Difference between revisions of "ALICE native xrootd"

Un article de lcgwiki.
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "Decommissioning ALICE native xrootd servers and dealing with data loss")
 
Ligne 1: Ligne 1:
 
Decommissioning ALICE native xrootd servers and dealing with data loss
 
Decommissioning ALICE native xrootd servers and dealing with data loss
 +
 +
== Aim of this documentation ==
 +
 +
This objective of this document is to detail the procedure to follow by system administrators when they want to remove an xrootd server (decommissioning) or when they lost a filesystem on an xrootd server.
 +
 +
This document is based on the mails exchanged on the alice-lcg-task-force@cern.ch list and on the real cases encountered at the GRIF-IPNO site. Costin Grigoras is the author of the different recommendations and tips successfully applied at IPNO.
 +
 +
 +
== A quick presentation of the xrootd files tree ==
 +
 +
On each xrootd server there are on or more disk partitions where the data files are stored. There is also a namespace which is a directory containing the names of the data files: theses names are the ones the redirector uses. The name itself is a symlink to the real data file. The name space can be in a separate partition or in a subdirectory of a data partition.

Version du 10:26, 18 novembre 2015

Decommissioning ALICE native xrootd servers and dealing with data loss

Aim of this documentation

This objective of this document is to detail the procedure to follow by system administrators when they want to remove an xrootd server (decommissioning) or when they lost a filesystem on an xrootd server.

This document is based on the mails exchanged on the alice-lcg-task-force@cern.ch list and on the real cases encountered at the GRIF-IPNO site. Costin Grigoras is the author of the different recommendations and tips successfully applied at IPNO.


A quick presentation of the xrootd files tree

On each xrootd server there are on or more disk partitions where the data files are stored. There is also a namespace which is a directory containing the names of the data files: theses names are the ones the redirector uses. The name itself is a symlink to the real data file. The name space can be in a separate partition or in a subdirectory of a data partition.