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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-10285?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15403588#comment-15403588
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Yuanbo Liu commented on HDFS-10285:
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[~umamaheswararao] Great proposal, thanks for your work.
I have two question about your design:
1.
{quote}
When user calls satisfyStoragePolicy(src) API
{quote}
Is this api only available for java program, or when user uses this command
{code}
hdfs storagepolicies -setStoragePolicy -path <path> -policy <policy>
{code}
this api is invoked by default ?
2.
what if inodes exsit in toBeSatisfiedStoragePolicyList meanwhile "mover tool"
takes effect on the directory which contains those inodes?
> Storage Policy Satisfier in Namenode
> ------------------------------------
>
> Key: HDFS-10285
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-10285
> Project: Hadoop HDFS
> Issue Type: New Feature
> Components: datanode, namenode
> Affects Versions: 2.7.2
> Reporter: Uma Maheswara Rao G
> Assignee: Uma Maheswara Rao G
> Attachments: Storage-Policy-Satisfier-in-HDFS-May10.pdf
>
>
> Heterogeneous storage in HDFS introduced the concept of storage policy. These
> policies can be set on directory/file to specify the user preference, where
> to store the physical block. When user set the storage policy before writing
> data, then the blocks could take advantage of storage policy preferences and
> stores physical block accordingly.
> If user set the storage policy after writing and completing the file, then
> the blocks would have been written with default storage policy (nothing but
> DISK). User has to run the ‘Mover tool’ explicitly by specifying all such
> file names as a list. In some distributed system scenarios (ex: HBase) it
> would be difficult to collect all the files and run the tool as different
> nodes can write files separately and file can have different paths.
> Another scenarios is, when user rename the files from one effected storage
> policy file (inherited policy from parent directory) to another storage
> policy effected directory, it will not copy inherited storage policy from
> source. So it will take effect from destination file/dir parent storage
> policy. This rename operation is just a metadata change in Namenode. The
> physical blocks still remain with source storage policy.
> So, Tracking all such business logic based file names could be difficult for
> admins from distributed nodes(ex: region servers) and running the Mover tool.
> Here the proposal is to provide an API from Namenode itself for trigger the
> storage policy satisfaction. A Daemon thread inside Namenode should track
> such calls and process to DN as movement commands.
> Will post the detailed design thoughts document soon.
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