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rocksdb/utilities/backupable/backupable_db.cc

1067 lines
35 KiB

[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// Copyright (c) 2013, Facebook, Inc. All rights reserved.
// This source code is licensed under the BSD-style license found in the
// LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. An additional grant
// of patent rights can be found in the PATENTS file in the same directory.
//
// Copyright (c) 2011 The LevelDB Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file. See the AUTHORS file for names of contributors.
#include "utilities/backupable_db.h"
#include "db/filename.h"
#include "util/coding.h"
#include "util/crc32c.h"
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
#include "rocksdb/transaction_log.h"
#define __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <algorithm>
#include <vector>
#include <map>
#include <string>
#include <limits>
#include <atomic>
#include <unordered_map>
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
namespace rocksdb {
void BackupableDBOptions::Dump(Logger* logger) const {
Log(logger, " Options.backup_dir: %s", backup_dir.c_str());
Log(logger, " Options.backup_env: %p", backup_env);
Log(logger, "Options.share_table_files: %d",
static_cast<int>(share_table_files));
Log(logger, " Options.info_log: %p", info_log);
Log(logger, " Options.sync: %d", static_cast<int>(sync));
Log(logger, " Options.destroy_old_data: %d",
static_cast<int>(destroy_old_data));
}
// -------- BackupEngineImpl class ---------
class BackupEngineImpl : public BackupEngine {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
public:
BackupEngineImpl(Env* db_env, const BackupableDBOptions& options);
~BackupEngineImpl();
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status CreateNewBackup(DB* db, bool flush_before_backup = false);
Status PurgeOldBackups(uint32_t num_backups_to_keep);
Status DeleteBackup(BackupID backup_id);
void StopBackup() {
stop_backup_.store(true, std::memory_order_release);
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
void GetBackupInfo(std::vector<BackupInfo>* backup_info);
Status RestoreDBFromBackup(BackupID backup_id, const std::string &db_dir,
const std::string &wal_dir);
Status RestoreDBFromLatestBackup(const std::string &db_dir,
const std::string &wal_dir) {
return RestoreDBFromBackup(latest_backup_id_, db_dir, wal_dir);
}
private:
struct FileInfo {
FileInfo(const std::string& fname, uint64_t sz, uint32_t checksum)
: refs(0), filename(fname), size(sz), checksum_value(checksum) {}
int refs;
const std::string filename;
const uint64_t size;
uint32_t checksum_value;
};
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
class BackupMeta {
public:
BackupMeta(const std::string& meta_filename,
std::unordered_map<std::string, FileInfo>* file_infos, Env* env)
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
: timestamp_(0), size_(0), meta_filename_(meta_filename),
file_infos_(file_infos), env_(env) {}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
~BackupMeta() {}
void RecordTimestamp() {
env_->GetCurrentTime(&timestamp_);
}
int64_t GetTimestamp() const {
return timestamp_;
}
uint64_t GetSize() const {
return size_;
}
void SetSequenceNumber(uint64_t sequence_number) {
sequence_number_ = sequence_number;
}
uint64_t GetSequenceNumber() {
return sequence_number_;
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status AddFile(const FileInfo& file_info);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
void Delete();
bool Empty() {
return files_.empty();
}
const std::vector<std::string>& GetFiles() {
return files_;
}
Status LoadFromFile(const std::string& backup_dir);
Status StoreToFile(bool sync);
private:
int64_t timestamp_;
// sequence number is only approximate, should not be used
// by clients
uint64_t sequence_number_;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
uint64_t size_;
std::string const meta_filename_;
// files with relative paths (without "/" prefix!!)
