670 lines
23 KiB
C
670 lines
23 KiB
C
/*---
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This software is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of
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California, and other parties. The following terms apply to all files
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associated with the software unless explicitly disclaimed in
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individual files.
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The authors hereby grant permission to use, copy, modify, distribute,
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and license this software and its documentation for any purpose,
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provided that existing copyright notices are retained in all copies
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and that this notice is included verbatim in any distributions. No
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written agreement, license, or royalty fee is required for any of the
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authorized uses. Modifications to this software may be copyrighted by
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their authors and need not follow the licensing terms described here,
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provided that the new terms are clearly indicated on the first page of
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each file where they apply.
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IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR DISTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY
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FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
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ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, ITS DOCUMENTATION, OR ANY
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DERIVATIVES THEREOF, EVEN IF THE AUTHORS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE
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POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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THE AUTHORS AND DISTRIBUTORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY WARRANTIES,
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INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND
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NON-INFRINGEMENT. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, AND
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THE AUTHORS AND DISTRIBUTORS HAVE NO OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE
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MAINTENANCE, SUPPORT, UPDATES, ENHANCEMENTS, OR MODIFICATIONS.
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GOVERNMENT USE: If you are acquiring this software on behalf of the
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U.S. government, the Government shall have only "Restricted Rights" in
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the software and related documentation as defined in the Federal
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Acquisition Regulations (FARs) in Clause 52.227.19 (c) (2). If you are
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acquiring the software on behalf of the Department of Defense, the
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software shall be classified as "Commercial Computer Software" and the
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Government shall have only "Restricted Rights" as defined in Clause
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252.227-7013 (c) (1) of DFARs. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
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authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf
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permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the
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terms specified in this license.
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---*/
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/**
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* @defgroup LLADD_CORE Core API
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*
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* The minimal subset of Stasis necessary to implement transactional consistency.
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*
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* This module includes the standard API (excluding operations), the
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* logger, the buffer mananger, and recovery code.
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*
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* In theory, the other .h files that are installed in /usr/include
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* aren't needed for application developers.
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*
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* @todo Move as much of the stuff in lladd/ to src/lladd/ as possible. Alternatively, move all headers to lladd/, and be done with it!
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*
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*/
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/**
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@mainpage Introduction to Stasis
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@section compiling Compiling and installation
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Prerequisites:
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- automake 1.8+: needed to build from CVS
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- <a href="http://check.sourceforge.net">check</a>: A unit testing
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framework (needed to run the self-tests)
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Optional:
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- libconfuse: Used by older networking code to parse configuration options.
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- BerkeleyDB: Used by the benchmarking code for purposes of comparison.
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Development is currently performed under Debian's Testing branch.
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To compile Stasis, first check out a copy with SVN. If you have commit access:
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@verbatim
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svn co --username username https://stasis.googlecode.com/svn/trunk stasis
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@endverbatim
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For anonymous checkout:
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@verbatim
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svn co http://stasis.googlecode.com/svn/trunk stasis
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@endverbatim
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then:
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@code
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$ ./reconf
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$ ./configure --quiet
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$ make -j4 > /dev/null
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$ cd test/stasis
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$ make check
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@endcode
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This will fail if your system defaults to an old (pre-1.7) version
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of autotools. Fortunately, multiple versions of autotools may
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exist on the same system. Execute the following commands to
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compile with version 1.8 of autotools:
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@code
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$ ./reconf-1.8
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$ ./configure --quiet
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$ make -j4 > /dev/null
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$ cd test/stasis
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$ make check
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@endcode
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Of course, you can omit "--quiet" and "> /dev/null", but configure
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and make both produce quite a bit of output that may obscure useful
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warning messages.
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'make install' installs the Stasis library and python SWIG
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bindings, but none of the extra programs that come with Stasis.
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utilities/ contains a number of utility programs that are useful
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for debugging Stasis. The examples/ directory contains a number of
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simple C examples.
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@section usage Using Stasis in your software
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Synopsis:
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@include examples/ex1.c
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Hopefully, Tbegin(), Talloc(), Tset(), Tcommit(), Tabort() and Tdealloc() are
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self explanatory. If not, they are covered in detail elsewhere. Tinit() and
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Tdeinit() initialize the library, and clean up when the program is finished.
