I need to have a file where certain bytes are contiguously laid out. Lets call these chunks. The reason the chunks need to be laid out contiguously is that these eventually get memory-mapped to an array. A file would have several chunks(these correspond to different but related arrays), and these chunks need to be appended over time. The first thing I thought about is to use a sparse file and have holes at the inter-chunk boundaries.
Whenever I have new data I could then write in the hole. If the space available in the hole is not enough I intend to move minimum amount of bytes to create the space and (some extra space for future) and then write the data.
- Is this a wrong way to do things ?
- Are there good alternatives to this approach
- How does the OS (Linux) handle a write in the hole, does it move(shift) all the bytes in the tail ? Or restructures the inodes to somehow accommodate (at the cost of fragmentation)
- Is there an optimal way to do this so that amortized movement cost is small