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CS 519: Lecture 4 I/O, Disks, and File Systems I/O Devices So far we have talked about how to abstract and manage CPU and memory Computation “inside” computer is useful only if some results are communicated “outside” of the computer I/O devices are the computer’s interface to the outside world (I/O Input/Output) Example devices: display, keyboard, mouse, speakers, network interface, and disk Computer Science, Rutgers 2 CS 519: Operating System Theory Basic Computer Structure CPU Memory Memory Bus (System Bus) Bridge I/O Bus NIC Disk Computer Science, Rutgers 3 CS 519: Operating System Theory OS: Abstractions and Access Calls OS must virtualize a wide range of devices into a few simple abstractions: Storage Hard drives, tapes, CDROM Networking Ethernet, radio, serial line Multimedia DVD, camera, microphones Operating system should provide consistent calls to access the abstractions Otherwise, programming is too hard Computer Science, Rutgers 4 CS 519: Operating System Theory User/OS Interface Same interface is used to access devices (like disks and network cards) and more abstract resources (like files) 4 main calls: open() close() read() write() Semantics depend on the type of the device (block, char, net) Computer Science, Rutgers 5 CS 519: Operating System Theory Unix I/O Calls fileHandle = open(pathName, flags, mode) a file handle is a small integer, valid only within a single process, to operate on the device or file pathname: a name in the file system. In Unix, devices are put under /dev. E.g. /dev/ttya is the first serial port, /dev/sda the first SCSI drive flags: blocking or non-blocking … mode: read only, read/write, append … errorCode = close(fileHandle) Kernel will free the data structures associated with the device Computer Science, Rutgers 6 CS 519: Operating System Theory Unix I/O Calls byteCount = read(fileHandle, buf, count) read at most count bytes from the device and put them in the byte buffer buf. Bytes placed from 0th byte. Kernel can give the process fewer bytes, user process must check the byteCount to see how many were actually returned. A negative byteCount signals an error (value is the error type) byteCount = write(fileHandle, buf, count) write at most count bytes from the buffer buf actual number written returned in byteCount a negative byteCount signals an error Computer Science, Rutgers 7 CS 519: Operating System Theory I/O Semantics From this basic interface, two different dimensions to how I/O is processed: blocking vs. non-blocking vs. asynchronous buffered vs. unbuffered The OS tries to support as many of these dimensions as possible for each device The semantics are specified in the open() system call Computer Science, Rutgers 8 CS 519: Operating System Theory Blocking vs. Non-blocking vs. Asynchronous I/O Blocking – process is blocked until all bytes in the count field are read or written E.g., for a network device, if the user wrote 1000 bytes, then the OS would only unblock the process after the write() call completes. + Easy to use and understand - If the device just can’t perform the operation (e.g. you unplug the cable), what to do? Give up an return the successful number of bytes. Non-blocking – the OS only reads or writes as many bytes as is possible without blocking the process + Returns quickly - More work for the programmer (but really good for robust programs) Computer Science, Rutgers 9 CS 519: Operating System Theory Blocking vs. Non-blocking vs. Asynchronous I/O Asynchronous – similar to non-blocking I/O. The I/O call returns immediately, without waiting for the operation to complete. I/O subsystem signals the process when I/O is done. Same advantages and disadvantages of non-blocking I/O. Difference between non-blocking and asynchronous I/O: a non-blocking read() returns immediately with whatever data available; an asynchronous read() requests a transfer that will be performed in its entirety, but that will complete at some future time. Computer Science, Rutgers 10 CS 519: Operating System Theory Buffered vs. Unbuffered I/O Sometimes we want the ease of programming of blocking I/O without the long waits if the buffers on the device are small. Buffered I/O allows the kernel to make a copy of the data and adjust to different device speeds. write(): allows the process to write bytes and continue processing read(): as device signals data is ready, kernel places data in the buffer. When process calls read(), the kernel just makes a copy. Why not use buffered I/O? -- Extra copy overhead -- Delays sending data Computer Science, Rutgers 11 CS 519: Operating System Theory Getting Back to Device Types Most OSs have three device types (in terms of transfer modes): Character devices Used for serial-line types of devices (e.g., USB port) Block devices Used for mass-storage (e.g., disks and CDROM) Network devices Used for network interfaces (e.g., Ethernet card) What you can expect from the read/write calls changes with each device type Computer Science, Rutgers 12 CS 519: Operating System Theory Character Devices Device is represented by the OS as an ordered stream of bytes bytes sent out to the device by the