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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-1869?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12623819#action_12623819
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Tsz Wo (Nicholas), SZE commented on HADOOP-1869:
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> IOW, a last access time of 't' returned by NameNode for file implies "this
> file was last accessed during [t, t+24h)".
Basically, it is recording "access date" for the case above.
BTW, is it expensive to invoke System.currentTimeMillis()? I don't have any
idea.
> access times of HDFS files
> --------------------------
>
> Key: HADOOP-1869
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-1869
> Project: Hadoop Core
> Issue Type: New Feature
> Components: dfs
> Reporter: dhruba borthakur
> Assignee: dhruba borthakur
>
> HDFS should support some type of statistics that allows an administrator to
> determine when a file was last accessed.
> Since HDFS does not have quotas yet, it is likely that users keep on
> accumulating files in their home directories without much regard to the
> amount of space they are occupying. This causes memory-related problems with
> the namenode.
> Access times are costly to maintain. AFS does not maintain access times. I
> thind DCE-DFS does maintain access times with a coarse granularity.
> One proposal for HDFS would be to implement something like an "access bit".
> 1. This access-bit is set when a file is accessed. If the access bit is
> already set, then this call does not result in a transaction.
> 2. A FileSystem.clearAccessBits() indicates that the access bits of all files
> need to be cleared.
> An administrator can effectively use the above mechanism (maybe a daily cron
> job) to determine files that are recently used.
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