std::vector<std::string> files_;
std::unordered_map<std::string, FileInfo>* file_infos_;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Env* env_;
static const size_t max_backup_meta_file_size_ = 10 * 1024 * 1024; // 10MB
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}; // BackupMeta
inline std::string GetAbsolutePath(
const std::string &relative_path = "") const {
assert(relative_path.size() == 0 || relative_path[0] != '/');
return options_.backup_dir + "/" + relative_path;
}
inline std::string GetPrivateDirRel() const {
return "private";
}
inline std::string GetPrivateFileRel(BackupID backup_id,
bool tmp = false,
const std::string& file = "") const {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
assert(file.size() == 0 || file[0] != '/');
return GetPrivateDirRel() + "/" + std::to_string(backup_id) +
(tmp ? ".tmp" : "") + "/" + file;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
inline std::string GetSharedFileRel(const std::string& file = "",
bool tmp = false) const {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
assert(file.size() == 0 || file[0] != '/');
return "shared/" + file + (tmp ? ".tmp" : "");
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
inline std::string GetLatestBackupFile(bool tmp = false) const {
return GetAbsolutePath(std::string("LATEST_BACKUP") + (tmp ? ".tmp" : ""));
}
inline std::string GetBackupMetaDir() const {
return GetAbsolutePath("meta");
}
inline std::string GetBackupMetaFile(BackupID backup_id) const {
return GetBackupMetaDir() + "/" + std::to_string(backup_id);
}
Status GetLatestBackupFileContents(uint32_t* latest_backup);
Status PutLatestBackupFileContents(uint32_t latest_backup);
// if size_limit == 0, there is no size limit, copy everything
Status CopyFile(const std::string& src,
const std::string& dst,
Env* src_env,
Env* dst_env,
bool sync,
uint64_t* size = nullptr,
uint32_t* checksum_value = nullptr,
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
uint64_t size_limit = 0);
// if size_limit == 0, there is no size limit, copy everything
Status BackupFile(BackupID backup_id,
BackupMeta* backup,
bool shared,
const std::string& src_dir,
const std::string& src_fname, // starts with "/"
uint64_t size_limit = 0);
Status CalculateChecksum(const std::string& src,
Env* src_env,
uint64_t size_limit,
uint32_t* checksum_value);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// Will delete all the files we don't need anymore
// If full_scan == true, it will do the full scan of files/ directory
// and delete all the files that are not referenced from backuped_file_infos__
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
void GarbageCollection(bool full_scan);
// backup state data
BackupID latest_backup_id_;
std::map<BackupID, BackupMeta> backups_;
std::unordered_map<std::string, FileInfo> backuped_file_infos_;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
std::vector<BackupID> obsolete_backups_;
std::atomic<bool> stop_backup_;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// options data
BackupableDBOptions options_;
Env* db_env_;
Env* backup_env_;
// directories
unique_ptr<Directory> backup_directory_;
unique_ptr<Directory> shared_directory_;
unique_ptr<Directory> meta_directory_;
unique_ptr<Directory> private_directory_;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
static const size_t copy_file_buffer_size_ = 5 * 1024 * 1024LL; // 5MB
};
BackupEngine* BackupEngine::NewBackupEngine(
Env* db_env, const BackupableDBOptions& options) {
return new BackupEngineImpl(db_env, options);
}
BackupEngineImpl::BackupEngineImpl(Env* db_env,
const BackupableDBOptions& options)
: stop_backup_(false),
options_(options),
db_env_(db_env),
backup_env_(options.backup_env != nullptr ? options.backup_env
: db_env_) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
options_.Dump(options_.info_log);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// create all the dirs we need
backup_env_->CreateDirIfMissing(GetAbsolutePath());
backup_env_->NewDirectory(GetAbsolutePath(), &backup_directory_);
if (options_.share_table_files) {
backup_env_->CreateDirIfMissing(GetAbsolutePath(GetSharedFileRel()));
backup_env_->NewDirectory(GetAbsolutePath(GetSharedFileRel()),
&shared_directory_);
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
backup_env_->CreateDirIfMissing(GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateDirRel()));
backup_env_->NewDirectory(GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateDirRel()),
&private_directory_);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
backup_env_->CreateDirIfMissing(GetBackupMetaDir());
backup_env_->NewDirectory(GetBackupMetaDir(), &meta_directory_);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
std::vector<std::string> backup_meta_files;
backup_env_->GetChildren(GetBackupMetaDir(), &backup_meta_files);
// create backups_ structure
for (auto& file : backup_meta_files) {
BackupID backup_id = 0;
sscanf(file.c_str(), "%u", &backup_id);
if (backup_id == 0 || file != std::to_string(backup_id)) {
// invalid file name, delete that
backup_env_->DeleteFile(GetBackupMetaDir() + "/" + file);
continue;
}
assert(backups_.find(backup_id) == backups_.end());
backups_.insert(std::make_pair(
backup_id, BackupMeta(GetBackupMetaFile(backup_id),
&backuped_file_infos_, backup_env_)));
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
if (options_.destroy_old_data) { // Destory old data
for (auto& backup : backups_) {
backup.second.Delete();
