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rocksdb/options/options_parser.cc

753 lines
27 KiB

// Copyright (c) 2011-present, Facebook, Inc. All rights reserved.
// This source code is licensed under both the GPLv2 (found in the
// COPYING file in the root directory) and Apache 2.0 License
// (found in the LICENSE.Apache file in the root directory).
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
#ifndef ROCKSDB_LITE
#include "options/options_parser.h"
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
#include <cmath>
#include <map>
#include <string>
#include <utility>
#include <vector>
#include "file/read_write_util.h"
#include "file/writable_file_writer.h"
#include "options/options_helper.h"
#include "port/port.h"
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
#include "rocksdb/convenience.h"
#include "rocksdb/db.h"
#include "table/block_based/block_based_table_factory.h"
#include "test_util/sync_point.h"
#include "util/cast_util.h"
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
#include "util/string_util.h"
namespace ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE {
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
static const std::string option_file_header =
"# This is a RocksDB option file.\n"
"#\n"
"# For detailed file format spec, please refer to the example file\n"
"# in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini\n"
"#\n"
"\n";
Status PersistRocksDBOptions(const DBOptions& db_opt,
const std::vector<std::string>& cf_names,
const std::vector<ColumnFamilyOptions>& cf_opts,
Introduce a new storage specific Env API (#5761) Summary: The current Env API encompasses both storage/file operations, as well as OS related operations. Most of the APIs return a Status, which does not have enough metadata about an error, such as whether its retry-able or not, scope (i.e fault domain) of the error etc., that may be required in order to properly handle a storage error. The file APIs also do not provide enough control over the IO SLA, such as timeout, prioritization, hinting about placement and redundancy etc. This PR separates out the file/storage APIs from Env into a new FileSystem class. The APIs are updated to return an IOStatus with metadata about the error, as well as to take an IOOptions structure as input in order to allow more control over the IO. The user can set both ```options.env``` and ```options.file_system``` to specify that RocksDB should use the former for OS related operations and the latter for storage operations. Internally, a ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` has been introduced that inherits from ```Env``` and redirects individual methods to either an ```Env``` implementation or the ```FileSystem``` as appropriate. When options are sanitized during ```DB::Open```, ```options.env``` is replaced with a newly allocated ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` instance if both env and file_system have been specified. This way, the rest of the RocksDB code can continue to function as before. This PR also ports PosixEnv to the new API by splitting it into two - PosixEnv and PosixFileSystem. PosixEnv is defined as a sub-class of CompositeEnvWrapper, and threading/time functions are overridden with Posix specific implementations in order to avoid an extra level of indirection. The ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` translates ```IOStatus``` return code to ```Status```, and sets the severity to ```kSoftError``` if the io_status is retryable. The error handling code in RocksDB can then recover the DB automatically. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5761 Differential Revision: D18868376 Pulled By: anand1976 fbshipit-source-id: 39efe18a162ea746fabac6360ff529baba48486f
5 years ago
const std::string& file_name, FileSystem* fs) {
ConfigOptions
config_options; // Use default for escaped(true) and check (exact)
config_options.delimiter = "\n ";
// If a readahead size was set in the input options, use it
if (db_opt.log_readahead_size > 0) {
config_options.file_readahead_size = db_opt.log_readahead_size;
}
return PersistRocksDBOptions(config_options, db_opt, cf_names, cf_opts,
file_name, fs);
}
Status PersistRocksDBOptions(const ConfigOptions& config_options_in,
const DBOptions& db_opt,
const std::vector<std::string>& cf_names,
const std::vector<ColumnFamilyOptions>& cf_opts,
const std::string& file_name, FileSystem* fs) {
ConfigOptions config_options = config_options_in;
config_options.delimiter = "\n "; // Override the default to nl
TEST_SYNC_POINT("PersistRocksDBOptions:start");
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (cf_names.size() != cf_opts.size()) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"cf_names.size() and cf_opts.size() must be the same");
}