write system call bytes read from the device by the read system call Byte stream has no “start”, just open and start reading/writing Computer Science, Rutgers 13 CS 519: Operating System Theory Block Devices OS presents device as a large array of blocks Each block has a fixed size (1KB - 8KB is typical) User can read/write only in fixed-size blocks Unlike other devices, block devices support random access We can read or write anywhere in the device without having to ‘read all the bytes first’ Computer Science, Rutgers 14 CS 519: Operating System Theory Network Devices Like block-based I/O devices, but each write call either sends the entire block (packet), up to some maximum fixed size, or none. On the receiver, the read call returns all the bytes in the block, or none. Computer Science, Rutgers 15 CS 519: Operating System Theory Random Access: The File Pointer For random access in block devices, OS adds a concept called the file pointer A file pointer is associated with each open file or device, if the device is a block device The next read or write operates at the position in the device pointed to by the file pointer The file pointer points to bytes, not blocks Computer Science, Rutgers 16 CS 519: Operating System Theory The Seek Call To set the file pointer: absoluteOffset = lseek(fileHandle, offset, from); from specifies if the offset is absolute, from byte 0, or relative to the current file pointer position The absolute offset is returned; negative numbers signal error codes For devices, the offset should be a integral number of bytes. Computer Science, Rutgers 17 CS 519: Operating System Theory Block Device Example You want to read the 10th block of a disk Each disk block is 4096 bytes long fh = open(/dev/sda, , , ); pos = lseek(fh, 4096*9, 0); if (pos < 0) error; bytesRead = read(fh, buf, 4096); if (bytesRead < 0) error; … Computer Science, Rutgers 18 CS 519: Operating System Theory Getting and Setting Device-Specific Info Unix has an I/O control system call: ErrorCode = ioctl(fileHandle, request, object); request is a numeric command to the device Can also pass an optional, arbitrary object to a device The meaning of the command and the type of the object are device-specific Computer Science, Rutgers 19 CS 519: Operating System Theory Programmed I/O vs. DMA Programmed I/O is ok for sending commands, receiving status, and communication of a small amount of data Inefficient for large amount of data Keeps CPU busy during the transfer Programmed I/O memory operations slow Direct Memory Access Device read/write directly from/to memory Memory device typically initiated from CPU Device memory can be initiated by either the device or the CPU Computer Science, Rutgers 20 CS 519: Operating System Theory Direct Memory Access Used to avoid programmed I/O for large data movement Requires DMA controller Bypasses CPU to transfer data directly between I/O device and memory Computer Science, Rutgers 21 CS 519: Operating System Theory Programmed I/O vs. DMA CPU Memory Interconnect CPU Memory Interconnect CPU Memory Interconnect Disk Disk Disk Programmed I/O DMA DMA Device Memory Problems? Computer Science, Rutgers 22 CS 519: Operating System Theory Six Steps to Perform DMA Transfer Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 23 CS 519: Operating System Theory Life Cycle of a Blocking I/O Request Naïve processing of blocking request: device driver executed by a dedicated kernel thread; only one I/O can be processed at a time. More sophisticated approach would not block the device driver and would not require a dedicated kernel thread. driver Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 24 CS 519: Operating System Theory Life Cycle of a Blocking I/O Request Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 25 CS 519: Operating System Theory Performance I/O a major factor in system performance Demands CPU to execute device driver, kernel I/O code State save/restore due to interrupts Data copying Disk I/O is extremely slow Computer Science, Rutgers 26 CS 519: Operating System Theory Improving Performance Reduce number of context switches Reduce data copying Reduce interrupts by using large transfers, smart controllers, polling Use DMA Balance CPU, memory, bus, and I/O performance for highest throughput Computer Science, Rutgers 27 CS 519: Operating System Theory Device Driver OS module controlling an I/O device Hides the device specifics from the above layers in the kernel Supporting a common API UNIX: block or character device Block: device communicates with the CPU/memory in fixed-size blocks Character/Stream: stream of bytes Translates logical I/O into device I/O E.g., logical disk blocks into {head, track, sector} Performs data buffering and scheduling of I/O operations Structure Several synchronous entry points: device initialization, queue I/O requests, state control, read/write An asynchronous entry point to handle interrupts Computer Science, Rutgers 28 CS 519: Operating System Theory Some Common Entry Points for UNIX Device Drivers Attach: attach a new device to the system. Close: note the device is not in use. Halt: prepare for system shutdown. Init: initialize driver globals at load