Librados (C)
librados provides low-level access to the RADOS service. For an overview of RADOS, see Architecture.
Example: connecting and writing an object
To use Librados, you instantiate a rados_t
variable (a cluster handle) and
call rados_create()
with a pointer to it:
int err;
rados_t cluster;
err = rados_create(&cluster, NULL);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: cannot create a cluster handle: %s\n", argv[0], strerror(-err));
exit(1);
}
Then you configure your rados_t
to connect to your cluster,
either by setting individual values (rados_conf_set()
),
using a configuration file (rados_conf_read_file()
), using
command line options (rados_conf_parse_argv()
), or an
environment variable (rados_conf_parse_env()
):
err = rados_conf_read_file(cluster, "/path/to/myceph.conf");
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: cannot read config file: %s\n", argv[0], strerror(-err));
exit(1);
}
Once the cluster handle is configured, you can connect to the cluster with rados_connect()
:
err = rados_connect(cluster);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: cannot connect to cluster: %s\n", argv[0], strerror(-err));
exit(1);
}
Then you open an “IO context”, a rados_ioctx_t
, with rados_ioctx_create()
:
rados_ioctx_t io;
char *poolname = "mypool";
err = rados_ioctx_create(cluster, poolname, &io);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: cannot open rados pool %s: %s\n", argv[0], poolname, strerror(-err));
rados_shutdown(cluster);
exit(1);
}
Note that the pool you try to access must exist.
Then you can use the RADOS data manipulation functions, for example
write into an object called greeting
with
rados_write_full()
:
err = rados_write_full(io, "greeting", "hello", 5);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: cannot write pool %s: %s\n", argv[0], poolname, strerror(-err));
rados_ioctx_destroy(io);
rados_shutdown(cluster);
exit(1);
}
In the end, you will want to close your IO context and connection to RADOS with rados_ioctx_destroy()
and rados_shutdown()
:
rados_ioctx_destroy(io);
rados_shutdown(cluster);
Asynchronous IO
When doing lots of IO, you often don’t need to wait for one operation to complete before starting the next one. Librados provides asynchronous versions of several operations:
For each operation, you must first create a
rados_completion_t
that represents what to do when the
operation is safe or complete by calling
rados_aio_create_completion()
. If you don’t need anything
special to happen, you can pass NULL:
rados_completion_t comp;
err = rados_aio_create_completion(NULL, NULL, NULL, &comp);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: could not create aio completion: %s\n", argv[0], strerror(-err));
rados_ioctx_destroy(io);
rados_shutdown(cluster);
exit(1);
}
Now you can call any of the aio operations, and wait for it to be in memory or on disk on all replicas:
err = rados_aio_write(io, "foo", comp, "bar", 3, 0);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: could not schedule aio write: %s\n", argv[0], strerror(-err));
rados_aio_release(comp);
rados_ioctx_destroy(io);
rados_shutdown(cluster);
exit(1);
}
rados_aio_wait_for_complete(comp); // in memory
rados_aio_wait_for_safe(comp); // on disk
Finally, we need to free the memory used by the completion with rados_aio_release()
:
rados_aio_release(comp);
You can use the callbacks to tell your application when writes are
durable, or when read buffers are full. For example, if you wanted to
measure the latency of each operation when appending to several
objects, you could schedule several writes and store the ack and
commit time in the corresponding callback, then wait for all of them
to complete using rados_aio_flush()
before analyzing the
latencies:
typedef struct {
struct timeval start;
struct timeval ack_end;
struct timeval commit_end;
} req_duration;
void ack_callback(rados_completion_t comp, void *arg) {
req_duration *dur = (req_duration *) arg;
gettimeofday(&dur->ack_end, NULL);
}
void commit_callback(rados_completion_t comp, void *arg) {
req_duration *dur = (req_duration *) arg;
gettimeofday(&dur->commit_end, NULL);
}
int output_append_latency(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *data, size_t len, size_t num_writes) {
req_duration times[num_writes];
rados_completion_t comps[num_writes];
for (size_t i = 0; i < num_writes; ++i) {
gettimeofday(×[i].start, NULL);
int err = rados_aio_create_completion((void*) ×[i], ack_callback, commit_callback, &comps[i]);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error creating rados completion: %s\n", strerror(-err));
return err;
}
char obj_name[100];
snprintf(obj_name, sizeof(obj_name), "foo%ld", (unsigned long)i);
err = rados_aio_append(io, obj_name, comps[i], data, len);
if (err < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error from rados_aio_append: %s", strerror(-err));
return err;
}
}
// wait until all requests finish *and* the callbacks complete
rados_aio_flush(io);
// the latencies can now be analyzed
printf("Request # | Ack latency (s) | Commit latency (s)\n");
for (size_t i = 0; i < num_writes; ++i) {
// don't forget to free the completions
rados_aio_release(comps[i]);
struct timeval ack_lat, commit_lat;
timersub(×[i].ack_end, ×[i].start, &ack_lat);
timersub(×[i].commit_end, ×[i].start, &commit_lat);
printf("%9ld | %8ld.%06ld | %10ld.%06ld\n", (unsigned long) i, ack_lat.tv_sec, ack_lat.tv_usec, commit_lat.tv_sec, commit_lat.tv_usec);
}
return 0;
}
Note that all the rados_completion_t
must be freed with rados_aio_release()
to avoid leaking memory.
API calls
Defines
- LIBRADOS_ALL_NSPACES
Pass as nspace argument to rados_ioctx_set_namespace() before calling rados_nobjects_list_open() to return all objects in all namespaces.
- struct obj_watch_t
#include <rados_types.h>One item from list_watchers
- struct notify_ack_t
- struct notify_timeout_t
xattr comparison operations
Operators for comparing xattrs on objects, and aborting the rados_read_op or rados_write_op transaction if the comparison fails.
Operation Flags
Flags for rados_read_op_operate(), rados_write_op_operate(), rados_aio_read_op_operate(), and rados_aio_write_op_operate(). See librados.hpp for details.
- enum [anonymous]
Values:
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_NOFLAG
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_BALANCE_READS
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_LOCALIZE_READS
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_ORDER_READS_WRITES
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_IGNORE_CACHE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_SKIPRWLOCKS
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_IGNORE_OVERLAY
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_FULL_TRY
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_FULL_FORCE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_IGNORE_REDIRECT
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_ORDERSNAP
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OPERATION_RETURNVEC
Alloc hint flags
Flags for rados_write_op_alloc_hint2() and rados_set_alloc_hint2() indicating future IO patterns.
- enum [anonymous]
Values:
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_SEQUENTIAL_WRITE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_RANDOM_WRITE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_SEQUENTIAL_READ
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_RANDOM_READ
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_APPEND_ONLY
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_IMMUTABLE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_SHORTLIVED
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_LONGLIVED
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_COMPRESSIBLE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_ALLOC_HINT_FLAG_INCOMPRESSIBLE
Asynchronous I/O
Read and write to objects without blocking.
- typedef void (*rados_callback_t)(rados_completion_t cb, void *arg)
Callbacks for asynchrous operations take two parameters:
cb the completion that has finished
arg application defined data made available to the callback function
- int rados_aio_create_completion(void *cb_arg, rados_callback_t cb_complete, rados_callback_t cb_safe, rados_completion_t *pc)
Constructs a completion to use with asynchronous operations
The complete and safe callbacks correspond to operations being acked and committed, respectively. The callbacks are called in order of receipt, so the safe callback may be triggered before the complete callback, and vice versa. This is affected by journalling on the OSDs.
TODO: more complete documentation of this elsewhere (in the RADOS docs?)
Note
Read operations only get a complete callback.
Note
BUG: this should check for ENOMEM instead of throwing an exception
- Parameters
cb_arg – application-defined data passed to the callback functions
cb_complete – the function to be called when the operation is in memory on all replicas
cb_safe – the function to be called when the operation is on stable storage on all replicas
pc – where to store the completion
- Returns
0
- int rados_aio_create_completion2(void *cb_arg, rados_callback_t cb_complete, rados_completion_t *pc)
Constructs a completion to use with asynchronous operations
The complete callback corresponds to operation being acked.
Note
BUG: this should check for ENOMEM instead of throwing an exception
- Parameters
cb_arg – application-defined data passed to the callback functions
cb_complete – the function to be called when the operation is committed on all replicas
pc – where to store the completion
- Returns
0
- int rados_aio_wait_for_complete(rados_completion_t c)
Block until an operation completes
This means it is in memory on all replicas.
Note
BUG: this should be void
- Parameters
c – operation to wait for
- Returns
0
- int rados_aio_wait_for_safe(rados_completion_t c) __attribute__((deprecated))
Block until an operation is safe
This means it is on stable storage on all replicas.
Note
BUG: this should be void
- Parameters
c – operation to wait for
- Returns
0
- int rados_aio_is_complete(rados_completion_t c)
Has an asynchronous operation completed?
Warning
This does not imply that the complete callback has finished
- Parameters
c – async operation to inspect
- Returns
whether c is complete
- int rados_aio_is_safe(rados_completion_t c)
Is an asynchronous operation safe?
Warning
This does not imply that the safe callback has finished
- Parameters
c – async operation to inspect
- Returns
whether c is safe
- int rados_aio_wait_for_complete_and_cb(rados_completion_t c)
Block until an operation completes and callback completes
This means it is in memory on all replicas and can be read.
Note
BUG: this should be void
- Parameters
c – operation to wait for
- Returns
0
- int rados_aio_wait_for_safe_and_cb(rados_completion_t c) __attribute__((deprecated))
Block until an operation is safe and callback has completed
This means it is on stable storage on all replicas.
Note
BUG: this should be void
- Parameters
c – operation to wait for
- Returns
0
- int rados_aio_is_complete_and_cb(rados_completion_t c)
Has an asynchronous operation and callback completed
- Parameters
c – async operation to inspect
- Returns
whether c is complete
- int rados_aio_is_safe_and_cb(rados_completion_t c)
Is an asynchronous operation safe and has the callback completed
- Parameters
c – async operation to inspect
- Returns
whether c is safe
- int rados_aio_get_return_value(rados_completion_t c)
Get the return value of an asychronous operation
The return value is set when the operation is complete or safe, whichever comes first.
Note
BUG: complete callback may never be called when the safe message is received before the complete message
- Parameters
c – async operation to inspect
- Pre
The operation is safe or complete
- Returns
return value of the operation
- uint64_t rados_aio_get_version(rados_completion_t c)
Get the internal object version of the target of an asychronous operation
The return value is set when the operation is complete or safe, whichever comes first.
Note
BUG: complete callback may never be called when the safe message is received before the complete message
- Parameters
c – async operation to inspect
- Pre
The operation is safe or complete
- Returns
version number of the asychronous operation’s target
- void rados_aio_release(rados_completion_t c)
Release a completion
Call this when you no longer need the completion. It may not be freed immediately if the operation is not acked and committed.
- Parameters
c – completion to release
- int rados_aio_write(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion, const char *buf, size_t len, uint64_t off)
Write data to an object asynchronously
Queues the write and returns. The return value of the completion will be 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
- Parameters
io – the context in which the write will occur
oid – name of the object
completion – what to do when the write is safe and complete
buf – data to write
len – length of the data, in bytes
off – byte offset in the object to begin writing at
- Returns
0 on success, -EROFS if the io context specifies a snap_seq other than LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD
- int rados_aio_append(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion, const char *buf, size_t len)
Asynchronously append data to an object
Queues the append and returns.
The return value of the completion will be 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
oid – the name of the object
completion – what to do when the append is safe and complete
buf – the data to append
len – length of buf (in bytes)
- Returns
0 on success, -EROFS if the io context specifies a snap_seq other than LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD
- int rados_aio_write_full(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion, const char *buf, size_t len)
Asynchronously write an entire object
The object is filled with the provided data. If the object exists, it is atomically truncated and then written. Queues the write_full and returns.
