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AFS at CERN and other High Energy Physics Sites

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AFS at CERN. and other High Energy Physics Sites. Rainer T bbicke / CERN. March 2003 ... Security, flexibilty. NAS approach. No special infrastructure ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AFS at CERN and other High Energy Physics Sites


1
AFS at CERN and other High Energy Physics Sites
  • Rainer Többicke / CERN

2
AFS Software
  • Servers OpenAFS 1.2.6
  • Focus stability
  • Additional patches
  • Local debugging
  • Clients OpenAFS 1.2.7
  • Linux RPMs
  • Historical accumulation wide spread of partly
    ancient versions
  • and system architectures

3
Service
  • Total disk space
  • 10 TB installed
  • 6 TB usable
  • 15 Sun Servers, 10 PC servers
  • Sun A1000 RAID (-5) Systems
  • Clients
  • 4000-6000
  • 2000 off-site

4
Usage
  • Private user files - home directories
  • 14000 users, 5000 active, 2TB disk space
  • Scratch
  • low quality space at descretion of major user
    groups, 1 TB disk space
  • Software development
  • Production environment
  • Software
  • Controlled by major user groups

5
Evolution of users
6
Evolution User space
7
Evolution Project space
8
The Future of AFS
  • History
  • Characteristics
  • What do we require?
  • Distributed file systems

9
History
  • IBM sponsored development at CMU in the late 80s
  • Transarc Corporation, later owned by IBM
  • Strong academic (CMU, MIT, Umich) user community
  • AFS 3.2 Introduced _at_ CERN in 1993
  • Now almost ubiquitous in HEP
  • OpenAFS - open source as of 2000
  • Active development 4-5 releases/year
  • Alternative implementations Arla, Red Hat
  • Prime time quality software

10
AFS characteristics
  • Global file system
  • Security, flexibilty
  • NAS approach
  • No special infrastructure
  • Moderate performance single path to data
  • Performance (in 2002) for big files
  • Slightly below NFS with caching 20-25 MB/s
  • approaching RFIO without caching 30 MB/s

11
AFS characteristics contd
  • Scaling
  • Number of files in a directory 62000
  • 2 GB file size limit
  • No single directory bigger than a disk
  • AFS cache size?
  • Scaling non-issues
  • Number of servers
  • Performance limits
  • No file striping file access limited by single
    server
  • Client disk caching
  • Flat client/server topology, no proxies or
    cascades

12
Requirements ?
  • Global access
  • Cascading / proxies?
  • Security / access control
  • Manageability
  • Performance
  • infrastructure files
  • data files
  • Scalability
  • Cost
  • Standard in AFS
  • Kerberos, ACLs
  • AFS volumes
  • OK
  • problematic
  • Looks OK
  • Free

13
Distributed File Systems
  • Production, IP (NAS)
  • NFS V3, V4
  • Microsoft Dfs
  • SAN based
  • GFS, CXFS
  • GPFS
  • Recent Developments
  • Lustre, Intermezzo , StorageTank
  • ? PASTA III (2002) Distributed File Systems

14
Summary
  • From a shaky interesting idea in 1993 AFS has
    grown to a stable system
  • There is a need for a distributed file system for
    LCG
  • Characteristics?
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