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Other partiularly useful functions are ThashCreate(), ThashDelete(),
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ThashInsert(), ThashRemove(), and ThashLookup() which provide a
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re-entrant linear hash implementation. ThashIterator() and
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ThashNext() provide an iterator over the hashtable's values.
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@subsection bootstrap Reopening a closed data store
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Stasis imposes as little structure upon the application's data structures as
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possible. Therefore, it does not maintain any information about the contents
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or naming of objects within the page file. This means that the application
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must maintain such information manually.
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In order to facilitate this, Stasis provides the function TgetRecordType() and
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guarantees that the first recordid returned by any allocation will point to
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the same page and slot as the constant ROOT_RECORD. TgetRecordType
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will return NULLRID if the record passed to it does not exist.
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Therefore, the following code will safely initialize or reopen a data
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store:
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@include examples/ex2.c
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@see test.c for a complete, executable example of reopeneing an existing store.
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@todo Explain how to determine the correct value of rootEntry.size in the case
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of a hashtable.
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@see OPERATIONS for more operations that may be useful for your software.
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@subsection consistency Using Stasis in multithreaded applications.
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Unless otherwise noted, Stasis' operations are re-entrant. This
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means that an application may call them concurrently without
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corrupting Stasis' internal data structures. However, if two
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threads attempt to write the same data value simultaneously, the
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result is undefined.
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In database terms, Stasis uses latches to protect its own data
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structures' consistency (including those on disk), but does not
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obtain short term read or write locks to protect data as it is
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being written. This is less consistency than SQL's Level 0 (Dirty
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Reads) provides. Some of Stasis' data structures do obtain short
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read and write locks automatically. Refer to individual data
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structues for more information.
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Stasis' allocation functions, such as Talloc(), do not reuse space
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that was freed by an ongoing transaction. This means that you may
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safely overwrite freshly allocated space without writing undo
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entries, and allows concurrent transactions to safely allocate
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space.
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From the point of view of conventional multithreaded software
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development, Stasis closely matches the semantics provided by
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typical operating system thread implementations. However, it
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allows transactions to abort and rollback independently of each
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other. This means that transactions may observe the effects of
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transactions that will eventually abort.
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Finally, Stasis asumes that each thread has its own transaction;
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concurrent calls within the same transaction are not supported.
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This restriction may be removed in the future.
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@section selfTest The test suite
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Stasis includes an extensive unit test suite which may be invoked
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by running 'make check' in Stasis' root directory. Some of the
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tests are for older, unmaintained code that was built on top of
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Stasis. Running 'make check' in test/stasis runs all of the Stasis
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tests without running the obsolete tests.
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@section archictecture Stasis' structure
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This section is geared toward people that would like to extend
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Stasis. The OSDI paper provides a higher level description and
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motivation for the architecture. This section describes naming
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conventions used to distinguish between different portions of
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Stasis, and provides an overview of memory management and mutex
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acquisition conventions.
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This section does not describe recovery, transaction initiation,
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etc. Those methods change less frequently. Instead of focusing on
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them, this text focuses on the issues faced by transactional data
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structures.
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Stasis components can be classified as follows:
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- I/O utilities (file handles, OS compatibility wrappers)
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- Write ahead logging component interfaces (logger.h, XXX)
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- Write ahead logging component implementations (hash based buffer manager, in memory log, etc...)
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- Page formats and associated operations (page/slotted.c page/fixed.c)
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- Application visible methods (Talloc, Tset, ThashInsert, etc)
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@subsection layoutNaming Directory layout
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The Stasis repository contains the following "interesting" directories:
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@par $STASIS/stasis/
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Contains the header directory structure.
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In theory, this contains all of the .h files that need to be
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installed for a fully functional Stasis development environment.
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In practice, .h files in src/ are also needed in some cases. The
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separation of .h files between src/ and stasis/ continues for
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various obscure reasons, including CVS's lack of a "move" command.
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For now, .h files should be placed with similar .h files, or in
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stasis/ if no such files exist.
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The directory structure of stasis/ mirrors that of src/
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@par $STASIS/src/
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Contains the .c files
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@par $STASIS/src/stasis
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Contains Stasis and the implementations of its standard modules.
