storage revision 1.15.2.2 1 $NetBSD: storage,v 1.15.2.2 2017/01/07 08:53:45 pgoyette Exp $
2
3 NetBSD Storage Roadmap
4 ======================
5
6 This is a small roadmap document, and deals with the storage and file
7 systems side of the operating system. It discusses elements, projects,
8 and goals that are under development or under discussion; and it is
9 divided into three categories based on perceived priority.
10
11 The following elements, projects, and goals are considered strategic
12 priorities for the project:
13
14 1. Improving iscsi
15 2. nfsv4 support
16 3. A better journaling file system solution
17 4. Getting zfs working for real
18 5. Seamless full-disk encryption
19 6. Finish tls-maxphys
20
21 The following elements, projects, and goals are not strategic
22 priorities but are still important undertakings worth doing:
23
24 7. nvme support
25 8. lfs64
26 9. Per-process namespaces
27 10. lvm tidyup
28 11. Flash translation layer
29 12. Shingled disk support
30 13. ext3/ext4 support
31 14. Port hammer from Dragonfly
32 15. afs maintenance
33 16. execute-in-place
34 17. extended attributes for acl and capability storage
35
36 The following elements, projects, and goals are perhaps less pressing;
37 this doesn't mean one shouldn't work on them but the expected payoff
38 is perhaps less than for other things:
39
40 18. coda maintenance
41
42
43 Explanations
44 ============
45
46 1. Improving iscsi
47 ------------------
48
49 Both the existing iscsi target and initiator are fairly bad code, and
50 neither works terribly well. Fixing this is fairly important as iscsi
51 is where it's at for remote block devices. Note that there appears to
52 be no compelling reason to move the target to the kernel or otherwise
53 make major architectural changes.
54
55 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
56 - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
57 - Contact agc for further information.
58
59
60 2. nfsv4 support
61 ----------------
62
63 nfsv4 is at this point the de facto standard for FS-level (as opposed
64 to block-level) network volumes in production settings. The legacy nfs
65 code currently in NetBSD only supports nfsv2 and nfsv3.
66
67 The intended plan is to port FreeBSD's nfsv4 code, which also includes
68 nfsv2 and nfsv3 support, and eventually transition to it completely,
69 dropping our current nfs code. (Which is kind of a mess.) So far the
70 only step that has been taken is to import the code from FreeBSD. The
71 next step is to update that import (since it was done a while ago now)
72 and then work on getting it to configure and compile.
73
74 - As of November 2015 nobody is working on this, and a volunteer to
75 take charge is urgently needed.
76 - There is no clear timeframe or release target, although having an
77 experimental version ready for -8 would be great.
78 - Contact dholland for further information.
79
80
81 3. A better journaling file system solution
82 -------------------------------------------
83
84 WAPBL, the journaling FFS that NetBSD rolled out some time back, has a
85 critical problem: it does not address the historic ffs behavior of
86 allowing stale on-disk data to leak into user files in crashes. And
87 because it runs faster, this happens more often and with more data.
88 This situation is both a correctness and a security liability. Fixing
89 it has turned out to be difficult. It is not really clear what the
90 best option at this point is:
91
92 + Fixing WAPBL (e.g. to flush newly allocated/newly written blocks to
93 disk early) has been examined by several people who know the code base
94 and judged difficult. Also, some other problems have come to light
95 more recently; e.g. PR 50725, and 45676. Still, it might be the best
96 way forward.
97
98 + There is another journaling FFS; the Harvard one done by Margo
99 Seltzer's group some years back. We have a copy of this, but as it was
100 written in BSD/OS circa 1999 it needs a lot of merging, and then will
101 undoubtedly also need a certain amount of polishing to be ready for
102 production use. It does record-based rather than block-based
103 journaling and does not share the stale data problem.
104
105 + We could bring back softupdates (in the softupdates-with-journaling
106 form found today in FreeBSD) -- this code is even more complicated
107 than the softupdates code we removed back in 2009, and it's not clear
108 that it's any more robust either. However, it would solve the stale
109 data problem if someone wanted to port it over. It isn't clear that
110 this would be any less work than getting the Harvard journaling FFS
111 running... or than writing a whole new file system either.
