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Doug Cutting commented on HADOOP-1134: -------------------------------------- > it is potentially much slower since validating with Map/Reduce could cause a > lot of data transfer over the network Why wouldn't the map tasks run on a node where the block is local? The checksum data would need to be read over the network, but checksums are 1% the size of data, and we typically assume that net reads from a random node are 10x slower than local disk reads, so the checksum network i/o should only add 10% to the cost of reading the block, right? > Block level CRCs in HDFS > ------------------------ > > Key: HADOOP-1134 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-1134 > Project: Hadoop > Issue Type: New Feature > Components: dfs > Reporter: Raghu Angadi > Assigned To: Raghu Angadi > > Currently CRCs are handled at FileSystem level and are transparent to core > HDFS. See recent improvement HADOOP-928 ( that can add checksums to a given > filesystem ) regd more about it. Though this served us well there a few > disadvantages : > 1) This doubles namespace in HDFS ( or other filesystem implementations ). In > many cases, it nearly doubles the number of blocks. Taking namenode out of > CRCs would nearly double namespace performance both in terms of CPU and > memory. > 2) Since CRCs are transparent to HDFS, it can not actively detect corrupted > blocks. With block level CRCs, Datanode can periodically verify the checksums > and report corruptions to namnode such that name replicas can be created. > We propose to have CRCs maintained for all HDFS data in much the same way as > in GFS. I will update the jira with detailed requirements and design. This > will include same guarantees provided by current implementation and will > include a upgrade of current data. > -- This message is automatically generated by JIRA. - You can reply to this email to add a comment to the issue online.