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140 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
140 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
= Performance costs for some common operations =
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1. Publishing an A-byte immutable file
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2. Publishing an A-byte mutable file
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3. Downloading B bytes of an A-byte immutable file
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4. Downloading B bytes of an A-byte mutable file
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5. Modifying B bytes of an A-byte mutable file
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6. Inserting/Removing B bytes in an A-byte mutable file
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7. Adding an entry to an A-entry directory
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8. Listing an A entry directory
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9. Performing a file-check on an A-byte file
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10. Performing a file-verify on an A-byte file
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11. Repairing an A-byte file (mutable or immutable)
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== Publishing an A-byte immutable file ==
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network: A
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memory footprint: N/k*128KiB
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notes: An immutable file upload requires an additional I/O pass over the entire
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source file before the upload process can start, since convergent
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encryption derives the encryption key in part from the contents of the
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source file.
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== Publishing an A-byte mutable file ==
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network: A
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memory footprint: N/k*A
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cpu: O(A) + a large constant for RSA keypair generation
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notes: Tahoe-LAFS generates a new RSA keypair for each mutable file that
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it publishes to a grid. This takes up to 1 or 2 seconds on a
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typical desktop PC.
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Part of the process of encrypting, encoding, and uploading a
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mutable file to a Tahoe-LAFS grid requires that the entire file
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be in memory at once. For larger files, this may cause
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Tahoe-LAFS to have an unacceptably large memory footprint (at
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least when uploading a mutable file).
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== Downloading B bytes of an A-byte immutable file ==
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network: B
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memory footprint: 128KiB
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notes: When Tahoe-LAFS 1.8.0 or later is asked to read an arbitrary range
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of an immutable file, only the 128-KiB segments that overlap the
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requested range will be downloaded.
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(Earlier versions would download from the beginning of the file up
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until the end of the requested range, and then continue to download
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the rest of the file even after the request was satisfied.)
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== Downloading B bytes of an A-byte mutable file ==
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network: A
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memory footprint: A
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notes: As currently implemented, mutable files must be downloaded in
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their entirety before any part of them can be read. We are
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exploring fixes for this; see ticket #393 for more information.
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== Modifying B bytes of an A-byte mutable file ==
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network: A
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memory footprint: N/k*A
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notes: If you upload a changed version of a mutable file that you
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earlier put onto your grid with, say, 'tahoe put --mutable',
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Tahoe-LAFS will replace the old file with the new file on the
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grid, rather than attempting to modify only those portions of the
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file that have changed. Modifying a file in this manner is
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essentially uploading the file over again, except that it re-uses
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the existing RSA keypair instead of generating a new one.
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== Inserting/Removing B bytes in an A-byte mutable file ==
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network: A
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memory footprint: N/k*A
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notes: Modifying any part of a mutable file in Tahoe-LAFS requires that
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the entire file be downloaded, modified, held in memory while it is
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encrypted and encoded, and then re-uploaded. A future version of the
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mutable file layout ("LDMF") may provide efficient inserts and
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deletes. Note that this sort of modification is mostly used internally
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for directories, and isn't something that the WUI, CLI, or other
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interfaces will do -- instead, they will simply overwrite the file to
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be modified, as described in "Modifying B bytes of an A-byte mutable
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file".
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== Adding an entry to an A-entry directory ==
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network: O(A)
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memory footprint: N/k*A
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notes: In Tahoe-LAFS, directories are implemented as specialized mutable
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files. So adding an entry to a directory is essentially adding B
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(actually, 300-330) bytes somewhere in an existing mutable file.
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== Listing an A entry directory ==
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network: O(A)
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memory footprint: N/k*A
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notes: Listing a directory requires that the mutable file storing the
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directory be downloaded from the grid. So listing an A entry
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directory requires downloading a (roughly) 330 * A byte mutable
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file, since each directory entry is about 300-330 bytes in size.
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== Performing a file-check on an A-byte file ==
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network: O(S), where S is the number of servers on your grid
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memory footprint: negligible
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notes: To check a file, Tahoe-LAFS queries all the servers that it knows
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about. Note that neither of these values directly depend on the size
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of the file. This is relatively inexpensive, compared to the verify
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and repair operations.
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== Performing a file-verify on an A-byte file ==
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network: N/k*A
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memory footprint: N/k*128KiB
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notes: To verify a file, Tahoe-LAFS downloads all of the ciphertext
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shares that were originally uploaded to the grid and integrity
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checks them. This is, for well-behaved grids, likely to be more
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expensive than downloading an A-byte file, since only a fraction
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of these shares are necessary to recover the file.
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== Repairing an A-byte file (mutable or immutable) ==
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network: variable; up to around O(A)
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memory footprint: from 128KiB to (1+N/k)*128KiB
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notes: To repair a file, Tahoe-LAFS downloads the file, and generates/uploads
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missing shares in the same way as when it initially uploads the file.
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So, depending on how many shares are missing, this can be about as
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expensive as initially uploading the file in the first place.
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