Computerworld
Kernel space: The Tru64 Advanced Filesystem
HP has released Digital's Tru64 Advanced Filesystem under the GPL, free for Linux developers to borrow. And developers can learn a lot from this museum piece.
Jonathan Corbet (LinuxWorld)  02 July, 2008 10:15

On June 23, HP announced that it was releasing the source for the "Tru64 Advanced Filesystem" (or AdvFS) under version 2 of the GPL. This is, clearly, a large release of code from HP. What is a bit less clear is what the value of this release will be for Linux. In the end, that value is likely to be significant, but it will be probably realized in relatively indirect and difficult-to-measure ways.

AdvFS was originally developed by Digital Equipment Corporation for its version of Unix; HP picked it up when it acquired Compaq, which had acquired DEC in 1998. This filesystem offers a number of the usual features. It is intended to be a high-performance filesystem, naturally. Extent-based block management and directory indexes are provided. It does journaling for fast crash recovery. There is an undelete feature. AdvFS is also designed to work in clustered environments.

Much of the thought that went into AdvFS was concerned with avoiding the need to take the system down. There is a snapshot feature which can be used to make consistent backups of running systems. Defragmentation can be done online. There is a built-in volume management layer which allows storage devices to be added to (or removed from) a running filesystem; files can also be relocated across devices. The internal volume manager can perform striping of files across devices, but nothing more advanced than that; AdvFS will happily work on top of a more capable volume manager, though.

There are a few things which AdvFS does not have. There is no checksumming of data, and, thus, no ability to catch corruption. Online filesystem integrity checking does not appear to be supported. The maximum filesystem size (16TB) probably seemed infinite in the early 1990's, but it's starting to look a little tight now. In general, AdvFS looks like something which was a very nice filesystem ten or fifteen years ago, but it has little that is not either available in Linux now, or in the works for the near future. And AdvFS doesn't even work with Linux - no porting effort has been made, and it's not clear that one will be made. So is this release just another dump of code being abandoned by its corporate owner?

One could make a first answer by saying that, even if this were true, it would still be welcome. If a company gives up on a piece of code, it's far preferable to put it out for adoption under the GPL than to let it rot until nobody can find it anymore. But there may well be value in this release.

Even if there is no point in trying to make it work under Linux, the AdvFS code is the repository of more than a decade of experience of making a high-end filesystem work in a commercial environment. The author had stopped working with DEC systems by the time AdvFS came out, but the word he heard from others is that the early releases were, shall we say, something that taught administrators about the value of frequent backups. But after a few major releases, AdvFS had stabilized into a fast, solid, and reliable filesystem. The current code will embody all of the hard lessons that were learned in the process of getting to that point.

Chris Mason, who is currently working on the Btrfs filesystem, puts it this way:

The idea is that well established filesystems can teach us quite a lot about layout, and about the optimizations that were added in response to customer demand. Having the code to these optimizations is very useful.

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