obsolete_backups_.push_back(backup.first);
}
backups_.clear();
// start from beginning
latest_backup_id_ = 0;
// GarbageCollection() will do the actual deletion
} else { // Load data from storage
// load the backups if any
for (auto& backup : backups_) {
Status s = backup.second.LoadFromFile(options_.backup_dir);
if (!s.ok()) {
Log(options_.info_log, "Backup %u corrupted - deleting -- %s",
backup.first, s.ToString().c_str());
backup.second.Delete();
obsolete_backups_.push_back(backup.first);
}
}
// delete obsolete backups from the structure
for (auto ob : obsolete_backups_) {
backups_.erase(ob);
}
Status s = GetLatestBackupFileContents(&latest_backup_id_);
// If latest backup file is corrupted or non-existent
// set latest backup as the biggest backup we have
// or 0 if we have no backups
if (!s.ok() ||
backups_.find(latest_backup_id_) == backups_.end()) {
auto itr = backups_.end();
latest_backup_id_ = (itr == backups_.begin()) ? 0 : (--itr)->first;
}
}
// delete any backups that claim to be later than latest
for (auto itr = backups_.upper_bound(latest_backup_id_);
itr != backups_.end();) {
itr->second.Delete();
obsolete_backups_.push_back(itr->first);
itr = backups_.erase(itr);
}
PutLatestBackupFileContents(latest_backup_id_); // Ignore errors
GarbageCollection(true);
Log(options_.info_log,
"Initialized BackupEngine, the latest backup is %u.",
latest_backup_id_);
}
BackupEngineImpl::~BackupEngineImpl() { LogFlush(options_.info_log); }
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status BackupEngineImpl::CreateNewBackup(DB* db, bool flush_before_backup) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
std::vector<std::string> live_files;
VectorLogPtr live_wal_files;
uint64_t manifest_file_size = 0;
uint64_t sequence_number = db->GetLatestSequenceNumber();
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
s = db->DisableFileDeletions();
if (s.ok()) {
// this will return live_files prefixed with "/"
s = db->GetLiveFiles(live_files, &manifest_file_size, flush_before_backup);
}
// if we didn't flush before backup, we need to also get WAL files
if (s.ok() && !flush_before_backup) {
// returns file names prefixed with "/"
s = db->GetSortedWalFiles(live_wal_files);
}
if (!s.ok()) {
db->EnableFileDeletions();
return s;
}
BackupID new_backup_id = latest_backup_id_ + 1;
assert(backups_.find(new_backup_id) == backups_.end());
auto ret = backups_.insert(std::make_pair(
new_backup_id, BackupMeta(GetBackupMetaFile(new_backup_id),
&backuped_file_infos_, backup_env_)));
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
assert(ret.second == true);
auto& new_backup = ret.first->second;
new_backup.RecordTimestamp();
new_backup.SetSequenceNumber(sequence_number);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Log(options_.info_log, "Started the backup process -- creating backup %u",
new_backup_id);
// create temporary private dir
s = backup_env_->CreateDir(
GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateFileRel(new_backup_id, true)));
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// copy live_files
for (size_t i = 0; s.ok() && i < live_files.size(); ++i) {
uint64_t number;
FileType type;
bool ok = ParseFileName(live_files[i], &number, &type);
if (!ok) {
assert(false);
return Status::Corruption("Can't parse file name. This is very bad");
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// we should only get sst, manifest and current files here
assert(type == kTableFile || type == kDescriptorFile ||
type == kCurrentFile);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// rules:
// * if it's kTableFile, than it's shared
// * if it's kDescriptorFile, limit the size to manifest_file_size
s = BackupFile(new_backup_id,
&new_backup,
options_.share_table_files && type == kTableFile,
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
db->GetName(), /* src_dir */
live_files[i], /* src_fname */
(type == kDescriptorFile) ? manifest_file_size : 0);
}
// copy WAL files
for (size_t i = 0; s.ok() && i < live_wal_files.size(); ++i) {
if (live_wal_files[i]->Type() == kAliveLogFile) {
// we only care about live log files
// copy the file into backup_dir/files/<new backup>/
s = BackupFile(new_backup_id,
&new_backup,
false, /* not shared */
db->GetOptions().wal_dir,
live_wal_files[i]->PathName());
}
}
// we copied all the files, enable file deletions
db->EnableFileDeletions();
if (s.ok()) {
// move tmp private backup to real backup folder
s = backup_env_->RenameFile(
GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateFileRel(new_backup_id, true)), // tmp
GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateFileRel(new_backup_id, false)));
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (s.ok()) {
// persist the backup metadata on the disk
s = new_backup.StoreToFile(options_.sync);
}
if (s.ok()) {
// install the newly created backup meta! (atomic)
s = PutLatestBackupFileContents(new_backup_id);
}
if (s.ok() && options_.sync) {
unique_ptr<Directory> backup_private_directory;
backup_env_->NewDirectory(
GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateFileRel(new_backup_id, false)),
&backup_private_directory);
if (backup_private_directory != nullptr) {
backup_private_directory->Fsync();
}
if (private_directory_ != nullptr) {
private_directory_->Fsync();
}
if (meta_directory_ != nullptr) {
meta_directory_->Fsync();
}
if (shared_directory_ != nullptr) {
shared_directory_->Fsync();
}
if (backup_directory_ != nullptr) {