Introduce a new storage specific Env API (#5761) Summary: The current Env API encompasses both storage/file operations, as well as OS related operations. Most of the APIs return a Status, which does not have enough metadata about an error, such as whether its retry-able or not, scope (i.e fault domain) of the error etc., that may be required in order to properly handle a storage error. The file APIs also do not provide enough control over the IO SLA, such as timeout, prioritization, hinting about placement and redundancy etc. This PR separates out the file/storage APIs from Env into a new FileSystem class. The APIs are updated to return an IOStatus with metadata about the error, as well as to take an IOOptions structure as input in order to allow more control over the IO. The user can set both ```options.env``` and ```options.file_system``` to specify that RocksDB should use the former for OS related operations and the latter for storage operations. Internally, a ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` has been introduced that inherits from ```Env``` and redirects individual methods to either an ```Env``` implementation or the ```FileSystem``` as appropriate. When options are sanitized during ```DB::Open```, ```options.env``` is replaced with a newly allocated ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` instance if both env and file_system have been specified. This way, the rest of the RocksDB code can continue to function as before. This PR also ports PosixEnv to the new API by splitting it into two - PosixEnv and PosixFileSystem. PosixEnv is defined as a sub-class of CompositeEnvWrapper, and threading/time functions are overridden with Posix specific implementations in order to avoid an extra level of indirection. The ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` translates ```IOStatus``` return code to ```Status```, and sets the severity to ```kSoftError``` if the io_status is retryable. The error handling code in RocksDB can then recover the DB automatically. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5761 Differential Revision: D18868376 Pulled By: anand1976 fbshipit-source-id: 39efe18a162ea746fabac6360ff529baba48486f
5 years ago
std::unique_ptr<FSWritableFile> wf;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
Introduce a new storage specific Env API (#5761) Summary: The current Env API encompasses both storage/file operations, as well as OS related operations. Most of the APIs return a Status, which does not have enough metadata about an error, such as whether its retry-able or not, scope (i.e fault domain) of the error etc., that may be required in order to properly handle a storage error. The file APIs also do not provide enough control over the IO SLA, such as timeout, prioritization, hinting about placement and redundancy etc. This PR separates out the file/storage APIs from Env into a new FileSystem class. The APIs are updated to return an IOStatus with metadata about the error, as well as to take an IOOptions structure as input in order to allow more control over the IO. The user can set both ```options.env``` and ```options.file_system``` to specify that RocksDB should use the former for OS related operations and the latter for storage operations. Internally, a ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` has been introduced that inherits from ```Env``` and redirects individual methods to either an ```Env``` implementation or the ```FileSystem``` as appropriate. When options are sanitized during ```DB::Open```, ```options.env``` is replaced with a newly allocated ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` instance if both env and file_system have been specified. This way, the rest of the RocksDB code can continue to function as before. This PR also ports PosixEnv to the new API by splitting it into two - PosixEnv and PosixFileSystem. PosixEnv is defined as a sub-class of CompositeEnvWrapper, and threading/time functions are overridden with Posix specific implementations in order to avoid an extra level of indirection. The ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` translates ```IOStatus``` return code to ```Status```, and sets the severity to ```kSoftError``` if the io_status is retryable. The error handling code in RocksDB can then recover the DB automatically. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5761 Differential Revision: D18868376 Pulled By: anand1976 fbshipit-source-id: 39efe18a162ea746fabac6360ff529baba48486f
5 years ago
Status s =
fs->NewWritableFile(file_name, FileOptions(), &wf, nullptr);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
std::unique_ptr<WritableFileWriter> writable;
writable.reset(new WritableFileWriter(std::move(wf), file_name, EnvOptions(),
nullptr /* statistics */));
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
std::string options_file_content;
s = writable->Append(option_file_header + "[" +
opt_section_titles[kOptionSectionVersion] +
"]\n"
" rocksdb_version=" +
ToString(ROCKSDB_MAJOR) + "." + ToString(ROCKSDB_MINOR) +
"." + ToString(ROCKSDB_PATCH) + "\n");
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Append(
" options_file_version=" + ToString(ROCKSDB_OPTION_FILE_MAJOR) + "." +
ToString(ROCKSDB_OPTION_FILE_MINOR) + "\n");
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Append("\n[" + opt_section_titles[kOptionSectionDBOptions] +
"]\n ");
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = GetStringFromDBOptions(config_options, db_opt, &options_file_content);
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Append(options_file_content + "\n");
