VOS stream files are limited in growth to about 2 GB. This is because the definition of interfaces such as s$seq_position, s$get_port_status, s$lock_region, etc. use signed 32-bit variables to indicate position in the file and 2**31 is the largest possible value which can be represented. In stream files, position is byte-offset rather than record number as in other VOS file organizations.
64-bit stream files are available as of Release 17.2 and allow for growth limited only by the VOS file system (the maximum size of any file is 512 GB). In addition to expanding growth potential, these files offer other advantages, particularly when accessing binary data. Unlike with normal stream files, blocks containing all binary zeros occupy no space on disk, and reading such data requires no disk access.
Posix compliant applications can be easily built for large file awareness without any source changes: new files created on disks running on 17.2+ modules will be 64-bit (often referred to as stream64) files and on pre-17.2 modules will be ordinary stream files. Applications which use VOS s$ interface or VOS Language I/O are called native applications and those using stream files will be able to access stream64 files as long as either they do not use byte positioning operations (positioning to BOF or EOF is not considered byte positioning) OR if the file is However, they will need to be modified in order to create stream64 files.
Here is some information which may be useful if/when you plan to make use of 64-bit stream files. It is organized as follows:
Existing Applications and Compatibility
– Existing Posix Applications
– Existing Native Applications
– Compatibility
– Open Source Products
Sparse Allocation
File Conversion
Physical Characteristics
– Extents
– How Extents Affect Sparse Allocation
– Flexible Extents
Tools
– Locating 64-bit Stream Files on a Module
– Block Compares
– Comparing Sparse Files
Existing Applications and Compatibility
– Existing Posix Applications
As of Release 17.2, Posix applications can be built for large file awareness allowing then to access 64-bit files and create them if the target is on a disk running on 17.2 or beyond. If the application is Posix-compliant (for example, is coded to use types like off_t instead of int where required), then no source changes are needed; simply build it as described in the OpenVOS POSIX.1 Reference manual, R502, “Porting Existing Applications to the 64-bit Stream File Environment”. If a file being created is on a disk on a module running pre-17.2, then a normal stream file is created, and all will be fine with failure occurring only if an attempt is made to grow the file > 2 GB. So enabling your Posix application to use large files costs nothing in terms of interoperability. Most VOS supported Open source products will produce and deal properly with 64-bit stream files as of Release 17.2.
Posix compliant applications can be easily built for large file awareness without any source changes: new files created on disks running on 17.2+ modules will be 64-bit stream (often referred to as stream64) files and on pre-17.2 modules will be ordinary stream files. Applications which use VOS s$ interface or VOS Language I/O are called native applications and those which use stream files will be able to access stream64 files as long as either they do not use byte positioning operations (positioning to BOF or EOF is not considered byte positioning) OR if the file is smaller than 2 GB.
– Existing Native Applications
Many native applications simply need to change the use of the create_file command (or s$create_file) to indicate organization is STREAM64 rather than STREAM. If the application uses positioning operations and the file grows to > 2 GB, then s$seq_position will produce an error: to support larger files, s$seq_position calls needs to be changed to s$seq_position_x. Again, using _x interfaces does not interfere with the application’s ability to reference normal stream files existing on modules which may not support the _x interfaces, as long as positional arguments are in the supported range. So making the change allows access to any type of stream file and costs nothing in interoperability.
Existing applications which use only interfaces which do not communicate byte position: s$seq_read, s$seq_write, s$seq_position BOF/EOF will be able to deal with stream64 files without modification. Many applications are written to deal with ASCII files whether they are sequential or stream and thus need no change to deal with 64-bit stream files, regardless of size.
64-bit stream files cannot have indexes, and thus an indexed stream file cannot be converted to stream64. Indexed stream files cannot grow to > 2 GB due to restrictions in the existing index implementation.
– Compatibility
Because 64-bit stream files offer a number of advantages, they should be adopted when possible, if an index is not required.
As long as the file does not grow > 2 GB, it can be copied or moved to modules running older versions of VOS, and will appear there as a normal stream file. You can even move a disk containing stream64 files to an older VOS, providing the files are not “restricted”. A file is restricted when it grows > 2 GB or is sparsely allocated; such files cannot be opened if the disk which contains them is moved to a pre-17.2 VOS (tools are available to identify restricted files if you are planning on such a move). However, applications running older versions of VOS can open, read and write any kind of stream64 files across the network; any failure which occurs is the same as if the application were running on 17.2+ (for example, use of s$seq_position for byte positioning when the file exceeds 2 GB).
– Open Source Products
Most Open Software supported on VOS has been converted to be large file aware, for example ftp, sftp, samba, etc. That has certain implications. As of release 17.2, you can now ftp a stream file to VOS and not be concerned about the file being too big since the ftp daemon will create a stream64 file. ftp writes all bytes and thus the resulting file will not be sparse (see next section), even if consisting mostly of binary zeros. Simply copying the transferred file may greatly reduce the disk space it occupies. If you plan on adding an index to the ftp’ed file, you must first convert it to an ordinary stream file (and of course it must not be exceed 2 GB in length).