backup_directory_->Fsync();
}
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
// clean all the files we might have created
Log(options_.info_log, "Backup failed -- %s", s.ToString().c_str());
backups_.erase(new_backup_id);
GarbageCollection(true);
return s;
}
// here we know that we succeeded and installed the new backup
// in the LATEST_BACKUP file
latest_backup_id_ = new_backup_id;
Log(options_.info_log, "Backup DONE. All is good");
return s;
}
Status BackupEngineImpl::PurgeOldBackups(uint32_t num_backups_to_keep) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Log(options_.info_log, "Purging old backups, keeping %u",
num_backups_to_keep);
while (num_backups_to_keep < backups_.size()) {
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleting backup %u", backups_.begin()->first);
backups_.begin()->second.Delete();
obsolete_backups_.push_back(backups_.begin()->first);
backups_.erase(backups_.begin());
}
GarbageCollection(false);
return Status::OK();
}
Status BackupEngineImpl::DeleteBackup(BackupID backup_id) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleting backup %u", backup_id);
auto backup = backups_.find(backup_id);
if (backup == backups_.end()) {
return Status::NotFound("Backup not found");
}
backup->second.Delete();
obsolete_backups_.push_back(backup_id);
backups_.erase(backup);
GarbageCollection(false);
return Status::OK();
}
void BackupEngineImpl::GetBackupInfo(std::vector<BackupInfo>* backup_info) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
backup_info->reserve(backups_.size());
for (auto& backup : backups_) {
if (!backup.second.Empty()) {
backup_info->push_back(BackupInfo(
backup.first, backup.second.GetTimestamp(), backup.second.GetSize()));
}
}
}
Status BackupEngineImpl::RestoreDBFromBackup(BackupID backup_id,
const std::string& db_dir,
const std::string& wal_dir) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
auto backup_itr = backups_.find(backup_id);
if (backup_itr == backups_.end()) {
return Status::NotFound("Backup not found");
}
auto& backup = backup_itr->second;
if (backup.Empty()) {
return Status::NotFound("Backup not found");
}
Log(options_.info_log, "Restoring backup id %u\n", backup_id);
// just in case. Ignore errors
db_env_->CreateDirIfMissing(db_dir);
db_env_->CreateDirIfMissing(wal_dir);
// delete log files that might have been already in wal_dir.
// This is important since they might get replayed to the restored DB,
// which will then differ from the backuped DB
std::vector<std::string> delete_children;
db_env_->GetChildren(wal_dir, &delete_children); // ignore errors
for (auto f : delete_children) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
db_env_->DeleteFile(wal_dir + "/" + f); // ignore errors
}
// Also delete all the db_dir children. This is not so important
// because obsolete files will be deleted by DBImpl::PurgeObsoleteFiles()
delete_children.clear();
db_env_->GetChildren(db_dir, &delete_children); // ignore errors
for (auto f : delete_children) {
db_env_->DeleteFile(db_dir + "/" + f); // ignore errors
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
for (auto& file : backup.GetFiles()) {
std::string dst;
// 1. extract the filename
size_t slash = file.find_last_of('/');
// file will either be shared/<file> or private/<number>/<file>
assert(slash != std::string::npos);
dst = file.substr(slash + 1);
// 2. find the filetype
uint64_t number;
FileType type;
bool ok = ParseFileName(dst, &number, &type);
if (!ok) {
return Status::Corruption("Backup corrupted");
}
// 3. Construct the final path
// kLogFile lives in wal_dir and all the rest live in db_dir
dst = ((type == kLogFile) ? wal_dir : db_dir) +
"/" + dst;
Log(options_.info_log, "Restoring %s to %s\n", file.c_str(), dst.c_str());
uint32_t checksum_value;
s = CopyFile(GetAbsolutePath(file), dst, backup_env_, db_env_, false,
nullptr /* size */, &checksum_value);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
break;
}
const auto iter = backuped_file_infos_.find(file);
assert(iter != backuped_file_infos_.end());
if (iter->second.checksum_value != checksum_value) {
s = Status::Corruption("Checksum check failed");
break;
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
Log(options_.info_log, "Restoring done -- %s\n", s.ToString().c_str());
return s;
}
// latest backup id is an ASCII representation of latest backup id
Status BackupEngineImpl::GetLatestBackupFileContents(uint32_t* latest_backup) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
unique_ptr<SequentialFile> file;
s = backup_env_->NewSequentialFile(GetLatestBackupFile(),
&file,
EnvOptions());
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
char buf[11];
Slice data;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
s = file->Read(10, &data, buf);
if (!s.ok() || data.size() == 0) {
return s.ok() ? Status::Corruption("Latest backup file corrupted") : s;
}
buf[data.size()] = 0;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
*latest_backup = 0;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
sscanf(data.data(), "%u", latest_backup);
if (backup_env_->FileExists(GetBackupMetaFile(*latest_backup)) == false) {
s = Status::Corruption("Latest backup file corrupted");
}
return Status::OK();
}
// this operation HAS to be atomic
// writing 4 bytes to the file is atomic alright, but we should *never*
// do something like 1. delete file, 2. write new file
// We write to a tmp file and then atomically rename