}
for (size_t i = 0; s.ok() && i < cf_opts.size(); ++i) {
// CFOptions section
s = writable->Append("\n[" + opt_section_titles[kOptionSectionCFOptions] +
" \"" + EscapeOptionString(cf_names[i]) + "\"]\n ");
if (s.ok()) {
s = GetStringFromColumnFamilyOptions(config_options, cf_opts[i],
&options_file_content);
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Append(options_file_content + "\n");
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
// TableOptions section
auto* tf = cf_opts[i].table_factory.get();
if (tf != nullptr) {
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Append(
"[" + opt_section_titles[kOptionSectionTableOptions] + tf->Name() +
" \"" + EscapeOptionString(cf_names[i]) + "\"]\n ");
}
if (s.ok()) {
options_file_content.clear();
s = tf->GetOptionString(config_options, &options_file_content);
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Append(options_file_content + "\n");
}
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Sync(true /* use_fsync */);
}
if (s.ok()) {
s = writable->Close();
}
if (s.ok()) {
return RocksDBOptionsParser::VerifyRocksDBOptionsFromFile(
config_options, db_opt, cf_names, cf_opts, file_name, fs);
}
return s;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
RocksDBOptionsParser::RocksDBOptionsParser() { Reset(); }
void RocksDBOptionsParser::Reset() {
db_opt_ = DBOptions();
db_opt_map_.clear();
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
cf_names_.clear();
cf_opts_.clear();
cf_opt_maps_.clear();
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
has_version_section_ = false;
has_db_options_ = false;
has_default_cf_options_ = false;
for (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
db_version[i] = 0;
opt_file_version[i] = 0;
}
}
bool RocksDBOptionsParser::IsSection(const std::string& line) {
if (line.size() < 2) {
return false;
}
if (line[0] != '[' || line[line.size() - 1] != ']') {
return false;
}
return true;
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::ParseSection(OptionSection* section,
std::string* title,
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
std::string* argument,
const std::string& line,
const int line_num) {
*section = kOptionSectionUnknown;
// A section is of the form [<SectionName> "<SectionArg>"], where
// "<SectionArg>" is optional.
size_t arg_start_pos = line.find("\"");
size_t arg_end_pos = line.rfind("\"");
// The following if-then check tries to identify whether the input
// section has the optional section argument.
if (arg_start_pos != std::string::npos && arg_start_pos != arg_end_pos) {
*title = TrimAndRemoveComment(line.substr(1, arg_start_pos - 1), true);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
*argument = UnescapeOptionString(
line.substr(arg_start_pos + 1, arg_end_pos - arg_start_pos - 1));
} else {
*title = TrimAndRemoveComment(line.substr(1, line.size() - 2), true);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
*argument = "";
}
for (int i = 0; i < kOptionSectionUnknown; ++i) {
if (title->find(opt_section_titles[i]) == 0) {
if (i == kOptionSectionVersion || i == kOptionSectionDBOptions ||
i == kOptionSectionCFOptions) {
if (title->size() == opt_section_titles[i].size()) {
// if true, then it indicats equal
*section = static_cast<OptionSection>(i);
return CheckSection(*section, *argument, line_num);
}
} else if (i == kOptionSectionTableOptions) {
// This type of sections has a sufffix at the end of the
// section title
if (title->size() > opt_section_titles[i].size()) {
*section = static_cast<OptionSection>(i);
return CheckSection(*section, *argument, line_num);
}
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
}
return Status::InvalidArgument(std::string("Unknown section ") + line);
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::InvalidArgument(const int line_num,
const std::string& message) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"[RocksDBOptionsParser Error] ",
message + " (at line " + ToString(line_num) + ")");
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::ParseStatement(std::string* name,
std::string* value,
const std::string& line,
const int line_num) {
size_t eq_pos = line.find("=");
if (eq_pos == std::string::npos) {
return InvalidArgument(line_num, "A valid statement must have a '='.");
}
*name = TrimAndRemoveComment(line.substr(0, eq_pos), true);
*value =
TrimAndRemoveComment(line.substr(eq_pos + 1, line.size() - eq_pos - 1));
if (name->empty()) {
return InvalidArgument(line_num,
"A valid statement must have a variable name.");
}
return Status::OK();
}
