Commit graph

340 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Peter Dillinger 11b3f09eac Add a temporary hook for custom yielding in long-running op (#13103)
Summary:
This is a simplified version of https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/13096, which called for a way to hook into long-running loops completely within RocksDB to change their thread priority (or similar). The current prime hook point is `DBIter::FindNextUserEntryInternal` likely because of iterating over tombstones.

This is implemented using the weak symbol hack for ease of back-porting/patching, and while we get to know potential future requirements better for integration into the public API. (Consider potential relationships to `Env::GetThreadStatusUpdater()` and `TransactionDBMutexFactory`.)

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/13103

Test Plan:
Performance validated with db_bench and DEBUG_LEVEL=0: `./db_bench --benchmarks=fillseq,deleterandom,readseq[-X100] --value_size=1 --num=1000000`

No consistent difference seen; variances likely in how DB / executable / memory were laid out.

```
With an empty hook:
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1753018 (± 8850) ops/sec;   28.4 (± 0.1) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1763746 ops/sec;   28.6 MB/sec
(recompile)
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1789019 (± 10260) ops/sec;   29.0 (± 0.2) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1801849 ops/sec;   29.2 MB/sec

Base:
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1772196 (± 8240) ops/sec;   28.7 (± 0.1) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1780453 ops/sec;   28.9 MB/sec
(recompile)
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1777637 (± 7613) ops/sec;   28.8 (± 0.1) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1786657 ops/sec;   29.0 MB/sec

With a functional hook (count number of calls into it):
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1796733 (± 8854) ops/sec;   29.1 (± 0.1) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1804690 ops/sec;   29.3 MB/sec
RocksDbThreadYield: 126915800
(recompile)
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1775371 (± 10529) ops/sec;   28.8 (± 0.2) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1789046 ops/sec;   29.0 MB/sec
RocksDbThreadYield: 126977000

Base:
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1773071 (± 10657) ops/sec;   28.7 (± 0.2) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1783414 ops/sec;   28.9 MB/sec
(recompile)
readseq [AVG    100 runs] : 1750852 (± 10184) ops/sec;   28.4 (± 0.2) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 100 runs] : 1763587 ops/sec;   28.6 MB/sec
```

Reviewed By: george-reynya

Differential Revision: D65235379

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 7829e4cc25a56d4c1801b8adf9c7f7aa49ab7aca
2024-11-01 08:11:34 -07:00
yuzhangyu@fb.com 1cfdece85d Run internal cpp modernizer on RocksDB repo (#12398)
Summary:
When internal cpp modernizer attempts to format rocksdb code, it will replace macro `ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE`  with its default definition `rocksdb` when collapsing nested namespace. We filed a feedback for the tool T180254030 and the team filed a bug for this: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/83452. At the same time, they suggested us to run the modernizer tool ourselves so future auto codemod attempts will be smaller. This diff contains:

Running
`xplat/scripts/codemod_service/cpp_modernizer.sh`
in fbcode/internal_repo_rocksdb/repo (excluding some directories in utilities/transactions/lock/range/range_tree/lib that has a non meta copyright comment)
without swapping out the namespace macro `ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE`

Followed by RocksDB's own
`make format`
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12398

Test Plan: Auto tests

Reviewed By: hx235

Differential Revision: D54382532

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: e7d5b40f9b113b60e5a503558c181f080b9d02fa
2024-03-04 10:08:32 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 54cb9c77d9 Prefer static_cast in place of most reinterpret_cast (#12308)
Summary:
The following are risks associated with pointer-to-pointer reinterpret_cast:
* Can produce the "wrong result" (crash or memory corruption). IIRC, in theory this can happen for any up-cast or down-cast for a non-standard-layout type, though in practice would only happen for multiple inheritance cases (where the base class pointer might be "inside" the derived object). We don't use multiple inheritance a lot, but we do.
* Can mask useful compiler errors upon code change, including converting between unrelated pointer types that you are expecting to be related, and converting between pointer and scalar types unintentionally.