or boot time. Intr: handle device interrupt. Ioctl: implement control operations. Mmap: implement memory-mapping. Open: connect a process to a device. Read: character-mode input. Size: return logical size of block device. Start: initialize driver at load or boot time. Write: character-mode output. Computer Science, Rutgers 29 CS 519: Operating System Theory User to Driver Control Flow read, write, ioctl user kernel ordinary file special file file system character device block device buffer cache character queue driver Computer Science, Rutgers driver 30 CS 519: Operating System Theory Buffer Cache When an I/O request is made for a block, the buffer cache is checked first If block is missing from the cache, it is read into the buffer cache from the device Exploits locality of reference as any other cache Replacement policies similar to those for VM, but LRU is feasible UNIX Historically, UNIX has a buffer cache for the disk which does not share buffers with character/stream devices Adds overhead in a path that has become increasingly common: disk NIC Computer Science, Rutgers 31 CS 519: Operating System Theory Disks Sectors Tracks Seek time: time to move the disk head to the desired track Rotational delay: time to reach desired sector once head is over the desired track Transfer rate: rate data read/write to disk Some typical parameters: Seek: ~2-10ms Rotational delay: ~3ms for 10000 rpm Transfer rate: 200 MB/s Computer Science, Rutgers 32 CS 519: Operating System Theory Disk Scheduling Disks are at least four orders of magnitude slower than main memory The performance of disk I/O is vital for the performance of the computer system as a whole Access time (seek time + rotational delay) >> transfer time for a sector Therefore the order in which sectors are read matters a lot Disk scheduling Usually based on the position of the requested sector rather than according to the process priority Possibly reorder stream of read/write request to improve performance Computer Science, Rutgers 33 CS 519: Operating System Theory Disk Scheduling (Cont.) Several algorithms exist to schedule the servicing of disk I/O requests. We illustrate them with a request queue (tracks 0-199). 98, 183, 37, 122, 14, 124, 65, 67 Head pointer 53 Computer Science, Rutgers 34 CS 519: Operating System Theory FCFS Illustration shows total head movement of 640 cylinders. Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 35 CS 519: Operating System Theory SSTF Selects the request with the minimum seek time from the current head position. SSTF scheduling is a form of SJF scheduling; may cause starvation of some requests. Illustration shows total head movement of 236 cylinders. Computer Science, Rutgers 36 CS 519: Operating System Theory SSTF (Cont.) Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 37 CS 519: Operating System Theory SCAN The disk arm starts at one end of the disk, and moves toward the other end, servicing requests until it gets to the other end of the disk, where the head movement is reversed and servicing continues. Sometimes called the elevator algorithm. Illustration shows total head movement of 208 cylinders. Computer Science, Rutgers 38 CS 519: Operating System Theory SCAN (Cont.) Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 39 CS 519: Operating System Theory C-SCAN Provides a more uniform wait time than SCAN. The head moves from one end of the disk to the other, servicing requests as it goes. When it reaches the other end, however, it immediately returns to the beginning of the disk, without servicing any requests on the return trip. Treats the cylinders as a circular list that wraps around from the last cylinder to the first one. Computer Science, Rutgers 40 CS 519: Operating System Theory C-SCAN (Cont.) Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 41 CS 519: Operating System Theory C-LOOK Version of C-SCAN Arm only goes as far as the last request in each direction, then reverses direction immediately, without first going all the way to the end of the disk. Computer Science, Rutgers 42 CS 519: Operating System Theory C-LOOK (Cont.) Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 43 CS 519: Operating System Theory Disk Scheduling Policies Shortest-service-time-first (SSTF): pick the request that requires the least movement of the head SCAN (back and forth over disk): good service distribution C-SCAN (one way with fast return): lower service variability Problem with SSTF, SCAN, and C-SCAN: arm may not move for long time (due to rapid-fire accesses to same track) N-step SCAN: scan of N records at a time by breaking the request queue in segments of size at most N and cycling through them FSCAN: uses two sub-queues, during a scan one queue is consumed while the other one is produced Computer Science, Rutgers 44 CS 519: Operating System Theory Disk Management Low-level formatting, or physical formatting — Dividing a disk into sectors that the disk controller can read and write. To use a disk to hold files, the operating system still needs to record its own data structures on the disk. Partition the disk into one or more groups of cylinders. Logical formatting or “making a file system”. Boot block