### Sharding xlator (Stripe 2.0) GlusterFS's answer to very large files (those which can grow beyond a single brick) has never been clear. There is a stripe xlator which allows you to do that, but that comes at a cost of flexibility - you can add servers only in multiple of stripe-count x replica-count, mixing striped and unstriped files is not possible in an "elegant" way. This also happens to be a big limiting factor for the big data/Hadoop use case where super large files are the norm (and where you want to split a file even if it could fit within a single server.) The proposed solution for this is to replace the current stripe xlator with a new Shard xlator. Unlike the stripe xlator, Shard is not a cluster xlator. It is placed on top of DHT. Initially all files will be created as normal files, even up to a certain configurable size. The first block (default 4MB) will be stored like a normal file. However further blocks will be stored in a file, named by the GFID and block index in a separate namespace (like /.shard/GFID1.1, /.shard/GFID1.2 ... /.shard/GFID1.N). File IO happening to a particular offset will write to the appropriate "piece file", creating it if necessary. The aggregated file size and block count will be stored in the xattr of the original (first block) file. The advantage of such a model: - Data blocks are distributed by DHT in a "normal way". - Adding servers can happen in any number (even one at a time) and DHT's rebalance will spread out the "piece files" evenly. - Self-healing of a large file is now more distributed into smaller files across more servers. - piece file naming scheme is immune to renames and hardlinks. Source: https://gist.github.com/avati/af04f1030dcf52e16535#sharding-xlator-stripe-20 ## Usage: Shard translator is disabled by default. To enable it on a given volume, execute: gluster volume set features.shard on The default shard block size is 4MB. To modify it, execute: gluster volume set features.shard-block-size When a file is created in a volume with sharding disabled, its block size is persisted in its xattr on the first block. This property of the file will remain even if the shard-block-size for the volume is reconfigured later. If you want to disable sharding on a volume, it is advisable to create a new volume without sharding and copy out contents of this volume into the new volume. ## Note: * Shard translator is still a beta feature in 3.7.0 and will be possibly fully supported in one of the 3.7.x releases. * It is advisable to use shard translator in volumes with replication enabled for fault tolerance. ## TO-DO: * Complete implementation of zerofill, discard and fallocate fops. * Introduce caching and its invalidation within shard translator to store size and block count of shard'ed files. * Make shard translator work for non-Hadoop and non-VM use cases where there are multiple clients operating on the same file. * Serialize appending writes. * Manage recovery of size and block count better in the face of faults during ongoing inode write fops. * Anything else that could crop up later :)