| dlmfs |
| ================== |
| A minimal DLM userspace interface implemented via a virtual file |
| system. |
| |
| dlmfs is built with OCFS2 as it requires most of its infrastructure. |
| |
| Project web page: http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2 |
| Tools web page: http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2-tools |
| OCFS2 mailing lists: http://oss.oracle.com/projects/ocfs2/mailman/ |
| |
| All code copyright 2005 Oracle except when otherwise noted. |
| |
| CREDITS |
| ======= |
| |
| Some code taken from ramfs which is Copyright (C) 2000 Linus Torvalds |
| and Transmeta Corp. |
| |
| Mark Fasheh <mark.fasheh@oracle.com> |
| |
| Caveats |
| ======= |
| - Right now it only works with the OCFS2 DLM, though support for other |
| DLM implementations should not be a major issue. |
| |
| Mount options |
| ============= |
| None |
| |
| Usage |
| ===== |
| |
| If you're just interested in OCFS2, then please see ocfs2.txt. The |
| rest of this document will be geared towards those who want to use |
| dlmfs for easy to setup and easy to use clustered locking in |
| userspace. |
| |
| Setup |
| ===== |
| |
| dlmfs requires that the OCFS2 cluster infrastructure be in |
| place. Please download ocfs2-tools from the above url and configure a |
| cluster. |
| |
| You'll want to start heartbeating on a volume which all the nodes in |
| your lockspace can access. The easiest way to do this is via |
| ocfs2_hb_ctl (distributed with ocfs2-tools). Right now it requires |
| that an OCFS2 file system be in place so that it can automatically |
| find it's heartbeat area, though it will eventually support heartbeat |
| against raw disks. |
| |
| Please see the ocfs2_hb_ctl and mkfs.ocfs2 manual pages distributed |
| with ocfs2-tools. |
| |
| Once you're heartbeating, DLM lock 'domains' can be easily created / |
| destroyed and locks within them accessed. |
| |
| Locking |
| ======= |
| |
| Users may access dlmfs via standard file system calls, or they can use |
| 'libo2dlm' (distributed with ocfs2-tools) which abstracts the file |
| system calls and presents a more traditional locking api. |
| |
| dlmfs handles lock caching automatically for the user, so a lock |
| request for an already acquired lock will not generate another DLM |
| call. Userspace programs are assumed to handle their own local |
| locking. |
| |
| Two levels of locks are supported - Shared Read, and Exclusive. |
| Also supported is a Trylock operation. |
| |
| For information on the libo2dlm interface, please see o2dlm.h, |
| distributed with ocfs2-tools. |
| |
| Lock value blocks can be read and written to a resource via read(2) |
| and write(2) against the fd obtained via your open(2) call. The |
| maximum currently supported LVB length is 64 bytes (though that is an |
| OCFS2 DLM limitation). Through this mechanism, users of dlmfs can share |
| small amounts of data amongst their nodes. |
| |
| mkdir(2) signals dlmfs to join a domain (which will have the same name |
| as the resulting directory) |
| |
| rmdir(2) signals dlmfs to leave the domain |
| |
| Locks for a given domain are represented by regular inodes inside the |
| domain directory. Locking against them is done via the open(2) system |
| call. |
| |
| The open(2) call will not return until your lock has been granted or |
| an error has occurred, unless it has been instructed to do a trylock |
| operation. If the lock succeeds, you'll get an fd. |
| |
| open(2) with O_CREAT to ensure the resource inode is created - dlmfs does |
| not automatically create inodes for existing lock resources. |
| |
| Open Flag Lock Request Type |
| --------- ----------------- |
| O_RDONLY Shared Read |
| O_RDWR Exclusive |
| |
| Open Flag Resulting Locking Behavior |
| --------- -------------------------- |
| O_NONBLOCK Trylock operation |
| |
| You must provide exactly one of O_RDONLY or O_RDWR. |
| |
| If O_NONBLOCK is also provided and the trylock operation was valid but |
| could not lock the resource then open(2) will return ETXTBUSY. |
| |
| close(2) drops the lock associated with your fd. |
| |
| Modes passed to mkdir(2) or open(2) are adhered to locally. Chown is |
| supported locally as well. This means you can use them to restrict |
| access to the resources via dlmfs on your local node only. |
| |
| The resource LVB may be read from the fd in either Shared Read or |
| Exclusive modes via the read(2) system call. It can be written via |
| write(2) only when open in Exclusive mode. |
| |
| Once written, an LVB will be visible to other nodes who obtain Read |
| Only or higher level locks on the resource. |
| |
| See Also |
| ======== |
| http://opendlm.sourceforge.net/cvsmirror/opendlm/docs/dlmbook_final.pdf |
| |
| For more information on the VMS distributed locking API. |