Version 3.2.1
Custom File Systems

Applications can provide a custom file system implementation that will be used by WiredTiger to interact with the I/O subsystem using the WT_FILE_SYSTEM and WT_FILE_HANDLE interfaces.

It is not necessary for all file system providers to implement all methods in the WT_FILE_SYSTEM and WT_FILE_HANDLE structures, and documentation for those structures indicate which methods are optional. Methods which are not provided should be set to NULL.

Function pointers should not be cleared once a handle is created. (WiredTiger might check for a non-NULL method and then call it, and clearing the function pointer could result in a core dump.)

Function pointers are not expected to be cleared or set after a handle is created. An exception to this are the file extension methods, because existing file system implementations do not know the level of support the underlying system provides until after file extension is attempted. For this reason, these methods appear in both locking and non-locking versions. Custom file systems needing to discover system support before configuring non-locking methods should initialize only the locking version of the method, then either set the non-locking version of the method and clear the locking method (or clear both methods), after discovery is complete. Clearing the method value is safe because calls are serialized until a non-locking method is set. Note it is not possible to downgrade from a non-locking version of these methods to a locking version.

WT_FILE_SYSTEM and WT_FILE_HANDLE methods are expected to return POSIX 1003.1 or ANSI C standard error codes on failure. Custom file systems on Windows systems can use the WT_EXTENSION_API::map_windows_error method to translate Windows system errors into POSIX system errors for return to WiredTiger.

WT_FILE_SYSTEM and WT_FILE_HANDLE methods which fail, but where future calls may succeed (for example, a WT_FILE_HANDLE::fh_truncate method call which fails because the file is currently mapped into memory), should return EBUSY.

WT_FILE_SYSTEM and WT_FILE_HANDLE methods which fail, and no future calls will succeed, should return ENOTSUP. This failure may describe either the entire method being unavailable or a particular mode failure. For example, a WT_FILE_HANDLE::fh_advise method call with an argument of WT_FILE_HANDLE_DONTNEED, where the file handle doesn't support the WT_FILE_HANDLE::fh_advise method at all, or only supports the method argument WT_FILE_HANDLE_WILLNEED, should return ENOTSUP.

Additionally, custom file system functions may return WT_PANIC to shut down the system.

Unless explicitly stated otherwise, WiredTiger may invoke methods on the WT_FILE_SYSTEM and WT_FILE_HANDLE interfaces from multiple threads concurrently. It is the responsibility of the implementation to protect any shared data.

See ex_file_system.c for an example implementation of a custom file system; the WiredTiger code for a POSIX standard file system is in the public domain and may also be useful as a starting point for a custom file system implementation.