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The subdirectories group files by the type of module they
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implement.
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@note By convention, when the rest of this document says
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<tt>foo/</tt>, it is referring to two directories:
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<tt>stasis/foo/</tt> and <tt>src/stasis/foo/</tt>. Unless it's clear
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from context, a file without an explicit directory name is in
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<tt>stasis/</tt> or <tt>src/stasis/</tt>. In order to refer to files
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and directories outside of these two locations, but still in the
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repository, this document will use the notation
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<tt>$STASIS/dir</tt>.
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@note This is done for brevity, and to avoid coupling documentation
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to the (deprecated) placement of .h files under src/.
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@note <b>Example:</b> The transactional data structure
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implementations in <tt>operations/</tt> can be found in
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<tt>$STASIS/src/stasis/operations/</tt> and
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<tt>$STASIS/stasis/operations/</tt>.
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@subsection Modules
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Stasis is implemented in C, but is structured in a somewhat object
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oriented style. There are a number of different "modules", for
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lack of a better term. Each implementation in the module lives in
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the module's subdirectory. Code that is common to many
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implementation, and headers that define per-module functions live
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in files named after the module.
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<b>Example:</b> The <tt>io</tt> module contains the following files:
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@code
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io.h
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io.c
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io/handle.h
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io/debug.c
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io/file.c
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io/memory.c
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io/non_blocking.c
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io/rangeTracker.h
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io/rangeTracker.c
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@endcode
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In this case, rangeTracker.c and io.c are the only files containing
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more than one non-static method, so they are the only ones that
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have corresponding .h files. rangeTracker.c is implementing a data
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structure that is being used by the other files. debug.c, file.c,
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memory.c and non_blocking.c each implements a different type of
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handle.
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Some modules are simply groups of files that perform similar tasks,
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or make use of the same set of interfaces (eg: <tt>page/</tt> and
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<tt>operations/</tt>). Files in these directories may make use of the same
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utility functions, but aren't implementing the same interface.
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Other modules provide multiple implementations of the same
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interface (eg: <tt>io/</tt> and <tt>logger/</tt>). C doesn't have
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inheritance, so Stasis "fakes it" using one of two methods. In
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both cases, a struct is defined to contain a void pointer, which
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the implementation manually casts to the appropriate type:
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@par Dispatch functions
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The dispatch functions contain a switch statement or conditional
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that decides which implementation to call. Calling convention:
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@code bird_carry(african_swallow, coconut); @endcode
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@par struct of function pointers
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These functions use the following calling convention:
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@code african_swallow->carry(african_swallow,coconut) @endcode
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@subsection ioutil I/O utilities
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The I/O utilities live in <tt>io/</tt>. They provide reentrant
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interfaces. This was written to insulate Stasis from Linux's
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ever-evolving I/O system calls, for portability, and to allow (for
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example) in-memory operation.
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@subsection walin WAL Modules
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None of these modules understand page formats; at this level
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everything is either
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- a page with an LSN (a version number),or
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- a log entry with an associated operation (redo / undo
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functions).
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Interesting files in this part of Stasis include logger2.c,
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bufferManager.c, and recovery2.c.
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@subsection page Page types
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Page types define the layout of data on pages. Currently, all
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pages contain a header with an LSN and a page type in it. This
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information is used by recovery and the buffer manager to invoke
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callbacks at appropriate times. (LSN-free pages are currently not
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supported.)
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XXX: This section is not complete.
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@todo Discuss readRecord, writeRecord (high level page access
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methods)
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@todo Explain the latching convention. (Also, explain which
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latches are not to be used by page implementations, and which
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latches may not be used by higher level code.)
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@par Registering new page type implementations
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Page implementations are registered with Stasis by passing a
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page_impl struct into registerPageType(). page_impl.page_type
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should contain an integer that is unique across all page types,
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while the rest of the fields contain function pointers to the page
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type's implementation.
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@par Pointer arithmetic
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Stasis page type implementations typically do little more than
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pointer arithmetic. However, implementing page types cleanly and
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portably is a bit tricky. Stasis has settled upon a compromise in
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this matter. Its page file formats are compatible within a single
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architecture, but not across systems with varying lengths of
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primitive types, or that vary in endianess.