initializes system. The bootstrap is stored in ROM. Bootstrap loader program. Methods such as sector sparing used to handle bad blocks. Computer Science, Rutgers 45 CS 519: Operating System Theory Swap Space Management Virtual memory uses disk space as an extension of main memory. Swap space is necessary for pages that have been written and then replaced from memory. Swap space can be carved out of the normal file system, or, more commonly, it can be in a separate disk partition. Swap space management 4.3BSD allocates swap space when process starts; holds text segment (the program) and data segment. (Swap and heap pages are created in main memory first.) Kernel uses swap maps to track swap space use. Solaris 2 allocates swap space only when a page is forced out of physical memory, not when the virtual memory page is first created. Computer Science, Rutgers 46 CS 519: Operating System Theory Disk Reliability Several improvements in disk-use techniques involve the use of multiple disks working cooperatively. RAID is one important technique currently in common use. Computer Science, Rutgers 47 CS 519: Operating System Theory RAID Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID) A set of physical disk drives viewed by the OS as a single logical drive Replace large-capacity disks with multiple smaller-capacity drives to improve the I/O performance (at lower price) Data are distributed across physical drives in a way that enables simultaneous access to data from multiple drives Redundant disk capacity is used to compensate for the increase in the probability of failure due to multiple drives Improve availability because no single point of failure Six levels of RAID representing different design alternatives Computer Science, Rutgers 48 CS 519: Operating System Theory RAID Level 0 Does not include redundancy Data is stripped across the available disks Total storage space across all disks is divided into strips Strips are mapped round-robin to consecutive disks A set of consecutive strips that maps exactly one strip to each disk in the array is called a stripe Can you see how this improves the disk I/O bandwidth? What access pattern gives the best performance? stripe 0 Computer Science, Rutgers strip 0 strip 1 strip 2 strip 3 strip 4 ... strip 5 strip 6 strip 7 49 CS 519: Operating System Theory RAID Level 1 Redundancy achieved by duplicating all the data Every disk has a mirror disk that stores exactly the same data A read can be serviced by either of the two disks which contains the requested data (improved performance over RAID 0 if reads dominate) A write request must be done on both disks but can be done in parallel Recovery is simple but cost is high Computer Science, Rutgers strip 0 strip 0 strip 8 strip 8 strip 1 ... strip 1 strip 9 strip 9 50 CS 519: Operating System Theory RAID Levels 2 and 3 Parallel access: all disks participate in every I/O request Small strips (1 bit) since size of each read/write = # of disks * strip size RAID 2: 1-bit strips and error-correcting code. ECC is calculated across corresponding bits on data disks and stored on O(log(# data disks)) ECC disks Hamming code: can correct single-bit errors and detect double-bit errors Example configurations data disks/ECC disks: 4/3, 10/4, 32/7 Less expensive than RAID 1 but still high overhead – not needed in most environments RAID 3: 1-bit strips and a single redundant disk for parity bits P(i) = X2(i) X1(i) X0(i) On a failure, data can be reconstructed. Only tolerates one failure at a time b0 b1 Computer Science, Rutgers b2 P(b) 51 X2(i) = P(i) X1(i) X0(i) CS 519: Operating System Theory RAID Levels 4 and 5 RAID 4 Large strips with a parity strip like RAID 3 Independent access - each disk operates independently, so multiple I/O request can be satisfied in parallel Independent access small write = 2 reads + 2 writes Example: if write performed only on strip 0: P’(i) = X2(i) X1(i) X0’(i) = X2(i) X1(i) X0’(i) X0(i) X0(i) = P(i) X0’(i) X0(i) Parity disk can become bottleneck strip 0 strip 1 strip 2 P(0-2) strip 3 strip 4 strip 5 P(3-5) RAID 5 Like RAID 4 but parity strips are distributed across all disks Computer Science, Rutgers 52 CS 519: Operating System Theory Cost of Disk Storage Main memory is much more expensive than disk storage The cost/MB of hard disk storage is competitive with magnetic tape if only one tape is used per drive The cheapest tape drives and the cheapest disk drives have had about the same storage capacity over the years Computer Science, Rutgers 53 CS 519: Operating System Theory Cost of DRAM Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 54 CS 519: Operating System Theory Cost of Disks Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 55 CS 519: Operating System Theory Cost of Tapes Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 56 CS 519: Operating System Theory File System File system is an abstraction of the disk File Tracks/sectors File Control Block stores mapping info (+ protection, timestamps, size, etc) To a user process A file looks like a contiguous block of bytes (Unix) A file system provides a coherent view of a group of files A file system provides protection API: