go-fuse

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Published: Feb 23, 2019 License: BSD-3-Clause

README

GO-FUSE

Build Status GoDoc

native bindings for the FUSE kernel module.

Highlights

  • High speed: as fast as libfuse using the gc compiler for single threaded loads.

  • Supports in-process mounting of different FileSystems onto subdirectories of the FUSE mount.

  • Supports 3 interfaces for writing filesystems:

    • PathFileSystem: define filesystems in terms path names.
    • NodeFileSystem: define filesystems in terms of inodes.
    • RawFileSystem: define filesystems in terms of FUSE's raw wire protocol.
  • Both NodeFileSystem and PathFileSystem support manipulation of true hardlinks.

  • Includes two fleshed out examples, zipfs and unionfs.

Examples

  • example/hello/main.go contains a 60-line "hello world" filesystem

  • zipfs/zipfs.go contains a small and simple read-only filesystem for zip and tar files. The corresponding command is in example/zipfs/ For example,

    mkdir /tmp/mountpoint
    example/zipfs/zipfs /tmp/mountpoint file.zip &
    ls /tmp/mountpoint
    fusermount -u /tmp/mountpoint
    
  • zipfs/multizipfs.go shows how to use in-process mounts to combine multiple Go-FUSE filesystems into a larger filesystem.

  • fuse/loopback.go mounts another piece of the filesystem. Functionally, it is similar to a symlink. A binary to run is in example/loopback/ . For example

    mkdir /tmp/mountpoint
    example/loopback/loopback -debug /tmp/mountpoint /some/other/directory &
    ls /tmp/mountpoint
    fusermount -u /tmp/mountpoint
    
  • unionfs/unionfs.go: implements a union mount using 1 R/W branch, and multiple R/O branches.

    mkdir -p  /tmp/mountpoint /tmp/writable
    example/unionfs/unionfs /tmp/mountpoint /tmp/writable /usr &
    ls /tmp/mountpoint
    ls -l /tmp/mountpoint/bin/vi
    rm /tmp/mountpoint/bin/vi
    ls -l /tmp/mountpoint/bin/vi
    cat /tmp/writable/DELETION/*
    
  • union/autounionfs.go: creates UnionFs mounts automatically based on existence of READONLY symlinks.

Tested on:

  • x86 32bits (Fedora 14).
  • x86 64bits (Ubuntu Lucid).

Benchmarks

We use threaded stats over a read-only filesystem for benchmarking. Automated code is under benchmark/ directory. A simple C version of the same FS gives a FUSE baseline

Data points (Go-FUSE version May 2012), 1000 files, high level interface, all kernel caching turned off, median stat time:

platform libfuse Go-FUSE difference (%)

Lenovo T60/Fedora16 (1cpu) 349us 355us 2% slower Lenovo T400/Lucid (1cpu) 138us 140us 5% slower Dell T3500/Lucid (1cpu) 72us 76us 5% slower

On T60, for each file we have

  • Client side latency is 360us
  • 106us of this is server side latency (4.5x lookup 23us, 1x getattr 4us)
  • 16.5us is due to latency measurements.
  • 3us is due to garbage collection.

macOS Support

go-fuse works somewhat on OSX. Known limitations:

  • All of the limitations of OSXFUSE, including lack of support for NOTIFY.

  • OSX issues STATFS calls continuously (leading to performance concerns).

  • OSX has trouble with concurrent reads from the FUSE device, leading to performance concerns.

  • Tests are expected to pass; report any failure as a bug!

Credits

Bugs

Yes, probably. Report them through https://github.com/hanwen/go-fuse/issues

Disclaimer

This is not an official Google product.

Known Problems

Grep source code for TODO. Major topics:

License

Like Go, this library is distributed under the new BSD license. See accompanying LICENSE file.


Appendix I. Go-FUSE log format

To increase signal/noise ratio Go-FUSE uses abbreviations in its debug log output. Here is how to read it:

  • iX means inode X;
  • gX means generation X;
  • tA and tE means timeout for attributes and directory entry correspondingly;
  • [<off> +<size>) means data range from <off> inclusive till <off>+<size> exclusive;
  • Xb means X bytes.

Every line is prefixed with either rx <unique> or tx <unique> to denote whether it was for kernel request, which Go-FUSE received, or reply, which Go-FUSE sent back to kernel.

Example debug log output:

rx 2: LOOKUP i1 [".wcfs"] 6b
tx 2:     OK, {i3 g2 tE=1s tA=1s {M040755 SZ=0 L=0 1000:1000 B0*0 i0:3 A 0.000000 M 0.000000 C 0.000000}}
rx 3: LOOKUP i3 ["zurl"] 5b
tx 3:     OK, {i4 g3 tE=1s tA=1s {M0100644 SZ=33 L=1 1000:1000 B0*0 i0:4 A 0.000000 M 0.000000 C 0.000000}}
rx 4: OPEN i4 {O_RDONLY,0x8000}
tx 4:     38=function not implemented, {Fh 0 }
rx 5: READ i4 {Fh 0 [0 +4096)  L 0 RDONLY,0x8000}
tx 5:     OK,  33b data "file:///"...
rx 6: GETATTR i4 {Fh 0}
tx 6:     OK, {tA=1s {M0100644 SZ=33 L=1 1000:1000 B0*0 i0:4 A 0.000000 M 0.000000 C 0.000000}}
rx 7: FLUSH i4 {Fh 0}
tx 7:     OK
rx 8: LOOKUP i1 ["head"] 5b
tx 8:     OK, {i5 g4 tE=1s tA=1s {M040755 SZ=0 L=0 1000:1000 B0*0 i0:5 A 0.000000 M 0.000000 C 0.000000}}
rx 9: LOOKUP i5 ["bigfile"] 8b
tx 9:     OK, {i6 g5 tE=1s tA=1s {M040755 SZ=0 L=0 1000:1000 B0*0 i0:6 A 0.000000 M 0.000000 C 0.000000}}
rx 10: FLUSH i4 {Fh 0}
tx 10:     OK
rx 11: GETATTR i1 {Fh 0}
tx 11:     OK, {tA=1s {M040755 SZ=0 L=1 1000:1000 B0*0 i0:1 A 0.000000 M 0.000000 C 0.000000}}

Directories

Path Synopsis
example
benchmark-read-throughput
readbench is a benchmark helper for measuring throughput on single-file reads out of a FUSE filesystem.
readbench is a benchmark helper for measuring throughput on single-file reads out of a FUSE filesystem.
Package fuse provides APIs to implement filesystems in userspace in terms of raw FUSE protocol.
Package fuse provides APIs to implement filesystems in userspace in terms of raw FUSE protocol.
nodefs
The nodefs package offers a high level API that resembles the kernel's idea of what an FS looks like.
The nodefs package offers a high level API that resembles the kernel's idea of what an FS looks like.
test
Package test holds the tests for Go-FUSE and is not for end-user consumption.
Package test holds the tests for Go-FUSE and is not for end-user consumption.
internal

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