Status BackupEngineImpl::PutLatestBackupFileContents(uint32_t latest_backup) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
unique_ptr<WritableFile> file;
EnvOptions env_options;
env_options.use_mmap_writes = false;
s = backup_env_->NewWritableFile(GetLatestBackupFile(true),
&file,
env_options);
if (!s.ok()) {
backup_env_->DeleteFile(GetLatestBackupFile(true));
return s;
}
char file_contents[10];
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
int len = sprintf(file_contents, "%u\n", latest_backup);
s = file->Append(Slice(file_contents, len));
if (s.ok() && options_.sync) {
file->Sync();
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = file->Close();
}
if (s.ok()) {
// atomically replace real file with new tmp
s = backup_env_->RenameFile(GetLatestBackupFile(true),
GetLatestBackupFile(false));
}
return s;
}
Status BackupEngineImpl::CopyFile(const std::string& src,
const std::string& dst, Env* src_env,
Env* dst_env, bool sync, uint64_t* size,
uint32_t* checksum_value,
uint64_t size_limit) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
unique_ptr<WritableFile> dst_file;
unique_ptr<SequentialFile> src_file;
EnvOptions env_options;
env_options.use_mmap_writes = false;
env_options.use_os_buffer = false;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (size != nullptr) {
*size = 0;
}
if (checksum_value != nullptr) {
*checksum_value = 0;
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// Check if size limit is set. if not, set it to very big number
if (size_limit == 0) {
size_limit = std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max();
}
s = src_env->NewSequentialFile(src, &src_file, env_options);
if (s.ok()) {
s = dst_env->NewWritableFile(dst, &dst_file, env_options);
}
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
unique_ptr<char[]> buf(new char[copy_file_buffer_size_]);
Slice data;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
do {
if (stop_backup_.load(std::memory_order_acquire)) {
return Status::Incomplete("Backup stopped");
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
size_t buffer_to_read = (copy_file_buffer_size_ < size_limit) ?
copy_file_buffer_size_ : size_limit;
s = src_file->Read(buffer_to_read, &data, buf.get());
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
size_limit -= data.size();
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (size != nullptr) {
*size += data.size();
}
if (checksum_value != nullptr) {
*checksum_value = crc32c::Extend(*checksum_value, data.data(),
data.size());
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
s = dst_file->Append(data);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
} while (s.ok() && data.size() > 0 && size_limit > 0);
if (s.ok() && sync) {
s = dst_file->Sync();
}
return s;
}
// src_fname will always start with "/"
Status BackupEngineImpl::BackupFile(BackupID backup_id, BackupMeta* backup,
bool shared, const std::string& src_dir,
const std::string& src_fname,
uint64_t size_limit) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
assert(src_fname.size() > 0 && src_fname[0] == '/');
std::string dst_relative = src_fname.substr(1);
std::string dst_relative_tmp;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (shared) {
dst_relative_tmp = GetSharedFileRel(dst_relative, true);
dst_relative = GetSharedFileRel(dst_relative, false);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
} else {
dst_relative_tmp = GetPrivateFileRel(backup_id, true, dst_relative);
dst_relative = GetPrivateFileRel(backup_id, false, dst_relative);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
std::string dst_path = GetAbsolutePath(dst_relative);
std::string dst_path_tmp = GetAbsolutePath(dst_relative_tmp);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
uint64_t size;
// if it's shared, we also need to check if it exists -- if it does,
// no need to copy it again
uint32_t checksum_value = 0;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (shared && backup_env_->FileExists(dst_path)) {
backup_env_->GetFileSize(dst_path, &size); // Ignore error
Log(options_.info_log, "%s already present, calculate checksum",
src_fname.c_str());
s = CalculateChecksum(src_dir + src_fname,
db_env_,
size_limit,
&checksum_value);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
} else {
Log(options_.info_log, "Copying %s", src_fname.c_str());
s = CopyFile(src_dir + src_fname,
dst_path_tmp,
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
db_env_,
backup_env_,
options_.sync,
&size,
&checksum_value,
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
size_limit);
if (s.ok() && shared) {
s = backup_env_->RenameFile(dst_path_tmp, dst_path);
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = backup->AddFile(FileInfo(dst_relative, size, checksum_value));
}
return s;
}
Status BackupEngineImpl::CalculateChecksum(const std::string& src, Env* src_env,
uint64_t size_limit,
uint32_t* checksum_value) {
*checksum_value = 0;
if (size_limit == 0) {
size_limit = std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max();
}
EnvOptions env_options;
env_options.use_mmap_writes = false;
env_options.use_os_buffer = false;
std::unique_ptr<SequentialFile> src_file;
Status s = src_env->NewSequentialFile(src, &src_file, env_options);
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
std::unique_ptr<char[]> buf(new char[copy_file_buffer_size_]);
Slice data;
do {
if (stop_backup_.load(std::memory_order_acquire)) {
return Status::Incomplete("Backup stopped");
}
size_t buffer_to_read = (copy_file_buffer_size_ < size_limit) ?