112
113 + We could write a whole new journaling file system. (That is, not
114 FFS. Doing a new journaling FFS implementation is probably not
115 sensible relative to merging the Harvard journaling FFS.) This is a
116 big project.
117
118 Right now it is not clear which of these avenues is the best way
119 forward. Given the general manpower shortage, it may be that the best
120 way is whatever looks best to someone who wants to work on the
121 problem.
122
123 - There has been some interest in the Harvard journaling FFS but no
124 significant progress. Nobody is known to be working on or particularly
125 interested in porting softupdates-with-journaling. And, while
126 dholland has been mumbling for some time about a plan for a
127 specific new file system to solve this problem, there isn't any
128 realistic prospect of significant progress on that in the
129 foreseeable future, and nobody else is known to have or be working
130 on even that much.
131 - There is no clear timeframe or release target; but given that WAPBL
132 has been disabled by default for new installs in -7 this problem
133 can reasonably be said to have become critical.
134 - jdolecek is working on fixing WAPBL, goal is to get WAPBL fixed
135 enough to be safe to re-enable as default for -8
136 - Contact joerg or martin regarding WAPBL; contact dholland regarding
137 the Harvard journaling FFS.
138
139
140 4. Getting zfs working for real
141 -------------------------------
142
143 ZFS has been almost working for years now. It is high time we got it
144 really working. One of the things this entails is updating the ZFS
145 code, as what we have is rather old. The Illumos version is probably
146 what we want for this.
147
148 - There has been intermittent work on zfs, but as of November 2015
149 nobody is known to be actively working on it
150 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
151 - Contact riastradh or ?? for further information.
152
153
154 5. Seamless full-disk encryption
155 --------------------------------
156
157 (This is only sort of a storage issue.) We have cgd, and it is
158 believed to still be cryptographically suitable, at least for the time
159 being. However, we don't have any of the following things:
160
161 + An easy way to install a machine with full-disk encryption. It
162 should really just be a checkbox item in sysinst, or not much more
163 than that.
164
165 + Ideally, also an easy way to turn on full-disk encryption for a
166 machine that's already been installed, though this is harder.
167
168 + A good story for booting off a disk that is otherwise encrypted;
169 obviously one cannot encrypt the bootblocks, but it isn't clear where
170 in boot the encrypted volume should take over, or how to make a best
171 effort at protecting the unencrypted elements needed to boot. (At
172 least, in the absence of something like UEFI secure boot combined with
173 an cryptographic oracle to sign your bootloader image so UEFI will
174 accept it.) There's also the question of how one runs cgdconfig(8) and
175 where the cgdconfig binary comes from.
176
177 + A reasonable way to handle volume passphrases. MacOS apparently uses
178 login passwords for this (or as passphrases for secondary keys, or
179 something) and this seems to work well enough apart from the somewhat
180 surreal experience of sometimes having to log in twice. However, it
181 will complicate the bootup story.
182
183 Given the increasing regulatory-level importance of full-disk
184 encryption, this is at least a de facto requirement for using NetBSD
185 on laptops in many circumstances.
186
187 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
188 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
189 - Contact dholland for further information.
190
191
192 6. Finish tls-maxphys
193 ---------------------
194
195 The tls-maxphys branch changes MAXPHYS (the maximum size of a single
196 I/O request) from a global fixed constant to a value that's probed
197 separately for each particular I/O channel based on its
198 capabilities. Large values are highly desirable for e.g. feeding large
199 disk arrays but do not work with all hardware.
200
201 The code is nearly done and just needs more testing and support in
202 more drivers.
203
204 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
205 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
206 - Contact tls for further information.
207
208
209 7. nvme suppport
210 ----------------
211
212 nvme ("NVM Express") is a hardware interface standard for PCI-attached
213 SSDs. NetBSD now has a driver for these.
214
215 Driver is now MPSAFE and uses bufq fcfs (i.e. no disksort()) already,
216 so the most obvious software bottlenecks were treated. It still needs
217 more testing on real hardware, and it may be good to investigate some further
218 optimizations, such as DragonFly pbuf(9) or something similar.
