Catfs is a caching filesystem written in Rust.
Overview
Catfs allows you to have cached access to another (possibly remote) filesystem. Caching semantic is read-ahead and write-through (see Current Status). Currently it only provides a data cache and all metadata operations hit the source filesystem.
Catfs is ALPHA software. Don't use this if you value your data.
Installation
-
On Linux, install via pre-built binaries. You may also need to install fuse-utils first.
-
Or build from source which requires Cargo.
:~/catfs$ cargo install catfs
$ # optimized binary now in $HOME/.cargo/bin/catfs
Usage
Catfs requires extended attributes (xattr) to be enabled on the
filesystem where files are cached to. Typically this means you need to
have user_xattr
mount option turned on.
$ catfs <from> <to> <mountpoint>
Catfs will expose files in <from>
under <mountpoint>
, and cache
them to <to>
as they are accessed. You can use --free
to control
how much free space <to>
's filesystem has.
To mount catfs on startup, add this to /etc/fstab
:
catfs#/src/dir#/cache/dir /mnt/point fuse allow_other,--uid=1001,--gid=1001,--free=1% 0 0
Benchmark
Compare using catfs to cache sshfs vs sshfs only. Topology is laptop - 802.11n - router - 1Gbps wired - desktop. Laptop has SSD whereas desktop has spinning rust.
Compare running catfs with two local directories on the same filesystem with direct access. This is not a realistic use case but should give you an idea of the worst case slowdown.
Write is twice as slow as expected since we are writing twice the amount.
$ sudo docker run -e SSHFS_SERVER=user@host --rm --privileged --net=host -v $PWD/target:/root/catfs/target kahing/catfs-bench
# result is written to $PWD/target
The docker container will need to be able to ssh to user@host
. Typically I arrange that by mounting the ssh socket from the host
$ sudo docker run -e SSHFS_OPTS="-o ControlPath=/root/.ssh/sockets/%r@%h_%p -o ControlMaster=auto -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -o Cipher=arcfour user@host:/tmp" -e SSHFS_SERVER=user@host --rm --privileged --net=host -v $HOME/.ssh/sockets:/root/.ssh/sockets -v $PWD/target:/root/catfs/target kahing/catfs-bench
License
Copyright (C) 2017 Ka-Hing Cheung
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0
Current Status
Catfs is ALPHA software. Don't use this if you value your data.
Entire file is cached if it's open for read, even if nothing is actually read.
Data is written-through to the source and also cached for each
write. In case of non-sequential writes, catfs
detects ENOTSUP
emitted by filesystems like goofys
and falls back to flush the
entire file on close()
. Note that in the latter case even changing
one byte will cause the entire file to be re-written.
References
- Catfs is designed to work with goofys
- FS-Cache provides caching for some in kernel filesystems but doesn't support other FUSE filesystems.
- Other similar fuse caching filesystems, no idea about their completeness:
- CacheFS - written in Python, not to be confused with FS-Cache above which is in kernel
- fuse-cache
- gocachefs
- mcachefs
- pcachefs