I can only think of some obscure cases where static_cast could be troublesome when it compiles as a replacement:
* Going through `void*` could plausibly cause unnecessary or broken pointer arithmetic. Suppose we have
`struct Derived: public Base1, public Base2`.  If we have `Derived*` -> `void*` -> `Base2*` -> `Derived*` through reinterpret casts, this could plausibly work (though technical UB) assuming the `Base2*` is not dereferenced. Changing to static cast could introduce breaking pointer arithmetic.
* Unnecessary (but safe) pointer arithmetic could arise in a case like `Derived*` -> `Base2*` -> `Derived*` where before the Base2 pointer might not have been dereferenced. This could potentially affect performance.

With some light scripting, I tried replacing pointer-to-pointer reinterpret_casts with static_cast and kept the cases that still compile. Most occurrences of reinterpret_cast have successfully been changed (except for java/ and third-party/). 294 changed, 257 remain.

A couple of related interventions included here:
* Previously Cache::Handle was not actually derived from in the implementations and just used as a `void*` stand-in with reinterpret_cast. Now there is a relationship to allow static_cast. In theory, this could introduce pointer arithmetic (as described above) but is unlikely without multiple inheritance AND non-empty Cache::Handle.
* Remove some unnecessary casts to void* as this is allowed to be implicit (for better or worse).

Most of the remaining reinterpret_casts are for converting to/from raw bytes of objects. We could consider better idioms for these patterns in follow-up work.

I wish there were a way to implement a template variant of static_cast that would only compile if no pointer arithmetic is generated, but best I can tell, this is not possible. AFAIK the best you could do is a dynamic check that the void* conversion after the static cast is unchanged.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12308

Test Plan: existing tests, CI

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D53204947

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 9de23e618263b0d5b9820f4e15966876888a16e2
2024-02-07 10:44:11 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 76c834e441 Remove 'virtual' when implied by 'override' (#12319)
Summary:
... to follow modern C++ style / idioms.

Used this hack:
```
for FILE in `cat my_list_of_files`; do perl -pi -e 'BEGIN{undef $/;} s/ virtual( [^;{]* override)/$1/smg' $FILE; done
```

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12319

Test Plan: existing tests, CI

Reviewed By: jaykorean

Differential Revision: D53275303

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: bc0881af270aa8ef4d0ae4f44c5a6614b6407377
2024-01-31 13:14:42 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 4e60663b31 Remove unnecessary, confusing 'extern' (#12300)
Summary:
In C++, `extern` is redundant in a number of cases:
* "Global" function declarations and definitions
* "Global" variable definitions when already declared `extern`

For consistency and simplicity, I've removed these in code that *we own*. In a couple of cases, I removed obsolete declarations, and for MagicNumber constants, I have consolidated the declarations into a header file (format.h)
as standard best practice would prescribe.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12300

Test Plan: no functional changes, CI

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D53148629

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: fb8d927959892e03af09b0c0d542b0a3b38fd886
2024-01-29 10:38:08 -08:00
Richard Barnes dee46863ba Remove extra semi colon from internal_repo_rocksdb/repo/port/lang.h
Summary:
`-Wextra-semi` or `-Wextra-semi-stmt`

If the code compiles, this is safe to land.

Reviewed By: dmm-fb

Differential Revision: D52968990

fbshipit-source-id: 58d344b719734c736cd80d47eeb6965557ce344b
2024-01-23 09:41:29 -08:00
Andrew Kryczka be3bc36811 internal_repo_rocksdb (-8794174668376270091) (#12114)
Summary: Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12114

Reviewed By: jowlyzhang

Differential Revision: D51745613

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 27ca4bda275cab057d3a3ec99f0f92cdb9be5177
2023-12-01 11:10:30 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 4dd2bb8f70 Fix stack trace trimming with LLDB (#12101)
Summary:
I must have chosen trimming before frame 8 based on assertion failures, but that trims too many frame for a general segfault. So this changes to start printing at frame 4, as in this example where I've seeded a null deref:

```
Received signal 11 (Segmentation fault)
Invoking LLDB for stack trace...
Process 873208 stopped
* thread #1, name = 'db_stress', stop reason = signal SIGSTOP
    frame #0: 0x00007fb1fe8f1033 libc.so.6`__GI___wait4(pid=873478, stat_loc=0x00007fb1fb114030, options=0, usage=0x0000000000000000) at wait4.c:30:10
  thread #2, name = 'rocksdb:low', stop reason = signal SIGSTOP
    frame #0: 0x00007fb1fe8972a1 libc.so.6`__GI___futex_abstimed_wait_cancelable64 at futex-internal.c:57:12
Executable module set to "/data/users/peterd/rocksdb/db_stress".
Architecture set to: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.
True
frame #4: 0x00007fb1fe844540 libc.so.6`__restore_rt at libc_sigaction.c:13
frame #5: 0x0000000000608514 db_stress`rocksdb::StressTest::InitDb(rocksdb::SharedState*) at db_stress_test_base.cc:345:18
frame #6: 0x0000000000585d62 db_stress`rocksdb::RunStressTestImpl(rocksdb::SharedState*) at db_stress_driver.cc:84:17
frame #7: 0x000000000058dd69 db_stress`rocksdb::RunStressTest(shared=0x00006120000001c0) at db_stress_driver.cc:266:34
frame #8: 0x0000000000453b34 db_stress`rocksdb::db_stress_tool(int, char**) at db_stress_tool.cc:370:20
...
```