219
220 Semi-relatedly, it is also time for scsipi to become MPSAFE.
221
222 - As of May 2016 a port of OpenBSD's driver has been commited. This
223 will be in -8.
224 - The nvme driver is a backend to ld(4) which is MPSAFE, but we still
225 need to attend to I/O path bottlenecks. Better instrumentation
226 is needed.
227 - Flush cache commands via DIOCCACHESYNC currently doesn't wait for completion;
228 it must not poll since that corrupts command queue, but it should use
229 a condition variable to wait for the flush to actually finish
230 - NVMe controllers supports write cache administration via GET/SET FEATURE, but
231 driver doesn't currently implement the cache ioctls, leading to somewhat
232 ugly dkctl(1) output; it would be fairly simple to add this, but would
233 require ld(4) attachment code changed to support passing arbitrary ioctls
234 to attachments
235 - There is no clear timeframe or release target for these points.
236 - Contact msaitoh or agc for further information.
237
238
239 8. lfs64
240 --------
241
242 LFS currently only supports volumes up to 2 TB. As LFS is of interest
243 for use on shingled disks (which are larger than 2 TB) and also for
244 use on disk arrays (ditto) this is something of a problem. A 64-bit
245 version of LFS for large volumes is in the works.
246
247 - As of November 2015 dholland is working on this.
248 - It is close to being ready for at least experimental use and is
249 expected to be in 8.0.
250 - Responsible: dholland
251
252
253 9. Per-process namespaces
254 -------------------------
255
256 Support for per-process variation of the file system namespace enables
257 a number of things; more flexible chroots, for example, and also
258 potentially more efficient pkgsrc builds. dholland thought up a
259 somewhat hackish but low-footprint way to implement this.
260
261 - As of November 2015 dholland is working on this.
262 - It is scheduled to be in 8.0.
263 - Responsible: dholland
264
265
266 10. lvm tidyup
267 --------------
268
269 [agc says someone should look at our lvm stuff; XXX fill this in]
270
271 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
272 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
273 - Contact agc for further information.
274
275
276 11. Flash translation layer
277 ---------------------------
278
279 SSDs ship with firmware called a "flash translation layer" that
280 arbitrates between the block device software expects to see and the
281 raw flash chips. FTLs handle wear leveling, lifetime management, and
282 also internal caching, striping, and other performance concerns. While
283 NetBSD has a file system for raw flash (chfs), it seems that given
284 things NetBSD is often used for it ought to come with a flash
285 translation layer as well.
286
287 Note that this is an area where writing your own is probably a bad
288 plan; it is a complicated area with a lot of prior art that's also
289 reportedly full of patent mines. There are a couple of open FTL
290 implementations that we might be able to import.
291
292 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
293 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
294 - Contact dholland for further information.
295
296
297 12. Shingled disk support
298 -------------------------
299
300 Shingled disks (or more technically, disks with "shingled magnetic
301 recording" or SMR) can only write whole tracks at once. Thus, to
302 operate effectively they require translation support similar to the
303 flash translation layers found in SSDs. The nature and structure of
304 shingle translation layers is still being researched; however, at some
305 point we will want to support these things in NetBSD.
306
307 - As of November 2015 one of dholland's coworkers is looking at this.
308 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
309 - Contact dholland for further information.
310
311
312 13. ext3/ext4 support
313 ---------------------
314
315 We would like to be able to read and write Linux ext3fs and ext4fs
316 volumes. (We can already read clean ext3fs volumes as they're the same
317 as ext2fs, modulo volume features our ext2fs code does not support;
318 but we can't write them.)
319
320 Ideally someone would write ext3 and/or ext4 code, whether integrated
321 with or separate from the ext2 code we already have. It might also
322 make sense to port or wrap the Linux ext3 or ext4 code so it can be
323 loaded as a GPL'd kernel module; it isn't clear if that would be more
324 or less work than doing an implementation.