The return value of the completion will be 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
- Parameters
io – the io context in which the write will occur
oid – name of the object
completion – what to do when the write_full is safe and complete
buf – data to write
len – length of the data, in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, -EROFS if the io context specifies a snap_seq other than LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD
- int rados_aio_writesame(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion, const char *buf, size_t data_len, size_t write_len, uint64_t off)
Asynchronously write the same buffer multiple times
Queues the writesame and returns.
The return value of the completion will be 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
- Parameters
io – the io context in which the write will occur
oid – name of the object
completion – what to do when the writesame is safe and complete
buf – data to write
data_len – length of the data, in bytes
write_len – the total number of bytes to write
off – byte offset in the object to begin writing at
- Returns
0 on success, -EROFS if the io context specifies a snap_seq other than LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD
- int rados_aio_remove(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion)
Asynchronously remove an object
Queues the remove and returns.
The return value of the completion will be 0 on success, negative error code on failure.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
oid – the name of the object
completion – what to do when the remove is safe and complete
- Returns
0 on success, -EROFS if the io context specifies a snap_seq other than LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD
- int rados_aio_read(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion, char *buf, size_t len, uint64_t off)
Asynchronously read data from an object
The io context determines the snapshot to read from, if any was set by rados_ioctx_snap_set_read().
The return value of the completion will be number of bytes read on success, negative error code on failure.
Note
only the ‘complete’ callback of the completion will be called.
- Parameters
io – the context in which to perform the read
oid – the name of the object to read from
completion – what to do when the read is complete
buf – where to store the results
len – the number of bytes to read
off – the offset to start reading from in the object
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_flush(rados_ioctx_t io)
Block until all pending writes in an io context are safe
This is not equivalent to calling rados_aio_wait_for_safe() on all write completions, since this waits for the associated callbacks to complete as well.
Note
BUG: always returns 0, should be void or accept a timeout
- Parameters
io – the context to flush
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_flush_async(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_completion_t completion)
Schedule a callback for when all currently pending aio writes are safe. This is a non-blocking version of rados_aio_flush().
- Parameters
io – the context to flush
completion – what to do when the writes are safe
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_stat(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, uint64_t *psize, time_t *pmtime)
Asynchronously get object stats (size/mtime)
- Parameters
io – ioctx
o – object name
completion – what to do when the stat is complete
psize – where to store object size
pmtime – where to store modification time
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_cmpext(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, const char *cmp_buf, size_t cmp_len, uint64_t off)
Asynchronously compare an on-disk object range with a buffer
- Parameters
io – the context in which to perform the comparison
o – the name of the object to compare with
completion – what to do when the comparison is complete
cmp_buf – buffer containing bytes to be compared with object contents
cmp_len – length to compare and size of
cmp_buf
in bytesoff – object byte offset at which to start the comparison
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure, (-MAX_ERRNO - mismatch_off) on mismatch
- int rados_aio_cancel(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_completion_t completion)
Cancel async operation
- Parameters
io – ioctx
completion – completion handle
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_exec(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, const char *cls, const char *method, const char *in_buf, size_t in_len, char *buf, size_t out_len)
Asynchronously execute an OSD class method on an object
The OSD has a plugin mechanism for performing complicated operations on an object atomically. These plugins are called classes. This function allows librados users to call the custom methods. The input and output formats are defined by the class. Classes in ceph.git can be found in src/cls subdirectories
- Parameters
io – the context in which to call the method
o – name of the object
completion – what to do when the exec completes
cls – the name of the class
method – the name of the method
in_buf – where to find input
in_len – length of in_buf in bytes
buf – where to store output
out_len – length of buf in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
Watch/Notify
Watch/notify is a protocol to help communicate among clients. It can be used to sychronize client state. All that’s needed is a well-known object name (for example, rbd uses the header object of an image).
Watchers register an interest in an object, and receive all notifies on that object. A notify attempts to communicate with all clients watching an object, and blocks on the notifier until each client responds or a timeout is reached.
See rados_watch() and rados_notify() for more details.
- typedef void (*rados_watchcb_t)(uint8_t opcode, uint64_t ver, void *arg)
Callback activated when a notify is received on a watched object.
Note
BUG: opcode is an internal detail that shouldn’t be exposed
Note
BUG: ver is unused
- Param opcode
undefined
- Param ver
version of the watched object
- Param arg
application-specific data
- typedef void (*rados_watchcb2_t)(void *arg, uint64_t notify_id, uint64_t handle, uint64_t notifier_id, void *data, size_t data_len)
Callback activated when a notify is received on a watched object.
- Param arg
opaque user-defined value provided to rados_watch2()
- Param notify_id
an id for this notify event
- Param handle
the watcher handle we are notifying
- Param notifier_id
the unique client id for the notifier
- Param data
payload from the notifier
- Param data_len
length of payload buffer
- typedef void (*rados_watcherrcb_t)(void *pre, uint64_t cookie, int err)
Callback activated when we encounter an error with the watch session. This can happen when the location of the objects moves within the cluster and we fail to register our watch with the new object location, or when our connection with the object OSD is otherwise interrupted and we may have missed notify events.
- Param pre
opaque user-defined value provided to rados_watch2()
- Param cookie
the internal id assigned to the watch session
- Param err
error code
- int rados_watch(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t ver, uint64_t *cookie, rados_watchcb_t watchcb, void *arg) __attribute__((deprecated))
Register an interest in an object
A watch operation registers the client as being interested in notifications on an object. OSDs keep track of watches on persistent storage, so they are preserved across cluster changes by the normal recovery process. If the client loses its connection to the primary OSD for a watched object, the watch will be removed after 30 seconds. Watches are automatically reestablished when a new connection is made, or a placement group switches OSDs.
Note
BUG: librados should provide a way for watchers to notice connection resets
Note
BUG: the ver parameter does not work, and -ERANGE will never be returned (See URL tracker.ceph.com/issues/2592)
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object to watch
ver – expected version of the object
cookie – where to store the internal id assigned to this watch
watchcb – what to do when a notify is received on this object
arg – application defined data to pass when watchcb is called
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE if the version of the object is greater than ver
- int rados_watch2(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t *cookie, rados_watchcb2_t watchcb, rados_watcherrcb_t watcherrcb, void *arg)
Register an interest in an object
A watch operation registers the client as being interested in notifications on an object. OSDs keep track of watches on persistent storage, so they are preserved across cluster changes by the normal recovery process. If the client loses its connection to the primary OSD for a watched object, the watch will be removed after a timeout configured with osd_client_watch_timeout. Watches are automatically reestablished when a new connection is made, or a placement group switches OSDs.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object to watch
cookie – where to store the internal id assigned to this watch
watchcb – what to do when a notify is received on this object
watcherrcb – what to do when the watch session encounters an error
arg – opaque value to pass to the callback
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_watch3(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t *cookie, rados_watchcb2_t watchcb, rados_watcherrcb_t watcherrcb, uint32_t timeout, void *arg)
Register an interest in an object
A watch operation registers the client as being interested in notifications on an object. OSDs keep track of watches on persistent storage, so they are preserved across cluster changes by the normal recovery process. Watches are automatically reestablished when a new connection is made, or a placement group switches OSDs.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object to watch
cookie – where to store the internal id assigned to this watch
watchcb – what to do when a notify is received on this object
watcherrcb – what to do when the watch session encounters an error
timeout – how many seconds the connection will keep after disconnection
arg – opaque value to pass to the callback
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_watch(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, uint64_t *handle, rados_watchcb2_t watchcb, rados_watcherrcb_t watcherrcb, void *arg)
Asynchronous register an interest in an object
A watch operation registers the client as being interested in notifications on an object. OSDs keep track of watches on persistent storage, so they are preserved across cluster changes by the normal recovery process. If the client loses its connection to the primary OSD for a watched object, the watch will be removed after 30 seconds. Watches are automatically reestablished when a new connection is made, or a placement group switches OSDs.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object to watch
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
handle – where to store the internal id assigned to this watch
watchcb – what to do when a notify is received on this object
watcherrcb – what to do when the watch session encounters an error
arg – opaque value to pass to the callback
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_watch2(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, uint64_t *handle, rados_watchcb2_t watchcb, rados_watcherrcb_t watcherrcb, uint32_t timeout, void *arg)
Asynchronous register an interest in an object
A watch operation registers the client as being interested in notifications on an object. OSDs keep track of watches on persistent storage, so they are preserved across cluster changes by the normal recovery process. If the client loses its connection to the primary OSD for a watched object, the watch will be removed after the number of seconds that configured in timeout parameter. Watches are automatically reestablished when a new connection is made, or a placement group switches OSDs.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object to watch
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
handle – where to store the internal id assigned to this watch
watchcb – what to do when a notify is received on this object
watcherrcb – what to do when the watch session encounters an error
timeout – how many seconds the connection will keep after disconnection
arg – opaque value to pass to the callback
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_watch_check(rados_ioctx_t io, uint64_t cookie)
Check on the status of a watch
Return the number of milliseconds since the watch was last confirmed. Or, if there has been an error, return that.
If there is an error, the watch is no longer valid, and should be destroyed with rados_unwatch2(). The the user is still interested in the object, a new watch should be created with rados_watch2().
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
cookie – the watch handle
- Returns
ms since last confirmed on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_unwatch(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t cookie) __attribute__((deprecated))
Unregister an interest in an object
Once this completes, no more notifies will be sent to us for this watch. This should be called to clean up unneeded watchers.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the name of the watched object (ignored)
cookie – which watch to unregister
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_unwatch2(rados_ioctx_t io, uint64_t cookie)
Unregister an interest in an object
Once this completes, no more notifies will be sent to us for this watch. This should be called to clean up unneeded watchers.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
cookie – which watch to unregister
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_unwatch(rados_ioctx_t io, uint64_t cookie, rados_completion_t completion)
Asynchronous unregister an interest in an object
Once this completes, no more notifies will be sent to us for this watch. This should be called to clean up unneeded watchers.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
cookie – which watch to unregister
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_notify(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t ver, const char *buf, int buf_len) __attribute__((deprecated))
Sychronously notify watchers of an object
This blocks until all watchers of the object have received and reacted to the notify, or a timeout is reached.
Note
BUG: the timeout is not changeable via the C API
Note
BUG: the bufferlist is inaccessible in a rados_watchcb_t
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the name of the object
ver – obsolete - just pass zero
buf – data to send to watchers
buf_len – length of buf in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_notify(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, const char *buf, int buf_len, uint64_t timeout_ms, char **reply_buffer, size_t *reply_buffer_len)
Sychronously notify watchers of an object
This blocks until all watchers of the object have received and reacted to the notify, or a timeout is reached.
The reply buffer is optional. If specified, the client will get back an encoded buffer that includes the ids of the clients that acknowledged the notify as well as their notify ack payloads (if any). Clients that timed out are not included. Even clients that do not include a notify ack payload are included in the list but have a 0-length payload associated with them. The format:
le32 num_acks { le64 gid global id for the client (for client.1234 that’s 1234) le64 cookie cookie for the client le32 buflen length of reply message buffer u8 * buflen payload } * num_acks le32 num_timeouts { le64 gid global id for the client le64 cookie cookie for the client } * num_timeouts
Note: There may be multiple instances of the same gid if there are multiple watchers registered via the same client.
Note: The buffer must be released with rados_buffer_free() when the user is done with it.
Note: Since the result buffer includes clients that time out, it will be set even when rados_notify() returns an error code (like -ETIMEDOUT).
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
o – the name of the object
buf – data to send to watchers
buf_len – length of buf in bytes
timeout_ms – notify timeout (in ms)
reply_buffer – pointer to reply buffer pointer (free with rados_buffer_free)
reply_buffer_len – pointer to size of reply buffer
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_notify2(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *buf, int buf_len, uint64_t timeout_ms, char **reply_buffer, size_t *reply_buffer_len)
- int rados_decode_notify_response(char *reply_buffer, size_t reply_buffer_len, struct notify_ack_t **acks, size_t *nr_acks, struct notify_timeout_t **timeouts, size_t *nr_timeouts)
Decode a notify response
Decode a notify response (from rados_aio_notify() call) into acks and timeout arrays.