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12101

Test Plan: manual (see above)

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D51593217

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 4a71eb8e516edbc32e682f9537bc77d073a7b4ed
2023-11-27 11:49:52 -08:00
Peter Dillinger f6fd4b9dbd Print stack traces more reliably with concurrency (#12086)
Summary:
It's been relatively easy to break our stack trace printer:
* If another thread reaches a signal condition such as a related SEGV or assertion failure while one is trying to print a stack trace from the signal handler, it seems to end the process abruptly without a stack trace.
* If the process exits normally in one thread (such as main finishing) while another is trying to print a stack trace from the signal handler, it seems the process will often end normally without a stack trace.

This change attempts to fix these issues, with
* Keep the custom signal handler installed as long as possible, so that other threads will most likely re-enter our custom handler. (We only switch back to default for triggering core dump or whatever after stack trace.)
* Use atomics and sleeps to implement a crude recursive mutex for ensuring all threads hitting the custom signal handler wait on the first that is trying to print a stack trace, while recursive signals in the same thread can still be handled cleanly.
* Use an atexit handler to hook into normal exit to (a) wait on a pending printing of stack trace when detectable and applicable, and (b) detect and warn when printing a stack trace might be interrupted by a process exit in progress. (I don't know how to pause that *after* our atexit handler has been called; the best I know how to do is warn, "In a race with process already exiting...".)

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12086

Test Plan:
manual, including with TSAN. I added this code to the end of a unit test file:
```
  for (size_t i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
    std::thread t([]() { assert(false); });
    t.detach();
  }
```
Followed by either `sleep(100)` or `usleep(100)` or usual process exit. And for recursive signal testing, inject `abort()` at various places in the handler.

Reviewed By: cbi42

Differential Revision: D51531882

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 3473b863a43e61b722dfb7a2ed12a8120949b09c
2023-11-22 11:55:10 -08:00
Peter Dillinger d010b02e86 Fix race in options taking effect (#11929)
Summary:
In follow-up to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11922, fix a race in functions like CreateColumnFamily and SetDBOptions where the DB reports one option setting but a different one is left in effect.

To fix, we can add an extra mutex around these rare operations. We don't want to hold the DB mutex during I/O or other slow things because of the many purposes it serves, but a mutex more limited to these cases should be fine.

I believe this would fix a write-write race in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10079 but not the read-write race.

Intended follow-up to this:
* Should be able to remove write thread synchronization from DBImpl::WriteOptionsFile

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11929

Test Plan:
Added two mini-stress style regression tests that fail with >1% probability before this change:
DBOptionsTest::SetStatsDumpPeriodSecRace
ColumnFamilyTest::CreateAndDropPeriodicRace

I haven't reproduced such an inconsistency between in-memory options and on disk latest options, but this change at least improves safety and adds a test anyway:
DBOptionsTest::SetStatsDumpPeriodSecRace

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D50024506

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 1e99a9ed4d96fdcf3ac5061ec6b3cee78aecdda4
2023-10-12 10:05:23 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 7bebd3036d Update tiered storage tests (ahead of next change) (#11917)
Summary:
After https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11905, I am preparing a DBImpl change to ensure all sufficiently recent sequence numbers since Open are covered by SeqnoToTimeMapping. **Intended follow-up**

However, there are a number of test changes I want to make prior to that to make it clear that I am not regressing the tests and production behavior at the same time.

