Ovdb is a storage method that uses the Berkeley DB library to store
overview data. It requires version 2.6.x or later of the Berkeley DB
library, but has mostly been tested with version 3 and 4 (4.7+ is
recommended because older versions suffer from various +issues).
Ovdb makes use of the full transaction/logging/locking functionality of
the BerkeleyDB environment. BerkeleyDB may be downloaded from
<http://www.sleepycat.com> and is needed to build the ovdb backend.
UPGRADING
This is version 2 of ovdb. If you have a database created with a previous
version of ovdb (such as the one shipped with INN 2.3.0) your database
will need to be upgraded using ovdb_init(8) . See the man page
ovdb_init(8) for upgrade instructions.
INSTALLATION
To build ovdb support into INN, specify the option <(>CW"--with-berkeleydb"(>
when running the configure script. By default, configure will search for
a BerkeleyDB tree in several likely locations, and choose the highest
version (based on the name of the directory, e.g., BerkeleyDB.3.0) that
it finds. There will be a message in the configure output indicating the
chosen pathname.
You can override this pathname by adding a path to the option, e.g.,
<(>CW"--with-berkeleydb=/usr/BerkeleyDB.3.1"(>. This directory is expected to
have subdirectories include and lib, containing db.h, and the
library itself, respectively.
The ovdb database will take up more disk space for a given spool than the
other overview methods. Plan on needing at least 1.1 KB for every article
in your spool (not counting crossposts). So, if you have 5 million
articles, you'll need at least 5.5 GB of disk space for ovdb. With
BerkeleyDB 2.x, the db files are 'grow only'; the library will not shrink
them, even if data is removed. So, reserving extra space above the
estimate is a good idea. Plus, you'll need additional space for
transaction logs: at least 100 MB. By default the transaction logs go in
the same directory as the database. To improve performance, they can be
placed on a different disk (-- see the DB_CONFIG section.
CONFIGURATION
To enable ovdb, set the ovmethod parameter in inn.conf to <(>CW"ovdb"(>.
The ovdb database is stored in the directory specified by the
pathoverview paramter in inn.conf. This is the "DB_HOME" directory.
To start out, this directory should be empty (other than an optional
DB_CONFIG file; see DB_CONFIG for details) and innd (or
makehistory) will create the files as necessary in that directory.
Make sure the directory is owned by the news user.
Other parameters for configuring ovdb are in the ovdb.conf(5)
configuration file. See also the sample ovdb.conf.
"cachesize"
Size of the memory pool cache, in kilobytes. The cache will have a
backing store file in the DB directory which will be at least as big. In
general, the bigger the cache, the better. Use <(>CW"ovdb_stat -m"(> to see
cache hit percentages. To make a change of this parameter take effect,
shut down and restart INN (be sure to kill all of the nnrpds when shutting
down). Default is 8000, which is adequate for small to medium sized
servers. Large servers will probably need at least 20000.
"numdbfiles"
Overview data is split between this many files. Currently, innd will
keep all of the files open, so don't set this too high or innd may run
out of file descriptors. nnrpd only opens one at a time, regardless.
May be set to one, or just a few, but only do that if your OS supports
large (>2G) files. Changing this parameter has no effect on an
already-established database. Default is 32.
"txn_nosync"
If txn_nosync is set to false, BerkeleyDB flushes the log after every
transaction. This minimizes the number of transactions that may be lost
in the event of a crash, but results in significantly degraded
performance. Default is true.
"useshm"
If useshm is set to true, BerkeleyDB will use shared memory instead of
mmap for its environment regions (cache, lock, etc). With some platforms,
this may improve performance. Default is false. This parameter is
ignored if you have BerkeleyDB 2.x
"shmkey"
Sets the shared memory key used by BerkeleyDB when 'useshm' is true.
BerkeleyDB will create several (usually 5) shared memory segments, using
sequentially numbered keys starting with 'shmkey'. Choose a key that does
not conflict with any existing shared memory segments on your system.
Default is 6400. This parameter is only used with BerkeleyDB 3.1 or
newer.
"pagesize"
Sets the page size for the DB files (in bytes). Must be a power of 2.
Best choices are 4096 or 8192. The default is 8192. Changing this
parameter has no effect on an already-established database.
"minkey"
Sets the minimum number of keys per page. See the BerkeleyDB
documentation for more info. Default is based on page size:
default_minkey = MAX(2, pagesize / 2048 - 1)
The lowest allowed minkey is 2. Setting minkey higher than the default is
not recommended, as it will cause the databases to have a lot of overflow
pages. Changing this parameter has no effect on an already-established
database.
"maxlocks"
Sets the BerkeleyDB "lk_max" parameter, which is the maxmium number of
locks that can exist in the database at the same time. Default is 4000.
"nocompact"
The nocompact parameter affects expireover's behavior. The expireover
function in ovdb can do its job in one of two ways: by simply deleting
expired records from the database, or by re-writing the overview records
into a different location leaving out the expired records. The first
method is faster, but it leaves 'holes' that result in space that can not
immediately be reused. The second method 'compacts' the records by
rewriting them.
