Ploop/Why
< Ploop<translate> This article tries to summarize why ploop is needed, and why is it a better technology.
Contents
Before ploop
First of all, a few facts about the pre-ploop era technologies and their limitations.
As you are probably aware, a container file system was just a directory on the host, which a new container was chroot()-ed into. Although it seems like a good and natural idea, there are a number of limitations.
- Since containers are living on one same file system, they all share common properties of that file system (it's type, block size, and other options). That means we can not configure the above properties on a per-container basis.
- One such property that deserves a special item in this list is file system journal. While journal is a good thing to have, because it helps to maintain file system integrity and improve reboot times (by eliminating fsck in many cases), it is also a bottleneck for containers. If one container will fill up in-memory journal (with lots of small operations leading to file metadata updates, e.g. file truncates), all the other containers I/O will block waiting for the journal to be written to disk. In some extreme cases we saw up to 15 seconds of such blockage [but can be easily fixed using journal_async_commit in mount options].
- Since many containers share the same file system with limited space, in order to limit containers disk space we had to develop per-directory disk quotas (i.e. vzquota).
- Since many containers share the same file system, and the number of inodes on a file system is limited [but can be increased in fs creation], vzquota should also be able to limit inodes on a per container (per directory) basis.
- In order for in-container (aka second-level) disk quota (i.e. standard per-user and per-group UNIX dist quota) to work, we had to provide a dummy file system called simfs. Its sole purpose is to have a superblock which is needed for disk quota to work.
- When doing a live migration without some sort of shared storage (like NAS or SAN), we sync the files to a destination system using rsync, which does the exact copy of all files, except that their i-node numbers on disk will change. If there are some apps that rely on files' i-node numbers being constant (which is normally the case), those apps are not surviving the migration
- Finally, a container backup or snapshot is harder to do because there is a lot of small files that need to be copied.
Introducing ploop
In order to address the above problems and ultimately make a world a better place, we decided to implement a container-in-a-file technology, not different from what various VM products are using, but working as effectively as all the other container bits and pieces in OpenVZ.
The main idea of ploop is to have an image file, use it as a block device, and create and use a file system on that device. Some readers will recognize that this is exactly what Linux loop device does! Right, the only thing is loop device is very inefficient (say, using it leads to double caching of data in memory) and its functionality is very limited.
Modular design
Ploop implementation in the kernel have a modular and layered design. The top layer is the main ploop module, which provides a virtual block device to be used for CT filesystem.
The middle layer is the format module, which does translation of block device block numbers into image file block numbers. A simple format module which is called "raw" is doing trivial 1:1 translation, same as existing loop device. More sophisticated format module is keeping the translation table and is able to dynamically grow and shrink the image file. That means, if you create a container with 2GB of disk space, the image file size will not be 2GB, but less -- the size of the actual data stored in the container.
It is also possible to support other image formats by writing other ploop format modules, such as the one for QCOW2 (used by QEMU and KVM).
The bottom layer is the I/O module. Currently modules for direct I/O on an ext4 device, and for NFS are available. There are plans to also have a generic VFS module, which will be able to store images on any decent file system, but that needs an efficient direct I/O implementation in the VFS layer which is still being worked on.
Write tracker
Write tracker is a feature of ploop that is designed for live migration. When write tracker is turned on, the kernel memorizes a list of modified data blocks. This list then can be used to efficiently migrate a ploop device to a different physical server, with minimal container downtime. User-space support for this is implemented in ploop copy tool and is used by vzmigrate utility.
The idea is to do iterative migration of an image file, in the following way:
- Turn write tracker feature on. Now the kernel will keep track of ploop image blocks being modified.
- Copy all blocks of a ploop image file to a destination system.
- Ask write tracker which blocks were modified.
- Copy only these blocks.
- Repeat steps 3 and 4 until number of blocks is not decreasing.
- Freeze the container processes and repeat steps 3 and 4 last time.
See Effective live migration with ploop write tracker blog post for more details.
Snapshots
With ploop, one can instantly create file system snapshots. Snapshots are described in ploop snapshots and backups blog post.
Benefits
- File system journal is not bottleneck anymore [if you are not using journal_async_commit mount option yet]
- Large-size image files I/O instead of lots of small-size files I/O on management operations
- Disk space quota can be implemented based on virtual device sizes; no need for per-directory quotas
- Number of inodes doesn't have to be limited because this is not a shared resource anymore (each CT has its own file system) [but these file systems yet have their own inodes limit]
- Live backup is easy and consistent
- Live migration is reliable and efficient
- Different containers may use file systems of different types and properties
In addition:
- [Potential] support for QCOW2 and other image formats
- Support for different storage types
See also
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