A filesystem that allows users access to the DNAnexus storage system.
For support issues please contact support@dnanexus.com
NOTE: This project is designed for read-only use in the DNAnexus worker environment. Use in any other environment (such as macOS or Linux clients) or use of -limitedWrite
is in beta
The code uses the FUSE library, implemented in golang. The DNAnexus storage system is not POSIX compilant. It holds not just files and directories, but also records, databases, applets, and workflows. It allows things that are not POSIX, for example:
- Files in a directory can have the same name
- A filename can include slashes
- A file and a directory may share a name
To fit these names into a POSIX compliant filesystem, as FUSE and
Linux require, files are moved to avoid name collisions. For example,
if file foo.txt
has three versions in directory bar
, dxfuse will
present the following Unix directory structure:
bar/
foo.txt
1/foo.txt
2/foo.txt
The directories 1
and 2
are new, and do not exist in the
project. If a file contains a slash, it is replaced with a triple
underscore. As a rule, directories are not moved, nor are their
characters modified. However, if a directory name contains a slash, it
is dropped, and a warning is emitted to the log.
dxfuse provides a read-only view of the DNAnexus storage unless launched with an optional -limitedWrite
flag.
limitedWrite mode allows writing data in append-only fashion that enables support of spark file outputs.
dxfuse approximates a normal POSIX filesystem, but does not always have the same semantics. For example:
- Metadata like last access time are not supported
- Directories have approximate create/modify times. This is because DNAx does not keep such attributes for directories.
There are several limitations currently:
- Primarily intended for Linux, but can be used on OSX
- Limits directories to 255,000 elements
- Updates to the project emanating from other machines are not reflected locally
- Does not support hard links
- limitedWrite mode has additional limitations described in the Limited Write Mode section
Streaming a file from DNAnexus using dxfuse performs similiarly to dx-toolkit.
The following table shows performance across several
instance types. The benchmark was how many seconds does it take to
download a file of size X? The lower the number, the better. The two
download methods were (1) dx cat
, and (2) cat
from a dxfuse mount point.
instance type | dx cat (seconds) | dxfuse cat (seconds) | file size |
---|---|---|---|
mem1_ssd1_v2_x4 | 207 | 219 | 17G |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x4 | 66 | 77 | 5.9G |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x4 | 6 | 4 | 705M |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x4 | 3 | 3 | 285M |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x16 | 57 | 49 | 17G |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x16 | 22 | 24 | 5.9G |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x16 | 3 | 3 | 705M |
mem1_ssd1_v2_x16 | 2 | 1 | 285M |
mem3_ssd1_v2_x32 | 52 | 51 | 17G |
mem3_ssd1_v2_x32 | 20 | 15 | 5.9G |
mem3_ssd1_v2_x32 | 4 | 2 | 705M |
mem3_ssd1_v2_x32 | 2 | 1 | 285M |
The implementation uses a sqlite
database, located on /var/dxfuse/metadata.db
. It stores files and
directories in tables, indexed to speed up common queries.
Load on the DNAnexus API servers and the cloud object system is carefully controlled. Bulk calls are used to describe data objects, and the number of parallel IO requests is bounded.
dxfuse operations can sometimes be slow, for example, if the server is slow to respond, or has been temporarily shut down (503 mode). This may cause the filesystem to lose its interactive feel. Running it on a cloud worker reduces network latency significantly, and is the way it is used in the product. Running on a local, non cloud machine, runs the risk of network choppiness.
dxfuse -limitedWrite
mode was primarly designed to support spark file output over the file:///
protocol.
Creating and writing to files is allowed when dxfuse is mounted with the -limitedWrite
flag.
Writing to files is append only. Any non-sequential writes will return ENOTSUP
. Seeking or reading operations are not permitted while a file is being written.
-limitedWrite
mode enables the following operations: rename (mv, see below), unlink (rm), mkdir (see below), and rmdir (empty folders only). Rewriting existing files is not permitted, nor is truncating existing files.