* Start mock time in the tests well beyond epoch (time 0) so that we aren't normally reaching into pre-history for current time minus the preserve/preclude duration.
* Majorly clean up BasicSeqnoToTimeMapping to avoid confusing hard-coded bounds on GetProximalTimeBeforeSeqno() results.
  * There is an unresolved/unexplained issue marked with FIXME that should be investigated when GetProximalTimeBeforeSeqno() is put into production.
* MultiCFs test was strangely generating 5 L0 files, four of which would be compacted into an L1, and then letting TTL compaction compact 1@L0+1@L1. Changing the starting time of the tests seemed to mess up the TTL compaction. But I suspect the TTL compaction was unintentional, so I've cut it down to just 4 L0 files, which compacts predictably.
* Unrelated: allow ROCKSDB_NO_STACK=1 to skip printing a stack trace on assertion failures.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11917

Test Plan: no changes to production code

Reviewed By: jowlyzhang

Differential Revision: D49841436

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 753348ace9c548e82bcb77fcc8b2ffb7a6beeb0a
2023-10-02 16:19:05 -07:00
Peter Dillinger e67ee46642 Suppress TSAN reports on AutoHyperClockTable::Lookup (#11806)
Summary:
This function uses racing reads for heuristic performance improvement. My change in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11792 only worked for clang, not gcc, and gcc does not accurately handle TSAN suppressions. I would have to mark much more code as suppressed than I want to.

So I've taken a different approach: TSAN build does not use the racing reads but substitutes random results, as an extra test that a "correct" value is not needed for correct overall behavior.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11806

Test Plan: manual TSAN builds & tests with cache_bench

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D49100115

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: d6d0dfb796d710b953212dd3fc171b6e88fadea1
2023-09-08 10:50:47 -07:00
Peter Dillinger d01b1215bd Fix TSAN reports on AutoHCC (#11792)
Summary:
Forgot to run TSAN test on latest revision of https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11738

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11792

Test Plan: Use cache_bench to reproduce TSAN errors and observe fix

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D48953196

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 9e358b4768d8ddde86f84b451863263f661d7b80
2023-09-04 10:59:16 -07:00
Andrew Kryczka e373685dab Add SystemClock::TimedWait() function (#11753)
Summary:
Having a synthetic implementation of `TimedWait()` in `SystemClock` will allow us to add `SyncPoint`s while mutex is released, which was previously impossible since the lock was released and reacquired all within `pthread_cond_timedwait()`. Additionally, integrating `TimedWait()` with `MockSystemClock` allows us to cleanup some workarounds in the test code. In this PR I only cleaned up the `GenericRateLimiter` test workaround.

This is related to the intended follow-up mentioned in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/7101's description. There are a couple differences:

(1) This PR does not include removing the particular workaround that initially motivated it. Actually, the `Timer` class uses `InstrumentedCondVar`, so the interface introduced here is inadequate to remove that workaround. On the bright side, the interface introduced in this PR can be changed as needed since it can neither be used nor extended externally, due to using forward-declared `port::CondVar*` in the interface.
(2) This PR only makes the change in `SystemClock` not `Env`. Older revisions of this PR included `Env::TimedWait()` and `SpecialEnv::TimedWait()`; however, since they were unused it probably makes sense to defer adding them until when they are needed.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11753

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D48654995

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 15e19f2454b64d4ec7f50e328691c66ca9911122
2023-08-29 18:39:10 -07:00
Peter Dillinger cdb11f5ce6 More minor HCC refactoring + typed mmap (#11670)
Summary:
More code leading up to dynamic HCC.
* Small enhancements to cache_bench
* Extra assertion in Unref
* Improve a CAS loop in ChargeUsageMaybeEvictStrict
* Put load factor constants in appropriate class
* Move `standalone` field to HyperClockTable::HandleImpl because it can be encoded differently in the upcoming dynamic HCC.
* Add a typed version of MemMapping to simplify some future code.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11670

Test Plan: existing tests, unit test added for TypedMemMapping

Reviewed By: jowlyzhang

Differential Revision: D48056464

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 186b7d3105c5d6d2eb6a592369bc10a97ee14a15
2023-08-07 12:20:23 -07:00
Yelso Honnr 5732cf50e1 Add OpenBSD Support (#11255)
Summary:
I made some changes to add OpenBSD support.

Second time doing something like this, so I apologize in advance if I'm doing something wrong (had some minor hiccups with how github worked).

Fixes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11220

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11255

Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D46361706

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 90922fa30197fe6d6f3c0e3ecca2dbb92c337277
2023-06-27 11:58:29 -07:00
akankshamahajan fbd2f563bb Add an interface to provide support for underlying FS to pass their own buffer during reads (#11324)
Summary:
1. Public API change: Replace `use_async_io`  API in file_system with `SupportedOps` API which is used by underlying FileSystem to indicate to upper layers whether the FileSystem supports different operations introduced in `enum FSSupportedOps `. Right now operations are `async_io` and whether FS will provide its own buffer during reads or not. The api is changed to extend it to various FileSystem operations in one API rather than creating a separate API for each operation.

2. Provide support for underlying FS to pass their own buffer during Reads (async and sync read) instead of using RocksDB provided `scratch` (buffer) in `FSReadRequest`. Currently only MultiRead supports it and later will be extended to other reads as well (point lookup, scan etc). More details in how to enable in file_system.h

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11324

Test Plan: Tested locally

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D44465322

Pulled By: akankshamahajan15

fbshipit-source-id: 9ec9e08f839b5cc815e75d5dade6cd549998d0ec
2023-06-23 11:48:49 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 459969e993 Simplify detection of x86 CPU features (#11419)
Summary:
**Background** - runtime detection of certain x86 CPU features was added for optimizing CRC32c checksums, where performance is dramatically affected by the availability of certain CPU instructions and code using intrinsics for those instructions. And Java builds with native library try to be broadly compatible but performant.

What has changed is that CRC32c is no longer the most efficient cheecksum on contemporary x86_64 hardware, nor the default checksum. XXH3 is generally faster and not as dramatically impacted by the availability of certain CPU instructions. For example, on my Skylake system using db_bench (similar on an older Skylake system without AVX512):

PORTABLE=1 empty USE_SSE  : xxh3->8 GB/s   crc32c->0.8 GB/s  (no SSE4.2 nor AVX2 instructions)
PORTABLE=1 USE_SSE=1      : xxh3->19 GB/s  crc32c->16 GB/s  (with SSE4.2 and AVX2)
PORTABLE=0 USE_SSE ignored: xxh3->28 GB/s  crc32c->16 GB/s  (also some AVX512)

Testing a ~10 year old system, with SSE4.2 but without AVX2, crc32c is a similar speed to the new systems but xxh3 is only about half that speed, also 8GB/s like the non-AVX2 compile above. Given that xxh3 has specific optimization for AVX2, I think we can infer that that crc32c is only fastest for that ~2008-2013 period when SSE4.2 was included but not AVX2. And given that xxh3 is only about 2x slower on these systems (not like >10x slower for unoptimized crc32c), I don't think we need to invest too much in optimally adapting to these old cases.

x86 hardware that doesn't support fast CRC32c is now extremely rare, so requiring a custom build to support such hardware is fine IMHO.

**This change** does two related things:
* Remove runtime CPU detection for optimizing CRC32c on x86. Maintaining this code is non-zero work, and compiling special code that doesn't work on the configured target instruction set for code generation is always dubious. (On the one hand we have to ensure the CRC32c code uses SSE4.2 but on the other hand we have to ensure nothing else does.)
* Detect CPU features in source code, not in build scripts. Although there are some hypothetical advantages to detectiong in build scripts (compiler generality), RocksDB supports at least three build systems: make, cmake, and buck. It's not practical to support feature detection on all three, and we have suffered from missed optimization opportunities by relying on missing or incomplete detection in cmake and buck. We also depend on some components like xxhash that do source code detection anyway.

**In more detail:**
* `HAVE_SSE42`, `HAVE_AVX2`, and `HAVE_PCLMUL` replaced by standard macros `__SSE4_2__`, `__AVX2__`, and `__PCLMUL__`.
* MSVC does not provide high fidelity defines for SSE, PCLMUL, or POPCNT, but we can infer those from `__AVX__` or `__AVX2__` in a compatibility header. In rare cases of false negative or false positive feature detection, a build engineer should be able to set defines to work around the issue.
* `__POPCNT__` is another standard define, but we happen to only need it on MSVC, where it is set by that compatibility header, or can be set by the build engineer.
* `PORTABLE` can be set to a CPU type, e.g. "haswell", to compile for that CPU type.
* `USE_SSE` is deprecated, now equivalent to PORTABLE=haswell, which roughly approximates its old behavior.

