4. Caching Terminology

Cache Directive

A Cache Directive defines the path that will be cached. Paths can point either directories or files. Directories are cached non-recursively, meaning only files in the first-level listing of the directory will be cached.     

Cache Directives also specify additional parameters, such as the cache replication factor and expiration time. The replication factor specifies the number of block replicas to cache. If multiple Cache Directives refer to the same file, the maximum cache replication factor is applied.     

The expiration time is specified on the command line as a time-to-live (TTL), which represents a relative expiration time in the future. After a Cache Directive expires, it is no longer taken into consideration by the NameNode when making caching decisions.

Cache Pool

A Cache Pool is an administrative entity used to manage groups of Cache Directives. Cache Pools have UNIX-like permissions that restrict which users and groups have access to the pool. Write permissions allow users to add and remove Cache Directives to the pool. Read permissions allow users to list the Cache Directives in a pool, as well as additional metadata. Execute permissions are unused.     

Cache Pools are also used for resource management. Cache Pools can enforce a maximum memory limit, which restricts the aggregate number of bytes that can be cached by directives in the pool. Normally, the sum of the pool limits will approximately equal the amount of aggregate memory reserved for HDFS caching on the cluster. Cache Pools also track a number of statistics to help cluster users track what is currently cached, and to determine what else should be cached.  

Cache Pools can also enforce a maximum time-to-live. This restricts the maximum expiration time of directives being added to the pool.


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