- Parameters
reply_buffer – buffer from rados_aio_notify() call
reply_buffer_len – reply_buffer length
acks – pointer to struct notify_ack_t pointer
nr_acks – pointer to ack count
timeouts – pointer to notify_timeout_t pointer
nr_timeouts – pointer to timeout count
- Returns
0 on success
- void rados_free_notify_response(struct notify_ack_t *acks, size_t nr_acks, struct notify_timeout_t *timeouts)
Free notify allocated buffer
Release memory allocated by rados_decode_notify_response() call
- Parameters
acks – notify_ack_t struct (from rados_decode_notify_response())
nr_acks – ack count
timeouts – notify_timeout_t struct (from rados_decode_notify_response())
- int rados_notify_ack(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t notify_id, uint64_t cookie, const char *buf, int buf_len)
Acknolwedge receipt of a notify
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the name of the object
notify_id – the notify_id we got on the watchcb2_t callback
cookie – the watcher handle
buf – payload to return to notifier (optional)
buf_len – payload length
- Returns
0 on success
- int rados_watch_flush(rados_t cluster)
Flush watch/notify callbacks
This call will block until all pending watch/notify callbacks have been executed and the queue is empty. It should usually be called after shutting down any watches before shutting down the ioctx or librados to ensure that any callbacks do not misuse the ioctx (for example by calling rados_notify_ack after the ioctx has been destroyed).
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster handle
- int rados_aio_watch_flush(rados_t cluster, rados_completion_t completion)
Flush watch/notify callbacks
This call will be nonblock, and the completion will be called until all pending watch/notify callbacks have been executed and the queue is empty. It should usually be called after shutting down any watches before shutting down the ioctx or librados to ensure that any callbacks do not misuse the ioctx (for example by calling rados_notify_ack after the ioctx has been destroyed).
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster handle
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
Mon/OSD/PG Commands
These interfaces send commands relating to the monitor, OSD, or PGs.
- typedef void (*rados_log_callback_t)(void *arg, const char *line, const char *who, uint64_t sec, uint64_t nsec, uint64_t seq, const char *level, const char *msg)
- typedef void (*rados_log_callback2_t)(void *arg, const char *line, const char *channel, const char *who, const char *name, uint64_t sec, uint64_t nsec, uint64_t seq, const char *level, const char *msg)
- int rados_mon_command(rados_t cluster, const char **cmd, size_t cmdlen, const char *inbuf, size_t inbuflen, char **outbuf, size_t *outbuflen, char **outs, size_t *outslen)
Send monitor command.
The result buffers are allocated on the heap; the caller is expected to release that memory with rados_buffer_free(). The buffer and length pointers can all be NULL, in which case they are not filled in.
Note
Takes command string in carefully-formatted JSON; must match defined commands, types, etc.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
cmd – an array of char *’s representing the command
cmdlen – count of valid entries in cmd
inbuf – any bulk input data (crush map, etc.)
inbuflen – input buffer length
outbuf – double pointer to output buffer
outbuflen – pointer to output buffer length
outs – double pointer to status string
outslen – pointer to status string length
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_mgr_command(rados_t cluster, const char **cmd, size_t cmdlen, const char *inbuf, size_t inbuflen, char **outbuf, size_t *outbuflen, char **outs, size_t *outslen)
Send ceph-mgr command.
The result buffers are allocated on the heap; the caller is expected to release that memory with rados_buffer_free(). The buffer and length pointers can all be NULL, in which case they are not filled in.
Note
Takes command string in carefully-formatted JSON; must match defined commands, types, etc.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
cmd – an array of char *’s representing the command
cmdlen – count of valid entries in cmd
inbuf – any bulk input data (crush map, etc.)
inbuflen – input buffer length
outbuf – double pointer to output buffer
outbuflen – pointer to output buffer length
outs – double pointer to status string
outslen – pointer to status string length
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_mgr_command_target(rados_t cluster, const char *name, const char **cmd, size_t cmdlen, const char *inbuf, size_t inbuflen, char **outbuf, size_t *outbuflen, char **outs, size_t *outslen)
Send ceph-mgr tell command.
The result buffers are allocated on the heap; the caller is expected to release that memory with rados_buffer_free(). The buffer and length pointers can all be NULL, in which case they are not filled in.
Note
Takes command string in carefully-formatted JSON; must match defined commands, types, etc.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
name – mgr name to target
cmd – an array of char *’s representing the command
cmdlen – count of valid entries in cmd
inbuf – any bulk input data (crush map, etc.)
inbuflen – input buffer length
outbuf – double pointer to output buffer
outbuflen – pointer to output buffer length
outs – double pointer to status string
outslen – pointer to status string length
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_mon_command_target(rados_t cluster, const char *name, const char **cmd, size_t cmdlen, const char *inbuf, size_t inbuflen, char **outbuf, size_t *outbuflen, char **outs, size_t *outslen)
Send monitor command to a specific monitor.
The result buffers are allocated on the heap; the caller is expected to release that memory with rados_buffer_free(). The buffer and length pointers can all be NULL, in which case they are not filled in.
Note
Takes command string in carefully-formatted JSON; must match defined commands, types, etc.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
name – target monitor’s name
cmd – an array of char *’s representing the command
cmdlen – count of valid entries in cmd
inbuf – any bulk input data (crush map, etc.)
inbuflen – input buffer length
outbuf – double pointer to output buffer
outbuflen – pointer to output buffer length
outs – double pointer to status string
outslen – pointer to status string length
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- void rados_buffer_free(char *buf)
free a rados-allocated buffer
Release memory allocated by librados calls like rados_mon_command().
- Parameters
buf – buffer pointer
- int rados_osd_command(rados_t cluster, int osdid, const char **cmd, size_t cmdlen, const char *inbuf, size_t inbuflen, char **outbuf, size_t *outbuflen, char **outs, size_t *outslen)
- int rados_pg_command(rados_t cluster, const char *pgstr, const char **cmd, size_t cmdlen, const char *inbuf, size_t inbuflen, char **outbuf, size_t *outbuflen, char **outs, size_t *outslen)
- int rados_monitor_log(rados_t cluster, const char *level, rados_log_callback_t cb, void *arg)
- int rados_monitor_log2(rados_t cluster, const char *level, rados_log_callback2_t cb, void *arg)
- int rados_service_register(rados_t cluster, const char *service, const char *daemon, const char *metadata_dict)
register daemon instance for a service
Register us as a daemon providing a particular service. We identify the service (e.g., ‘rgw’) and our instance name (e.g., ‘rgw.$hostname’). The metadata is a map of keys and values with arbitrary static metdata for this instance. The encoding is a series of NULL-terminated strings, alternating key names and values, terminating with an empty key name. For example, “foo\0bar\0this\0that\0\0” is the dict {foo=bar,this=that}.
For the lifetime of the librados instance, regular beacons will be sent to the cluster to maintain our registration in the service map.
- Parameters
cluster – handle
service – service name
daemon – daemon instance name
metadata_dict – static daemon metadata dict
- int rados_service_update_status(rados_t cluster, const char *status_dict)
update daemon status
Update our mutable status information in the service map.
The status dict is encoded the same way the daemon metadata is encoded for rados_service_register. For example, “foo\0bar\0this\0that\0\0” is {foo=bar,this=that}.
- Parameters
cluster – rados cluster handle
status_dict – status dict
Setup and Teardown
These are the first and last functions to that should be called when using librados.
- int rados_create(rados_t *cluster, const char *const id)
Create a handle for communicating with a RADOS cluster.
Ceph environment variables are read when this is called, so if $CEPH_ARGS specifies everything you need to connect, no further configuration is necessary.
- Parameters
cluster – where to store the handle
id – the user to connect as (i.e. admin, not client.admin)
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_create2(rados_t *pcluster, const char *const clustername, const char *const name, uint64_t flags)
Extended version of rados_create.
Like rados_create, but 1) don’t assume ‘client.’+id; allow full specification of name 2) allow specification of cluster name 3) flags for future expansion
- int rados_create_with_context(rados_t *cluster, rados_config_t cct)
Initialize a cluster handle from an existing configuration.
Share configuration state with another rados_t instance.
- Parameters
cluster – where to store the handle
cct – the existing configuration to use
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ping_monitor(rados_t cluster, const char *mon_id, char **outstr, size_t *outstrlen)
Ping the monitor with ID mon_id, storing the resulting reply in buf (if specified) with a maximum size of len.
The result buffer is allocated on the heap; the caller is expected to release that memory with rados_buffer_free(). The buffer and length pointers can be NULL, in which case they are not filled in.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
mon_id – [in] ID of the monitor to ping
outstr – [out] double pointer with the resulting reply
outstrlen – [out] pointer with the size of the reply in outstr
- int rados_connect(rados_t cluster)
Connect to the cluster.
Note
BUG: Before calling this, calling a function that communicates with the cluster will crash.
- Parameters
cluster – The cluster to connect to.
- Pre
The cluster handle is configured with at least a monitor address. If cephx is enabled, a client name and secret must also be set.
- Post
If this succeeds, any function in librados may be used
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- void rados_shutdown(rados_t cluster)
Disconnects from the cluster.
For clean up, this is only necessary after rados_connect() has succeeded.
Warning
This does not guarantee any asynchronous writes have completed. To do that, you must call rados_aio_flush() on all open io contexts.
Warning
We implicitly call rados_watch_flush() on shutdown. If there are watches being used, this should be done explicitly before destroying the relevant IoCtx. We do it here as a safety measure.
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster to shutdown
- Post
the cluster handle cannot be used again
Configuration
These functions read and update Ceph configuration for a cluster handle. Any configuration changes must be done before connecting to the cluster.
Options that librados users might want to set include:
mon_host
auth_supported
key, keyfile, or keyring when using cephx
log_file, log_to_stderr, err_to_stderr, and log_to_syslog
debug_rados, debug_objecter, debug_monc, debug_auth, or debug_ms
See docs.ceph.com for information about available configuration options`
- int rados_conf_read_file(rados_t cluster, const char *path)
Configure the cluster handle using a Ceph config file
If path is NULL, the default locations are searched, and the first found is used. The locations are:
$CEPH_CONF (environment variable)
/etc/ceph/ceph.conf
~/.ceph/config
ceph.conf (in the current working directory)
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle to configure
path – path to a Ceph configuration file
- Pre
rados_connect() has not been called on the cluster handle
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_conf_parse_argv(rados_t cluster, int argc, const char **argv)
Configure the cluster handle with command line arguments
argv can contain any common Ceph command line option, including any configuration parameter prefixed by ‘—’ and replacing spaces with dashes or underscores. For example, the following options are equivalent:
—mon-host 10.0.0.1:6789
—mon_host 10.0.0.1:6789
-m 10.0.0.1:6789
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle to configure
argc – number of arguments in argv
argv – arguments to parse
- Pre
rados_connect() has not been called on the cluster handle
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_conf_parse_argv_remainder(rados_t cluster, int argc, const char **argv, const char **remargv)
Configure the cluster handle with command line arguments, returning any remainders. Same rados_conf_parse_argv, except for extra remargv argument to hold returns unrecognized arguments.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle to configure
argc – number of arguments in argv
argv – arguments to parse
remargv – char* array for returned unrecognized arguments
- Pre
rados_connect() has not been called on the cluster handle
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_conf_parse_env(rados_t cluster, const char *var)
Configure the cluster handle based on an environment variable
The contents of the environment variable are parsed as if they were Ceph command line options. If var is NULL, the CEPH_ARGS environment variable is used.
Note
BUG: this is not threadsafe - it uses a static buffer
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle to configure
var – name of the environment variable to read
- Pre
rados_connect() has not been called on the cluster handle
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_conf_set(rados_t cluster, const char *option, const char *value)
Set a configuration option
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle to configure
option – option to set
value – value of the option
- Pre
rados_connect() has not been called on the cluster handle
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ENOENT when the option is not a Ceph configuration option
- int rados_conf_get(rados_t cluster, const char *option, char *buf, size_t len)
Get the value of a configuration option
- Parameters
cluster – configuration to read
option – which option to read
buf – where to write the configuration value
len – the size of buf in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ENAMETOOLONG if the buffer is too short to contain the requested value
Pools
RADOS pools are separate namespaces for objects. Pools may have different crush rules associated with them, so they could have differing replication levels or placement strategies. RADOS permissions are also tied to pools - users can have different read, write, and execute permissions on a per-pool basis.
