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Currently, I've got images (max. 6MB) stored as BLOB in a InnoDB table. As the size of the data is growing, the nightly backup is growing slower and slower hindering normal performance.

So, the binary data needs to go to the file system. (pointers to the files will be kept in the DB.)

The data has a tree like relation:

- main site
  - user_0
    - album_0
    - album_1
    - album_n
  - user_1
  - user_n
etc...

Now I want the data to be distributed evenly trough the directory structure. How should I accomplish this?

I guess I could try MD5('userId, albumId, imageId'); and slice up the resulting string to get my directory path:

  /var/imageStorage/f/347e/013b/c042/51cf/985f7ad0daa987d.jpeg

This would allow me to map the first character to a server and evenly distribute the directory structure over multiple servers.

This would however not keep images organised per user, likely spreading the images for 1 album over multiple servers.

My question is:
What is the best way to store the image data in the file system in a balanced way, while keeping user/album data together ?

Am I thinking in the right direction? or is this the wrong way of doing things altogether?

Update:
I will go for the md5(user_id0) string slicing for the split up on highest level. And then put all user data in that same bucket. This will ensure an even distribution of data while keeping user data stored close together.

  /var
   - imageStorage
     - f/347e/013b
       - f347e013bc04251cf985f7ad0daa987d
         - 0
           - album1_10
             - picture_1.jpeg
         - 1
           - album1_1
             - picture_2.jpeg
             - picture_3.jpeg
           - album1_11
             - picture_n.jpeg
         - n
           - album1_n

I think I will use albumId splitted up from behind (I like that idea!) as to keep the number of albums per directory smaller (although it won't be necessary for most users).

Thanks!

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Ah - I'd suggest editing "nicely distribute" to "evenly distribute". I now realize that your goal is to try and average out the number of pictures per file system folder. – J c Oct 10 '08 at 15:50
thanks, I'm not native English – Jacco Oct 10 '08 at 16:14

3 Answers

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Just split your userid from behind. e.g.

UserID = 6435624 
Path = /images/24/56/6435624

As for the backup you could use MySQL Replication and backup the slave database to avoid problems (e.g. locks) while backuping.

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Yep,that's what I was going to say. Reverse the digits in the numeric ID and it's more likely to distribute evenly, kind of round-robin. – Bill Karwin Oct 10 '08 at 16:13
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one thing about distributing the filenames into different directories, if you consider splitting your md5 filenames into different subdirectories (which is generally a good idea), I would suggest keeping the complete hash as filename and duplicate the first few chars as directory names. This way you will make it easier to identify files e.g. when you have to move directories.

e.g.

abcdefgh.jpg -> a/ab/abc/abcdefgh.jpg

if your filenames are not evenly distributed (not a hash), try to choose a splitting method that gets an even distribution, e.g. the last characters if it is an incrementing user-id

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Thanks, that sounds like a really useful tip. – Jacco Oct 11 '08 at 15:37
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Have you considered doing incremental backups of the DB?

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I think that incremental backups would only temporarily solve the problem. – Jacco Oct 10 '08 at 17:22

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