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![]() When walking the file system tree, check for each entry if it is reusable, meaning that the metadata did not change and the payload chunks can be reindexed instead of reencoding the whole data. If the metadata matched, the range of the dynamic index entries for that file are looked up in the previous payload data index. Use the range and possible padding introduced by partial reuse of chunks to decide whether to reuse the dynamic entries and encode the file payloads as payload reference right away or cache the entry for now and keep looking ahead. If however a non-reusable (because changed) entry is encountered before the padding threshold is reached, the entries on the cache are flushed to the archive by reencoding them, resetting the cached state. Reusable chunk digests and size as well as reference offsets to the start of regular files payloads within the payload stream are injected into the backup stream by sending them to the chunker via a dedicated channel, forcing a chunk boundary and inserting the chunks. If the threshold value for reuse is reached, the chunks are injected in the payload stream and the references with the corresponding offsets encoded in the metadata stream. Since multiple files might be contained within a single chunk, it is assured that the deduplication of chunks is performed, by keeping back the last chunk, so following files might as well reuse that same chunk without double indexing it. It is assured that this chunk is injected in the stream also in case that the following lookups lead to a cache clear and reencoding. Directory boundaries are cached as well, and written as part of the encoding when flushing. Signed-off-by: Christian Ebner <c.ebner@proxmox.com> |
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.cargo | ||
debian | ||
docs | ||
etc | ||
examples | ||
pbs-api-types | ||
pbs-buildcfg | ||
pbs-client | ||
pbs-config | ||
pbs-datastore | ||
pbs-fuse-loop | ||
pbs-key-config | ||
pbs-pxar-fuse | ||
pbs-tape | ||
pbs-tools | ||
proxmox-backup-banner | ||
proxmox-backup-client | ||
proxmox-file-restore | ||
proxmox-restore-daemon | ||
pxar-bin | ||
src | ||
templates | ||
tests | ||
www | ||
zsh-completions | ||
.gitignore | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
defines.mk | ||
Makefile | ||
README.rst | ||
rustfmt.toml | ||
TODO.rst |
Build & Release Notes ********************* ``rustup`` Toolchain ==================== We normally want to build with the ``rustc`` Debian package. To do that you can set the following ``rustup`` configuration: # rustup toolchain link system /usr # rustup default system Versioning of proxmox helper crates =================================== To use current git master code of the proxmox* helper crates, add:: git = "git://git.proxmox.com/git/proxmox" or:: path = "../proxmox/proxmox" to the proxmox dependency, and update the version to reflect the current, pre-release version number (e.g., "0.1.1-dev.1" instead of "0.1.0"). Local cargo config ================== This repository ships with a ``.cargo/config`` that replaces the crates.io registry with packaged crates located in ``/usr/share/cargo/registry``. A similar config is also applied building with dh_cargo. Cargo.lock needs to be deleted when switching between packaged crates and crates.io, since the checksums are not compatible. To reference new dependencies (or updated versions) that are not yet packaged, the dependency needs to point directly to a path or git source (e.g., see example for proxmox crate above). Build ===== on Debian 12 Bookworm Setup: 1. # echo 'deb http://download.proxmox.com/debian/devel/ bookworm main' | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/proxmox-devel.list 2. # sudo wget https://enterprise.proxmox.com/debian/proxmox-release-bookworm.gpg -O /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/proxmox-release-bookworm.gpg 3. # sudo apt update 4. # sudo apt install devscripts debcargo clang 5. # git clone git://git.proxmox.com/git/proxmox-backup.git 6. # cd proxmox-backup; sudo mk-build-deps -ir Note: 2. may be skipped if you already added the PVE or PBS package repository You are now able to build using the Makefile or cargo itself, e.g.:: # make deb # # or for a non-package build # cargo build --all --release Design Notes ************ Here are some random thought about the software design (unless I find a better place). Large chunk sizes ================= It is important to notice that large chunk sizes are crucial for performance. We have a multi-user system, where different people can do different operations on a datastore at the same time, and most operation involves reading a series of chunks. So what is the maximal theoretical speed we can get when reading a series of chunks? Reading a chunk sequence need the following steps: - seek to the first chunk's start location - read the chunk data - seek to the next chunk's start location - read the chunk data - ... Lets use the following disk performance metrics: :AST: Average Seek Time (second) :MRS: Maximum sequential Read Speed (bytes/second) :ACS: Average Chunk Size (bytes) The maximum performance you can get is:: MAX(ACS) = ACS /(AST + ACS/MRS) Please note that chunk data is likely to be sequential arranged on disk, but this it is sort of a best case assumption. For a typical rotational disk, we assume the following values:: AST: 10ms MRS: 170MB/s MAX(4MB) = 115.37 MB/s MAX(1MB) = 61.85 MB/s; MAX(64KB) = 6.02 MB/s; MAX(4KB) = 0.39 MB/s; MAX(1KB) = 0.10 MB/s; Modern SSD are much faster, lets assume the following:: max IOPS: 20000 => AST = 0.00005 MRS: 500Mb/s MAX(4MB) = 474 MB/s MAX(1MB) = 465 MB/s; MAX(64KB) = 354 MB/s; MAX(4KB) = 67 MB/s; MAX(1KB) = 18 MB/s; Also, the average chunk directly relates to the number of chunks produced by a backup:: CHUNK_COUNT = BACKUP_SIZE / ACS Here are some staticics from my developer worstation:: Disk Usage: 65 GB Directories: 58971 Files: 726314 Files < 64KB: 617541 As you see, there are really many small files. If we would do file level deduplication, i.e. generate one chunk per file, we end up with more than 700000 chunks. Instead, our current algorithm only produce large chunks with an average chunks size of 4MB. With above data, this produce about 15000 chunks (factor 50 less chunks).