325
326 Note however that implementing ext3 has already defeated several
327 people; this is a harder project than it looks.
328
329 - GSoc 2016 brought support for extents, and also ro support for dir
330 hashes; jdolecek also implemented several frequently used ext4 features
331 so most contemporary ext filesystems should be possible to mount
332 read-write
333 - still need rw dir_nhash and xattr (semi-easy), and eventually journalling
334 (hard)
335 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
336 - jdolecek is working on improving ext3/ext4 support (particularily
337 journalling)
338
339
340 14. Port hammer from Dragonfly
341 ------------------------------
342
343 While the motivation for and role of hammer isn't perhaps super
344 persuasive, it would still be good to have it. Porting it from
345 Dragonfly is probably not that painful (compared to, say, zfs) but as
346 the Dragonfly and NetBSD VFS layers have diverged in different
347 directions from the original 4.4BSD, may not be entirely trivial
348 either.
349
350 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
351 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
352 - There probably isn't any particular person to contact; for VFS
353 concerns contact dholland or hannken.
354
355
356 15. afs maintenance
357 -------------------
358
359 AFS needs periodic care and feeding to continue working as NetBSD
360 changes, because the kernel-level bits aren't kept in the NetBSD tree
361 and don't get updated with other things. This is an ongoing issue that
362 always seems to need more manpower than it gets. It might make sense
363 to import some of the kernel AFS code, or maybe even just some of the
364 glue layer that it uses, in order to keep it more current.
365
366 - jakllsch sometimes works on this.
367 - We would like every release to have working AFS by the time it's
368 released.
369 - Contact jakllsch or gendalia about AFS; for VFS concerns contact
370 dholland or hannken.
371
372
373 16. execute-in-place
374 --------------------
375
376 It is likely that the future includes non-volatile storage (so-called
377 "nvram") that looks like RAM from the perspective of software. Most
378 importantly: the storage is memory-mapped rather than looking like a
379 disk controller. There are a number of things NetBSD ought to have to
380 be ready for this, of which probably the most important is
381 "execute-in-place": when an executable is run from such storage, and
382 mapped into user memory with mmap, the storage hardware pages should
383 be able to appear directly in user memory. Right now they get
384 gratuitously copied into RAM, which is slow and wasteful. There are
385 also other reasons (e.g. embedded device ROMs) to want execute-in-
386 place support.
387
388 Note that at the implementation level this is a UVM issue rather than
389 strictly a storage issue.
390
391 Also note that one does not need access to nvram hardware to work on
392 this issue; given the performance profiles touted for nvram
393 technologies, a plain RAM disk like md(4) is sufficient both
394 structurally and for performance analysis.
395
396 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this. Some
397 time back, uebayasi wrote some preliminary patches, but they were
398 rejected by the UVM maintainers.
399 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
400 - Contact dholland for further information.
401
402
403 17. use extended attributes for ACL and capability storage
404 ----------------------------------------------------------
405
406 Currently there is some support for extended attributes in ffs,
407 but nothing really uses it. I would be nice if we came up with
408 a standard format to store ACL's and capabilities like Linux has.
409 The various tools must be modified to understand this and be able
410 to copy them if requested. Also tools to manipulate the data will
411 need to be written.
412
413 18. coda maintenance
414 --------------------
415
416 Coda only sort of works. [And I think it's behind relative to
417 upstream, or something of the sort; XXX fill this in.] Also the code
418 appears to have an ugly incestuous relationship with FFS. This should
419 really be cleaned up. That or maybe it's time to remove Coda.
420
421 - As of November 2015 nobody is known to be working on this.
422 - There is no clear timeframe or release target.
423 - There isn't anyone in particular to contact.
424 - Circa 2012 christos made it work read-write and split it
425 into modules. Since then christos has not tested it.
426
427 Alistair Crooks, David Holland
428 Fri Nov 20 02:17:53 EST 2015
429 Sun May 1 16:50:42 EDT 2016 (some updates)
430
431