Introduce a new storage specific Env API (#5761) Summary: The current Env API encompasses both storage/file operations, as well as OS related operations. Most of the APIs return a Status, which does not have enough metadata about an error, such as whether its retry-able or not, scope (i.e fault domain) of the error etc., that may be required in order to properly handle a storage error. The file APIs also do not provide enough control over the IO SLA, such as timeout, prioritization, hinting about placement and redundancy etc. This PR separates out the file/storage APIs from Env into a new FileSystem class. The APIs are updated to return an IOStatus with metadata about the error, as well as to take an IOOptions structure as input in order to allow more control over the IO. The user can set both ```options.env``` and ```options.file_system``` to specify that RocksDB should use the former for OS related operations and the latter for storage operations. Internally, a ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` has been introduced that inherits from ```Env``` and redirects individual methods to either an ```Env``` implementation or the ```FileSystem``` as appropriate. When options are sanitized during ```DB::Open```, ```options.env``` is replaced with a newly allocated ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` instance if both env and file_system have been specified. This way, the rest of the RocksDB code can continue to function as before. This PR also ports PosixEnv to the new API by splitting it into two - PosixEnv and PosixFileSystem. PosixEnv is defined as a sub-class of CompositeEnvWrapper, and threading/time functions are overridden with Posix specific implementations in order to avoid an extra level of indirection. The ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` translates ```IOStatus``` return code to ```Status```, and sets the severity to ```kSoftError``` if the io_status is retryable. The error handling code in RocksDB can then recover the DB automatically. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5761 Differential Revision: D18868376 Pulled By: anand1976 fbshipit-source-id: 39efe18a162ea746fabac6360ff529baba48486f
5 years ago
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::Parse(const std::string& file_name, FileSystem* fs,
bool ignore_unknown_options,
size_t file_readahead_size) {
ConfigOptions
config_options; // Use default for escaped(true) and check (exact)
config_options.ignore_unknown_options = ignore_unknown_options;
if (file_readahead_size > 0) {
config_options.file_readahead_size = file_readahead_size;
}
return Parse(config_options, file_name, fs);
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::Parse(const ConfigOptions& config_options_in,
const std::string& file_name,
FileSystem* fs) {
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
Reset();
ConfigOptions config_options = config_options_in;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
Introduce a new storage specific Env API (#5761) Summary: The current Env API encompasses both storage/file operations, as well as OS related operations. Most of the APIs return a Status, which does not have enough metadata about an error, such as whether its retry-able or not, scope (i.e fault domain) of the error etc., that may be required in order to properly handle a storage error. The file APIs also do not provide enough control over the IO SLA, such as timeout, prioritization, hinting about placement and redundancy etc. This PR separates out the file/storage APIs from Env into a new FileSystem class. The APIs are updated to return an IOStatus with metadata about the error, as well as to take an IOOptions structure as input in order to allow more control over the IO. The user can set both ```options.env``` and ```options.file_system``` to specify that RocksDB should use the former for OS related operations and the latter for storage operations. Internally, a ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` has been introduced that inherits from ```Env``` and redirects individual methods to either an ```Env``` implementation or the ```FileSystem``` as appropriate. When options are sanitized during ```DB::Open```, ```options.env``` is replaced with a newly allocated ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` instance if both env and file_system have been specified. This way, the rest of the RocksDB code can continue to function as before. This PR also ports PosixEnv to the new API by splitting it into two - PosixEnv and PosixFileSystem. PosixEnv is defined as a sub-class of CompositeEnvWrapper, and threading/time functions are overridden with Posix specific implementations in order to avoid an extra level of indirection. The ```CompositeEnvWrapper``` translates ```IOStatus``` return code to ```Status```, and sets the severity to ```kSoftError``` if the io_status is retryable. The error handling code in RocksDB can then recover the DB automatically. Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5761 Differential Revision: D18868376 Pulled By: anand1976 fbshipit-source-id: 39efe18a162ea746fabac6360ff529baba48486f
5 years ago
std::unique_ptr<FSSequentialFile> seq_file;
Status s = fs->NewSequentialFile(file_name, FileOptions(), &seq_file,
nullptr);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
SequentialFileReader sf_reader(std::move(seq_file), file_name,
config_options.file_readahead_size);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
OptionSection section = kOptionSectionUnknown;
std::string title;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
std::string argument;
std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string> opt_map;
std::istringstream iss;
std::string line;
bool has_data = true;
// we only support single-lined statement.
