作者: 韩晨旭 10225101440 李畅 10225102463
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  1. // Copyright (c) 2011 The LevelDB Authors. All rights reserved.
  2. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
  3. // found in the LICENSE file. See the AUTHORS file for names of contributors.
  4. #ifndef STORAGE_LEVELDB_INCLUDE_OPTIONS_H_
  5. #define STORAGE_LEVELDB_INCLUDE_OPTIONS_H_
  6. #include <stddef.h>
  7. namespace leveldb {
  8. class Cache;
  9. class Comparator;
  10. class Env;
  11. class Snapshot;
  12. class WritableFile;
  13. // DB contents are stored in a set of blocks, each of which holds a
  14. // sequence of key,value pairs. Each block may be compressed before
  15. // being stored in a file. The following enum describes which
  16. // compression method (if any) is used to compress a block.
  17. enum CompressionType {
  18. // NOTE: do not change the values of existing entries, as these are
  19. // part of the persistent format on disk.
  20. kNoCompression = 0x0,
  21. kSnappyCompression = 0x1,
  22. };
  23. // Options to control the behavior of a database (passed to DB::Open)
  24. struct Options {
  25. // -------------------
  26. // Parameters that affect behavior
  27. // Comparator used to define the order of keys in the table.
  28. // Default: a comparator that uses lexicographic byte-wise ordering
  29. //
  30. // REQUIRES: The client must ensure that the comparator supplied
  31. // here has the same name and orders keys *exactly* the same as the
  32. // comparator provided to previous open calls on the same DB.
  33. const Comparator* comparator;
  34. // If true, the database will be created if it is missing.
  35. // Default: false
  36. bool create_if_missing;
  37. // If true, an error is raised if the database already exists.
  38. // Default: false
  39. bool error_if_exists;
  40. // If true, the implementation will do aggressive checking of the
  41. // data it is processing and will stop early if it detects any
  42. // errors. This may have unforeseen ramifications: for example, a
  43. // corruption of one DB entry may cause a large number of entries to
  44. // become unreadable or for the entire DB to become unopenable.
  45. // Default: false
  46. bool paranoid_checks;
  47. // Use the specified object to interact with the environment,
  48. // e.g. to read/write files, schedule background work, etc.
  49. // Default: Env::Default()
  50. Env* env;
  51. // Any internal progress/error information generated by the db will
  52. // be to written to info_log if it is non-NULL, or to a file stored
  53. // in the same directory as the DB contents if info_log is NULL.
  54. // Default: NULL
  55. WritableFile* info_log;
  56. // -------------------
  57. // Parameters that affect performance
  58. // Amount of data to build up in memory before converting to an
  59. // on-disk file.
  60. //
  61. // Some DB operations may encounter a delay proportional to the size
  62. // of this parameter. Therefore we recommend against increasing
  63. // this parameter unless you are willing to live with an occasional
  64. // slow operation in exchange for faster bulk loading throughput.
  65. //
  66. // Default: 1MB
  67. size_t write_buffer_size;
  68. // Number of open files that can be used by the DB. You may need to
  69. // increase this if your database has a large working set (budget
  70. // one open file per 2MB of working set).
  71. //
  72. // Default: 1000
  73. int max_open_files;
  74. // Handle values larger than "large_value_threshold" bytes
  75. // specially, by writing them into their own files (to avoid
  76. // compaction overhead) and doing content-based elimination of
  77. // duplicate values to save space.
  78. //
  79. // We recommend against changing this value.
  80. //
  81. // Default: 64K
  82. size_t large_value_threshold;
  83. // Control over blocks (user data is stored in a set of blocks, and
  84. // a block is the unit of reading from disk).
  85. // Use the specified cache for blocks (if non-NULL).
  86. // Default: NULL
  87. Cache* block_cache;
  88. // Approximate size of user data packed per block. Note that the
  89. // block size specified here corresponds to uncompressed data. The
  90. // actual size of the unit read from disk may be smaller if
  91. // compression is enabled. This parameter can be changed dynamically.
  92. //
  93. // Default: 8K
  94. int block_size;
  95. // Number of keys between restart points for delta encoding of keys.
  96. // This parameter can be changed dynamically. Most clients should
  97. // leave this parameter alone.
  98. //
  99. // Default: 16
  100. int block_restart_interval;
  101. // Compress blocks using the specified compression algorithm. This
  102. // parameter can be changed dynamically.
  103. //
  104. // Default: kSnappyCompression, which gives lightweight but fast
  105. // compression.
  106. //
  107. // Typical speeds of kSnappyCompression on an Intel(R) Core(TM)2 2.4GHz:
  108. // ~200-500MB/s compression
  109. // ~400-800MB/s decompression
  110. // Note that these speeds are significantly faster than most
  111. // persistent storage speeds, and therefore it is typically never
  112. // worth switching to kNoCompression. Even if the input data is
  113. // incompressible, the kSnappyCompression implementation will
  114. // efficiently detect that and will switch to uncompressed mode.
  115. CompressionType compression;
  116. // Create an Options object with default values for all fields.
  117. Options();
  118. };
  119. // Options that control read operations
  120. struct ReadOptions {
  121. // If true, all data read from underlying storage will be
  122. // verified against corresponding checksums.
  123. // Default: false
  124. bool verify_checksums;
  125. // Should the data read for this iteration be cached in memory?
  126. // Callers may wish to set this field to false for bulk scans.
  127. // Default: true
  128. bool fill_cache;
  129. // If "snapshot" is non-NULL, read as of the supplied snapshot
  130. // (which must belong to the DB that is being read and which must
  131. // not have been released). If "snapshot" is NULL, use an impliicit
  132. // snapshot of the state at the beginning of this read operation.
  133. // Default: NULL
  134. const Snapshot* snapshot;
  135. ReadOptions()
  136. : verify_checksums(false),
  137. fill_cache(true),
  138. snapshot(NULL) {
  139. }
  140. };
  141. // Options that control write operations
  142. struct WriteOptions {
  143. // If true, the write will be flushed from the operating system
  144. // buffer cache (by calling WritableFile::Sync()) before the write
  145. // is considered complete. If this flag is true, writes will be
  146. // slower.
  147. //
  148. // If this flag is false, and the machine crashes, some recent
  149. // writes may be lost. Note that if it is just the process that
  150. // crashes (i.e., the machine does not reboot), no writes will be
  151. // lost even if sync==false.
  152. //
  153. // Default: true
  154. bool sync;
  155. // If "post_write_snapshot" is non-NULL, and the write succeeds,
  156. // *post_write_snapshot will be modified to point to a snapshot of
  157. // the DB state immediately after this write. The caller must call
  158. // DB::ReleaseSnapshot(*post_write_snapshotsnapshot) when the
  159. // snapshot is no longer needed.
  160. //
  161. // If "post_write_snapshot" is non-NULL, and the write fails,
  162. // *post_write_snapshot will be set to NULL.
  163. //
  164. // Default: NULL
  165. const Snapshot** post_write_snapshot;
  166. WriteOptions()
  167. : sync(true),
  168. post_write_snapshot(NULL) {
  169. }
  170. };
  171. }
  172. #endif // STORAGE_LEVELDB_INCLUDE_OPTIONS_H_