On 2015/1/29 16:06, Wengang Wang wrote:>
>> On 2015/1/29 8:05, Goldwyn Rodrigues wrote:
>>> Hi Yangwenfang,
>>>
>>> I appreciate the effort in this regard.
>>>
>>> On 01/26/2015 06:28 AM, yangwenfang wrote:
>>>> What:
>>>> Byte range lock is applied to lock a region of a file to
accelerate
>>>> reading/writing concurrently.
>>>> Each lock resource deploys an interval tree to manage the
range, which
>>>> supports basic operations like add, delete, insert, find, split
and merge.
>>>> The most important issue is to determine the existance of
conflicts
>>>> among the ranges. Conflict-free ranges of the same file can be
accessed
>>>> concurrently. In the contrary, nodes must wait for the release
of a
>>>> conflicted lock before accessing the range of file.
>>>>
>>>> Byte range lock supports split and merge rules: for same level,
larger
>>>> scope; different level, write > read(If a node keeps EX lock
with
>>>> range(start,end), then it has PR range lock(start,end)).
>>>> For example:
>>>> (1) merge: N1 keeps range lock (0,9)PR and (5,19)PR, the lock
is merged into
>>>> (0,19) PR;
>>>> (2) merge: N1 keeps range lock (0,9)PR and (5,19)EX, the merged
lock should
>>>> become(0,19) PR, (5,19)EX;
>>>> (3) split: N1 keeps range lock (0,9)PR, N2 tries to lock(0,5)
PR, N1 should
>>>> split the lock and keep (6,9)PR.
>>> What is the purpose of doing this kind of merge/split? I assume
this will be required in case of multiple processes from the same node
read/write to the file. Would it not be simpler to not merge or split and keep
separate instances in lock resources? This way you would have to do relatively
lesser book keeping with respect to comparisons.
>>>
>> Hi,
>> Realization of this kind of merge/split is for cache of range lock to
support unlock-delay.
>> For example(the granularity is block size)
>> 1.Node 1 writes to 0-9, it will keep the range lock(0,9,EX) if no other
node write the same range of file.
>> 2.Node 1 writes to 10-19, then the range lock will be merged into
(0,19,EX). if not, the number of locks will be more and more.
>> 3.Node 1 writes to 5-10, then no need to dlmlock from master.
>> 3.Node 2 writes to 5-10, conflict with Node 1, so Node 1 will drop
(5,10), the range lock is splitted into (0,4) and (11,19).
>
> What's the merge would be like in dlm module? Will it cause deadlock
when
> node1 extend 0-9 to 0-19 and node 2 extend 10-19 to 0-19?
>
> thanks,
> wengang
>
Hi,
Do you mean that:
N1 keeps range lock(0,9), and wants to lock(10,19).
N2 keeps range lock(10,19), and wants to lock(0,9).
Firstly N1 sends locking message (10,19) to master, then master determines the
existance of conflicts among the ranges.
N1(10,19) is conflict with N2(10,19). So master sends bast message to N2.
Sencond N2 sends locking message (0,9) to master, N1(0,9) is conflict with N2
(0,9), so master sends bast message to N1.
N2 drops range lock(10,19), then N1 merges range lock into (0,19).
N1 drops range lock (0,9), then N1 splits range lock into (10,19).
Finally, N1 keeps range lock (10,19), N2 keeps range lock (0,9).
So, there is no deadlock. Merging is only to the granted lock.
But if N2 keeps range lock(10,19), and wants to lock(0,15), there is deadlock.
When N2 drops range lock(10,19), (10,19) is conflict with another request
(0,15), range lock (0,15) must be canceled
So, the most important issue is to determine the existance of conflicts among
the ranges.
thanks,
yangwenfang