All mkdir
operations via dxfuse are treated as mkdir -p
. This is because dxfuse does not present the realtime state of the project. Folders can be created outside of dxfuse (or in another dxfuse process), and therefore not be visible to the current running dxfuse. A subsequent mkdir
--> project-xxxx/newFolder
would return a 422 error, because dxfuse did not know the directory already exists. This design is due to spark behavior where multiple worker nodes sometimes attempt to create the same output directory.
Rename does not allow removing the target file or directory because DNAnexus API does not support this functionality. Removal of target file or directory must be done as a separate operation before calling the rename (mv) operation.
$ ls -lht MNT/file*
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 6 Aug 20 21:23 file1
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 6 Aug 20 21:23 file
$ mv MNT/file MNT/file1
mv: cannot move 'file' to 'file1': Operation not permitted
# Supported via 2 distinct operations:
$ rm MNT/file1
$ mv MNT/file MNT/file1
Each dxfuse file open for writing is allocated a 16MiB write buffer in memory, which is uploaded as a DNAnexus file part when full. This buffer increases in size for each part 1.1^n * 16MiB
up to a maximum 700MiB. dxfuse uploads up to 4 parts in parallel across all files being uploaded.
The upload of the last DNAnexus file part and the call of file-xxxx/close
DNAnexus API operation are performed by dxfuse only when the OS process that created the OS file descriptor closes the OS file descriptor, triggering FlushFile
fuse operation.
Applications which immediately duplicate a file descriptor after opening it are supported, but writing and the subsequent file descriptor duplication is not supported, as this triggers the FlushFile
fuse operation. See the below supported syscall access pattern, where FlushFile
op triggered by close(3)
is ignored for an empty open file.
# Supported access pattern
openat(AT_FDCWD, "MNT/project/writefile", O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, 0666) = 3
dup2(3, 1) = 1
# Triggers a FlushFile ignored by dxfuse since the file is empty
close(3) = 0
read(0, "\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"..., 1024) = 1024
write(1, "\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"..., 1024) = 1024
The example below closes the file descriptor after writing, which closes the dnanexus file, causing subsequent writes to fail.
# Unsupported access pattern
openat(AT_FDCWD, "MNT/project/writefile", O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, 0666) = 3
read(0, "\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"..., 1024) = 1024
write(3, "\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"..., 1024) = 1024
dup2(3, 1) = 1
# Triggers a FlushFile --> file-xxxx/close by dxfuse since the file size is greater than 0
close(3) = 0
# Returns EPERM error since the file has been closed already
write(1, "\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0"..., 1024) = -1
Ignoring the FlushFile
op for empty files creates an edge case for creating empty files in dxfuse-mounted folders. For empty files, the empty part upload and file-xxxx/close
are not called until the ReleaseFileHandle
fuse operation is triggered by the kernel when the last open file descriptor for a given file has been closed. The downside of this behavior is that the dxfuse client application creating the empty file is unable to catch errors that may happen during file-xxxxx/close
API call as it does for non-empty files closed via FlushFile
fuse operation triggered by application's call to close(3)
.
dxfuse clients should check errors from close(3)
call to make sure the corresponding DNAnexus file has been transitioned out of the open
state,
as DNAnexus files left in open state are eventually removed by the DNAnexus cleanup daemon.
Spark output through dxfuse uses the spark file://
protocol. Due to this each output produced by spark will have a corresponding .crc
file. These files can be removed.
