Pretty interesting to see them migrating over to a new backend... and even funnier to see that they are going to replace it in 3 years. That is the kind of mobility that you normally don't see in something the size of Google... good for them!Google has moved "most" of its online services off the Google File System that has underpinned its famously distributed back-end infrastructure for a good ten years, according to Google senior vice president of operations Urs Hölzle.
Hölzle – the man who led the development of the Google back-end – tells ZDNet that the company is "phasing out GFS in favor of the next-generation file system that is very similar." Presumably, this is a reference to Colossus, a revamped file system sometimes referred to as GFS2 or GFS II.
In 2009, Google webspam guru Matt Cutts confirmed that Colossus was part of the company's new search infrastructure, codenamed Caffeine. A year later, Google senior director of engineering Eisar Lipkovitz told us that Colossus was specifically built for use with BigTable, Google's distributed database. Caffeine discards Google MapReduce – the company's batch-oriented distributed number-crunching platform – in favor of the realtime setup provided by BigTable.
In short, Caffeine expands on BigTable to create a database programming model that lets the company make changes to its web index without rebuilding the entire index from scratch.
...
Collosus uses distributed masters as well as distributed slaves, and the chunkservers can handle many small chunks of data. This, Quinlan said, lets you spread data across more machines, and he explained that this would allow the Google infrastructure to expand for another ten years.
But in his interview with ZDNet, Hölzle indicated that Collosus will soon give way to another platform. "I think three years from now we'll try to retire that because flash memory is coming and faster networks and faster CPUs are on the way and that will change how we want to do things," he said. "One of the nice things is that if everyone today is using the BigTable compressed database. Suppose we have a better BigTable down the line that does the right thing with flash – then it's relatively easy to migrate all these applications as long as the API stays stable."
GFS and MapReduce were the inspiration for Hadoop, the open source number-crunching platform developed under the aegis of Apache. It's now used by everyone from Twitter to Facebook to Yahoo!. A sister project, HBase, provides an open source version of BigTable for Hadoop.
Google apps split with Google File System
Moderator: Moderators
- Sabre
- DCAWD Founding Member
- Posts: 21432
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 8:00 pm
- Location: Springfield, VA
- Contact:
Google apps split with Google File System
The Reg
Sabre (Julian)

92.5% Stock 04 STI
Good choice putting $4,000 rims on your 1990 Honda Civic. That's like Betty White going out and getting her tits done.

92.5% Stock 04 STI
Good choice putting $4,000 rims on your 1990 Honda Civic. That's like Betty White going out and getting her tits done.
- complacent
- DCAWD Founding Member
- Posts: 11651
- Joined: Sun Aug 29, 2004 8:00 pm
- Location: near the rockies. very.
- Contact:
Re: Google apps split with Google File System
i think it's incredibly impressive that their sw tech is that mobile. especially given the size of the datasets they're crunching.


colin
a tank, a yammie, a spaceship
i <3 teh 00ntz
a tank, a yammie, a spaceship
i <3 teh 00ntz