- int rados_pool_list(rados_t cluster, char *buf, size_t len)
List pools
Gets a list of pool names as NULL-terminated strings. The pool names will be placed in the supplied buffer one after another. After the last pool name, there will be two 0 bytes in a row.
If len is too short to fit all the pool name entries we need, we will fill as much as we can.
Buf may be null to determine the buffer size needed to list all pools.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
buf – output buffer
len – output buffer length
- Returns
length of the buffer we would need to list all pools
- int rados_inconsistent_pg_list(rados_t cluster, int64_t pool, char *buf, size_t len)
List inconsistent placement groups of the given pool
Gets a list of inconsistent placement groups as NULL-terminated strings. The placement group names will be placed in the supplied buffer one after another. After the last name, there will be two 0 types in a row.
If len is too short to fit all the placement group entries we need, we will fill as much as we can.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
pool – pool ID
buf – output buffer
len – output buffer length
- Returns
length of the buffer we would need to list all pools
- rados_config_t rados_cct(rados_t cluster)
Get a configuration handle for a rados cluster handle
This handle is valid only as long as the cluster handle is valid.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
- Returns
config handle for this cluster
- uint64_t rados_get_instance_id(rados_t cluster)
Get a global id for current instance
This id is a unique representation of current connection to the cluster
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
- Returns
instance global id
- int rados_get_min_compatible_osd(rados_t cluster, int8_t *require_osd_release)
Gets the minimum compatible OSD version
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
require_osd_release – [out] minimum compatible OSD version based upon the current features
- Returns
0 on sucess, negative error code on failure
- int rados_get_min_compatible_client(rados_t cluster, int8_t *min_compat_client, int8_t *require_min_compat_client)
Gets the minimum compatible client version
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
min_compat_client – [out] minimum compatible client version based upon the current features
require_min_compat_client – [out] required minimum client version based upon explicit setting
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_create(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name, rados_ioctx_t *ioctx)
Create an io context
The io context allows you to perform operations within a particular pool. For more details see rados_ioctx_t.
- Parameters
cluster – which cluster the pool is in
pool_name – name of the pool
ioctx – where to store the io context
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_create2(rados_t cluster, int64_t pool_id, rados_ioctx_t *ioctx)
- void rados_ioctx_destroy(rados_ioctx_t io)
The opposite of rados_ioctx_create
This just tells librados that you no longer need to use the io context. It may not be freed immediately if there are pending asynchronous requests on it, but you should not use an io context again after calling this function on it.
Warning
This does not guarantee any asynchronous writes have completed. You must call rados_aio_flush() on the io context before destroying it to do that.
Warning
If this ioctx is used by rados_watch, the caller needs to be sure that all registered watches are disconnected via rados_unwatch() and that rados_watch_flush() is called. This ensures that a racing watch callback does not make use of a destroyed ioctx.
- Parameters
io – the io context to dispose of
- rados_config_t rados_ioctx_cct(rados_ioctx_t io)
Get configuration handle for a pool handle
- Parameters
io – pool handle
- Returns
rados_config_t for this cluster
- rados_t rados_ioctx_get_cluster(rados_ioctx_t io)
Get the cluster handle used by this rados_ioctx_t Note that this is a weak reference, and should not be destroyed via rados_shutdown().
- Parameters
io – the io context
- Returns
the cluster handle for this io context
- int rados_ioctx_pool_stat(rados_ioctx_t io, struct rados_pool_stat_t *stats)
Get pool usage statistics
Fills in a rados_pool_stat_t after querying the cluster.
- Parameters
io – determines which pool to query
stats – where to store the results
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int64_t rados_pool_lookup(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name)
Get the id of a pool
- Parameters
cluster – which cluster the pool is in
pool_name – which pool to look up
- Returns
id of the pool
- Returns
-ENOENT if the pool is not found
- int rados_pool_reverse_lookup(rados_t cluster, int64_t id, char *buf, size_t maxlen)
Get the name of a pool
- Parameters
cluster – which cluster the pool is in
id – the id of the pool
buf – where to store the pool name
maxlen – size of buffer where name will be stored
- Returns
length of string stored, or -ERANGE if buffer too small
- int rados_pool_create(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name)
Create a pool with default settings
The default crush rule is rule 0.
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster in which the pool will be created
pool_name – the name of the new pool
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_pool_create_with_auid(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name, uint64_t auid) __attribute__((deprecated))
Create a pool owned by a specific auid.
DEPRECATED: auid support has been removed, and this call will be removed in a future release.
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster in which the pool will be created
pool_name – the name of the new pool
auid – the id of the owner of the new pool
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_pool_create_with_crush_rule(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name, uint8_t crush_rule_num)
Create a pool with a specific CRUSH rule
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster in which the pool will be created
pool_name – the name of the new pool
crush_rule_num – which rule to use for placement in the new pool1
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_pool_create_with_all(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name, uint64_t auid, uint8_t crush_rule_num) __attribute__((deprecated))
Create a pool with a specific CRUSH rule and auid
DEPRECATED: auid support has been removed and this call will be removed in a future release.
This is a combination of rados_pool_create_with_crush_rule() and rados_pool_create_with_auid().
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster in which the pool will be created
pool_name – the name of the new pool
crush_rule_num – which rule to use for placement in the new pool2
auid – the id of the owner of the new pool
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_pool_get_base_tier(rados_t cluster, int64_t pool, int64_t *base_tier)
Returns the pool that is the base tier for this pool.
The return value is the ID of the pool that should be used to read from/write to. If tiering is not set up for the pool, returns
pool
.
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster the pool is in
pool – ID of the pool to query
base_tier – [out] base tier, or
pool
if tiering is not configured- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_pool_delete(rados_t cluster, const char *pool_name)
Delete a pool and all data inside it
The pool is removed from the cluster immediately, but the actual data is deleted in the background.
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster the pool is in
pool_name – which pool to delete
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_pool_set_auid(rados_ioctx_t io, uint64_t auid) __attribute__((deprecated))
Attempt to change an io context’s associated auid “owner”
DEPRECATED: auid support has been removed and this call has no effect.
Requires that you have write permission on both the current and new auid.
- Parameters
io – reference to the pool to change.
auid – the auid you wish the io to have.
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_pool_get_auid(rados_ioctx_t io, uint64_t *auid) __attribute__((deprecated))
Get the auid of a pool
DEPRECATED: auid support has been removed and this call always reports CEPH_AUTH_UID_DEFAULT (-1).
- Parameters
io – pool to query
auid – where to store the auid
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_pool_requires_alignment(rados_ioctx_t io) __attribute__((deprecated))
- int rados_ioctx_pool_requires_alignment2(rados_ioctx_t io, int *req)
Test whether the specified pool requires alignment or not.
- Parameters
io – pool to query
req – 1 if alignment is supported, 0 if not.
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- uint64_t rados_ioctx_pool_required_alignment(rados_ioctx_t io) __attribute__((deprecated))
- int rados_ioctx_pool_required_alignment2(rados_ioctx_t io, uint64_t *alignment)
Get the alignment flavor of a pool
- Parameters
io – pool to query
alignment – where to store the alignment flavor
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int64_t rados_ioctx_get_id(rados_ioctx_t io)
Get the pool id of the io context
- Parameters
io – the io context to query
- Returns
the id of the pool the io context uses
- int rados_ioctx_get_pool_name(rados_ioctx_t io, char *buf, unsigned maxlen)
Get the pool name of the io context
- Parameters
io – the io context to query
buf – pointer to buffer where name will be stored
maxlen – size of buffer where name will be stored
- Returns
length of string stored, or -ERANGE if buffer too small
Object Locators
- void rados_ioctx_locator_set_key(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *key)
Set the key for mapping objects to pgs within an io context.
The key is used instead of the object name to determine which placement groups an object is put in. This affects all subsequent operations of the io context - until a different locator key is set, all objects in this io context will be placed in the same pg.
- Parameters
io – the io context to change
key – the key to use as the object locator, or NULL to discard any previously set key
- void rados_ioctx_set_namespace(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *nspace)
Set the namespace for objects within an io context
The namespace specification further refines a pool into different domains. The mapping of objects to pgs is also based on this value.
- Parameters
io – the io context to change
nspace – the name to use as the namespace, or NULL use the default namespace
- int rados_ioctx_get_namespace(rados_ioctx_t io, char *buf, unsigned maxlen)
Get the namespace for objects within the io context
- Parameters
io – the io context to query
buf – pointer to buffer where name will be stored
maxlen – size of buffer where name will be stored
- Returns
length of string stored, or -ERANGE if buffer too small
Listing Objects
- int rados_nobjects_list_open(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_list_ctx_t *ctx)
Start listing objects in a pool
- Parameters
io – the pool to list from
ctx – the handle to store list context in
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- uint32_t rados_nobjects_list_get_pg_hash_position(rados_list_ctx_t ctx)
Return hash position of iterator, rounded to the current PG
- Parameters
ctx – iterator marking where you are in the listing
- Returns
current hash position, rounded to the current pg
- uint32_t rados_nobjects_list_seek(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, uint32_t pos)
Reposition object iterator to a different hash position
- Parameters
ctx – iterator marking where you are in the listing
pos – hash position to move to
- Returns
actual (rounded) position we moved to
- uint32_t rados_nobjects_list_seek_cursor(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, rados_object_list_cursor cursor)
Reposition object iterator to a different position
- Parameters
ctx – iterator marking where you are in the listing
cursor – position to move to
- Returns
rounded position we moved to
- int rados_nobjects_list_get_cursor(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, rados_object_list_cursor *cursor)
Reposition object iterator to a different position
The returned handle must be released with rados_object_list_cursor_free().
- Parameters
ctx – iterator marking where you are in the listing
cursor – where to store cursor
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_nobjects_list_next(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, const char **entry, const char **key, const char **nspace)
Get the next object name and locator in the pool
entry and *key are valid until next call to rados_nobjects_list_
- Parameters
ctx – iterator marking where you are in the listing
entry – where to store the name of the entry
key – where to store the object locator (set to NULL to ignore)
nspace – where to store the object namespace (set to NULL to ignore)
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ENOENT when there are no more objects to list
- int rados_nobjects_list_next2(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, const char **entry, const char **key, const char **nspace, size_t *entry_size, size_t *key_size, size_t *nspace_size)
Get the next object name, locator and their sizes in the pool
The sizes allow to list objects with \0 (the NUL character) in .e.g entry. Is is unusual see such object names but a bug in a client has risen the need to handle them as well. *entry and *key are valid until next call to rados_nobjects_list_
- Parameters
ctx – iterator marking where you are in the listing
entry – where to store the name of the entry
key – where to store the object locator (set to NULL to ignore)
nspace – where to store the object namespace (set to NULL to ignore)
entry_size – where to store the size of name of the entry
key_size – where to store the size of object locator (set to NULL to ignore)
nspace_size – where to store the size of object namespace (set to NULL to ignore)
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ENOENT when there are no more objects to list
- void rados_nobjects_list_close(rados_list_ctx_t ctx)
Close the object listing handle.
This should be called when the handle is no longer needed. The handle should not be used after it has been closed.
- Parameters
ctx – the handle to close
- rados_object_list_cursor rados_object_list_begin(rados_ioctx_t io)
Get cursor handle pointing to the beginning of a pool.
This is an opaque handle pointing to the start of a pool. It must be released with rados_object_list_cursor_free().
- Parameters
io – ioctx for the pool
- Returns
handle for the pool, NULL on error (pool does not exist)
- rados_object_list_cursor rados_object_list_end(rados_ioctx_t io)
Get cursor handle pointing to the end of a pool.
This is an opaque handle pointing to the start of a pool. It must be released with rados_object_list_cursor_free().