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Over time, types that vary in length such as "int", "long", etc
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will be removed from Stasis, but their usage still exists in a few
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places. Once they have been removed, file compatibility problems
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should be limited to endianness (though application code will still
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be free to serialize objects in a non-portable manner).
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Most page implementations leverage C's pointer manipulation
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semantics to lay out pages. Rather than casting pointers to
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char*'s and then manually calculating byte offsets using sizeof(),
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the existing page types prefer to cast pointers to appropriate
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types, and then add or subtract the appropriate number of values.
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For example, instead of doing this:
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@code
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// p points to an int, followed by a two bars, then the foo whose address
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// we want to calculate
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int * p;
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foo* f = (foo*)( ((char*)p) + sizeof(int) + 2 * sizeof(bar))
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@endcode
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the implementations would do this:
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@code
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int * p;
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foo * f = (foo*)( ((bar*)(p+1)) + 2 )
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@endcode
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The main disadvantage of this approach is the large number of ()'s
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involved. However, it lets the compiler deal with the underlying
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multiplications, and often reduces the number of casts, leading to
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slightly more readable code. Take this implementation of
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page_type_ptr(), for example:
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@code
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int * page_type_ptr(Page *p) { return ( (int*)lsn_ptr(Page *p) ) - 1; }
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@endcode
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Here, the page type is stored as an integer immediately before the
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lsn_ptr. Using arithmetic over char*'s would require an extra
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cast to char*, and a multiplication by sizeof(int).
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@par A note on storage allocation
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Finally, while Stasis will correctly call appropriate functions
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when it encounters a properly registered third party page type, it
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currently provides few mechanisms to allocate such pages in the
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first place. There are examples of three approaches in the current
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code base:
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# Implement a full-featured, general purpose allocator, like the
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one in alloc.h. This is more difficult than it sounds.
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# Allocate entire regions at a time, and manually initialize pages
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within them. arrayList.h attempts to do this, but gets it wrong
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by relying upon lazy initialization to eventually set page types
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correctly. Doing so is problematic if the page was deallocated,
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then reused without being reset.
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# Allocate a single page at a time using TallocPage(), and
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TsetPage(). This is currently the msot attractive route, though
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TsetPage() does not call pageLoaded() when it resets page types,
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which can lead to trouble.
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@see page.h, fixed.h, and slotted.h for more information on the
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page API's, and the implementations of two common page formats.
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@subsection appfunc Application visible methods
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These methods start with "T". Look at the examples above. These
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are the "wrapper functions" from the OSDI paper. They are
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supported by operation implementations, which can be found in the
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operations/ directory.
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@section extending Implementing you own operations
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@todo Provide a tutorial that explains how to extend Stasis with new operations.
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@see increment.h for an example of a very simple logical operation.
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@see linearHashNTA.h for a more sophisticated example that makes use of Nested Top Actions.
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*/
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/**
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* @defgroup OPERATIONS Logical Operations
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*
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* Implementations of logical operations, and the interfaces that allow new operations to be added.
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*
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* @todo Write a brief howto to explain the implementation of new operations.
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*
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*/
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/**
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* @file
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*
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* Defines Stasis' primary interface.
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*
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*
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*
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* @todo error handling
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*
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* @ingroup LLADD_CORE
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* $Id$
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*/
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#ifndef __TRANSACTIONAL_H__
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#define __TRANSACTIONAL_H__
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#include "common.h"
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BEGIN_C_DECLS
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/**
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* represents how to look up a record on a page
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* @todo recordid.page should be 64bit.
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* @todo int64_t (for recordid.size) is a stopgap fix.
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*/
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typedef struct {
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int page; // XXX needs to be pageid_t, but that breaks unit tests.
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int slot;
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int64_t size; //signed long long size;
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} recordid;
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typedef struct {
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size_t offset;
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size_t size;
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// unsigned fd : 1;
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} blob_record_t;
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extern const recordid ROOT_RECORD;
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extern const recordid NULLRID;
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/**
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If a recordid's slot field is set to this, then the recordid
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represents an array of fixed-length records starting at slot zero
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of the recordid's page.
