I'm looking for a "trick" or an "hack" to be certain that a file has been persisted on a remote disk, passing through vmware cache, NAS cache, etc.
Flushing and closing a FileOutputStream is not enough. I think Channel.force(true) is neither.
I'm thinking about something like these:
- write the file and read back the file
- write the file, check timestamp, rename the file, check for a different timestamp
- write the file with "wrong content", overwrite with the original content, read it back and check the content
maybe someone had the same problem and found a solution.
My requirement is not to lose data. The java application works in this way:
- accept a file from a remote source
- add a digital signature and a certified timestamp creating a new file. If this file is lost it cannot be recreated in any way.
- write this file to the storage
- mark the file as signed on the database
- tell the remote side that everything is ok
Tonight we had a crash and three transactions failed after step 5 but before the data was actually flushed to the remote store. So the database says that everything is fine, the remote side was told the same but 15 seconds of signed data was lost. And this is no good.
The correct solution could be to do a "synch mount" of the remote file-system. But this is not going to happen in a short time. Even in this case I do not completely trust this scenario given that the app is running on a VMWare server.
So I'd like to have a "best effort hack" to prevent (mitigate) incidents like this one.
fsync
overs a very limited guarantee: that the local OS has flushed its dirty buffers. Those buffers may not actually be on a disk platter: they might be in the front-end RAM cache of a physical drive, or an yet another buffer cache for a SAN.