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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-1869?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12628411#action_12628411
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dhruba borthakur commented on HADOOP-1869:
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Hi Raghu, thanks for reviewing this patch. the current patch does not do any 
adsitional security checks or audit logging while settign access times when 
invoked from getBlockLocations. In the case when FileSystem.setTimes() is 
called, it checks access priviledges and does audit logging. So, it behaves 
precisely the way you described in your comment. Please let me know if you have 
any additional comments.

> 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
>             Fix For: 0.19.0
>
>         Attachments: accessTime1.patch, accessTime4.patch, accessTime5.patch, 
> accessTime6.patch
>
>
> 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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