copy_file_buffer_size_ : size_limit;
s = src_file->Read(buffer_to_read, &data, buf.get());
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
size_limit -= data.size();
*checksum_value = crc32c::Extend(*checksum_value, data.data(), data.size());
} while (data.size() > 0 && size_limit > 0);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
return s;
}
void BackupEngineImpl::GarbageCollection(bool full_scan) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Log(options_.info_log, "Starting garbage collection");
std::vector<std::string> to_delete;
for (auto& itr : backuped_file_infos_) {
if (itr.second.refs == 0) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s = backup_env_->DeleteFile(GetAbsolutePath(itr.first));
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleting %s -- %s", itr.first.c_str(),
s.ToString().c_str());
to_delete.push_back(itr.first);
}
}
for (auto& td : to_delete) {
backuped_file_infos_.erase(td);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
if (!full_scan) {
// take care of private dirs -- if full_scan == true, then full_scan will
// take care of them
for (auto backup_id : obsolete_backups_) {
std::string private_dir = GetPrivateFileRel(backup_id);
Status s = backup_env_->DeleteDir(GetAbsolutePath(private_dir));
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleting private dir %s -- %s",
private_dir.c_str(), s.ToString().c_str());
}
}
obsolete_backups_.clear();
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (full_scan) {
Log(options_.info_log, "Starting full scan garbage collection");
// delete obsolete shared files
std::vector<std::string> shared_children;
backup_env_->GetChildren(GetAbsolutePath(GetSharedFileRel()),
&shared_children);
for (auto& child : shared_children) {
std::string rel_fname = GetSharedFileRel(child);
// if it's not refcounted, delete it
if (backuped_file_infos_.find(rel_fname) == backuped_file_infos_.end()) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// this might be a directory, but DeleteFile will just fail in that
// case, so we're good
Status s = backup_env_->DeleteFile(GetAbsolutePath(rel_fname));
if (s.ok()) {
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleted %s", rel_fname.c_str());
}
}
}
// delete obsolete private files
std::vector<std::string> private_children;
backup_env_->GetChildren(GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateDirRel()),
&private_children);
for (auto& child : private_children) {
BackupID backup_id = 0;
bool tmp_dir = child.find(".tmp") != std::string::npos;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
sscanf(child.c_str(), "%u", &backup_id);
if (!tmp_dir && // if it's tmp_dir, delete it
(backup_id == 0 || backups_.find(backup_id) != backups_.end())) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// it's either not a number or it's still alive. continue
continue;
}
// here we have to delete the dir and all its children
std::string full_private_path =
GetAbsolutePath(GetPrivateFileRel(backup_id, tmp_dir));
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
std::vector<std::string> subchildren;
backup_env_->GetChildren(full_private_path, &subchildren);
for (auto& subchild : subchildren) {
Status s = backup_env_->DeleteFile(full_private_path + subchild);
if (s.ok()) {
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleted %s",
(full_private_path + subchild).c_str());
}
}
// finally delete the private dir
Status s = backup_env_->DeleteDir(full_private_path);
Log(options_.info_log, "Deleted dir %s -- %s", full_private_path.c_str(),
s.ToString().c_str());
}
}
}
// ------- BackupMeta class --------
Status BackupEngineImpl::BackupMeta::AddFile(const FileInfo& file_info) {
size_ += file_info.size;
files_.push_back(file_info.filename);
auto itr = file_infos_->find(file_info.filename);
if (itr == file_infos_->end()) {
auto ret = file_infos_->insert({file_info.filename, file_info});
if (ret.second) {
ret.first->second.refs = 1;
} else {
// if this happens, something is seriously wrong
return Status::Corruption("In memory metadata insertion error");
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
} else {
if (itr->second.checksum_value != file_info.checksum_value) {
return Status::Corruption("Checksum mismatch for existing backup file");
}
++itr->second.refs; // increase refcount if already present
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
return Status::OK();
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
void BackupEngineImpl::BackupMeta::Delete() {
for (const auto& file : files_) {
auto itr = file_infos_->find(file);
assert(itr != file_infos_->end());
--(itr->second.refs); // decrease refcount
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
files_.clear();
// delete meta file
env_->DeleteFile(meta_filename_);
timestamp_ = 0;
}
// each backup meta file is of the format:
// <timestamp>
// <seq number>
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// <number of files>
// <file1> <crc32(literal string)> <crc32_value>
// <file2> <crc32(literal string)> <crc32_value>
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// ...