Sparse Allocation
Blocks which contain all binary zeros are not always allocated for stream64 files and thus require no disk space. The gnu “truncate” command (in >system>gnu_library>bin) can be used to both truncate and extend the size of a stream file. In 18.0, VOS provides a similar command called reset_eof. Data past EOF is undefined, but when EOF is extended, the file contents from the point of the current EOF is always set to binary zeros.
Consider an ordinary stream file and a stream64 file:
create_file stm -organization stream
create_file s64 -organization stream64
and assume each has contents ‘abc’. We wish to extend the files so that each occupies 2 billion bytes:
bash
bash-4.2$ truncate -s 2000000000 s64
bash-4.2$ truncate -s 2000000000 stm
The first request finishes immediately while the 2nd takes several minutes. The files show logical equivalency:
bash-4.2$ ls -l
total 244382
-rwxrwxrwx 1 nobody nobody 2000000000 Feb 25 14:08 s64
-rwxrwxrwx 1 nobody nobody 2000000000 Feb 25 14:11 stm
However, the number of disk blocks each file occupies is quite different, as shown by the VOS list command:
list
Files: 2, Blocks: 488764
w 4 s64
w 488760 stm
In Release 18.0, the equivalent operations can using the VOS reset_eof command:
reset_eof s64 2000000000
The VOS command will warn if you ask to extend an ordinary stream file by more than a few thousand blocks, since this is such a costly operation
reset_eof stm 2000000000
Extending eof to 2000000000 will add 488281 blocks to the file. Do you want to extend stm by 1999999996 bytes? (yes, no)
Here is the 64-bit stream file after being extended. It consists of just two data blocks:
dump_file s64
Block number 1
000 6162630A 00000000 00000000 00000000 |abc………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
Block number 488282
000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
Dumping the ordinary stream file stm will show all 488282 blocks which have been allocated with most blocks containing binary zeros.
dump_file stm
Block number 1
000 6162630A 00000000 00000000 00000000 |abc………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
Block number 2
000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
Block number 3
…
Block number 488282
000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
400 FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF |…………….|
=
FF0 FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF |…………….|
Nonetheless, compare_files and diff see the files as equivalent, but need to read through all blocks in the ordinary stream file which in this case can take a few minutes:
ready;compare_files s64 stm
ready 14:29:47
ready 14:31:24 45.877 46
File Conversion
The convert_stream_file command is available to convert between any of the sequential and stream file types (stream, 64-bit stream, sequential, and extended sequential) and to change extents. Typically conversion involves copying the contents of the file and in this way is similar to creating an empty target file and using copy_file with the -truncate option. convert_stream_file can be used to change the file in place and has advantages of making sure the existing contents can be represented in the requested new format before attempting the conversion.
There are cases where a stream file can be reset to stream64 and vice versa without conversion, i.e., without copying contents. This is done by resetting the directory entry and is possible only if the file is not sparse, is less that 2 GB and extent size is not changed. This can be useful when migrating a disk containing stream64 files to a pre-17.2 module and again if the disk is moved back. The set_stream_files command is available for this purpose. It is a privileged command intended for use by a System Administrator: it takes a directory as input and resets files in that directory, and optionally in all sub-directories. It affects only those stream64 files which can be reset without conversion (not sparse and otto>stm
file organization: stream file
last used at: 15-02-25 14:34:45 est
…
extent size: 1
next byte: 2000000000
blocks used: 488760 <<<<<
Then:
convert_stream_file stm -to stream64 -extent_size 8
display_file_status stm
file organization: stream file (64-bit/rstr)
last used at: 15-02-25 14:39:16 est
…
extent size: 8
next byte: 2000000000
blocks used: 18 <<<<
sparse: yes
The resulting file is shown as restricted (64-bit/rstr) due to it now being sparse. The copy_file command will also produce a sparse file. Converting a stream64 file to an ordinary stream file will result in all blocks being instantiated and so the resulting file can be considerably larger then the original.
In a stream64 file, there is no guarantee that a block which happen to contain binary zeros will be allocated on disk or not. For example, if you write some zeros into a block which then ends up being all zeros, the block remains allocated – or if a program explicitly writes zero data filling up blocks. Only blocks which are never written remain unallocated; copy_file and convert_stream_file never write blocks containing all binary zeros.
Physical Characteristics
– Extents
The actual growth limit of any VOS file is determined by its extent size, so it is important to understand what an extent is. The VOS file map contains disk addresses for each 4k block in a file; it is limited to 523792 entries and thus any file without extents is limited to 2145452032 (523792 * 4096) bytes. This is slightly under 2**31 and thus is the actual limit on the growth of an ordinary stream file.
