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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-10285?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15517549#comment-15517549
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Uma Maheswara Rao G commented on HDFS-10285:
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[~ehiggs] Thank you for taking a look and questions.
Here satisfyStoragePolicy will not worry about what is the block layout(EC or 
replication). Erasure coded files still support storage policies. So, if you 
call satisfyStoragePolicy on a directory, we consider all immediate files under 
that directory and a Daemon thread will analyze whether that files really 
matching with namespace storage policy and real block storage placement at DN. 
If there is mismatch, then we need to move the storage. Then we will issue a 
command to DNs to move the block storage. Hope this answers your question. 


> Storage Policy Satisfier in Namenode
> ------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HDFS-10285
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-10285
>             Project: Hadoop HDFS
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: datanode, namenode
>    Affects Versions: 2.7.2
>            Reporter: Uma Maheswara Rao G
>            Assignee: Uma Maheswara Rao G
>         Attachments: Storage-Policy-Satisfier-in-HDFS-May10.pdf
>
>
> Heterogeneous storage in HDFS introduced the concept of storage policy. These 
> policies can be set on directory/file to specify the user preference, where 
> to store the physical block. When user set the storage policy before writing 
> data, then the blocks could take advantage of storage policy preferences and 
> stores physical block accordingly. 
> If user set the storage policy after writing and completing the file, then 
> the blocks would have been written with default storage policy (nothing but 
> DISK). User has to run the ‘Mover tool’ explicitly by specifying all such 
> file names as a list. In some distributed system scenarios (ex: HBase) it 
> would be difficult to collect all the files and run the tool as different 
> nodes can write files separately and file can have different paths.
> Another scenarios is, when user rename the files from one effected storage 
> policy file (inherited policy from parent directory) to another storage 
> policy effected directory, it will not copy inherited storage policy from 
> source. So it will take effect from destination file/dir parent storage 
> policy. This rename operation is just a metadata change in Namenode. The 
> physical blocks still remain with source storage policy.
> So, Tracking all such business logic based file names could be difficult for 
> admins from distributed nodes(ex: region servers) and running the Mover tool. 
> Here the proposal is to provide an API from Namenode itself for trigger the 
> storage policy satisfaction. A Daemon thread inside Namenode should track 
> such calls and process to DN as movement commands. 
> Will post the detailed design thoughts document soon. 



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