create, open, delete, read, write files Performance: throughput vs. response time Reliability: minimize the potential for lost or destroyed data E.g., RAID could be implemented in the OS (disk device driver) Computer Science, Rutgers 57 CS 519: Operating System Theory File API To read or write, need to open open() returns a handle to the opened file OS associates a (per-process) data structure with the handle This data structure maintains current “cursor” position in the stream of bytes in the file Read and write takes place from the current position Can specify a different location explicitly When done, should close the file Computer Science, Rutgers 58 CS 519: Operating System Theory In-Memory File System Structures Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 59 CS 519: Operating System Theory Files vs. Disk Disk Files ??? Computer Science, Rutgers 60 CS 519: Operating System Theory Files vs. Disk Disk Files Contiguous Layout What’s the problem with this mapping function? What’s the potential benefit of this mapping function? Computer Science, Rutgers 61 CS 519: Operating System Theory Files vs. Disk Disk Files What’s the problem with this mapping function? Computer Science, Rutgers 62 CS 519: Operating System Theory UNIX File i-nodes Computer Science, Rutgers 63 CS 519: Operating System Theory UNIX File Control Block (I-Node) Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 64 CS 519: Operating System Theory De-fragmentation Want index-based organization of disk blocks of a file for efficient random access and no fragmentation Want sequential layout of disk blocks for efficient sequential access How to reconcile? Computer Science, Rutgers 65 CS 519: Operating System Theory De-fragmentation (cont’d) Base structure is index-based Optimize for sequential access De-fragmentation: move the blocks around to simulate actual sequential layout of files Group allocation of blocks: group tracks together (cylinders). Try to allocate all blocks of a file from a single cylinder group so that they are close together. This style of grouped allocation was first proposed for the BSD Fast File System and later incorporated in ext2 (Linux). Extents: on each write that extends a file, allocate a chunk of consecutive blocks. Some modern systems use extents, e.g. VERITAS (supported in many systems like Linux and Solaris), the first commercial journaling file system. Ext4 can use them also (extents are not the default option, though). Computer Science, Rutgers 66 CS 519: Operating System Theory Free Space Management No policy issues here – just mechanism Bitmap: one bit for each block on the disk Good to find a contiguous group of free blocks Files are often accessed sequentially For 1TB disk and 4KB blocks, 32MB for the bitmap Chained free portions: pointer to the next one Not so good for sequential access (hard to find sequential blocks of appropriate size) Index: treats free space as a file Computer Science, Rutgers 67 CS 519: Operating System Theory File System OK, we have files How can we name them? How can we organize them? Computer Science, Rutgers 68 CS 519: Operating System Theory Tree-Structured Directories Source: SGG Computer Science, Rutgers 69 CS 519: Operating System Theory File Naming Each file has an associated human-readable name E.g., usr, bin, mid-term.pdf, design.pdf File name must be globally unique Otherwise how would the system know which file we are referring to? OS must maintain a mapping between a file name and the set of blocks belonging to the file Mappings are kept in directories Computer Science, Rutgers 70 CS 519: Operating System Theory Unix File System Ordinary files (uninterpreted) Directories Directory is differentiated from ordinary file by bit in i-node File of files: consists of records (directory entries), each of which contains info about a file and a pointer to its i-node Organized as a rooted tree Pathnames (relative and absolute) Contains links to parent, itself Multiple links to files can exist: hard (points to the actual file data) or symbolic (symbolic path to a hard link). Both types of links can be created with the ln utility. Removing a symbolic link does not affect the file data, whereas removing the last hard link to a file will remove the data. Computer Science, Rutgers 71 CS 519: Operating System Theory Storage Organization Info stored on the SB: size of the file system, number of free blocks, list of free blocks, index to the next free block, size of the I-node list, number of free I-nodes, list of free I-nodes, index to the next free I-node, locks for free block and free I-node lists, and flag to indicate a modification to the SB I-node contains: owner, type (directory, file, device), last modified time, last accessed time, last I-node modified time, access permissions, number of links to the file, size, and block pointers Computer Science, Rutgers 72 CS 519: Operating System Theory Unix File System (Cont’d) Tree-structured file hierarchies Mounted on existing space by using mount No hard links between different file systems Computer Science, Rutgers 73 CS 519: Operating System Theory File Naming Each file has a unique name User visible (external) name must be