for (int line_num = 1; ReadOneLine(&iss, &sf_reader, &line, &has_data, &s);
++line_num) {
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
line = TrimAndRemoveComment(line);
if (line.empty()) {
continue;
}
if (IsSection(line)) {
s = EndSection(config_options, section, title, argument, opt_map);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
opt_map.clear();
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
// If the option file is not generated by a higher minor version,
// there shouldn't be any unknown option.
if (config_options.ignore_unknown_options &&
section == kOptionSectionVersion) {
if (db_version[0] < ROCKSDB_MAJOR || (db_version[0] == ROCKSDB_MAJOR &&
db_version[1] <= ROCKSDB_MINOR)) {
config_options.ignore_unknown_options = false;
}
}
s = ParseSection(&section, &title, &argument, line, line_num);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
} else {
std::string name;
std::string value;
s = ParseStatement(&name, &value, line, line_num);
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
opt_map.insert({name, value});
}
}
s = EndSection(config_options, section, title, argument, opt_map);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
opt_map.clear();
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
return ValidityCheck();
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::CheckSection(const OptionSection section,
const std::string& section_arg,
const int line_num) {
if (section == kOptionSectionDBOptions) {
if (has_db_options_) {
return InvalidArgument(
line_num,
"More than one DBOption section found in the option config file");
}
has_db_options_ = true;
} else if (section == kOptionSectionCFOptions) {
bool is_default_cf = (section_arg == kDefaultColumnFamilyName);
if (cf_opts_.size() == 0 && !is_default_cf) {
return InvalidArgument(
line_num,
"Default column family must be the first CFOptions section "
"in the option config file");
} else if (cf_opts_.size() != 0 && is_default_cf) {
return InvalidArgument(
line_num,
"Default column family must be the first CFOptions section "
"in the optio/n config file");
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
} else if (GetCFOptions(section_arg) != nullptr) {
return InvalidArgument(
line_num,
"Two identical column families found in option config file");
}
has_default_cf_options_ |= is_default_cf;
} else if (section == kOptionSectionTableOptions) {
if (GetCFOptions(section_arg) == nullptr) {
return InvalidArgument(
line_num, std::string(
"Does not find a matched column family name in "
"TableOptions section. Column Family Name:") +
section_arg);
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
} else if (section == kOptionSectionVersion) {
if (has_version_section_) {
return InvalidArgument(
line_num,
"More than one Version section found in the option config file.");
}
has_version_section_ = true;
}
return Status::OK();
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::ParseVersionNumber(const std::string& ver_name,
const std::string& ver_string,
const int max_count,
int* version) {
int version_index = 0;
int current_number = 0;
int current_digit_count = 0;
bool has_dot = false;
for (int i = 0; i < max_count; ++i) {
version[i] = 0;
}
constexpr int kBufferSize = 200;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
char buffer[kBufferSize];
for (size_t i = 0; i < ver_string.size(); ++i) {
if (ver_string[i] == '.') {
if (version_index >= max_count - 1) {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer) - 1,
"A valid %s can only contains at most %d dots.",
ver_name.c_str(), max_count - 1);
return Status::InvalidArgument(buffer);
}
if (current_digit_count == 0) {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer) - 1,
"A valid %s must have at least one digit before each dot.",
ver_name.c_str());
return Status::InvalidArgument(buffer);
}
version[version_index++] = current_number;
current_number = 0;
current_digit_count = 0;
has_dot = true;
} else if (isdigit(ver_string[i])) {
current_number = current_number * 10 + (ver_string[i] - '0');
current_digit_count++;
} else {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer) - 1,
"A valid %s can only contains dots and numbers.",
ver_name.c_str());
return Status::InvalidArgument(buffer);
}
}
version[version_index] = current_number;
if (has_dot && current_digit_count == 0) {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer) - 1,
"A valid %s must have at least one digit after each dot.",
ver_name.c_str());
return Status::InvalidArgument(buffer);
}
return Status::OK();
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::EndSection(
const ConfigOptions& config_options, const OptionSection section,
const std::string& section_title, const std::string& section_arg,
const std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string>& opt_map) {
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
Status s;
if (section == kOptionSectionDBOptions) {
s = GetDBOptionsFromMap(config_options, DBOptions(), opt_map, &db_opt_);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
db_opt_map_ = opt_map;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
} else if (section == kOptionSectionCFOptions) {
// This condition should be ensured earlier in ParseSection
// so we make an assertion here.