Status BackupEngineImpl::BackupMeta::LoadFromFile(
const std::string& backup_dir) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
assert(Empty());
Status s;
unique_ptr<SequentialFile> backup_meta_file;
s = env_->NewSequentialFile(meta_filename_, &backup_meta_file, EnvOptions());
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
unique_ptr<char[]> buf(new char[max_backup_meta_file_size_ + 1]);
Slice data;
s = backup_meta_file->Read(max_backup_meta_file_size_, &data, buf.get());
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (!s.ok() || data.size() == max_backup_meta_file_size_) {
return s.ok() ? Status::Corruption("File size too big") : s;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
buf[data.size()] = 0;
uint32_t num_files = 0;
int bytes_read = 0;
sscanf(data.data(), "%" PRId64 "%n", &timestamp_, &bytes_read);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
data.remove_prefix(bytes_read + 1); // +1 for '\n'
sscanf(data.data(), "%" PRIu64 "%n", &sequence_number_, &bytes_read);
data.remove_prefix(bytes_read + 1); // +1 for '\n'
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
sscanf(data.data(), "%u%n", &num_files, &bytes_read);
data.remove_prefix(bytes_read + 1); // +1 for '\n'
std::vector<FileInfo> files;
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
for (uint32_t i = 0; s.ok() && i < num_files; ++i) {
auto line = GetSliceUntil(&data, '\n');
std::string filename = GetSliceUntil(&line, ' ').ToString();
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
uint64_t size;
s = env_->GetFileSize(backup_dir + "/" + filename, &size);
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
if (line.empty()) {
return Status::Corruption("File checksum is missing");
}
uint32_t checksum_value = 0;
if (line.starts_with("crc32 ")) {
line.remove_prefix(6);
sscanf(line.data(), "%u", &checksum_value);
if (memcmp(line.data(), std::to_string(checksum_value).c_str(),
line.size() - 1) != 0) {
return Status::Corruption("Invalid checksum value");
}
} else {
return Status::Corruption("Unknown checksum type");
}
files.emplace_back(filename, size, checksum_value);
}
if (s.ok() && data.size() > 0) {
// file has to be read completely. if not, we count it as corruption
s = Status::Corruption("Tailing data in backup meta file");
}
if (s.ok()) {
for (const auto& file_info : files) {
s = AddFile(file_info);
if (!s.ok()) {
break;
}
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
return s;
}
Status BackupEngineImpl::BackupMeta::StoreToFile(bool sync) {
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
Status s;
unique_ptr<WritableFile> backup_meta_file;
EnvOptions env_options;
env_options.use_mmap_writes = false;
s = env_->NewWritableFile(meta_filename_ + ".tmp", &backup_meta_file,
env_options);
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
unique_ptr<char[]> buf(new char[max_backup_meta_file_size_]);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
int len = 0, buf_size = max_backup_meta_file_size_;
len += snprintf(buf.get(), buf_size, "%" PRId64 "\n", timestamp_);
len += snprintf(buf.get() + len, buf_size - len, "%" PRIu64 "\n",
sequence_number_);
len += snprintf(buf.get() + len, buf_size - len, "%zu\n", files_.size());
for (const auto& file : files_) {
const auto& iter = file_infos_->find(file);
assert(iter != file_infos_->end());
// use crc32 for now, switch to something else if needed
len += snprintf(buf.get() + len, buf_size - len, "%s crc32 %u\n",
file.c_str(), iter->second.checksum_value);
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
}
s = backup_meta_file->Append(Slice(buf.get(), (size_t)len));
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
if (s.ok() && sync) {
s = backup_meta_file->Sync();
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = backup_meta_file->Close();
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = env_->RenameFile(meta_filename_ + ".tmp", meta_filename_);
}
return s;
}
// --- BackupableDB methods --------
BackupableDB::BackupableDB(DB* db, const BackupableDBOptions& options)
: StackableDB(db),
backup_engine_(new BackupEngineImpl(db->GetEnv(), options)) {}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
BackupableDB::~BackupableDB() {
delete backup_engine_;
}
Status BackupableDB::CreateNewBackup(bool flush_before_backup) {
return backup_engine_->CreateNewBackup(this, flush_before_backup);