symbolic In a hierarchical file system, unique external names are given as pathnames (path from the root to the file) Internal names: i-node in UNIX - an index into an array of file descriptors/headers for a volume Directory: translation from external to internal name May have more than one external name for a single internal name Information about file is split between the directory and the file descriptor: name, type, size, location on disk, owner, permissions, date created, date last modified, date last access, link count Computer Science, Rutgers 74 CS 519: Operating System Theory Name Space In UNIX, “devices are files” / E.g., /dev/cdrom, /dev/tape User process accesses devices by accessing corresponding file usr C Computer Science, Rutgers 75 A B D CS 519: Operating System Theory File System Buffer Cache application: OS: read/write files translate file to disk blocks ...buffer cache ... maintains controls disk accesses: read/write blocks hardware: Any problems? Computer Science, Rutgers 76 CS 519: Operating System Theory File System Buffer Cache Disks are “stable” while memory is volatile What happens if you buffer a write and the machine crashes before the write has been saved to disk? Can use write-through but write performance will suffer In UNIX Use un-buffered I/O when writing i-nodes or pointer blocks Use buffered I/O for other writes and force sync every 30 seconds Will talk more about this in a few slides What about replacement? How can we further improve performance? Computer Science, Rutgers 77 CS 519: Operating System Theory Application-Controlled Caching application: OS: read/write files replacement policy translate file to disk blocks ...buffer cache ... maintains controls disk accesses: read/write blocks hardware: Computer Science, Rutgers 78 CS 519: Operating System Theory Application-Controlled File Caching Two-level block replacement: responsibility is split between kernel and user level A global allocation policy performed by the kernel which decides which process will give up a block A block replacement policy decided by the user: Kernel provides the candidate block as a hint to the process The process can overrule the kernel’s choice by suggesting an alternative block The suggested block is replaced by the kernel Examples of alternative replacement policy: mostrecently used (MRU) Computer Science, Rutgers 79 CS 519: Operating System Theory Sound Kernel-User Cooperation Oblivious processes should do no worse than under LRU Foolish processes should not hurt other processes Smart processes should perform better than LRU whenever possible and they should never perform worse If kernel selects block A and user chooses B instead, the kernel swaps the position of A and B in the LRU list, and creates a “placeholder” tagged with B to point to A (kernel’s choice) If the user process misses on B (i.e. it made a bad choice), and B is found in the placeholder, then the block pointed to by the placeholder is chosen (prevents hurting other processes) Source: P. Cao et al. “Implementation and performance of integrated applicationcontrolled file caching, prefetching, and disk scheduling”. ACM TOCS, 1996. Computer Science, Rutgers 80 CS 519: Operating System Theory File Sharing Can multiple processes open the same file at the same time? What happens if two or more processes write to the same file? What happens if two or more processes try to create the same file at the same time? What happens if a process deletes a file when another has it opened? Computer Science, Rutgers 81 CS 519: Operating System Theory File Sharing (Cont’d) Several possibilities for file sharing semantics Unix semantics: file associated with single physical image Writes by one user are seen immediately by others who also have the file open. One sharing mode allows file pointer to be shared. Session semantics: file may be associated temporarily with several images at the same time Writes by one user are not immediately seen by others who also have the file open. Once a file is closed, the changes made to it are visible only in sessions starting later. Immutable-file semantics: file declared as shared cannot be written. Computer Science, Rutgers 82 CS 519: Operating System Theory File System Consistency on Crashes File system almost always uses a buffer/disk cache for performance reasons Two copies of a disk block (buffer cache, disk) consistency problem if the system crashes before all the modified blocks are written back to disk This problem is critical especially for the blocks that contain control information: i-node, free-list, directory blocks Example: if the directory block (contains pointer to i-node) is written back before the i-node of new file and the system crashes, the directory structure will be inconsistent Similar case when free list is updated before i-node and the system crashes, free list will be incorrect Computer Science, Rutgers 83 CS 519: Operating System Theory File System Metadata Consistency Problem: Examples Example 1: create a new file Two updates: (1) allocate a free I-node; (2) create an entry in the directory (1) and (2) must be write-through (expensive) or (1) must be writtenback before (2) If (2) is written back first and a crash occurs before (1) is written back the directory structure is inconsistent and cannot be recovered Example 2: write a new block to a file Two updates: (1) allocate a free block; (2) update the address table of the I-node (1) and (2) must be write-through or (1) must be written-back before (2) If (2) is written back first and a crash occurs before (1) is written back the I-node structure is inconsistent and cannot be recovered 84 More on File System Consistency Utility programs for checking block and directory consistency One approach to reduce inconsistency: Write critical blocks from the buffer cache to disk immediately. Data blocks can be written to disk periodically: sync A more elaborate solution: use logs of metadata operations (“journaling”) to implement transactions. The idea is to write all metadata operations associated with a system call to a log. After these operations are logged, they are considered “committed” and the call can return. Meanwhile, the log is replayed across the actual file system structures. As changes are made, a pointer is updated to indicate which actions have been completed. When an entire transaction is completed, it is removed from the log. If the system crashes, it knows how to recover by looking at the log. Computer Science, Rutgers 85 CS 519: Operating System Theory Protection Mechanisms Files are OS objects: unique names and a finite set of operations that processes can perform on them Protection domain defines a set of {object,rights} where right is the permission to perform one of the operations At every instant in time, each process runs in some protection domain In Unix, a protection domain is {uid, gid} Protection domain in Unix is switched when running a program with SETUID/SETGID set or when the process enters the kernel mode by issuing a system call How to store info about all the protection domains? Computer Science, Rutgers 86 CS 519: Operating System Theory Protection Mechanisms (cont’d) Access Control List (ACL): associate with each object a list of all the protection domains that may access the object and how In Unix, an ACL defines three protection domains: owner, group and others Capability List (C-list): associate with each process a list of objects that may be accessed along with the operations C-list implementation issues: where/how to store them (hardware, kernel, encrypted in user space) and how to revoke them Computer Science, Rutgers 87 CS 519: Operating System Theory Protection Mechanisms (cont’d) Most systems use a combination of access control lists and capabilities. Example: In Unix, an access list is checked when first opening a file. After that, system relies on kernel information (per-process file table) that is established during the open call. This obviates the need for further protection checks. Computer Science, Rutgers 88 CS 519: Operating System Theory Log-Structured File System (LFS) As memory gets larger, buffer cache size increases increases the fraction of read requests that are satisfied from the buffer cache with no disk access In the future, most disk accesses will be writes But writes are usually done in small chunks in most file systems (control data, for instance) which makes the file system highly inefficient LFS idea: structure the entire disk as a log Periodically, or when required, all the pending writes being buffered in memory are collected and written as a single contiguous segment at the end of the log Source: M. Rosenblum and J. Ousterhout. “The design and implementation of a log-structured file system”. ACM TOCS, 1992. Computer Science, Rutgers 89 CS 519: Operating System Theory LFS segment Contain i-nodes, directory blocks and data blocks, all mixed together Each segment starts with a segment summary Segment size: 512KB - 1MB Two key issues: How to retrieve information from the log? How to manage the free space on disk? Computer Science, Rutgers 90 CS 519: Operating System Theory File Location in LFS The i-node contains the disk addresses of the file blocks as in standard UNIX But there is no fixed location for the i-node An i-node map is used to maintain the current location of each i-node i-node map blocks can also be scattered but a fixed checkpoint region on the disk identifies the location of all the i-node map blocks Usually i-node map blocks are cached in main memory most of the time, thus disk accesses for them are rare Computer Science, Rutgers 91 CS 519: Operating System Theory Segment Cleaning in LFS LFS disk is divided into segments that are written sequentially Live data must be copied out of a segment before the segment can be re-written The process of copying data out of a segment: cleaning A separate cleaner thread moves along the log, removes old segments from the end and puts live data into memory for rewriting in the next segment As a result, an LFS disk appears like a big circular buffer with the writer thread adding new segments to the front and the cleaner thread removing old segments from the end Bookkeeping is not trivial: i-node must be updated when blocks are moved to the current segment Computer Science, Rutgers 92 CS 519: Operating System Theory