An extent is a group of N contiguous blocks on disk, where N is the extent size. The file map for a file allocated via extents contains the address of the first block in the extent and thus allows the file map to represent a significantly larger file. Dynamically allocated extents allow extent size up to 256 allowing for a file containing 512 GB (Note: statically allocated extents which allow extent size greater than 256 are deprecated except for use with paging files; these have many restrictions and performance issues which make then unacceptable for general use).
In order to grow past 2 GB, a stream64 file must have extents, the value of which will determine its actual growth limit. For example,
create_file stm64 -organization steam64 -extent_size 32
will create a file which can grow to 64 GB.
In release 17.2, the default extent size for files created by Posix Runtime is 8, allowing for growth up to 16 GB. Such files grow 8 blocks at a time, and thus the minimum size of any file is 8 blocks. This default can be changed by a System Administrator on a per-module basis, but the larger the growth potential, the larger the minimum size of a file. Larger extents can be a problem for applications which produce many very small files.
– How Extents Affect Sparse Allocation
Normally blocks which are never written are not allocated for stream64 files; however if one block in an extent is written, then all blocks in that extent are allocated, even if some contain all binary zeros.
Suppose a non-extent file containing the string abc (stm1) is converted to a file with extent size 8 (stm8):
dump_file stm1
Block number 1
000 6162630A 00000000 00000000 00000000 |abc………….|
010 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
convert_stream_file stm1 stm8 -extent_size 8
dump_file stm8
Block number 1
000 6162630A 00000000 00000000 00000000 |abc………….|
010 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
Block number 2
000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
Block number 3
…
Block number 8
000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
The -brief option was added to dump_file in release 18.0 and can be useful when you don’t want to see blocks which are physically present, but represent “empty” (potentially non-existent) blocks. Using that option with the DAE-8 file is shown below:
dump_file stm8 -brief
Block number 1
000 6162630A 00000000 00000000 00000000 |abc………….|
010 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
=
FF0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 |…………….|
This is effective also in hiding “empty” blocks containing all -1′s for relative of fixed files.
– Flexible Extents
Flexible extents were introduced in Release 18.0 allowing a small file to grow one block at a time; as the file grows larger, the extent value changes. This is the default for all files created by Posix applications in Release 18.0 and is what you’ll get with the create_file command if you don’t give an specific extent size:
create_file flex -organization stream64 -extent_size
Files with flexible extents are referred to as flex files; only stream64 files can have flexible extents. The display_file_status command shows the extent size of a flex file as “flex”.
display_file_status flex
name: %swsle#Raid4>flex
file organization: stream file (64-bit)
last modified at: 15-02-25 12:06:25 est
…
dynamic extents: yes
extent size: flex
If the display_file_status command is run on a pre-18.0 module, it shows:
extent size: -1
If a flex file is copied to a disk on a 17.2 module, it has extents which are the default for that module. If copied to 17.1 or before, the result is an ordinary stream files.
In release 17.2+, compare_files does not see extent size differences between stream files, and files appear identical regardless of extents. For example, suppose %swsle#m109_mas is a on a module running 17.2:
copy_file flex %swsle#m109_mas>Stratus
compare_files flex %swsle#m109_mas>Stratus>flex
ready 14:42:38 0.001 6
Running compare_files on a pre-17.2 module will show this as a difference:
compare_files %swsle#Raid>flex %swsle#m109_mas>Stratus>flex
A (%swsle#Raid4>flex does not match B (%swsle#m109_mas>Stratus>flex).
– Some attributes of the two files do not match:
extent size -1 8
Flex files are able to hold somewhat less than 512 GB, specifically 540,142,534,656 bytes vs 549,235,720,192 with DAE-256, but have the advantage that small files grow one block at a time, then 8, then 32, then 256 as opposed to always 256 blocks at a time.
You should not mount a disk containing flex files on a pre-18.0 module; there are tools which allow you to easily examine a disk for the presence of flex files. If you accidentally do, the files will not be visible and can’t be accessed. Such files or any containing directory cannot be deleted and so will remain intact if the disk is moved back to a module running 18.0+. However if you salvage on a pre-18.0 modules, all flex files will be eliminated and the space recovered.
Tools
– Locating 64-bit Stream Files on a Module
When you need to move a disk to an older version of VOS, you need to locate files which are incompatible with the older release. A command is available to help with this:
locate_stream_files -form
—————————– locate_stream_files ————————-
directory_names:
-depth:
-type: 64-bit
-brief: no
-long: no
-type can also be flex, sparse, or large (which will locate 64-bit stream files with that specific characteristic), or all (which will locate all stream files).