Notably, this change should enable more builds to use the AVX2-optimized Bloom filter implementation.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11419

Test Plan:
existing tests, CI

Manual performance tests after the change match the before above (none expected with make build).

We also see AVX2 optimized Bloom filter code enabled when expected, by injecting a compiler error. (Performance difference is not big on my current CPU.)

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D45489041

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 60ceb0dd2aa3b365c99ed08a8b2a087a9abb6a70
2023-05-09 22:25:45 -07:00
Peter Dillinger e0e318f370 Optionally support lldb for stack traces and debugger attach (#11413)
Summary:
lldb is more supported for Meta infrastructure than gdb, so adding support for it in generating stack traces and attaching debugger on crash. For now you need to set ROCKSDB_LLDB_STACK=1 for stack traces or ROCKSDB_DEBUG=lldb for interactive debugging.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11413

Test Plan: some manual testing (no production code changes)

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D45360952

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 862bc8800eb03e3bdc1be8c0702960a19db45be8
2023-05-01 14:12:40 -07:00
anand76 eac6b6d0cd Ignore async_io ReadOption if FileSystem doesn't support it (#11296)
Summary:
In PosixFileSystem, IO uring support is opt-in. If the support is not enabled by the user, then ignore the async_io ReadOption in MultiGet and iteration at the top, rather than follow the async_io codepath and transparently switch to sync IO at the FileSystem layer.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11296

Test Plan: Add new unit tests

Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D44045776

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: a0881bf763ca2fde50b84063d0068bb521edd8b9
2023-03-17 14:57:09 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 50e9b3f9c7 Default print stack traces with GDB on Linux (#11272)
Summary:
On Linux systems using full ASLR, including CircleCI, the old backtrace()+addr2line stack traces are pretty useless, as seen in some failures under ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED=1 LIB_MODE=static. Use gdb by default for stack traces under Linux. More detail in code comments.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11272

Test Plan: manual testing locally and on CircleCI with ssh

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D43786211

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: f8c7c77f774b504fbdf7c786ff2430cbc8f5b939
2023-03-05 08:21:57 -08:00
Andrew Kryczka fcd816d534 Add missing override keyword in env_win.h functions (#11232)
Summary:
I couldn't figure out why this causes failures in our 8.0 release to fbcode while this issue appears to not be new in 8.0. Anyways, we can add the missing `override` keywords to these functions as the compiler insists.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11232

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D43420656

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: da748eeef6ba38dd113dbe4b5143d7558daf38dd
2023-02-18 17:30:15 -08:00
Wentian Guo 42d6652ba2 remove dependency on options.h for port_posix.h andport_win.h (#11214)
Summary:
The files in `port/`, such as `port_posix.h`, are layering over the system libraries, so shouldn't include the DB-specific files like `options.h`. This PR remove this dependency.

# How
The reason that `port_posix.h` (or `port_win.h`) include `options.h` is to use `CpuPriority`, as there is a method `SetCpuPriority()` in `port_posix.h` that uses `CpuPriority.`
- I think `SetCpuPriority()` make sense to exist in `port_posix.h` as it provides has platform-dependent implementation
- `CpuPriority` enum is defined in `env.h`, but used in `rocksdb/include` and `port/`.

Hence, let us define `CpuPriority` enum in a common file, say `port_defs.h`, such that both directories `rocksdb/include` and `port/` can include.

When we remove this dependency, some other files have compile errors because they can't find definitions, so add header files to resolve

# Test
make all check -j

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11214

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D43196910

Pulled By: guowentian

fbshipit-source-id: 70deccb72844cfb08fcc994f76c6ef6df5d55ab9
2023-02-13 02:21:38 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 27cf09172c Fix compile gettid on older Linux (#11184)
Summary:
Seen only in post-PR CI job benchmark-linux. Some context: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30680550/c-gettid-was-not-declared-in-this-scope

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11184

Test Plan: watch CI

Reviewed By: cbi42

Differential Revision: D43013891

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 48b3b7231080a0f803fdc36d13946d5524770302
2023-02-03 16:49:54 -08:00
Peter Dillinger e17f31057b Support stack traces with gdb (and debugger invocation) (#11150)
Summary:
LIB_MODE=shared is much more efficient for building all the unit tests but comes with the downside of ugly stack traces, generally missing name demangling and source line info. Searching the internet suggests the reliable way to get stack traces with dynamic loading is with gdb.