assert(GetCFOptions(section_arg) == nullptr);
cf_names_.emplace_back(section_arg);
cf_opts_.emplace_back();
s = GetColumnFamilyOptionsFromMap(config_options, ColumnFamilyOptions(),
opt_map, &cf_opts_.back());
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
// keep the parsed string.
cf_opt_maps_.emplace_back(opt_map);
} else if (section == kOptionSectionTableOptions) {
assert(GetCFOptions(section_arg) != nullptr);
auto* cf_opt = GetCFOptionsImpl(section_arg);
if (cf_opt == nullptr) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"The specified column family must be defined before the "
"TableOptions section:",
section_arg);
}
// Ignore error as table factory deserialization is optional
s = GetTableFactoryFromMap(
config_options,
section_title.substr(
opt_section_titles[kOptionSectionTableOptions].size()),
opt_map, &(cf_opt->table_factory));
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
} else if (section == kOptionSectionVersion) {
for (const auto& pair : opt_map) {
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (pair.first == "rocksdb_version") {
s = ParseVersionNumber(pair.first, pair.second, 3, db_version);
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
} else if (pair.first == "options_file_version") {
s = ParseVersionNumber(pair.first, pair.second, 2, opt_file_version);
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
if (opt_file_version[0] < 1) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"A valid options_file_version must be at least 1.");
}
}
}
}
return s;
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::ValidityCheck() {
if (!has_db_options_) {
return Status::Corruption(
"A RocksDB Option file must have a single DBOptions section");
}
if (!has_default_cf_options_) {
return Status::Corruption(
"A RocksDB Option file must have a single CFOptions:default section");
}
return Status::OK();
}
std::string RocksDBOptionsParser::TrimAndRemoveComment(const std::string& line,
bool trim_only) {
size_t start = 0;
size_t end = line.size();
// we only support "#" style comment
if (!trim_only) {
size_t search_pos = 0;
while (search_pos < line.size()) {
size_t comment_pos = line.find('#', search_pos);
if (comment_pos == std::string::npos) {
break;
}
if (comment_pos == 0 || line[comment_pos - 1] != '\\') {
end = comment_pos;
break;
}
search_pos = comment_pos + 1;
}
}
while (start < end && isspace(line[start]) != 0) {
++start;
}
// start < end implies end > 0.
while (start < end && isspace(line[end - 1]) != 0) {
--end;
}
if (start < end) {
return line.substr(start, end - start);
}
return "";
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::VerifyRocksDBOptionsFromFile(
const ConfigOptions& config_options, const DBOptions& db_opt,
const std::vector<std::string>& cf_names,
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
const std::vector<ColumnFamilyOptions>& cf_opts,
const std::string& file_name, FileSystem* fs) {
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
RocksDBOptionsParser parser;
Status s = parser.Parse(config_options, file_name, fs);
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
// Verify DBOptions
s = VerifyDBOptions(config_options, db_opt, *parser.db_opt(),
parser.db_opt_map());
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
// Verify ColumnFamily Name
if (cf_names.size() != parser.cf_names()->size()) {
if (config_options.sanity_level >=
ConfigOptions::kSanityLevelLooselyCompatible) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"[RocksDBOptionParser Error] The persisted options does not have "
"the same number of column family names as the db instance.");
} else if (cf_opts.size() > parser.cf_opts()->size()) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"[RocksDBOptionsParser Error]",
"The persisted options file has less number of column family "
"names than that of the specified one.");
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
for (size_t i = 0; i < cf_names.size(); ++i) {
if (cf_names[i] != parser.cf_names()->at(i)) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
"[RocksDBOptionParser Error] The persisted options and the db"
"instance does not have the same name for column family ",
ToString(i));
}
}
// Verify Column Family Options
if (cf_opts.size() != parser.cf_opts()->size()) {
if (config_options.sanity_level >=
ConfigOptions::kSanityLevelLooselyCompatible) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"[RocksDBOptionsParser Error]",
"The persisted options does not have the same number of "
"column families as the db instance.");
} else if (cf_opts.size() > parser.cf_opts()->size()) {
return Status::InvalidArgument(
"[RocksDBOptionsParser Error]",
"The persisted options file has less number of column families "
"than that of the specified number.");
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
for (size_t i = 0; i < cf_opts.size(); ++i) {
s = VerifyCFOptions(config_options, cf_opts[i], parser.cf_opts()->at(i),
&(parser.cf_opt_maps()->at(i)));
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
s = VerifyTableFactory(config_options, cf_opts[i].table_factory.get(),
parser.cf_opts()->at(i).table_factory.get());
if (!s.ok()) {
return s;
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
return Status::OK();
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::VerifyDBOptions(
const ConfigOptions& config_options, const DBOptions& base_opt,
const DBOptions& file_opt,
const std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string>* /*opt_map*/) {
for (const auto& pair : db_options_type_info) {
const auto& opt_info = pair.second;
if (config_options.IsCheckEnabled(opt_info.GetSanityLevel())) {
const char* base_addr =
reinterpret_cast<const char*>(&base_opt) + opt_info.offset;
const char* file_addr =
reinterpret_cast<const char*>(&file_opt) + opt_info.offset;
std::string mismatch;
if (!opt_info.MatchesOption(config_options, pair.first, base_addr,
file_addr, &mismatch) &&
!opt_info.MatchesByName(config_options, pair.first, base_addr,
file_addr)) {
const size_t kBufferSize = 2048;
char buffer[kBufferSize];
std::string base_value;
std::string file_value;
int offset =
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer),
"[RocksDBOptionsParser]: "
"failed the verification on ColumnFamilyOptions::%s",
pair.first.c_str());
Status s = opt_info.SerializeOption(config_options, pair.first,
base_addr, &base_value);
if (s.ok()) {
s = opt_info.SerializeOption(config_options, pair.first, file_addr,
&file_value);
}
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer),
"[RocksDBOptionsParser]: "
"failed the verification on DBOptions::%s --- "
"The specified one is %s while the persisted one is %s.\n",
pair.first.c_str(), base_value.c_str(), file_value.c_str());
assert(offset >= 0);
assert(static_cast<size_t>(offset) < sizeof(buffer));
if (s.ok()) {
snprintf(
buffer + offset, sizeof(buffer) - static_cast<size_t>(offset),
"--- The specified one is %s while the persisted one is %s.\n",
base_value.c_str(), file_value.c_str());
} else {
snprintf(buffer + offset,
sizeof(buffer) - static_cast<size_t>(offset),
"--- Unable to re-serialize an option: %s.\n",
s.ToString().c_str());
}
return Status::InvalidArgument(Slice(buffer, strlen(buffer)));
}
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
}
}
return Status::OK();