Depending on -depth, subordinate directories are searched and if the file has any of the attributes (not specified by type), information regarding that and extent size is shown as well. If no directory name is given, then all disks on the module are searched from the root. For example:
locate_stream_files -type 64-bit
Checking directories on disk %swsle#raid0-1…
%swsle#raid0-1:
smb_test.stm64 (FLEX/large)
smb_test.stmb
Total of 2 64-bit stream files.
Checking directories on disk %swsle#raid0-2…
%swsle#raid0-2:
big_stream (FLEX)
smb_test.stm (FLEX)
smb_test.stm64a (FLEX/large)
Total of 3 64-bit stream files.
Checking directories on disk %swsle#Raid4…
%swsle#Raid4>otto:
b3 (DAE-8)
big (DAE-256/large/sparse)
…
– Block Compares
In release 17.2 and 18.0, new options are available for the compare_files command which are useful for stream files. Block by block comparison of VOS structured file types is typically not useful because two blocks with different values often will represent the same logical records. For example, unused data in a relative file’s records past their current length is unpredictable. In addition, sequential files contain undefined filler bytes. The block contents of extended sequential files are completely different if the record size is different, although representing the same logical records.
However, block compares can sometimes be useful for fixed and stream files. The problem is that compare_files is record oriented and designed to show differences in terms of record numbers (or line numbers) which can be located using an editor. This has presented problems for binary stream files which are not organized in terms of records. Since record size for any file is limited to 32767 bytes, using s$seq_read in a stream file when a sequence of more than 32k bytes occurs without an intervening NL record delimiter will deliver the next 32767 characters, and not distinguish whether the next byte was a NL or not. This makes the result of record-oriented comparison ambiguous for stream files which hold binary values rather than a sequence of characters separated by the NL character.
This problem has been dealt with in release 17.2; compare_files will detect cases where false success may have occurred previously – specifically when 32767 characters followed by a NL match 32767 characters not followed by a NL. If this occurs, an error will be reported indicating that the stream file contains records > 32767. If this never occurs, then the record oriented results will be valid and can be trusted. But in any event, when all you want to do is assure files are identical, comparing the blocks of an unstructured file is much faster than the record-oriented method. The problem with block compares is that with no records to serve as guideposts, comparison after the first discrepancy is often meaningless.
In release 17.2, the -compare_blocks option was added to the compare_files command for this purpose. This will quickly detect whether or not unstructured files are block for block identical and identify the block at which they differ. For the rare case, where the difference is caused by an overlay (certain bytes being modified as opposed to inserted or deleted) and the rest of the files are identical, the -continue option is also available. This will show you the range of blocks in the remainder of the file which differ. If a byte was inserted for example (as opposed to overlaid), then all remaining blocks will differ; that is, resync’ing as is done with record compares is not possible with block compares. But in the case alluded to, this additional information could ascertain that the only difference was some overlaid bytes in a few blocks, perhaps representing something like a timestamp.
As an example of -compare_blocks with -continue:
compare_files flex dae256 -compare_blocks -continue
A (%swsle#m111_mas>Stratus>Newman>flex) does not match B (%swsle#m111_mas>Stratus>Newman>dae256).
– Data blocks from 2 to 24 differ.
– Data blocks from 33 to 488 differ.
– 272 additional blocks in File B.
– Comparing Sparse Files
The compare_files command looks at all physically present blocks in a file. This can be a problem in sparse files, because a block of binary zeros may appear as an allocated block in one file, yet not be present in another. The files may be logically identical, but not block for block. In fact, using copy_file will eliminate blocks of binary zeros in the target, and if any exist, this will guarantee the source and target will not be block for block identical.
This is also a problem in extent based stream files because all blocks in an extent are always instantiated even if they contain all binary zeros. That means that the blocks in an sparse extent file may look different that the blocks in an identical non-extent file, even though they represent the exact same data. Running copy_file cannot eliminate zero blocks in an extent.
The example showing use of -continue above actually involves two identical files, except that one has DAE-256 extents and the other has flexible extents.
So a DAE-8 file with contents “abc” will contain one block with “abc” followed by 7 others containing binary zeros. A non-extent file (or flex file) will just have one block with “abc”, and a DAE-16 file will have an “abc” block followed by 15 blocks of binary zeros.
Using the compare_files command with -compare_blocks will show all these files as being different, even though they all represent the same file data. In Release 18.0, the -compare_all_blocks option is available for this situation. This causes copy_file to logically instantiate missing blocks in files being compared, resulting in a true block by block compare with differences caused by sparseness eliminated. Missing blocks in stream64 files are considered all binary zeros while in fixed (or all other file types) are considered binary -1′s (all FFFF).
In a very sparse file, this can make the comparison much slower than using the -compare_blocks options, but still significantly faster than using the default record-oriented comparison. It is typically only needed when comparing blocks of files having different extents, although there are other cases as mentioned where sparseness can differ. This is useful also for fixed files having different extents.