- Parameters
io – ioctx for the pool
- Returns
handle for the pool, NULL on error (pool does not exist)
- int rados_object_list_is_end(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_object_list_cursor cur)
Check if a cursor has reached the end of a pool
- Parameters
io – ioctx
cur – cursor
- Returns
1 if the cursor has reached the end of the pool, 0 otherwise
- void rados_object_list_cursor_free(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_object_list_cursor cur)
Release a cursor
Release a cursor. The handle may not be used after this point.
- Parameters
io – ioctx
cur – cursor
- int rados_object_list_cursor_cmp(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_object_list_cursor lhs, rados_object_list_cursor rhs)
Compare two cursor positions
Compare two cursors, and indicate whether the first cursor precedes, matches, or follows the second.
- Parameters
io – ioctx
lhs – first cursor
rhs – second cursor
- Returns
-1, 0, or 1 for lhs < rhs, lhs == rhs, or lhs > rhs
- int rados_object_list(rados_ioctx_t io, const rados_object_list_cursor start, const rados_object_list_cursor finish, const size_t result_size, const char *filter_buf, const size_t filter_buf_len, rados_object_list_item *results, rados_object_list_cursor *next)
- Returns
the number of items set in the results array
- void rados_object_list_free(const size_t result_size, rados_object_list_item *results)
- void rados_object_list_slice(rados_ioctx_t io, const rados_object_list_cursor start, const rados_object_list_cursor finish, const size_t n, const size_t m, rados_object_list_cursor *split_start, rados_object_list_cursor *split_finish)
Obtain cursors delineating a subset of a range. Use this when you want to split up the work of iterating over the global namespace. Expected use case is when you are iterating in parallel, with
m
workers, and each worker taking an idn
.
- Parameters
io – ioctx
start – start of the range to be sliced up (inclusive)
finish – end of the range to be sliced up (exclusive)
n – which of the m chunks you would like to get cursors for
m – how many chunks to divide start-finish into
split_start – cursor populated with start of the subrange (inclusive)
split_finish – cursor populated with end of the subrange (exclusive)
Snapshots
RADOS snapshots are based upon sequence numbers that form a snapshot context. They are pool-specific. The snapshot context consists of the current snapshot sequence number for a pool, and an array of sequence numbers at which snapshots were taken, in descending order. Whenever a snapshot is created or deleted, the snapshot sequence number for the pool is increased. To add a new snapshot, the new snapshot sequence number must be increased and added to the snapshot context.
There are two ways to manage these snapshot contexts:
within the RADOS cluster These are called pool snapshots, and store the snapshot context in the OSDMap. These represent a snapshot of all the objects in a pool.
within the RADOS clients These are called self-managed snapshots, and push the responsibility for keeping track of the snapshot context to the clients. For every write, the client must send the snapshot context. In librados, this is accomplished with rados_selfmanaged_snap_set_write_ctx(). These are more difficult to manage, but are restricted to specific objects instead of applying to an entire pool.
- int rados_ioctx_snap_create(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *snapname)
Create a pool-wide snapshot
- Parameters
io – the pool to snapshot
snapname – the name of the snapshot
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_snap_remove(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *snapname)
Delete a pool snapshot
- Parameters
io – the pool to delete the snapshot from
snapname – which snapshot to delete
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_snap_rollback(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *snapname)
Rollback an object to a pool snapshot
The contents of the object will be the same as when the snapshot was taken.
- Parameters
io – the pool in which the object is stored
oid – the name of the object to rollback
snapname – which snapshot to rollback to
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_rollback(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *snapname) __attribute__((deprecated))
Warning
Deprecated: Use rados_ioctx_snap_rollback() instead
- void rados_ioctx_snap_set_read(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t snap)
Set the snapshot from which reads are performed.
Subsequent reads will return data as it was at the time of that snapshot.
- Parameters
io – the io context to change
snap – the id of the snapshot to set, or LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD for no snapshot (i.e. normal operation)
- int rados_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_create(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t *snapid)
Allocate an ID for a self-managed snapshot
Get a unique ID to put in the snaphot context to create a snapshot. A clone of an object is not created until a write with the new snapshot context is completed.
- Parameters
io – the pool in which the snapshot will exist
snapid – where to store the newly allocated snapshot ID
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- void rados_aio_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_create(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t *snapid, rados_completion_t completion)
- int rados_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_remove(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t snapid)
Remove a self-managed snapshot
This increases the snapshot sequence number, which will cause snapshots to be removed lazily.
- Parameters
io – the pool in which the snapshot will exist
snapid – where to store the newly allocated snapshot ID
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- void rados_aio_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_remove(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t snapid, rados_completion_t completion)
- int rados_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_rollback(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_snap_t snapid)
Rollback an object to a self-managed snapshot
The contents of the object will be the same as when the snapshot was taken.
- Parameters
io – the pool in which the object is stored
oid – the name of the object to rollback
snapid – which snapshot to rollback to
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_set_write_ctx(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t seq, rados_snap_t *snaps, int num_snaps)
Set the snapshot context for use when writing to objects
This is stored in the io context, and applies to all future writes.
- Parameters
io – the io context to change
seq – the newest snapshot sequence number for the pool
snaps – array of snapshots in sorted by descending id
num_snaps – how many snaphosts are in the snaps array
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-EINVAL if snaps are not in descending order
- int rados_ioctx_snap_list(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t *snaps, int maxlen)
List all the ids of pool snapshots
If the output array does not have enough space to fit all the snapshots, -ERANGE is returned and the caller should retry with a larger array.
- Parameters
io – the pool to read from
snaps – where to store the results
maxlen – the number of rados_snap_t that fit in the snaps array
- Returns
number of snapshots on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE is returned if the snaps array is too short
- int rados_ioctx_snap_lookup(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *name, rados_snap_t *id)
Get the id of a pool snapshot
- Parameters
io – the pool to read from
name – the snapshot to find
id – where to store the result
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_ioctx_snap_get_name(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t id, char *name, int maxlen)
Get the name of a pool snapshot
- Parameters
io – the pool to read from
id – the snapshot to find
name – where to store the result
maxlen – the size of the name array
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE if the name array is too small
- int rados_ioctx_snap_get_stamp(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_snap_t id, time_t *t)
Find when a pool snapshot occurred
- Parameters
io – the pool the snapshot was taken in
id – the snapshot to lookup
t – where to store the result
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
Synchronous I/O
Writes are replicated to a number of OSDs based on the configuration of the pool they are in. These write functions block until data is in memory on all replicas of the object they’re writing to - they are equivalent to doing the corresponding asynchronous write, and the calling rados_ioctx_wait_for_complete(). For greater data safety, use the asynchronous functions and rados_aio_wait_for_safe().
- uint64_t rados_get_last_version(rados_ioctx_t io)
Return the version of the last object read or written to.
This exposes the internal version number of the last object read or written via this io context
- Parameters
io – the io context to check
- Returns
last read or written object version
- int rados_write(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *buf, size_t len, uint64_t off)
Write len bytes from buf into the oid object, starting at offset off. The value of len must be <= UINT_MAX/2.
Note
This will never return a positive value not equal to len.
- Parameters
io – the io context in which the write will occur
oid – name of the object
buf – data to write
len – length of the data, in bytes
off – byte offset in the object to begin writing at
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_write_full(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *buf, size_t len)
Write len bytes from buf into the oid object. The value of len must be <= UINT_MAX/2.
The object is filled with the provided data. If the object exists, it is atomically truncated and then written.
- Parameters
io – the io context in which the write will occur
oid – name of the object
buf – data to write
len – length of the data, in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_writesame(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *buf, size_t data_len, size_t write_len, uint64_t off)
Write the same data_len bytes from buf multiple times into the oid object. write_len bytes are written in total, which must be a multiple of data_len. The value of write_len and data_len must be <= UINT_MAX/2.
- Parameters
io – the io context in which the write will occur
oid – name of the object
buf – data to write
data_len – length of the data, in bytes
write_len – the total number of bytes to write
off – byte offset in the object to begin writing at
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_append(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *buf, size_t len)
Append len bytes from buf into the oid object. The value of len must be <= UINT_MAX/2.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
oid – the name of the object
buf – the data to append
len – length of buf (in bytes)
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_read(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, char *buf, size_t len, uint64_t off)
Read data from an object
The io context determines the snapshot to read from, if any was set by rados_ioctx_snap_set_read().
- Parameters
io – the context in which to perform the read
oid – the name of the object to read from
buf – where to store the results
len – the number of bytes to read
off – the offset to start reading from in the object
- Returns
number of bytes read on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_checksum(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_checksum_type_t type, const char *init_value, size_t init_value_len, size_t len, uint64_t off, size_t chunk_size, char *pchecksum, size_t checksum_len)
Compute checksum from object data
The io context determines the snapshot to checksum, if any was set by rados_ioctx_snap_set_read(). The length of the init_value and resulting checksum are dependent upon the checksum type:
XXHASH64: le64 XXHASH32: le32 CRC32C: le32
The checksum result is encoded the following manner:
le32 num_checksum_chunks { leXX checksum for chunk (where XX = appropriate size for the checksum type) } * num_checksum_chunks
- Parameters
io – the context in which to perform the checksum
oid – the name of the object to checksum
type – the checksum algorithm to utilize
init_value – the init value for the algorithm
init_value_len – the length of the init value
len – the number of bytes to checksum
off – the offset to start checksumming in the object
chunk_size – optional length-aligned chunk size for checksums
pchecksum – where to store the checksum result
checksum_len – the number of bytes available for the result
- Returns
negative error code on failure
- int rados_remove(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid)
Delete an object
Note
This does not delete any snapshots of the object.
- Parameters
io – the pool to delete the object from
oid – the name of the object to delete
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_trunc(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, uint64_t size)
Resize an object
If this enlarges the object, the new area is logically filled with zeroes. If this shrinks the object, the excess data is removed.
- Parameters
io – the context in which to truncate
oid – the name of the object
size – the new size of the object in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_cmpext(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *cmp_buf, size_t cmp_len, uint64_t off)
Compare an on-disk object range with a buffer
- Parameters
io – the context in which to perform the comparison
o – name of the object
cmp_buf – buffer containing bytes to be compared with object contents
cmp_len – length to compare and size of
cmp_buf
in bytesoff – object byte offset at which to start the comparison
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure, (-MAX_ERRNO - mismatch_off) on mismatch
Xattrs
Extended attributes are stored as extended attributes on the files representing an object on the OSDs. Thus, they have the same limitations as the underlying filesystem. On ext4, this means that the total data stored in xattrs cannot exceed 4KB.
- int rados_getxattr(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name, char *buf, size_t len)
Get the value of an extended attribute on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which the attribute is read
o – name of the object
name – which extended attribute to read
buf – where to store the result
len – size of buf in bytes
- Returns
length of xattr value on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_setxattr(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name, const char *buf, size_t len)
Set an extended attribute on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which xattr is set
o – name of the object
name – which extended attribute to set
buf – what to store in the xattr
len – the number of bytes in buf
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_rmxattr(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name)
Delete an extended attribute from an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which to delete the xattr
o – the name of the object
name – which xattr to delete
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_getxattrs(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_xattrs_iter_t *iter)
Start iterating over xattrs on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which to list xattrs
oid – name of the object
iter – where to store the iterator
- Post
iter is a valid iterator
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_getxattrs_next(rados_xattrs_iter_t iter, const char **name, const char **val, size_t *len)
Get the next xattr on the object
- Parameters
iter – iterator to advance
name – where to store the name of the next xattr
val – where to store the value of the next xattr
len – the number of bytes in val
- Pre
iter is a valid iterator
- Post
name is the NULL-terminated name of the next xattr, and val contains the value of the xattr, which is of length len. If the end of the list has been reached, name and val are NULL, and len is 0.
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- void rados_getxattrs_end(rados_xattrs_iter_t iter)
Close the xattr iterator.
iter should not be used after this is called.
- Parameters
iter – the iterator to close
Asynchronous Xattrs
Extended attributes are stored as extended attributes on the files representing an object on the OSDs. Thus, they have the same limitations as the underlying filesystem. On ext4, this means that the total data stored in xattrs cannot exceed 4KB.
