Veritas™ File System 5.0.1 Administrator's Guide
Enhanced data integrity modes
For most UNIX file systems, including VxFS, the default mode for writing to a file
is delayed, or buffered, meaning that the data to be written is copied to the file
system cache and later flushed to disk.
A delayed write provides much better performance than synchronously writing
the data to disk. However, in the event of a system failure, data written shortly
before the failure may be lost since it was not flushed to disk. In addition, if space
was allocated to the file as part of the write request, and the corresponding data
was not flushed to disk before the system failure occurred, uninitialized data can
appear in the file.
For the most common type of write, delayed extending writes (a delayed write
that increases the file size), VxFS avoids the problem of uninitialized data
appearing in the file by waiting until the data has been flushed to disk before
updating the new file size to disk. If a system failure occurs before the data has
been flushed to disk, the file size has not yet been updated to be uninitialized data,
thus no uninitialized data appears in the file. The unused blocks that were allocated
are reclaimed.
The blkclear option and data integrity
In environments where performance is more important than absolute data
integrity, the preceding situation is not of great concern. However, VxFS supports
environments that emphasize data integrity by providing the mount -o blkclear
option that ensures uninitialized data does not appear in a file.
The closesync option and data integrity
VxFS provides the mount -o mincache=closesync option, which is useful in
desktop environments with users who are likely to shut off the power on machines
without halting them first. In closesync mode, only files that are written during
the system crash or shutdown can lose data. Any changes to a file are flushed to
disk when the file is closed.
The log option and data integrity
File systems are typically asynchronous in that structural changes to the file
system are not immediately written to disk, which provides better performance.
However, recent changes made to a system can be lost if a system failure occurs.
Specifically, attribute changes to files and recently created files may disappear.
The mount -o log intent logging option guarantees that all structural changes
to the file system are logged to disk before the system call returns to the
application. With this option, the rename(2) system call flushes the source file to
Introducing Veritas File System
Veritas File System features
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