}
void BackupableDB::GetBackupInfo(std::vector<BackupInfo>* backup_info) {
backup_engine_->GetBackupInfo(backup_info);
}
Status BackupableDB::PurgeOldBackups(uint32_t num_backups_to_keep) {
return backup_engine_->PurgeOldBackups(num_backups_to_keep);
}
Status BackupableDB::DeleteBackup(BackupID backup_id) {
return backup_engine_->DeleteBackup(backup_id);
}
void BackupableDB::StopBackup() {
backup_engine_->StopBackup();
}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
// --- RestoreBackupableDB methods ------
RestoreBackupableDB::RestoreBackupableDB(Env* db_env,
const BackupableDBOptions& options)
: backup_engine_(new BackupEngineImpl(db_env, options)) {}
[RocksDB] BackupableDB Summary: In this diff I present you BackupableDB v1. You can easily use it to backup your DB and it will do incremental snapshots for you. Let's first describe how you would use BackupableDB. It's inheriting StackableDB interface so you can easily construct it with your DB object -- it will add a method RollTheSnapshot() to the DB object. When you call RollTheSnapshot(), current snapshot of the DB will be stored in the backup dir. To restore, you can just call RestoreDBFromBackup() on a BackupableDB (which is a static method) and it will restore all files from the backup dir. In the next version, it will even support automatic backuping every X minutes. There are multiple things you can configure: 1. backup_env and db_env can be different, which is awesome because then you can easily backup to HDFS or wherever you feel like. 2. sync - if true, it *guarantees* backup consistency on machine reboot 3. number of snapshots to keep - this will keep last N snapshots around if you want, for some reason, be able to restore from an earlier snapshot. All the backuping is done in incremental fashion - if we already have 00010.sst, we will not copy it again. *IMPORTANT* -- This is based on assumption that 00010.sst never changes - two files named 00010.sst from the same DB will always be exactly the same. Is this true? I always copy manifest, current and log files. 4. You can decide if you want to flush the memtables before you backup, or you're fine with backing up the log files -- either way, you get a complete and consistent view of the database at a time of backup. 5. More things you can find in BackupableDBOptions Here is the directory structure I use: backup_dir/CURRENT_SNAPSHOT - just 4 bytes holding the latest snapshot 0, 1, 2, ... - files containing serialized version of each snapshot - containing a list of files files/*.sst - sst files shared between snapshots - if one snapshot references 00010.sst and another one needs to backup it from the DB, it will just reference the same file files/ 0/, 1/, 2/, ... - snapshot directories containing private snapshot files - current, manifest and log files All the files are ref counted and deleted immediatelly when they get out of scope. Some other stuff in this diff: 1. Added GetEnv() method to the DB. Discussed with @haobo and we agreed that it seems right thing to do. 2. Fixed StackableDB interface. The way it was set up before, I was not able to implement BackupableDB. Test Plan: I have a unittest, but please don't look at this yet. I just hacked it up to help me with debugging. I will write a lot of good tests and update the diff. Also, `make asan_check` Reviewers: dhruba, haobo, emayanke Reviewed By: dhruba CC: leveldb, haobo Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D14295
11 years ago
RestoreBackupableDB::~RestoreBackupableDB() {
delete backup_engine_;
}
void
RestoreBackupableDB::GetBackupInfo(std::vector<BackupInfo>* backup_info) {
backup_engine_->GetBackupInfo(backup_info);
}
Status RestoreBackupableDB::RestoreDBFromBackup(BackupID backup_id,
const std::string& db_dir,
const std::string& wal_dir) {
return backup_engine_->RestoreDBFromBackup(backup_id, db_dir, wal_dir);
}
Status
RestoreBackupableDB::RestoreDBFromLatestBackup(const std::string& db_dir,
const std::string& wal_dir) {
return backup_engine_->RestoreDBFromLatestBackup(db_dir, wal_dir);
}
Status RestoreBackupableDB::PurgeOldBackups(uint32_t num_backups_to_keep) {
return backup_engine_->PurgeOldBackups(num_backups_to_keep);
}
Status RestoreBackupableDB::DeleteBackup(BackupID backup_id) {
return backup_engine_->DeleteBackup(backup_id);
}
} // namespace rocksdb