Greetings,

A blueprint has been submitted for an extension to enable Local File Systems to 
take responsibility for
certain operations, allowing generic Swift code to offload some burdens when 
these optional capabilities
are available.

The goal of this proposal is to allow an Object Server to take advantage of the 
capabilities of the ZFS
file system, but it could be applied for other enhanced file systems as well.

The blueprint is: https://blueprints.launchpad.net/swift/+spec/localfs
The etherpad description is: http://etherpad.openstack.org/YMTqYzPmZQ

This is the first of what will probably be a handful of proposals from Nexenta 
Systems, all with the goal
of enabling value added Object Servers.

So we should introduce ourselves.

Nexenta brings open source solutions built on ZFS to provide software-based 
NAS/SAN appliances. The core value of the ZFS file system is delivered in an 
enterprise class storage solution. We intend to bring  the value of ZFS as a 
local file system to Cloud Storage as well.

>From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZFS

In computing, ZFS is a combined file system and logical volume manager designed 
by Sun Microsystems. The features of ZFS include data integrity verification 
against data corruption modes (like bit rot), support for high storage 
capacities, integration of the concepts of filesystem and volume 
management,snapshots and copy-on-write clones, continuous integrity checking 
and automatic repair, RAID-Z and native NFSv4 ACLs. ZFS is implemented 
as open-source software, licensed under the Common Development and Distribution 
License (CDDL). The ZFS name is a trademark of Oracle.[3]



To take advantage of ZFS capabilities we will need to work with the Swift 
project to define how the core Swift code discovers and exploits optional 
capabilities.  This is a role similar to that of a graphics chip or network 
interface vendor working with an open source OS project. The goal is to enable 
enhanced functionality with interfaces that make  the enhanced functionality 
optional and largely vendor neutral. Other file system providers should be able 
to plug-in in their own solutions.

Nexenta appliances are based on open source operating system that utilizes 
OpenSolaris, in a near future - Illumos, kernel. This means we will end up 
testing that the python code is truly OS independent, and we anticipate 
submitting a steady but hopefully small stream of patches to fix code that was 
inadvertently Linux dependent. The goal will be to supply patches that make the 
code truly generic, and hopefully avoid just accumulating any "if linux elif 
illumos elif bsd ..." sequences in Swift code.

>From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illumos:

Illumos is a derivative of OS/Net (aka ON), which basically is 
a Solaris/OpenSolaris kernel with the bulk of the drivers, core libraries, and 
basic utilities. It is dependent on OS/Net, which Illumos will follow very 
closely while allowing to retain changes to code which might be unacceptable to 
upstream OpenSolaris. Illumos is aiming at 100% ABI (Application Binary 
Interface) compatibility with Solaris ON, focusing just on the core foundation 
blocks.



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