Upload benchmarks are from an Ubuntu 20.04 DNAnexus worker mem2_ssd1_v2_x32 (AWS m5d.8xlarge) instance running kernel 5.4.0-1055-aws.
dx
and dxfuse
benchmark commands were run like so. These benchmarks are not exact because they include the wait time until the uploaded file is transitioned to the closed
state.
time dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=$SIZE | dx upload --wait -
time dd if=/dev/zero bs=1M count=$SIZE of=MNT/project/$SIZE
dx upload --wait (seconds) | dxfuse upload(seconds) | file size |
---|---|---|
4.4 | 3.5 | 100MiB |
4.8 | 4.2 | 200MiB |
5.9 | 4.8 | 400MiB |
5.9 | 6.8 | 800MiB |
7 | 10 | 1GiB |
22.5 | 19.2 | 2GiB |
37.8 | 87 | 10GiB |
254 | 495 | 100GiB |
To build the code from source, you'll need, at the very least, the go
and git
tools.
git clone git@github.com:dnanexus/dxfuse.git
cd dxfuse
go build -o dxfuse cli/main.go
Allow regular users access to the fuse device on the local machine:
chmod u+rw /dev/fuse
In theory, it should be possible to use suid
to achive this instead, but that does
not currently work.
To mount a dnanexus project mammals
in local directory /home/jonas/foo
do:
dxfuse /home/jonas/foo mammals
Note that dxfuse will hide any existing content of the mount point (e.g. /home/jonas/foo
directory in the example above)
until the dxfuse process is stopped.
The bootstrap process has some asynchrony, so it could take it a
second two to start up. It spawns a separate process for the filesystem
server, waits for it to start, and exits. To get more information, use
the verbose
flag. Debugging output is written to the log, which is
placed at $HOME/.dxfuse/dxfuse.log
. The maximal verbosity level is 2.
dxfuse -verbose 1 MOUNT-POINT PROJECT-NAME
Project ids can be used instead of project names. To mount several projects, say, mammals
, fish
, and birds
, do:
dxfuse /home/jonas/foo mammals fish birds
This will create the directory hierarchy:
/home/jonas/foo
|_ mammals
|_ fish
|_ birds
Note that files may be hard linked from several projects. These will appear as a single inode with a link count greater than one.
To stop the dxfuse process do:
fusermount -u MOUNT-POINT
DNXa data objects have properties and tags, these are exposed as POSIX extended attributes. Xattrs can be read, written, and removed. The package we use here is attr
, it can installed with sudo apt-get install attr
on Linux. On OSX the xattr
package comes packaged with the base operating system, and can be used to the same effect.
DNAx tags and properties are prefixed. For example, if zebra.txt
is a file then attr -l zebra.txt
will print out all the tags, properties, and attributes that have no POSIX equivalent. These are split into three correspnding prefixes tag, prop, and base all under the user
Linux namespace.
Here zebra.txt
has no properties or tags.
$ attr -l zebra.txt
base.state: closed
base.archivalState: live
base.id: file-xxxx
Add a property named family
with value mammal
$ attr -s prop.family -V mammal zebra.txt
Add a tag africa
$ attr -s tag.africa -V XXX zebra.txt
Remove the family
property:
$ attr -r prop.family zebra.txt
You cannot modify base.* attributes, these are read-only. Setting and deleting xattrs can be done only for files that are closed on the platform.
For OSX you will need to install macFUSE. Note that Your Milage May Vary (YMMV) on this platform, we are mostly focused on Linux.
Feaures such as kernel read-ahead, pagecache, mmap, and PID tracking may not work on macOS.
dxfuse supports shared read-only mmap for remote files. This is only possible with FUSE when both the kernel pagecache and kernel readahead options are both enabled for the FUSE mount, which may have other side effects of increased memory usage (pagecache) and more remote read requests (readahead).
>>> import mmap
>>> fd = open('MNT/dxfuse_test_data/README.md', 'r')
mmap.mmap(fd.fileno(), 0, flags=mmap.MAP_SHARED, prot=mmap.PROT_READ)
<mmap.mmap object at 0x7f9cadd87770>
If a project appears empty, or is missing files, it could be that the dnanexus token does not have permissions for it. Try to see if you can do dx ls YOUR_PROJECT:
.
There is no natural match for DNAnexus applets and workflows, so they are presented as block devices. They do not behave like block devices, but the shell colors them differently from files and directories.