- int rados_aio_getxattr(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, const char *name, char *buf, size_t len)
Asynchronously get the value of an extended attribute on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which the attribute is read
o – name of the object
completion – what to do when the getxattr completes
name – which extended attribute to read
buf – where to store the result
len – size of buf in bytes
- Returns
length of xattr value on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_setxattr(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, const char *name, const char *buf, size_t len)
Asynchronously set an extended attribute on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which xattr is set
o – name of the object
completion – what to do when the setxattr completes
name – which extended attribute to set
buf – what to store in the xattr
len – the number of bytes in buf
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_rmxattr(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, rados_completion_t completion, const char *name)
Asynchronously delete an extended attribute from an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which to delete the xattr
o – the name of the object
completion – what to do when the rmxattr completes
name – which xattr to delete
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_aio_getxattrs(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, rados_completion_t completion, rados_xattrs_iter_t *iter)
Asynchronously start iterating over xattrs on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context in which to list xattrs
oid – name of the object
completion – what to do when the getxattrs completes
iter – where to store the iterator
- Post
iter is a valid iterator
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
Hints
- int rados_set_alloc_hint(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t expected_object_size, uint64_t expected_write_size)
Set allocation hint for an object
This is an advisory operation, it will always succeed (as if it was submitted with a LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FAILOK flag set) and is not guaranteed to do anything on the backend.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the name of the object
expected_object_size – expected size of the object, in bytes
expected_write_size – expected size of writes to the object, in bytes
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_set_alloc_hint2(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t expected_object_size, uint64_t expected_write_size, uint32_t flags)
Set allocation hint for an object
This is an advisory operation, it will always succeed (as if it was submitted with a LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FAILOK flag set) and is not guaranteed to do anything on the backend.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the name of the object
expected_object_size – expected size of the object, in bytes
expected_write_size – expected size of writes to the object, in bytes
flags – hints about future IO patterns
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
Object Operations
A single rados operation can do multiple operations on one object atomically. The whole operation will succeed or fail, and no partial results will be visible.
Operations may be either reads, which can return data, or writes, which cannot. The effects of writes are applied and visible all at once, so an operation that sets an xattr and then checks its value will not see the updated value.
- rados_write_op_t rados_create_write_op(void)
Create a new rados_write_op_t write operation. This will store all actions to be performed atomically. You must call rados_release_write_op when you are finished with it.
Note
the ownership of a write operartion is passed to the function performing the operation, so the same instance of
rados_write_op_t
cannot be used again after being performed.
- Returns
non-NULL on success, NULL on memory allocation error.
- void rados_release_write_op(rados_write_op_t write_op)
Free a rados_write_op_t, must be called when you’re done with it.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to deallocate, created with rados_create_write_op
- void rados_write_op_set_flags(rados_write_op_t write_op, int flags)
Set flags for the last operation added to this write_op. At least one op must have been added to the write_op.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
flags – see librados.h constants beginning with LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG
- void rados_write_op_assert_exists(rados_write_op_t write_op)
Ensure that the object exists before writing
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
- void rados_write_op_assert_version(rados_write_op_t write_op, uint64_t ver)
Ensure that the object exists and that its internal version number is equal to “ver” before writing. “ver” should be a version number previously obtained with rados_get_last_version().
If the object’s version is greater than the asserted version then rados_write_op_operate will return -ERANGE instead of executing the op.
If the object’s version is less than the asserted version then rados_write_op_operate will return -EOVERFLOW instead of executing the op.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
ver – object version number
- void rados_write_op_cmpext(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *cmp_buf, size_t cmp_len, uint64_t off, int *prval)
Ensure that given object range (extent) satisfies comparison.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
cmp_buf – buffer containing bytes to be compared with object contents
cmp_len – length to compare and size of
cmp_buf
in bytesoff – object byte offset at which to start the comparison
prval – returned result of comparison, 0 on success, negative error code on failure, (-MAX_ERRNO - mismatch_off) on mismatch
- void rados_write_op_cmpxattr(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *name, uint8_t comparison_operator, const char *value, size_t value_len)
Ensure that given xattr satisfies comparison. If the comparison is not satisfied, the return code of the operation will be -ECANCELED
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
name – name of the xattr to look up
comparison_operator – currently undocumented, look for LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_EQ in librados.h
value – buffer to compare actual xattr value to
value_len – length of buffer to compare actual xattr value to
- void rados_write_op_omap_cmp(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *key, uint8_t comparison_operator, const char *val, size_t val_len, int *prval)
Ensure that the an omap value satisfies a comparison, with the supplied value on the right hand side (i.e. for OP_LT, the comparison is actual_value < value.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
key – which omap value to compare
comparison_operator – one of LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_EQ, LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_LT, or LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_GT
val – value to compare with
val_len – length of value in bytes
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_write_op_omap_cmp2(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *key, uint8_t comparison_operator, const char *val, size_t key_len, size_t val_len, int *prval)
Ensure that the an omap value satisfies a comparison, with the supplied value on the right hand side (i.e. for OP_LT, the comparison is actual_value < value.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
key – which omap value to compare
comparison_operator – one of LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_EQ, LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_LT, or LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_GT
val – value to compare with
key_len – length of key in bytes
val_len – length of value in bytes
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_write_op_setxattr(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *name, const char *value, size_t value_len)
Set an xattr
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
name – name of the xattr
value – buffer to set xattr to
value_len – length of buffer to set xattr to
- void rados_write_op_rmxattr(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *name)
Remove an xattr
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
name – name of the xattr to remove
- void rados_write_op_create(rados_write_op_t write_op, int exclusive, const char *category)
Create the object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
exclusive – set to either LIBRADOS_CREATE_EXCLUSIVE or LIBRADOS_CREATE_IDEMPOTENT will error if the object already exists.
category – category string (DEPRECATED, HAS NO EFFECT)
- void rados_write_op_write(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *buffer, size_t len, uint64_t offset)
Write to offset
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
offset – offset to write to
buffer – bytes to write
len – length of buffer
- void rados_write_op_write_full(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *buffer, size_t len)
Write whole object, atomically replacing it.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
buffer – bytes to write
len – length of buffer
- void rados_write_op_writesame(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *buffer, size_t data_len, size_t write_len, uint64_t offset)
Write the same buffer multiple times
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
buffer – bytes to write
data_len – length of buffer
write_len – total number of bytes to write, as a multiple of
data_len
offset – offset to write to
- void rados_write_op_append(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *buffer, size_t len)
Append to end of object.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
buffer – bytes to write
len – length of buffer
- void rados_write_op_remove(rados_write_op_t write_op)
Remove object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
- void rados_write_op_truncate(rados_write_op_t write_op, uint64_t offset)
Truncate an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
offset – Offset to truncate to
- void rados_write_op_zero(rados_write_op_t write_op, uint64_t offset, uint64_t len)
Zero part of an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
offset – Offset to zero
len – length to zero
- void rados_write_op_exec(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *cls, const char *method, const char *in_buf, size_t in_len, int *prval)
Execute an OSD class method on an object See rados_exec() for general description.
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
cls – the name of the class
method – the name of the method
in_buf – where to find input
in_len – length of in_buf in bytes
prval – where to store the return value from the method
- void rados_write_op_omap_set(rados_write_op_t write_op, char const *const *keys, char const *const *vals, const size_t *lens, size_t num)
Set key/value pairs on an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
keys – array of null-terminated char arrays representing keys to set
vals – array of pointers to values to set
lens – array of lengths corresponding to each value
num – number of key/value pairs to set
- void rados_write_op_omap_set2(rados_write_op_t write_op, char const *const *keys, char const *const *vals, const size_t *key_lens, const size_t *val_lens, size_t num)
Set key/value pairs on an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
keys – array of null-terminated char arrays representing keys to set
vals – array of pointers to values to set
key_lens – array of lengths corresponding to each key
val_lens – array of lengths corresponding to each value
num – number of key/value pairs to set
- void rados_write_op_omap_rm_keys(rados_write_op_t write_op, char const *const *keys, size_t keys_len)
Remove key/value pairs from an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
keys – array of null-terminated char arrays representing keys to remove
keys_len – number of key/value pairs to remove
- void rados_write_op_omap_rm_keys2(rados_write_op_t write_op, char const *const *keys, const size_t *key_lens, size_t keys_len)
Remove key/value pairs from an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
keys – array of char arrays representing keys to remove
key_lens – array of size_t values representing length of each key
keys_len – number of key/value pairs to remove
- void rados_write_op_omap_rm_range2(rados_write_op_t write_op, const char *key_begin, size_t key_begin_len, const char *key_end, size_t key_end_len)
Remove key/value pairs from an object whose keys are in the range [key_begin, key_end)
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
key_begin – the lower bound of the key range to remove
key_begin_len – length of key_begin
key_end – the upper bound of the key range to remove
key_end_len – length of key_end
- void rados_write_op_omap_clear(rados_write_op_t write_op)
Remove all key/value pairs from an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
- void rados_write_op_set_alloc_hint(rados_write_op_t write_op, uint64_t expected_object_size, uint64_t expected_write_size)
Set allocation hint for an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
expected_object_size – expected size of the object, in bytes
expected_write_size – expected size of writes to the object, in bytes
- void rados_write_op_set_alloc_hint2(rados_write_op_t write_op, uint64_t expected_object_size, uint64_t expected_write_size, uint32_t flags)
Set allocation hint for an object
- Parameters
write_op – operation to add this action to
expected_object_size – expected size of the object, in bytes
expected_write_size – expected size of writes to the object, in bytes
flags – hints about future IO patterns
- int rados_write_op_operate(rados_write_op_t write_op, rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, time_t *mtime, int flags)
Perform a write operation synchronously
- Parameters
write_op – operation to perform
io – the ioctx that the object is in
oid – the object id
mtime – the time to set the mtime to, NULL for the current time
flags – flags to apply to the entire operation (LIBRADOS_OPERATION_*)
- int rados_write_op_operate2(rados_write_op_t write_op, rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, struct timespec *mtime, int flags)
Perform a write operation synchronously
- Parameters
write_op – operation to perform
io – the ioctx that the object is in
oid – the object id
mtime – the time to set the mtime to, NULL for the current time
flags – flags to apply to the entire operation (LIBRADOS_OPERATION_*)
- int rados_aio_write_op_operate(rados_write_op_t write_op, rados_ioctx_t io, rados_completion_t completion, const char *oid, time_t *mtime, int flags)
Perform a write operation asynchronously
- Parameters
write_op – operation to perform
io – the ioctx that the object is in
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
oid – the object id
mtime – the time to set the mtime to, NULL for the current time
flags – flags to apply to the entire operation (LIBRADOS_OPERATION_*)
- rados_read_op_t rados_create_read_op(void)
Create a new rados_read_op_t read operation. This will store all actions to be performed atomically. You must call rados_release_read_op when you are finished with it (after it completes, or you decide not to send it in the first place).
Note
the ownership of a read operartion is passed to the function performing the operation, so the same instance of
rados_read_op_t
cannot be used again after being performed.
- Returns
non-NULL on success, NULL on memory allocation error.
- void rados_release_read_op(rados_read_op_t read_op)
Free a rados_read_op_t, must be called when you’re done with it.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to deallocate, created with rados_create_read_op
- void rados_read_op_set_flags(rados_read_op_t read_op, int flags)
Set flags for the last operation added to this read_op. At least one op must have been added to the read_op.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
flags – see librados.h constants beginning with LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG
- void rados_read_op_assert_exists(rados_read_op_t read_op)
Ensure that the object exists before reading
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
- void rados_read_op_assert_version(rados_read_op_t read_op, uint64_t ver)
Ensure that the object exists and that its internal version number is equal to “ver” before reading. “ver” should be a version number previously obtained with rados_get_last_version().
If the object’s version is greater than the asserted version then rados_read_op_operate will return -ERANGE instead of executing the op.
