diff --git a/ServerSelection.md b/ServerSelection.md index dcf7d30..151273d 100644 --- a/ServerSelection.md +++ b/ServerSelection.md @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ Different users of Tahoe-LAFS have different desires for "Which servers should I * Here's an example of this desire, Nathan Eisenberg asked on the mailing list for "Proximity Aware Decoding": * If you have *K+1* shares stored in a single location then you can repair after a loss (such as a hard drive failure) in that location without having to transfer data from other locations. This can save bandwidth expenses (since inter-location bandwidth is typically free), and of course it also means you can recover from that hard drive failure in that one location even if all the other locations have been stomped to death by Godzilla. * This is called "rack awareness" in the Hadoop and Cassandra projects, where the unit of distribution would be the rack. - * John Case wrote a letter to tahoe-dev asking for this feature and comparing it to the concept of "families" in the Tor project: letter + * John Case wrote a letter to tahoe-dev asking for this feature and comparing it to the concept of "families" in the Tor project: As I have emphasized a few times, we really should not try to write a super-clever algorithm into Tahoe which satisfies all of these people, plus all the other crazy people that will be using Tahoe-LAFS for other things in the future. Instead, we need some sort of configuration language or plugin system so that each crazy person can customize their own crazy server selection policy. I don't know the best way to implement this yet -- a domain specific language? Implement the above-mentioned list of seven policies into Tahoe-LAFS and have an option to choose which of the seven you want for this upload? My current favorite approach is: you give me a Python function. When the time comes to upload a file, I'll call that function and then use whichever servers it said to use. #### Brian says: