ZFS
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| ZFS | |
| Developer | Sun Microsystems |
|---|---|
| Full name | ZFS |
| Introduced | November 2005 (OpenSolaris) |
| Structures | |
| Directory contents | Extensible hash table |
| Limits | |
| Max file size | 16 EiB |
| Max number of files | 248 |
| Max filename length | 255 bytes |
| Max volume size | 16 EiB |
| Features | |
| Forks | Yes (called Extended Attributes) |
| Attributes | POSIX |
| File system permissions | POSIX, NFSv4 ACLs |
| Transparent compression | Yes |
| Transparent encryption | Yes (currently beta)[1] |
| Supported operating systems | Sun Solaris, Apple Mac OS X Server 10.5, FreeBSD, Linux via FUSE |
In computing, ZFS is a file system designed by Sun Microsystems for the Solaris Operating System. The features of ZFS include support for high storage capacities, integration of the concepts of filesystem and volume management, snapshots and copy-on-write clones, on-line integrity checking and repair, RAID-Z and native NFSv4 ACLs. ZFS is implemented as open-source software, licensed under the Common Development and Distribution License (CDDL).
Contents |
[edit] History
ZFS was designed and implemented by a team at Sun led by Jeff Bonwick. It was announced on September 14, 2004.[2] Source code for ZFS was integrated into the main trunk of Solaris development on October 31, 2005[3] and released as part of build 27 of OpenSolaris on November 16, 2005. Sun announced that ZFS was included in the 6/06 update to Solaris 10 in June 2006, one year after the opening of the OpenSolaris community.[4]
The name originally stood for "Zettabyte File System", but is now an orphan acronym.[5]
[edit] Features
[edit] Storage pools
Unlike traditional file systems, which reside on single devices and thus require a volume manager to use more than one device, ZFS filesystems are built on top of virtual storage pools called zpools. A zpool is constructed of virtual devices (vdevs), which are themselves constructed of block devices: files, hard drive partitions, or entire drives, with the last being the recommended usage.[6] Block devices within a vdev may be configured in different ways, depending on needs and space available: non-redundantly (similar to RAID 0), as a mirror (RAID 1) of two or more devices, as a RAID-Z group of three or more devices, or as a RAID-Z2 group of four or more devices.[7] Besides standard storage, devices can be designated as volatile read cache (ARC), nonvolatile write cache, or as a spare disk for use only in the case of a failure. Finally, when mirroring, block devices can be grouped according to physical chassis, so that the filesystem can continue in the face of the failure of an entire chassis.
The storage capacity of all vdevs is available to all of the file system instances in the zpool. A quota can be set to limit the amount of space a file system instance can occupy, and a reservation can be set to guarantee that space will be available to a file system instance.
[edit] Capacity
ZFS is a 128-bit file system, so it can store 18 billion billion (1.84 × 1019) times more data than current 64-bit systems. The limitations of ZFS are designed to be so large that they will not be encountered in practice for some time. Some theoretical limits in ZFS are:
- 264 — Number of snapshots of any file system[8]
- 248 — Number of entries in any individual directory[9]
- 16 EiB (264 bytes) — Maximum size of a file system
- 16 EiB — Maximum size of a single file
- 16 EiB — Maximum size of any attribute
- 256 ZiB (278 bytes) — Maximum size of any zpool
- 256 — Number of attributes of a file (actually constrained to 248 for the number of files in a ZFS file system)
- 256 — Number of files in a directory (actually constrained to 248 for the number of files in a ZFS file system)
- 264 — Number of devices in any zpool
- 264 — Number of zpools in a system
- 264 — Number of file systems in a zpool
Project leader Bonwick said, "Populating 128-bit file systems would exceed the quantum limits of earth-based storage. You couldn't fill a 128-bit storage pool without boiling the oceans."[2] Later he clarified:
| “ | Although we'd all like Moore's Law to continue forever, quantum mechanics imposes some fundamental limits on the computation rate and information capacity of any physical device. In particular, it has been shown that 1 kilogram of matter confined to 1 litre of space can perform at most 1051 operations per second on at most 1031 bits of information.[10] A fully populated 128-bit storage pool would contain 2128 blocks = 2137 bytes = 2140 bits; therefore the minimum mass required to hold the bits would be (2140 bits) / (1031 bits/kg) = 136 billion kg. To operate at the 1031 bits/kg limit, however, the entire mass of the computer must be in the form of pure energy. By E=mc², the rest energy of 136 billion kg is 1.2x1028 J. The mass of the oceans is about 1.4x1021 kg. It takes about 4,000 J to raise the temperature of 1 kg of water by 1 degree Celsius, and thus about 400,000 J to heat 1 kg of water from freezing to boiling. The latent heat of vaporization adds another 2 million J/kg. Thus the energy required to boil the oceans is about 2.4x106 J/kg * 1.4x1021 kg = 3.4x1027 J. Thus, fully populating a 128-bit storage pool would, literally, require more energy than boiling the oceans.[11] | ” |
[edit] Copy-on-write transactional model
ZFS uses a copy-on-write transactional object model. All block pointers within the filesystem contain a 256-bit checksum of the target block which is verified when the block is read. Blocks containing active data are never overwritten in place; instead, a new block is allocated, modified data is written to it, and then any metadata blocks referencing it are similarly read, reallocated, and written. To reduce the overhead of this process, multiple updates are grouped into transaction groups, and an intent log is used when synchronous write semantics are required.
[edit] Snapshots and clones
An advantage of copy-on-write is that when ZFS writes new data, the blocks containing the old data can be retained, allowing a snapshot version of the file system to be maintained. ZFS snapshots are created very quickly, since all the data composing the snapshot is already stored; they are also space efficient, since any unchanged data is shared among the file system and its snapshots.
Writeable snapshots ("clones") can also be created, resulting in two independent file systems that share a set of blocks. As changes are made to any of the clone file systems, new data blocks are created to reflect those changes, but any unchanged blocks continue to be shared, no matter how many clones exist.
[edit] Dynamic striping
Dynamic striping across all devices to maximize throughput means that as additional devices are added to the zpool, the stripe width automatically expands to include them; thus all disks in a pool are used, which balances the write load across them.
[edit] Variable block sizes
ZFS uses variable-sized blocks of up to 128 kilobytes. The currently available code allows the administrator to tune the maximum block size used as certain workloads do not perform well with large blocks. Automatic tuning to match workload characteristics is contemplated.[citation needed]
If data compression (LZJB) is enabled, variable block sizes are used. If a block can be compressed to fit into a smaller block size, the smaller size is used on the disk to use less storage and improve IO throughput (though at the cost of increased CPU use for the compression and decompression operations).
[edit] Lightweight filesystem creation
In ZFS, filesystem manipulation within a storage pool is easier than volume manipulation within a traditional filesystem; the time and effort required to create or resize a ZFS filesystem is closer to that of making a new directory than it is to volume manipulation in some other systems.
[edit] Additional capabilities
- Explicit I/O priority with deadline scheduling.
- Claimed globally optimal I/O sorting and aggregation.
- Multiple independent prefetch streams with automatic length and stride detection.
- Parallel, constant-time directory operations.
- End-to-end checksumming, allowing data corruption detection (and recovery if you have redundancy in the pool).
- Intelligent scrubbing and resilvering.[12]
- Load and space usage sharing between disks in the pool.[13]
- Ditto blocks: Metadata is replicated inside the pool, two or three times (according to metadata importance).[14] If the pool has several devices, ZFS tries to replicate over different devices. So a pool without redundancy can lose data if you find bad sectors, but metadata should be fairly safe even in this scenario.
- ZFS design (copy-on-write + superblocks) is safe when using disks with write cache enabled, if they support the cache flush commands issued by ZFS. This feature provides safety and a performance boost compared with some other filesystems.
- When entire disks are added to a ZFS pool, ZFS automatically enables their write cache. This is not done when ZFS only manages discrete slices of the disk, since it doesn't know if other slices are managed by non-write-cache safe filesystems, like UFS.
- Filesystem encryption is supported, though is currently in a beta stage.[1]
[edit] Cache management
ZFS also uses the ARC, a new method for cache management, instead of the traditional Solaris virtual memory page cache.
[edit] Adaptive Endianness
Pools and their associated ZFS file systems can be moved between different platform architectures, including systems implementing different byte orders. The ZFS block pointer format stores filesystem metadata in an endian-adaptive way; individual metadata blocks are written with the native byte order of the system writing the block. When reading, if the stored endianness doesn't match the endianness of the system, the metadata is byte-swapped in memory.
This does not affect the stored data itself; as is usual in POSIX systems, files appear to applications as simple arrays of bytes, so applications creating and reading data remain responsible for doing so in a way independent of the underlying system's endianness.
[edit] Limitations
- ZFS doesn't support per-user or per-group quotas. Instead, it is possible to create user-owned filesystems, each with its own size limit. Intrinsically, there is no practical quota solution for the file systems shared among several users (such as team projects, for example), where the data cannot be separated per user, although it could be implemented on top of the ZFS stack.
- Capacity expansion is normally achieved by adding groups of disks as a vdev (stripe, RAID-Z, RAID-Z2, or mirrored). Newly written data will dynamically start to use all available vdevs. It is also possible to expand the array by iteratively swapping each drive in the array with a bigger drive and waiting for ZFS to heal itself — the heal time will depend on amount of stored information, not the disk size. The new free space will not be available until all the disks have been swapped. If a snapshot is taken during this process, it will cause the heal to be restarted.
- It is currently not possible to reduce the number of vdevs in a pool nor otherwise reduce pool capacity. However, it is currently being worked on by the ZFS team. Still not available as of Solaris 10 05/08 (AKA update 5).
- It is not possible to add a disk to a RAID-Z or RAID-Z2 vdev. This feature appears very difficult to implement. You can however create a new RAID-Z vdev and add it to the zpool.
- You cannot mix vdev types in a zpool. For example, if you had a striped ZFS pool consisting of disks on a SAN, you cannot add the local-disks as a mirrored vdev.
- Reconfiguring storage requires copying data offline, destroying the pool, and recreating the pool with the new policy.
- ZFS is not a native cluster, distributed, or parallel file system and cannot provide concurrent access from multiple hosts as ZFS is a local file system. Sun's Lustre distributed filesystem will adapt ZFS as back-end storage for both data and metadata in version 1.8, which will be released in Q2 2008[dated info].[15]
[edit] Platforms
ZFS is part of Sun's own Solaris operating system and is thus available on both SPARC and x86-based systems. Since the code for ZFS is open source, a port to other operating systems and platforms can be produced without Sun's involvement.
[edit] OpenSolaris
OpenSolaris 2008.05 uses ZFS as its default filesystem. There are a half dozen 3rd party distributions.
Nexenta OS, a complete GNU-based open source operating system built on top of the OpenSolaris kernel and runtime, includes a ZFS implementation, added in version alpha1. More recently, Nexenta Systems announced NexentaStor, their ZFS storage appliance providing NAS/SAN/iSCSI capabilities and based on Nexenta OS. NexentaStor includes a GUI that simplifies the process of utilizing ZFS.
[edit] BSD
Pawel Jakub Dawidek has ported and committed ZFS to FreeBSD in experimental capacity for inclusion in FreeBSD 7.0, released on February 28, 2008.[16] The current recommendation is to use it only on amd64 platforms with sufficient memory but there is a newer port (uncommited yet) which fixes the memory issue.
As a part of the 2007 Google Summer of Code a ZFS port was started for NetBSD.[17]
[edit] Mac OS X Server
In a post on the opensolaris.org zfs-discuss mailing list, Apple Inc. announced it was porting ZFS to their Mac OS X operating system.[18] From Mac OS X 10.5 Developer Seed 9A321, support for ZFS has been included, but lacks the ability to act as a root partition. Also, attempts to format local drives using ZFS were unsuccessful; this is a known bug.[19]
On June 6, 2007, Sun's CEO Jonathan I. Schwartz announced that Apple would make ZFS "the" filesystem in Mac OS 10.5 Leopard.[20] Marc Hamilton, VP for Solaris Marketing later wrote to clarify that, in his opinion, Apple is planning to use ZFS in future versions of Mac OS X, but not necessarily as the default filesystem for Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard.[21] In the release version of Mac OS X 10.5, ZFS is available in read-only mode from the command line, which lacks the possibility to create zpools or write to them,[22] but Apple has also released the ""ZFS Beta Seed v1.1",[23] which allows read-write access and the creation of zpools. Apple states at their Developer Connection site "This seed requires installation on systems running Leopard9A559 or later." [24] However, the installer for the "ZFS Beta Seed v1.1" has been reported to only work on version 10.5.0, and has not been updated for version 10.5.1 and above.[25] As of January 2008, Apple provides read-write binaries and source, but they must be installed by hand. Alex Blewitt put together an installer for the 119 binaries, which doesn't need any hand-holding to install.
The current Mac OS Forge release of the Mac OS X ZFS project is version 119 and synchronized with the OpenSolaris ZFS SVN version 72[26] See: Mac OS X ZFS Project Downloads
Apple has also unveiled support for ZFS in its development version of Mac OS X Server "Snow Leopard", a 64-bit OS optimized for machines with multi-core processors. [27]
[edit] Linux
Porting ZFS to Linux is complicated by the fact that the GNU General Public License, which governs the Linux kernel, prohibits linking with code under certain licenses, such as CDDL, the license ZFS is released under.[28] One solution to this problem is to port ZFS to Linux's FUSE system so the filesystem runs in userspace instead. A project to do this was sponsored by Google's Summer of Code program in 2006, and is in Beta stage as of March 2008.[29] The ZFS on FUSE project is available here. Running a file system outside the kernel on traditional Unix-like systems can have a significant performance impact. However, NTFS-3G (another file system driver built on FUSE) performs well when compared to other traditional file system drivers.[30] This shows that reasonable performance is possible with ZFS on Linux after proper optimization. Sun Microsystems has stated that a Linux port is being investigated.[31] It is also possible to run Linux in a Zone on Solaris and thus the underlying filesystem would be ZFS (though Linux would not have 'ZFS commands'), see http://www.opensolaris.org/jive/thread.jspa?threadID=82024&tstart=0 .
[edit] See also
- List of file systems
- Comparison of file systems
- Veritas File System and Veritas Volume Manager — ZFS's main (cross-platform) competitor
- Write Anywhere File Layout — a similar file system by NetApp
- Btrfs
- NILFS — a Linux filesystem by Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) supporting snapshots
- LZJB — data compression algorithm used in ZFS
- Versioning file systems - List of versioning file systems
[edit] References
- ^ a b "OpenSolaris.org". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
- ^ a b "ZFS: the last word in file systems". Sun Microsystems (September 14, 2004). Retrieved on 2006-04-30.
- ^ Jeff Bonwick (October 31, 2005). "ZFS: The Last Word in Filesystems". Jeff Bonwick's Blog. Retrieved on 2006-04-30.
- ^ "Sun Celebrates Successful One-Year Anniversary of OpenSolaris". Sun Microsystems (June 20, 2006).
- ^ Jeff Bonwick (2006-05-04). "You say zeta, I say zetta". Jeff Bonwick's Blog. Retrieved on 2006-09-08.
- ^ "Solaris ZFS Administration Guide". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2007-10-02.
- ^ "ZFS Best Practices Guide". Solaris Performance Wiki. Retrieved on 2007-10-02.
- ^ "Solaris ZFS Administration Guide". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2007-10-05.
- ^ "Solaris ZFS Administration Guide". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2007-10-05.
- ^ Lloyd, Seth (2000). "Ultimate physical limits to computation". Nature 406: 1047–1054. doi:, http://puhep1.princeton.edu/~mcdonald/examples/QM/lloyd_nature_406_1047_00.pdf.
- ^ Jeff Bonwick (September 25, 2004). "128-bit storage: are you high?". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2006-07-12.
- ^ "Smokin' Mirrors". Jeff Bonwick's Weblog (2006-05-02). Retrieved on 2007-02-23.
- ^ "ZFS Block Allocation". Jeff Bonwick's Weblog (2006-11-04). Retrieved on 2007-02-23.
- ^ "Ditto Blocks - The Amazing Tape Repellent". Flippin' off bits Weblog (2006-05-12). Retrieved on 2007-03-01.
- ^ "Architecture ZFS for Lustre". Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
- ^ Dawidek, Pawel (April 6, 2007). "ZFS committed to the FreeBSD base". Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
- ^ "NetBSD Google Summer of Code projects: ZFS".
- ^ "Porting ZFS to OSX". zfs-discuss (April 27, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-04-30.
- ^ "Mac OS X 10.5 9A326 Seeded". InsanelyMac Forums (December 14, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
- ^ "Sun announce ZFS is "the file system" in Mac OS X v10.5". Sun (June 6, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-06.
- ^ "Marc Hamilton's weblog: Apple is planning to use the ZFS file system from OpenSolaris in future versions of their OS". Marc Hamilton's weblog (June 7, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-07.
- ^ "Apple: Leopard offers limited ZFS read-only". MacNN (June 12, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-06-23.
- ^ "Apple delivers ZFS Read/Write Developer Preview 1.1 for Leopard". Ars Technica (October 7, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-10-07.
- ^ "ADC Member Site « requires member login for access" (October 26, 2007). Retrieved on 2008-08-01.
- ^ Ché Kristo (November 18, 2007). "ZFS Beta Seed v1.1 will not install on Leopard.1 (10.5.1) « ideas are free". Retrieved on 2007-12-30.
- ^ "Mac OS Forge ZFS Project" (May 23, 2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-23.
- ^ "Snow Leopard" (June 10, 2008). Retrieved on 2008-06-10.
- ^ Jeremy Andrews (April 19, 2007). "Linux: ZFS, Licenses and Patents". Retrieved on 2007-04-21.
- ^ Ricardo Correia (May 26, 2006). "ZFS on FUSE/Linux". Retrieved on 2006-07-15.
- ^ Szabolcs Szakacsits (November 28, 2007). "NTFS-3G Read/Write Driver Performance". Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
- ^ "Fast Track to Solaris 10 Adoption: ZFS Technology". Solaris 10 Technical Knowledge Base. Sun Microsystems. Retrieved on 2006-04-24.
[edit] External links
- ZFS Development Community and detailed ZFS Documentation
- ZFS Best Practices Guide
- ZFS The Last word in File Systems
- ZFS Boot Project
- ZFS Encryption Project
- Sun's ZFS Learning Center Presentations on ZFS by Bill Moore
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