If the object’s version is less than the asserted version then rados_read_op_operate will return -EOVERFLOW instead of executing the op.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
ver – object version number
- void rados_read_op_cmpext(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *cmp_buf, size_t cmp_len, uint64_t off, int *prval)
Ensure that given object range (extent) satisfies comparison.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
cmp_buf – buffer containing bytes to be compared with object contents
cmp_len – length to compare and size of
cmp_buf
in bytesoff – object byte offset at which to start the comparison
prval – returned result of comparison, 0 on success, negative error code on failure, (-MAX_ERRNO - mismatch_off) on mismatch
- void rados_read_op_cmpxattr(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *name, uint8_t comparison_operator, const char *value, size_t value_len)
Ensure that the an xattr satisfies a comparison If the comparison is not satisfied, the return code of the operation will be -ECANCELED
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
name – name of the xattr to look up
comparison_operator – currently undocumented, look for LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_EQ in librados.h
value – buffer to compare actual xattr value to
value_len – length of buffer to compare actual xattr value to
- void rados_read_op_getxattrs(rados_read_op_t read_op, rados_xattrs_iter_t *iter, int *prval)
Start iterating over xattrs on an object.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
iter – where to store the iterator
prval – where to store the return value of this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_cmp(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *key, uint8_t comparison_operator, const char *val, size_t val_len, int *prval)
Ensure that the an omap value satisfies a comparison, with the supplied value on the right hand side (i.e. for OP_LT, the comparison is actual_value < value.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
key – which omap value to compare
comparison_operator – one of LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_EQ, LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_LT, or LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_GT
val – value to compare with
val_len – length of value in bytes
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_cmp2(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *key, uint8_t comparison_operator, const char *val, size_t key_len, size_t val_len, int *prval)
Ensure that the an omap value satisfies a comparison, with the supplied value on the right hand side (i.e. for OP_LT, the comparison is actual_value < value.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
key – which omap value to compare
comparison_operator – one of LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_EQ, LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_LT, or LIBRADOS_CMPXATTR_OP_GT
val – value to compare with
key_len – length of key in bytes
val_len – length of value in bytes
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_stat(rados_read_op_t read_op, uint64_t *psize, time_t *pmtime, int *prval)
Get object size and mtime
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
psize – where to store object size
pmtime – where to store modification time
prval – where to store the return value of this action
- void rados_read_op_read(rados_read_op_t read_op, uint64_t offset, size_t len, char *buffer, size_t *bytes_read, int *prval)
Read bytes from offset into buffer.
prlen will be filled with the number of bytes read if successful. A short read can only occur if the read reaches the end of the object.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
offset – offset to read from
len – length of buffer
buffer – where to put the data
bytes_read – where to store the number of bytes read by this action
prval – where to store the return value of this action
- void rados_read_op_checksum(rados_read_op_t read_op, rados_checksum_type_t type, const char *init_value, size_t init_value_len, uint64_t offset, size_t len, size_t chunk_size, char *pchecksum, size_t checksum_len, int *prval)
Compute checksum from object data
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
type – the checksum algorithm to utilize
init_value – the init value for the algorithm
init_value_len – the length of the init value
offset – the offset to start checksumming in the object
len – the number of bytes to checksum
chunk_size – optional length-aligned chunk size for checksums
pchecksum – where to store the checksum result for this action
checksum_len – the number of bytes available for the result
prval – where to store the return value for this action
- void rados_read_op_exec(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *cls, const char *method, const char *in_buf, size_t in_len, char **out_buf, size_t *out_len, int *prval)
Execute an OSD class method on an object See rados_exec() for general description.
The output buffer is allocated on the heap; the caller is expected to release that memory with rados_buffer_free(). The buffer and length pointers can all be NULL, in which case they are not filled in.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
cls – the name of the class
method – the name of the method
in_buf – where to find input
in_len – length of in_buf in bytes
out_buf – where to put librados-allocated output buffer
out_len – length of out_buf in bytes
prval – where to store the return value from the method
- void rados_read_op_exec_user_buf(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *cls, const char *method, const char *in_buf, size_t in_len, char *out_buf, size_t out_len, size_t *used_len, int *prval)
Execute an OSD class method on an object See rados_exec() for general description.
If the output buffer is too small, prval will be set to -ERANGE and used_len will be 0.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
cls – the name of the class
method – the name of the method
in_buf – where to find input
in_len – length of in_buf in bytes
out_buf – user-provided buffer to read into
out_len – length of out_buf in bytes
used_len – where to store the number of bytes read into out_buf
prval – where to store the return value from the method
- void rados_read_op_omap_get_vals(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *start_after, const char *filter_prefix, uint64_t max_return, rados_omap_iter_t *iter, int *prval) __attribute__((deprecated))
Start iterating over key/value pairs on an object.
They will be returned sorted by key.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
start_after – list keys starting after start_after
filter_prefix – list only keys beginning with filter_prefix
max_return – list no more than max_return key/value pairs
iter – where to store the iterator
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_get_vals2(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *start_after, const char *filter_prefix, uint64_t max_return, rados_omap_iter_t *iter, unsigned char *pmore, int *prval)
Start iterating over key/value pairs on an object.
They will be returned sorted by key.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
start_after – list keys starting after start_after
filter_prefix – list only keys beginning with filter_prefix
max_return – list no more than max_return key/value pairs
iter – where to store the iterator
pmore – flag indicating whether there are more keys to fetch
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_get_keys(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *start_after, uint64_t max_return, rados_omap_iter_t *iter, int *prval) __attribute__((deprecated))
Start iterating over keys on an object.
They will be returned sorted by key, and the iterator will fill in NULL for all values if specified.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
start_after – list keys starting after start_after
max_return – list no more than max_return keys
iter – where to store the iterator
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_get_keys2(rados_read_op_t read_op, const char *start_after, uint64_t max_return, rados_omap_iter_t *iter, unsigned char *pmore, int *prval)
Start iterating over keys on an object.
They will be returned sorted by key, and the iterator will fill in NULL for all values if specified.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
start_after – list keys starting after start_after
max_return – list no more than max_return keys
iter – where to store the iterator
pmore – flag indicating whether there are more keys to fetch
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_get_vals_by_keys(rados_read_op_t read_op, char const *const *keys, size_t keys_len, rados_omap_iter_t *iter, int *prval)
Start iterating over specific key/value pairs
They will be returned sorted by key.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
keys – array of pointers to null-terminated keys to get
keys_len – the number of strings in keys
iter – where to store the iterator
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- void rados_read_op_omap_get_vals_by_keys2(rados_read_op_t read_op, char const *const *keys, size_t num_keys, const size_t *key_lens, rados_omap_iter_t *iter, int *prval)
Start iterating over specific key/value pairs
They will be returned sorted by key.
- Parameters
read_op – operation to add this action to
keys – array of pointers to keys to get
num_keys – the number of strings in keys
key_lens – array of size_t’s describing each key len (in bytes)
iter – where to store the iterator
prval – where to store the return value from this action
- int rados_read_op_operate(rados_read_op_t read_op, rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, int flags)
Perform a read operation synchronously
- Parameters
read_op – operation to perform
io – the ioctx that the object is in
oid – the object id
flags – flags to apply to the entire operation (LIBRADOS_OPERATION_*)
- int rados_aio_read_op_operate(rados_read_op_t read_op, rados_ioctx_t io, rados_completion_t completion, const char *oid, int flags)
Perform a read operation asynchronously
- Parameters
read_op – operation to perform
io – the ioctx that the object is in
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
oid – the object id
flags – flags to apply to the entire operation (LIBRADOS_OPERATION_*)
Defines
- CEPH_OSD_TMAP_HDR
- CEPH_OSD_TMAP_SET
- CEPH_OSD_TMAP_CREATE
- CEPH_OSD_TMAP_RM
- LIBRADOS_VER_MAJOR
- LIBRADOS_VER_MINOR
- LIBRADOS_VER_EXTRA
- LIBRADOS_VERSION(maj, min, extra)
- LIBRADOS_VERSION_CODE
- LIBRADOS_SUPPORTS_WATCH
- LIBRADOS_SUPPORTS_SERVICES
- LIBRADOS_SUPPORTS_GETADDRS
- LIBRADOS_SUPPORTS_APP_METADATA
- LIBRADOS_LOCK_FLAG_RENEW
- LIBRADOS_LOCK_FLAG_MAY_RENEW
- LIBRADOS_LOCK_FLAG_MUST_RENEW
- LIBRADOS_CREATE_EXCLUSIVE
- LIBRADOS_CREATE_IDEMPOTENT
- CEPH_RADOS_API
- LIBRADOS_SNAP_HEAD
- LIBRADOS_SNAP_DIR
- VOIDPTR_RADOS_T
Typedefs
- typedef void *rados_t
A handle for interacting with a RADOS cluster. It encapsulates all RADOS client configuration, including username, key for authentication, logging, and debugging. Talking to different clusters — or to the same cluster with different users — requires different cluster handles.
- typedef void *rados_config_t
A handle for the ceph configuration context for the rados_t cluster instance. This can be used to share configuration context/state (e.g., logging configuration) between librados instance.
Warning
The config context does not have independent reference counting. As such, a rados_config_t handle retrieved from a given rados_t is only valid as long as that rados_t.
- typedef void *rados_ioctx_t
An io context encapsulates a few settings for all I/O operations done on it:
pool - set when the io context is created (see rados_ioctx_create())
snapshot context for writes (see rados_ioctx_selfmanaged_snap_set_write_ctx())
snapshot id to read from (see rados_ioctx_snap_set_read())
object locator for all single-object operations (see rados_ioctx_locator_set_key())
namespace for all single-object operations (see rados_ioctx_set_namespace()). Set to LIBRADOS_ALL_NSPACES before rados_nobjects_list_open() will list all objects in all namespaces.
Warning
Changing any of these settings is not thread-safe - librados users must synchronize any of these changes on their own, or use separate io contexts for each thread
- typedef void *rados_list_ctx_t
An iterator for listing the objects in a pool. Used with rados_nobjects_list_open(), rados_nobjects_list_next(), rados_nobjects_list_next2(), and rados_nobjects_list_close().
- typedef void *rados_object_list_cursor
The cursor used with rados_enumerate_objects and accompanying methods.
- typedef uint64_t rados_snap_t
The id of a snapshot.
- typedef void *rados_xattrs_iter_t
An iterator for listing extended attrbutes on an object. Used with rados_getxattrs(), rados_getxattrs_next(), and rados_getxattrs_end().
- typedef void *rados_omap_iter_t
An iterator for listing omap key/value pairs on an object. Used with rados_read_op_omap_get_keys(), rados_read_op_omap_get_vals(), rados_read_op_omap_get_vals_by_keys(), rados_omap_get_next(), and rados_omap_get_end().
- typedef void *rados_write_op_t
An object write operation stores a number of operations which can be executed atomically. For usage, see:
Creation and deletion: rados_create_write_op() rados_release_write_op()
Extended attribute manipulation: rados_write_op_cmpxattr() rados_write_op_cmpxattr(), rados_write_op_setxattr(), rados_write_op_rmxattr()
Object map key/value pairs: rados_write_op_omap_set(), rados_write_op_omap_rm_keys(), rados_write_op_omap_clear(), rados_write_op_omap_cmp()
Object properties: rados_write_op_assert_exists(), rados_write_op_assert_version()
Creating objects: rados_write_op_create()
IO on objects: rados_write_op_append(), rados_write_op_write(), rados_write_op_zero rados_write_op_write_full(), rados_write_op_writesame(), rados_write_op_remove, rados_write_op_truncate(), rados_write_op_zero(), rados_write_op_cmpext()
Hints: rados_write_op_set_alloc_hint()
Performing the operation: rados_write_op_operate(), rados_aio_write_op_operate()
- typedef void *rados_read_op_t
An object read operation stores a number of operations which can be executed atomically. For usage, see:
Creation and deletion: rados_create_read_op() rados_release_read_op()
Extended attribute manipulation: rados_read_op_cmpxattr(), rados_read_op_getxattr(), rados_read_op_getxattrs()
Object map key/value pairs: rados_read_op_omap_get_vals(), rados_read_op_omap_get_keys(), rados_read_op_omap_get_vals_by_keys(), rados_read_op_omap_cmp()
Object properties: rados_read_op_stat(), rados_read_op_assert_exists(), rados_read_op_assert_version()
IO on objects: rados_read_op_read(), rados_read_op_checksum(), rados_read_op_cmpext()
Custom operations: rados_read_op_exec(), rados_read_op_exec_user_buf()
Request properties: rados_read_op_set_flags()
Performing the operation: rados_read_op_operate(), rados_aio_read_op_operate()
- typedef void *rados_completion_t
Represents the state of an asynchronous operation - it contains the return value once the operation completes, and can be used to block until the operation is complete or safe.