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@todo Support read-only arrays of variable length records, and then
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someday read / write / insert / delete arrays...
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*/
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#define RECORD_ARRAY (-1)
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#include "operations.h"
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/**
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* Currently, Stasis has a fixed number of transactions that may be
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* active at one time.
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*/
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#define EXCEED_MAX_TRANSACTIONS 1
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/**
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* @param xid transaction ID
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* @param LSN last log that this transaction used
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*/
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typedef struct {
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int xid;
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long LSN;
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} Transaction;
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/**
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* Initialize Stasis. This opens the pagefile and log, initializes
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* subcomponents, and runs recovery.
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*
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* @return 0 on success
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*/
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int Tinit();
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/**
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* Start a new transaction, and return a new transaction id (xid).
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*
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* @return positive transaction ID (xid) on success, negative return value on error
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*/
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int Tbegin();
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/**
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* Used when extending Stasis.
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* Operation implementors should wrap around this function to provide more mnuemonic names.
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*
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* @param xid The current transaction.
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* @param rid The record the operation pertains to. For some logical operations, this will be a dummy record.
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* @param dat Application specific data to be recorded in the log (for undo/redo), and to be passed to the implementation of op.
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* @param op The operation's offset in operationsTable
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*
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* @see operations.h set.h
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*/
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compensated_function void Tupdate(int xid, recordid rid,
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const void *dat, int op);
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compensated_function void TupdateStr(int xid, recordid rid,
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const char *dat, int op);
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compensated_function void TupdateRaw(int xid, recordid rid,
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const void *dat, int op);
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compensated_function void TupdateDeferred(int xid, recordid rid,
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const void *dat, int op);
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/**
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* @param xid transaction ID
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* @param rid reference to page/slot
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* @param dat buffer into which data goes
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*/
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compensated_function void Tread(int xid, recordid rid, void *dat);
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compensated_function void TreadStr(int xid, recordid rid, char *dat);
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/**
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* Commit an active transaction. Each transaction should be completed
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* with exactly one call to Tcommit() or Tabort().
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*
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* @param xid transaction ID
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* @return 0 on success
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*/
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int Tcommit(int xid);
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/**
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* Abort (rollback) an active transaction. Each transaction should be
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* completed with exactly one call to Tcommit() or Tabort().
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*
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* @param xid transaction ID
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* @return 0 on success, -1 on error.
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*/
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int Tabort(int xid);
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/**
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* Cleanly shutdown Stasis. After this function is called, you should
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* call Tinit() before attempting to access data stored in Stasis.
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* This function flushes all pages, cleans up log, and frees any
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* resources that Stasis is holding.
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*
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* @return 0 on success
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*/
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int Tdeinit();
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/**
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* Uncleanly shutdown Stasis. This function frees any resources that
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* Stasis is holding, and flushes the log, but it does not flush dirty
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* pages to disk. This is used by testing to exercise the recovery
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* logic.
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*
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* @return 0 on success
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*/
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int TuncleanShutdown();
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/**
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* Used by the recovery process.
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* Revives Tprepare'ed transactions.
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*
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* @param xid The xid that is to be revived.
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* @param lsn The lsn of that xid's most recent PREPARE entry in the log.
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*/
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void Trevive(int xid, long lsn);
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/**
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* Used by the recovery process.
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*
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* Sets the number of active transactions.
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* Should not be used elsewhere.
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*
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* @param xid The new active transaction count.
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*/
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void TsetXIDCount(int xid);
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/**
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* Checks to see if a transaction is still active.
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*
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* @param xid The transaction id to be tested.
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* @return true if the transacation is still running, false otherwise.
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*/
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int TisActiveTransaction(int xid);
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/**
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This is used by log truncation.
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*/
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lsn_t transactions_minRecLSN();
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/**
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Report Stasis' current durablity guarantees.
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@return VOLATILE if the data will be lost after Tdeinit(), or a
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crash, PERSISTENT if the data will be written back to disk after
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Tdeinit(), but may be corrupted at crash, or DURABLE if Stasis will
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apply committed transactions, and roll back active transactions
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after a crash.
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*/
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int TdurabilityLevel();
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END_C_DECLS
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#endif
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