NFS

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This guide describes the instructions to configure NFS as Alluxio’s under storage system.

You’ll need to have a configured and running installation of NFS for the rest of this guide. If you need to get your own NFS installation up and running, we recommend taking a look at the NFS-HOW TO

Requirements

The prerequisite for this part is that you have a version of Java 8 installed.

Turn on remote login service so that ssh localhost can succeed. To avoid the need to repeatedly input the password, you can add the public SSH key for the host into ~/.ssh/authorized_keys. See this tutorial for more details.

Initial Setup

Download binaries locally.

Creating NFS mount point

Before Alluxio master and workers can access the NFS server, mount points to the NFS server need to be created. Typically, all the machines will have the NFS shares located at the same path, such as /mnt/nfs. NFS client cache can interfere with the correct operation of Alluxio, specifically if Alluxio master creates a file on the NFS but the NFS client on the Alluxio worker continue to use the cached file listing, it will not see the newly created file. Thus we highly recommend setting the attribute cache timeout to 0. Please mount your nfs share like this.

$ sudo mount -o actimeo=0 nfshost:/nfsdir /mnt/nfs

Configuring Alluxio

Configure Alluxio to use under storage systems by modifying conf/alluxio-site.properties. If it does not exist, create the configuration file from the template.

$ cp conf/alluxio-site.properties.template conf/alluxio-site.properties

Assume we have mounted NFS share at /mnt/nfs on all Alluxio masters and workers, the following lines should be exist within the conf/alluxio-site.properties file.

alluxio.master.hostname=localhost
alluxio.master.mount.table.root.ufs=/mnt/nfs

Running Alluxio with NFS

Run the following command to start Alluxio filesystem.

$ ./bin/alluxio-mount.sh SudoMount
$ ./bin/alluxio format
$ ./bin/alluxio-start.sh local

To verify that Alluxio is running, you can visit http://localhost:19999, or see the log in the logs folder.

Run a simple example program:

$ ./bin/alluxio runTests

Visit your NFS volume at /mnt/nfs to verify the files and directories created by Alluxio exist. For this test, you should see files named:

/mnt/nfs/default_tests_files/BASIC_CACHE_THROUGH

Stop Alluxio by running:

$ ./bin/alluxio-stop.sh local