This change automatically tries to use gdb to get a stack trace if built with LIB_MODE=shared, and only on Linux because that's where we have the capability to attach to the proper thread. (We could revise the exact conditions in the future.) If there's a failure invoking gdb, it falls back on the old method. Obscure details of making the output reasonable / pretty are in the source code comments.

Based on this, it was easy to make it so that running a test command with ROCKSDB_DEBUG=1 would invoke gdb whenever the stack trace handler was invoked, so I included that.

Intended follow-up: make LIB_MODE=shared the new default `make` build config

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11150

Test Plan:
manual, mostly by injecting an "assert(false)" into a unit test and trying different build modes etc.

Although gdb is slower to start showing stack trace output, it seems overall faster in many if not most cases, presumably because it doesn't reload the symbol table for each stack entry. At least with parallel test runs, having many tests dumping stacks with the old method can take so long it appears to hang the test run.

Reviewed By: cbi42

Differential Revision: D42894064

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 608143309d8c69c40049c9a4abcde4f22e87b4d8
2023-02-03 13:21:03 -08:00
sdong 4720ba4391 Remove RocksDB LITE (#11147)
Summary:
We haven't been actively mantaining RocksDB LITE recently and the size must have been gone up significantly. We are removing the support.

Most of changes were done through following comments:

unifdef -m -UROCKSDB_LITE `git grep -l ROCKSDB_LITE | egrep '[.](cc|h)'`

by Peter Dillinger. Others changes were manually applied to build scripts, CircleCI manifests, ROCKSDB_LITE is used in an expression and file db_stress_test_base.cc.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11147

Test Plan: See CI

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D42796341

fbshipit-source-id: 4920e15fc2060c2cd2221330a6d0e5e65d4b7fe2
2023-01-27 13:14:19 -08:00
Wenlong Zhang 1cfe3528a2 support loongarch64 for rocksdb (#10036)
Summary: Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10036

Reviewed By: hx235

Differential Revision: D42424074

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 004adb75005a26bd01c5d568d1ec6ac442cd59dd
2023-01-13 08:42:44 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 5d3953114f Fix include of windows.h in mmap.h (#10885)
Summary:
If windows.h is not included in a particular way, it can conflict with other code including it. I don't know all the details, but having just one standard place where we include windows.h in header files seems best and seems to fix the internal issue we hit.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10885

Test Plan: CI and internal validation

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D40738945

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 88f635e895b1c7b810baad159e6dbb8351344cac
2022-10-26 18:07:57 -07:00
sdong 7cf27eae0a clang format files under port/ (#10849)
Summary:
Run "clang-format" against files under port to make it happy.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10849

Test Plan: Watch existing CI to pass.

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D40645839

fbshipit-source-id: 582b4215503223795cf6234af90cc4e8e4eba773
2022-10-24 16:56:01 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 7555243bcf Refactor ShardedCache for more sharing, static polymorphism (#10801)
Summary:
The motivations for this change include
* Free up space in ClockHandle so that we can add data for secondary cache handling while still keeping within single cache line (64 byte) size.
  * This change frees up space by eliminating the need for the `hash` field by making the fixed-size key itself a hash, using a 128-bit bijective (lossless) hash.
* Generally more customizability of ShardedCache (such as hashing) without worrying about virtual call overheads
  * ShardedCache now uses static polymorphism (template) instead of dynamic polymorphism (virtual overrides) for the CacheShard. No obvious performance benefit is seen from the change (as mostly expected; most calls to virtual functions in CacheShard could already be optimized to static calls), but offers more flexibility without incurring the runtime cost of adhering to a common interface (without type parameters or static callbacks).
  * You'll also notice less `reinterpret_cast`ing and other boilerplate in the Cache implementations, as this can go in ShardedCache.

