[Gluster-users] Need some clarifications about the disperse feature
Xavier Hernandez
xhernandez at datalab.es
Tue Nov 25 15:19:18 UTC 2014
Hi Ayelet,
On 11/25/2014 02:41 PM, Ayelet Shemesh wrote:
> Hello Gluster experts,
>
> I have been using gluster for a small cluster for a few years now and I
> have a question regarding the new disperse feature, which is for me a
> much anticipated addition.
>
> *Suppose* I create a volume with a disperse set of 3, redundancy 1
> (let's call them A1, A2, A3) and then I add 3 more bricks to that volume
> (we'll call them B1, B2, B3).
>
> *First question* - which of the bricks will be the one carrying the
> redundancy data?
In current implementation, there's no difference between data and
redundancy. All bricks behave exactly equal and there isn't anyone more
important than another. In a configuration with 3 bricks and redundancy
1, you can lose any brick and everything will continue working normally.
>
> *Second question* - If I have machines with faster disk - should I
> assign them to the data or the redundancy bricks? What should I expect
> the load to be on the redundancy machine in heavy read scenarios and in
> heavy write scenarios?
As I said, there isn't a dedicated redundancy brick, so there's no
benefit in assigning the fast disk to a specific brick.
Read requests only need to be processed on N - R bricks (N = total
number of bricks, R = redundancy). This means that in your
configuration, each read will be sent to 2 bricks. If all bricks are
alive and healthy, the disperse translator balances these reads among
all nodes, giving 2/3 of the load to each brick.
Write requests are processed by all bricks, so the load is the same on
all of them.
>
> *Third question* - _does this require reading the entire data_ of A1, A2
> and A3 by initiating a heal or another operation?
>
Healing operations are on file basis. If only some files of A3 have been
damaged, it will only read the corresponding data from A1 and A2, but
not the entire contents of A1 and A2. To heal a file, all file contents
are read.
> *4th question* (and most important for me) - I saw in the list that it
> is now a Distributed-Dispersed volume. I understand I can now lose, for
> example bricks A1 and B1 and still have my entire data intact.
Correct
> Is this also correct for bricks from the same set, for example A1 and A2?
No, each disperse set is independent and have the same redundancy. It's
equivalent to a distributed replicated: if you lose both bricks of the
same replica set, you will lose access to the data stored in that
replica set.
> Or to put it in a more generic way - _does this create the exact same
> dispersed volume as if I created it originally with A1, A2 A3 B1 B2 B3
> and a redundancy of 2?
No. These are two different configurations. Both have the same effective
capacity, but the probability of failure in the second case is several
times lower than the first one (you can lose *any* two bricks without
losing access to the data). However it's more expensive to grow the
volume because you will need to add 6 new bricks at the same time, while
with the first case you only need to add 3.
Xavi
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