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::VerifyCFOptions(
const ConfigOptions& config_options, const ColumnFamilyOptions& base_opt,
const ColumnFamilyOptions& file_opt,
const std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string>* opt_map) {
for (const auto& pair : cf_options_type_info) {
const auto& opt_info = pair.second;
if (config_options.IsCheckEnabled(opt_info.GetSanityLevel())) {
std::string mismatch;
const char* base_addr =
reinterpret_cast<const char*>(&base_opt) + opt_info.offset;
const char* file_addr =
reinterpret_cast<const char*>(&file_opt) + opt_info.offset;
bool matches = opt_info.MatchesOption(config_options, pair.first,
base_addr, file_addr, &mismatch);
if (!matches && opt_info.IsByName()) {
if (opt_map == nullptr) {
matches = true;
} else {
auto iter = opt_map->find(pair.first);
if (iter == opt_map->end()) {
matches = true;
} else {
matches = opt_info.MatchesByName(config_options, pair.first,
base_addr, iter->second);
}
}
}
if (!matches) {
// The options do not match
const size_t kBufferSize = 2048;
char buffer[kBufferSize];
std::string base_value;
std::string file_value;
Status s = opt_info.SerializeOption(config_options, pair.first,
base_addr, &base_value);
if (s.ok()) {
s = opt_info.SerializeOption(config_options, pair.first, file_addr,
&file_value);
}
int offset =
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer),
"[RocksDBOptionsParser]: "
"failed the verification on ColumnFamilyOptions::%s",
pair.first.c_str());
assert(offset >= 0);
assert(static_cast<size_t>(offset) < sizeof(buffer));
if (s.ok()) {
snprintf(
buffer + offset, sizeof(buffer) - static_cast<size_t>(offset),
"--- The specified one is %s while the persisted one is %s.\n",
base_value.c_str(), file_value.c_str());
} else {
snprintf(buffer + offset,
sizeof(buffer) - static_cast<size_t>(offset),
"--- Unable to re-serialize an option: %s.\n",
s.ToString().c_str());
}
return Status::InvalidArgument(Slice(buffer, sizeof(buffer)));
} // if (! matches)
} // CheckSanityLevel
} // For each option
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
return Status::OK();
}
Status RocksDBOptionsParser::VerifyTableFactory(
const ConfigOptions& config_options, const TableFactory* base_tf,
const TableFactory* file_tf) {
if (base_tf && file_tf) {
if (config_options.sanity_level > ConfigOptions::kSanityLevelNone &&
std::string(base_tf->Name()) != std::string(file_tf->Name())) {
return Status::Corruption(
"[RocksDBOptionsParser]: "
"failed the verification on TableFactory->Name()");
}
if (base_tf->Name() == BlockBasedTableFactory::kName) {
return VerifyBlockBasedTableFactory(
config_options,
static_cast_with_check<const BlockBasedTableFactory,
const TableFactory>(base_tf),
static_cast_with_check<const BlockBasedTableFactory,
const TableFactory>(file_tf));
}
// TODO(yhchiang): add checks for other table factory types
} else {
// TODO(yhchiang): further support sanity check here
}
return Status::OK();
}
} // namespace ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE
RocksDB Options file format and its serialization / deserialization. Summary: This patch defines the format of RocksDB options file, which follows the INI file format, and implements functions for its serialization and deserialization. An example RocksDB options file can be found in examples/rocksdb_option_file_example.ini. A typical RocksDB options file has three sections, which are Version, DBOptions, and more than one CFOptions. The RocksDB options file in general follows the basic INI file format with the following extensions / modifications: * Escaped characters We escaped the following characters: - \n -- line feed - new line - \r -- carriage return - \\ -- backslash \ - \: -- colon symbol : - \# -- hash tag # * Comments We support # style comments. Comments can appear at the ending part of a line. * Statements A statement is of the form option_name = value. Each statement contains a '=', where extra white-spaces are supported. However, we don't support multi-lined statement. Furthermore, each line can only contain at most one statement. * Section Sections are of the form [SecitonTitle "SectionArgument"], where section argument is optional. * List We use colon-separated string to represent a list. For instance, n1:n2:n3:n4 is a list containing four values. Below is an example of a RocksDB options file: [Version] rocksdb_version=4.0.0 options_file_version=1.0 [DBOptions] max_open_files=12345 max_background_flushes=301 [CFOptions "default"] [CFOptions "the second column family"] [CFOptions "the third column family"] Test Plan: Added many tests in options_test.cc Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony Reviewed By: anthony Subscribers: maykov, dhruba, leveldb Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46059
9 years ago
#endif // !ROCKSDB_LITE