Enums
- enum [anonymous]
Values:
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_EXCL
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FAILOK
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FADVISE_RANDOM
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FADVISE_SEQUENTIAL
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FADVISE_WILLNEED
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FADVISE_DONTNEED
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FADVISE_NOCACHE
- enumerator LIBRADOS_OP_FLAG_FADVISE_FUA
Functions
- void rados_version(int *major, int *minor, int *extra)
Get the version of librados.
The version number is major.minor.extra. Note that this is unrelated to the Ceph version number.
TODO: define version semantics, i.e.:
incrementing major is for backwards-incompatible changes
incrementing minor is for backwards-compatible changes
incrementing extra is for bug fixes
- Parameters
major – where to store the major version number
minor – where to store the minor version number
extra – where to store the extra version number
- int rados_cluster_stat(rados_t cluster, struct rados_cluster_stat_t *result)
Read usage info about the cluster
This tells you total space, space used, space available, and number of objects. These are not updated immediately when data is written, they are eventually consistent.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster to query
result – where to store the results
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_cluster_fsid(rados_t cluster, char *buf, size_t len)
Get the fsid of the cluster as a hexadecimal string.
The fsid is a unique id of an entire Ceph cluster.
- Parameters
cluster – where to get the fsid
buf – where to write the fsid
len – the size of buf in bytes (should be 37)
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE if the buffer is too short to contain the fsid
- int rados_wait_for_latest_osdmap(rados_t cluster)
Get/wait for the most recent osdmap
- Parameters
cluster – the cluster to shutdown
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_omap_get_next(rados_omap_iter_t iter, char **key, char **val, size_t *len)
Get the next omap key/value pair on the object
- Parameters
iter – iterator to advance
key – where to store the key of the next omap entry
val – where to store the value of the next omap entry
len – where to store the number of bytes in val
- Pre
iter is a valid iterator
- Post
key and val are the next key/value pair. key is null-terminated, and val has length len. If the end of the list has been reached, key and val are NULL, and len is 0. key and val will not be accessible after rados_omap_get_end() is called on iter, so if they are needed after that they should be copied.
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_omap_get_next2(rados_omap_iter_t iter, char **key, char **val, size_t *key_len, size_t *val_len)
Get the next omap key/value pair on the object. Note that it’s perfectly safe to mix calls to rados_omap_get_next and rados_omap_get_next2.
- Parameters
iter – iterator to advance
key – where to store the key of the next omap entry
val – where to store the value of the next omap entry
key_len – where to store the number of bytes in key
val_len – where to store the number of bytes in val
- Pre
iter is a valid iterator
- Post
key and val are the next key/value pair. key has length keylen and val has length vallen. If the end of the list has been reached, key and val are NULL, and keylen and vallen is 0. key and val will not be accessible after rados_omap_get_end() is called on iter, so if they are needed after that they should be copied.
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- unsigned int rados_omap_iter_size(rados_omap_iter_t iter)
Return number of elements in the iterator
- Parameters
iter – the iterator of which to return the size
- void rados_omap_get_end(rados_omap_iter_t iter)
Close the omap iterator.
iter should not be used after this is called.
- Parameters
iter – the iterator to close
- int rados_stat(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, uint64_t *psize, time_t *pmtime)
Get object stats (size/mtime)
TODO: when are these set, and by whom? can they be out of date?
- Parameters
io – ioctx
o – object name
psize – where to store object size
pmtime – where to store modification time
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_exec(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *cls, const char *method, const char *in_buf, size_t in_len, char *buf, size_t out_len)
Execute an OSD class method on an object
The OSD has a plugin mechanism for performing complicated operations on an object atomically. These plugins are called classes. This function allows librados users to call the custom methods. The input and output formats are defined by the class. Classes in ceph.git can be found in src/cls subdirectories
- Parameters
io – the context in which to call the method
oid – the object to call the method on
cls – the name of the class
method – the name of the method
in_buf – where to find input
in_len – length of in_buf in bytes
buf – where to store output
out_len – length of buf in bytes
- Returns
the length of the output, or -ERANGE if out_buf does not have enough space to store it (For methods that return data). For methods that don’t return data, the return value is method-specific.
- int rados_cache_pin(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o)
Pin an object in the cache tier
When an object is pinned in the cache tier, it stays in the cache tier, and won’t be flushed out.
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object id
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_cache_unpin(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o)
Unpin an object in the cache tier
After an object is unpinned in the cache tier, it can be flushed out
- Parameters
io – the pool the object is in
o – the object id
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_lock_exclusive(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *oid, const char *name, const char *cookie, const char *desc, struct timeval *duration, uint8_t flags)
Take an exclusive lock on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
oid – the name of the object
name – the name of the lock
cookie – user-defined identifier for this instance of the lock
desc – user-defined lock description
duration – the duration of the lock. Set to NULL for infinite duration.
flags – lock flags
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-EBUSY if the lock is already held by another (client, cookie) pair
- Returns
-EEXIST if the lock is already held by the same (client, cookie) pair
Take a shared lock on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
o – the name of the object
name – the name of the lock
cookie – user-defined identifier for this instance of the lock
tag – The tag of the lock
desc – user-defined lock description
duration – the duration of the lock. Set to NULL for infinite duration.
flags – lock flags
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-EBUSY if the lock is already held by another (client, cookie) pair
- Returns
-EEXIST if the lock is already held by the same (client, cookie) pair
- int rados_unlock(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name, const char *cookie)
Release a shared or exclusive lock on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
o – the name of the object
name – the name of the lock
cookie – user-defined identifier for the instance of the lock
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ENOENT if the lock is not held by the specified (client, cookie) pair
- int rados_aio_unlock(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name, const char *cookie, rados_completion_t completion)
Asynchronous release a shared or exclusive lock on an object.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
o – the name of the object
name – the name of the lock
cookie – user-defined identifier for the instance of the lock
completion – what to do when operation has been attempted
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- ssize_t rados_list_lockers(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name, int *exclusive, char *tag, size_t *tag_len, char *clients, size_t *clients_len, char *cookies, size_t *cookies_len, char *addrs, size_t *addrs_len)
List clients that have locked the named object lock and information about the lock.
The number of bytes required in each buffer is put in the corresponding size out parameter. If any of the provided buffers are too short, -ERANGE is returned after these sizes are filled in.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
o – the name of the object
name – the name of the lock
exclusive – where to store whether the lock is exclusive (1) or shared (0)
tag – where to store the tag associated with the object lock
tag_len – number of bytes in tag buffer
clients – buffer in which locker clients are stored, separated by ‘\0’
clients_len – number of bytes in the clients buffer
cookies – buffer in which locker cookies are stored, separated by ‘\0’
cookies_len – number of bytes in the cookies buffer
addrs – buffer in which locker addresses are stored, separated by ‘\0’
addrs_len – number of bytes in the clients buffer
- Returns
number of lockers on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE if any of the buffers are too short
- int rados_break_lock(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *o, const char *name, const char *client, const char *cookie)
Releases a shared or exclusive lock on an object, which was taken by the specified client.
- Parameters
io – the context to operate in
o – the name of the object
name – the name of the lock
client – the client currently holding the lock
cookie – user-defined identifier for the instance of the lock
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ENOENT if the lock is not held by the specified (client, cookie) pair
- Returns
-EINVAL if the client cannot be parsed
- int rados_blocklist_add(rados_t cluster, char *client_address, uint32_t expire_seconds)
Blocklists the specified client from the OSDs
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
client_address – client address
expire_seconds – number of seconds to blocklist (0 for default)
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_blacklist_add(rados_t cluster, char *client_address, uint32_t expire_seconds) __attribute__((deprecated))
- int rados_getaddrs(rados_t cluster, char **addrs)
Gets addresses of the RADOS session, suitable for blocklisting.
- Parameters
cluster – cluster handle
addrs – the output string.
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- void rados_set_osdmap_full_try(rados_ioctx_t io) __attribute__((deprecated))
- void rados_unset_osdmap_full_try(rados_ioctx_t io) __attribute__((deprecated))
- void rados_set_pool_full_try(rados_ioctx_t io)
- void rados_unset_pool_full_try(rados_ioctx_t io)
- int rados_application_enable(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *app_name, int force)
Enable an application on a pool
- Parameters
io – pool ioctx
app_name – application name
force – 0 if only single application per pool
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_application_list(rados_ioctx_t io, char *values, size_t *values_len)
List all enabled applications
If the provided buffer is too short, the required length is filled in and -ERANGE is returned. Otherwise, the buffers are filled with the application names, with a ‘\0’ after each.
- Parameters
io – pool ioctx
values – buffer in which to store application names
values_len – number of bytes in values buffer
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE if either buffer is too short
- int rados_application_metadata_get(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *app_name, const char *key, char *value, size_t *value_len)
Get application metadata value from pool
- Parameters
io – pool ioctx
app_name – application name
key – metadata key
value – result buffer
value_len – maximum len of value
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_application_metadata_set(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *app_name, const char *key, const char *value)
Set application metadata on a pool
- Parameters
io – pool ioctx
app_name – application name
key – metadata key
value – metadata key
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_application_metadata_remove(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *app_name, const char *key)
Remove application metadata from a pool
- Parameters
io – pool ioctx
app_name – application name
key – metadata key
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- int rados_application_metadata_list(rados_ioctx_t io, const char *app_name, char *keys, size_t *key_len, char *values, size_t *vals_len)
List all metadata key/value pairs associated with an application.
This iterates over all metadata, key_len and val_len are filled in with the number of bytes put into the keys and values buffers.
If the provided buffers are too short, the required lengths are filled in and -ERANGE is returned. Otherwise, the buffers are filled with the keys and values of the metadata, with a ‘\0’ after each.
- Parameters
io – pool ioctx
app_name – application name
keys – buffer in which to store key names
key_len – number of bytes in keys buffer
values – buffer in which to store values
vals_len – number of bytes in values buffer
- Returns
0 on success, negative error code on failure
- Returns
-ERANGE if either buffer is too short
- int rados_objects_list_open(rados_ioctx_t io, rados_list_ctx_t *ctx) __attribute__((deprecated))
- uint32_t rados_objects_list_get_pg_hash_position(rados_list_ctx_t ctx) __attribute__((deprecated))
- uint32_t rados_objects_list_seek(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, uint32_t pos) __attribute__((deprecated))
- int rados_objects_list_next(rados_list_ctx_t ctx, const char **entry, const char **key) __attribute__((deprecated))
- void rados_objects_list_close(rados_list_ctx_t ctx) __attribute__((deprecated))
- struct rados_object_list_item
#include <librados.h>The item populated by rados_object_list in the results array.
- struct rados_pool_stat_t
#include <librados.h>Usage information for a pool.
Public Members
- uint64_t num_bytes
space used in bytes
- uint64_t num_kb
space used in KB
- uint64_t num_objects
number of objects in the pool
- uint64_t num_object_clones
number of clones of objects
- uint64_t num_object_copies
num_objects * num_replicas
- uint64_t num_objects_missing_on_primary
number of objects missing on primary
- uint64_t num_objects_unfound
number of objects found on no OSDs
- uint64_t num_objects_degraded
number of objects replicated fewer times than they should be (but found on at least one OSD)
- uint64_t num_rd
number of objects read
- uint64_t num_rd_kb
objects read in KB
- uint64_t num_wr
number of objects written
- uint64_t num_wr_kb
objects written in KB
- uint64_t num_user_bytes
bytes originally provided by user
- uint64_t compressed_bytes_orig
bytes passed compression
- uint64_t compressed_bytes
bytes resulted after compression
- uint64_t compressed_bytes_alloc
bytes allocated at storage
- struct rados_cluster_stat_t
#include <librados.h>Cluster-wide usage information