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Related to this question about using an SSD for system and HDD for data, except I would like my system to do this automatically...

Is it possible to have several layers of storage and push items automatically between them, using preferably free, open-source software?

I know of hugely expensive enterprise-class solutions like the EMC SAN->EMC Centera automatic archiving, but I was wondering if this sort of staged storage is possible to do automatically.

It would be nice to be able to have several layers in this : Memory->SSD->HDD->slower HDD or tape or some other archive solution.

Are there any filesystems which can do this automatically? (ZFS, Btrfs, HAMMER?)

Any Unix-variants are fine, as I'm interested in how this works and whether it's likely to be portable to Linux or other flavours (BSD etc).

9 Answers 9

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Well, ZFS uses a storage layering called Hybrid Storage Pool (HSP):

  1. Layer: memory
  2. Layer: SSD-based read-caches (L2ARC) and write-caches (separate intent log aka slog).
  3. Layer: (cheap) harddisks

With HSP its easy to automatically benefit from the advantages of SSDs compared to a harddisk-only solution. A system using HSP can be both faster and cheaper than the latter. See this link for some nice examples and more details.

I think there are plans regarding hierarchical storage management (HSM) for ZFS (see for example the Automatic Data Migration (ADM) OpenSolaris project) but I don't know its current status.

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  • This is just what I was thinking of, thanks! (Now to help on the Linux port... ;) Jul 23, 2009 at 8:30
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    I would not call this tiering but caching. In the sense that caching means keeping a copy of frequently used blocks, tiering moving the data to slower/faster storage. I would not call the intent log in ZFS a real write cache if I understand it correctly.
    – mrossi
    May 20, 2016 at 7:46
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Check out the LVM based "lvmts" (LVM Tiered Storage) solution this guy is cooking up:

https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1140640#p1140640

Pretty cool.

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  • +1 This looks very interesting -- I shall be keeping an eye on it! Aug 6, 2012 at 11:26
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TIER seems to answer your needs It is a linux kernel module that can create a tiered storage. It seems to learn by itself the pattern and optimize the placement into the storage

http://www.lessfs.com/wordpress/?p=776

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  • Just saw the question is old ... Sorry ^^'
    – Dolanor
    Aug 8, 2012 at 15:33
  • 4
    Revitalising old questions is better than having then rotting with old and out-of-date information on them! Aug 9, 2012 at 10:57
  • I'm worried that this guy wants to reduce redundancy for the sake of extra capacity (especially when SSDs are comparatively small and unreliable).
    – Tobu
    Nov 6, 2012 at 10:35
  • Also worried that he suggests raid as the solution, when experimental software needs backups most.
    – Tobu
    Nov 6, 2012 at 10:54
  • Here's a bit of more positive feedback though: permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.file-systems.ceph.devel/8316
    – Tobu
    Nov 6, 2012 at 10:55
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SAM-QFS is Sun's existing product and was open-sourced last year. It's CDDL, so you could only directly port it to *BSD.

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Answering my own question with something I just found:

I was just updating the kernel and looking at the new stuff that has been added, and there is now a 'CACHEFILES' option which allows for caching (usually remote) filesystems to a local filesystem. I guess I could use this to cache a slower storage mechanism (HDD) to a faster one (SSD), at least for one level of hierarchy.

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  • Did you try this solution? How does it perform?
    – skolima
    Nov 24, 2009 at 16:17
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    Nevermind - I found out myself that CacheFS for now only supports NFS and AFS.
    – skolima
    Nov 24, 2009 at 16:22
  • Using network filesystems for this isn't a bad idea, they tend to mature much faster than kernel patchsets. I wonder if Ceph or DRBD have useful modes for tiered storage.
    – Tobu
    Nov 6, 2012 at 10:48
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Some relevant links. YMMV.

http://code.google.com/p/fscops/ -- "Online Hierarchical Storage Manager (OHSM) is the first attempt towards an enterprise level open source data storage manager which automatically moves data between high-cost and low-cost storage media.".

http://www.tack.ch/unix/dmapi/ -- XFS + DMAPI under Linux

http://jfs.sourceforge.net/ -- JFS + DMAPI under Linux

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  • The OHSM project looks like an interesting one to follow. Only ext2 and the 2.6.30 kernel is supported for now, but I expect if it works out well then this will gain more filesystems. Jan 22, 2010 at 11:41
  • That project looks abandoned, most recent activity was in 2009. Sep 12, 2011 at 22:05
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RAID controllers offer some of these features.

"Leverages SSDs in front of HDD volumes to create high-capacity, high-performance controller cache pools"

http://www.lsi.com/channel/products/storagesw/Pages/MegaRAIDCacheCadeSoftware2-0.aspx

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LVM2 snapshots come to mind... but you can't really do more than a single snapshot.

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btier (7 years old)

autofs (recent, file based)

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