresponding cached attributes are up to date
File-attribute cache – the attribute cache is updated whenever new attributes arrive from the server
Clients do not free delayed-write blocks until the server confirms that the data have been written to disk

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Example: WAFL File System
Used on Network Appliance “Filers” – distributed file system appliances
“Write-anywhere file layout”
Serves up NFS, CIFS, http, ftp
Random I/O optimized, write optimized
NVRAM for write caching
Similar to Berkeley Fast File System, with extensive modifications

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The WAFL File Layout

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Snapshots in WAFL

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11.02

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Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009
Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition,

End of Chapter 11

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