If this parameter is set to 0, expireover will compact all newsgroups; if
set to 1, expireover will not compact any newsgroups; and if set to a
value greater than one, expireover will only compact groups that have less
than that number of articles.
Experience has shown that compacting has minimal effect (other than
making expireover take longer) so the default is now 1. This parameter
will probably be removed in the future.
"readserver"
Normally, each nnrpd process directly accesses the BerkeleyDB environment.
The process of attaching to the database (and detaching when finished) is
fairly expensive, and can result in high loads in situations when there
are lots of reader connections of relatively short duration.
When the readserver parameter is "true", the nnrpds will access overview
via a helper server (ovdb_server (-- which is started by ovdb_init).
This can also result in cleaner shutdowns for the database, improving
stability and avoiding deadlocks and corrupted databases. If you are
experiencing any instability in ovdb, try setting this parameter to true.
Default is false.
"numrsprocs"
This parameter is only used when readserver is true. It sets the
number of ovdb_server processes. As each ovdb_server can process only one
transaction at a time, running more servers can improve reader response
times. Default is 5.
"maxrsconn"
This parameter is only used when readserver is true. It sets a maximum
number of readers that a given ovdb_server process will serve at one time.
This means the maximum number of readers for all of the ovdb_server
processes is (numrsprocs * maxrsconn). Default is 0, which means an
umlimited number of connections is allowed.
DB_CONFIG
A file called DB_CONFIG may be placed in the database directory to
customize where the various database files and transaction logs are
written. By default, all of the files are written in the "DB_HOME"
directory. One way to improve performance is to put the transaction logs
on a different disk. To do this, put:
DB_LOG_DIR /path/to/logs
in the DB_CONFIG file. If the pathname you give starts with a /, it is
treated as an absolute path; otherwise, it is relative to the "DB_HOME"
directory. Make sure that any directories you specify exist and have
proper ownership/mode before starting INN, because they won't be created
automatically. Also, don't change the DB_CONFIG file while anything that
uses ovdb is running.
Another thing that you can do with this file is to split the overview
database across multiple disks. In the DB_CONFIG file, you can list
directories that BerkeleyDB will search when it goes to open a database.
For example, let's say that you have pathoverview set to
/mnt/overview and you have four additional file systems created on
/mnt/ov?. You would create a file "/mnt/overview/DB_CONFIG" containing
the following lines:
(For BerkeleyDB 2.x, replace <(>CW"set_data_dir"(> with <(>CW"DB_DATA_DIR"(>.)
Distribute your ovNNNNN files into the four filesystems. (say, 8 each).
When called upon to open a database file, the db library will look for it
in each of the specified directories (in order). If said file is not
found, one will be created in the first of those directories.
Whenever you change DB_CONFIG or move database files around, make sure all
news processes that use the database are shut down first (including
nnrpds).
The DB_CONFIG functionality is part of BerkeleyDB itself, rather than
something provided by ovdb. See the BerkeleyDB documentation for complete
details for the version of BerkeleyDB that you're running.
RUNNING
When starting the news system, rc.news will invoke ovdb_init.
ovdb_init must be run before using the database. It performs the
following tasks:
""
Creates the database environment, if necessary.
""
If the database is idle, it performs a normal recovery. The recovery will
remove stale locks, recreate the memory pool cache, and repair any damage
caused by a system crash or improper shutdown.
""
Starts the DB housekeeping processes (ovdb_monitor) if they're not
already running.
And when stopping INN, rc.news kills the ovdb_monitor processes after
the other INN processes have been shut down.
DIAGNOSTICS
Problems relating to ovdb are logged to news.err with "OVDB" in the error
message.
INN programs that use overview will fail to start up if the ovdb_monitor
processes aren't running. Be sure to run ovdb_init before running
anything that accesses overview.
Also, INN programs that use overview will fail to start up if the user
running them is not the "news" user.
If a program accessing the database crashes, or otherwise exits uncleanly,
it might leave a stale lock in the database. This lock could cause other
processes to deadlock on that stale lock. To fix this, shut down all news
processes (using <(>CW"kill -9"(> if necessary) and then restart. ovdb_init
should perform a recovery operation which will remove the locks and repair
damage caused by killing the deadlocked processes.
FILES
"inn.conf"
The ovmethod and pathoverview parameters are relevant to ovdb.
"ovdb.conf"
Optional configuration file for tuning. See CONFIGURATION above.
"pathoverview"
Directory where the database goes. BerkeleyDB calls it the 'DB_HOME'
directory.
"pathoverview/DB_CONFIG"
Optional file to configure the layout of the database files.
"pathrun/ovdb.sem"
A file that gets locked by every process that is accessing the database.
This is used by ovdb_init to determine whether the database is active
or quiescent.
"pathrun/ovdb_monitor.pid"
Contains the process ID of ovdb_monitor.
TO DO
Implement a way to limit how many databases can be open at once (to reduce
file descriptor usage); maybe using something similar to the cache code in
ov3.c
HISTORY
Written by Heath Kehoe <hakehoe@avalon.net> for InterNetNews