mirror of
https://github.com/Oxalide/vsphere-influxdb-go.git
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239 lines
11 KiB
Go
239 lines
11 KiB
Go
/*
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Package tsi1 provides a memory-mapped index implementation that supports
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high cardinality series.
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Overview
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The top-level object in tsi1 is the Index. It is the primary access point from
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the rest of the system. The Index is composed of LogFile and IndexFile objects.
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Log files are small write-ahead log files that record new series immediately
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in the order that they are received. The data within the file is indexed
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in-memory so it can be quickly accessed. When the system is restarted, this log
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file is replayed and the in-memory representation is rebuilt.
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Index files also contain series information, however, they are highly indexed
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so that reads can be performed quickly. Index files are built through a process
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called compaction where a log file or multiple index files are merged together.
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Operations
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The index can perform many tasks related to series, measurement, & tag data.
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All data is inserted by adding a series to the index. When adding a series,
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the measurement, tag keys, and tag values are all extracted and indexed
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separately.
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Once a series has been added, it can be removed in several ways. First, the
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individual series can be removed. Second, it can be removed as part of a bulk
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operation by deleting the entire measurement.
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The query engine needs to be able to look up series in a variety of ways such
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as by measurement name, by tag value, or by using regular expressions. The
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index provides an API to iterate over subsets of series and perform set
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operations such as unions and intersections.
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Log File Layout
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The write-ahead file that series initially are inserted into simply appends
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all new operations sequentially. It is simply composed of a series of log
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entries. An entry contains a flag to specify the operation type, the measurement
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name, the tag set, and a checksum.
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┏━━━━━━━━━LogEntry━━━━━━━━━┓
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Flag │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Measurement │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Key/Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Key/Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Key/Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Checksum │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┗━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
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When the log file is replayed, if the checksum is incorrect or the entry is
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incomplete (because of a partially failed write) then the log is truncated.
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Index File Layout
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The index file is composed of 3 main block types: one series block, one or more
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tag blocks, and one measurement block. At the end of the index file is a
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trailer that records metadata such as the offsets to these blocks.
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Series Block Layout
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The series block stores raw series keys in sorted order. It also provides hash
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indexes so that series can be looked up quickly. Hash indexes are inserted
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periodically so that memory size is limited at write time. Once all the series
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and hash indexes have been written then a list of index entries are written
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so that hash indexes can be looked up via binary search.
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The end of the block contains two HyperLogLog++ sketches which track the
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estimated number of created series and deleted series. After the sketches is
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a trailer which contains metadata about the block.
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┏━━━━━━━SeriesBlock━━━━━━━━┓
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Series Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Series Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Series Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ │ Hash Index │ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Series Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Series Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Series Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ │ Hash Index │ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Index Entries │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ HLL Sketches │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Trailer │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┗━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
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Tag Block Layout
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After the series block is one or more tag blocks. One of these blocks exists
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for every measurement in the index file. The block is structured as a sorted
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list of values for each key and then a sorted list of keys. Each of these lists
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has their own hash index for fast direct lookups.
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┏━━━━━━━━Tag Block━━━━━━━━━┓
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ │ Hash Index │ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Value │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ │ Hash Index │ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Key │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ │ Hash Index │ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Trailer │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┗━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
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Each entry for values contains a sorted list of offsets for series keys that use
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that value. Series iterators can be built around a single tag key value or
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multiple iterators can be merged with set operators such as union or
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intersection.
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Measurement block
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The measurement block stores a sorted list of measurements, their associated
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series offsets, and the offset to their tag block. This allows all series for
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a measurement to be traversed quickly and it allows fast direct lookups of
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measurements and their tags.
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This block also contains HyperLogLog++ sketches for new and deleted
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measurements.
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┏━━━━Measurement Block━━━━━┓
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┃ ┌──────────────────────┐ ┃
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┃ │ Measurement │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Measurement │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Measurement │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ │ Hash Index │ ┃
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┃ │ │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ HLL Sketches │ ┃
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┃ ├──────────────────────┤ ┃
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┃ │ Trailer │ ┃
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┃ └──────────────────────┘ ┃
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┗━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┛
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Manifest file
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The index is simply an ordered set of log and index files. These files can be
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merged together or rewritten but their order must always be the same. This is
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because series, measurements, & tags can be marked as deleted (aka tombstoned)
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and this action needs to be tracked in time order.
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Whenever the set of active files is changed, a manifest file is written to
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track the set. The manifest specifies the ordering of files and, on startup,
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all files not in the manifest are removed from the index directory.
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Compacting index files
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Compaction is the process of taking files and merging them together into a
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single file. There are two stages of compaction within TSI.
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First, once log files exceed a size threshold then they are compacted into an
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index file. This threshold is relatively small because log files must maintain
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their index in the heap which TSI tries to avoid. Small log files are also very
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quick to convert into an index file so this is done aggressively.
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Second, once a contiguous set of index files exceed a factor (e.g. 10x) then
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they are all merged together into a single index file and the old files are
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discarded. Because all blocks are written in sorted order, the new index file
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can be streamed and minimize memory use.
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Concurrency
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Index files are immutable so they do not require fine grained locks, however,
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compactions require that we track which files are in use so they are not
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discarded too soon. This is done by using reference counting with file sets.
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A file set is simply an ordered list of index files. When the current file set
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is obtained from the index, a counter is incremented to track its usage. Once
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the user is done with the file set, it is released and the counter is
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decremented. A file cannot be removed from the file system until this counter
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returns to zero.
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Besides the reference counting, there are no other locking mechanisms when
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reading or writing index files. Log files, however, do require a lock whenever
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they are accessed. This is another reason to minimize log file size.
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*/
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package tsi1
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