More detail:
* Don't have LRUCacheShard maintain `std::shared_ptr<SecondaryCache>` copies (extra refcount) when LRUCache can be in charge of keeping a `shared_ptr`.
* Renamed `capacity_mutex_` to `config_mutex_` to better represent the scope of what it guards.
* Some preparation for 64-bit hash and indexing in LRUCache, but didn't include the full change because of slight performance regression.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10801

Test Plan:
Unit test updates were non-trivial because of major changes to the ClockCacheShard interface in handling of key vs. hash.

Performance:
Create with `TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=30000000 -disable_wal=1 -bloom_bits=16`

Test with
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=readrandom[-X1000] -readonly -num=30000000 -bloom_bits=16 -cache_index_and_filter_blocks=1 -cache_size=610000000 -duration 20 -threads=16
```

Before: `readrandom [AVG 150 runs] : 321147 (± 253) ops/sec`
After: `readrandom [AVG 150 runs] : 321530 (± 326) ops/sec`

So possibly ~0.1% improvement.

And with `-cache_type=hyper_clock_cache`:
Before: `readrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 614126 (± 7978) ops/sec`
After: `readrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 645349 (± 8087) ops/sec`

So roughly 5% improvement!

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D40252236

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: ff8fc70ef569585edc95bcbaaa0386f61355ae5b
2022-10-18 22:06:57 -07:00
Peter Dillinger e466173d5c Print stack traces on frozen tests in CI (#10828)
Summary:
Instead of existing calls to ps from gnu_parallel, call a new wrapper that does ps, looks for unit test like processes, and uses pstack or gdb to print thread stack traces. Also, using `ps -wwf` instead of `ps -wf` ensures output is not cut off.

For security, CircleCI runs with security restrictions on ptrace (/proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope = 1), and this change adds a work-around to `InstallStackTraceHandler()` (only used by testing tools) to allow any process from the same user to debug it. (I've also touched >100 files to ensure all the unit tests call this function.)

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10828

Test Plan: local manual + temporary infinite loop in a unit test to observe in CircleCI

Reviewed By: hx235

Differential Revision: D40447634

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 718a4c4a5b54fa0f9af2d01a446162b45e5e84e1
2022-10-18 00:35:35 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 8367f0d2d7 Improve / refactor anonymous mmap capabilities (#10810)
Summary:
The motivation for this change is a planned feature (related to HyperClockCache) that will depend on a large array that can essentially grow automatically, up to some bound, without the pointer address changing and with guaranteed zero-initialization of the data. Anonymous mmaps provide such functionality, and this change provides an internal API for that.

The other existing use of anonymous mmap in RocksDB is for allocating in huge pages. That code and other related Arena code used some awkward non-RAII and pre-C++11 idioms, so I cleaned up much of that as well, with RAII, move semantics, constexpr, etc.

More specifcs:
* Minimize conditional compilation
* Add Windows support for anonymous mmaps
* Use std::deque instead of std::vector for more efficient bag

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10810

Test Plan: unit test added for new functionality

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D40347204

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: ca83fcc47e50fabf7595069380edd2954f4f879c
2022-10-17 17:10:16 -07:00
Andrew Hutchings ce529a4ce1 Fix FreeBSD building (#10575)
Summary:
FreeBSD doesn't have `JEMALLOC_USABLE_SIZE_CONST` so we need to define
it.

This fixes MariaDB MDEV-20248.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10575

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D39057665

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 3874779d12a1dd5036324947f6372e6ad57a7b08
2022-08-28 00:05:51 -07:00
sdong cc2099803a Use EnvLogger instead of PosixLogger (#10436)
Summary:
EnvLogger was built to replace PosixLogger that supports multiple Envs. Make FileSystem use EnvLogger by default, remove Posix FS specific implementation and remove PosixLogger code,
Some hacky changes are made to make sure iostats are not polluted by logging, in order to pass existing unit tests.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10436

Test Plan: Run db_bench and watch info log files.

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D38259855

fbshipit-source-id: 67d65874bfba7a33535b6d0dd0ed92cbbc9888b8
2022-08-01 14:37:18 -07:00
zczhu 96206531bc Support reservation in thread pool (#10278)
Summary:
Add `ReserveThreads` and `ReleaseThreads` functions in thread pool to support reservation in for a specific thread pool.  With this feature, a thread will be blocked if the number of waiting threads (noted by `num_waiting_threads_`) equals the number of reserved threads (noted by `reserved_threads_`), normally `reserved_threads_` is upper bounded by `num_waiting_threads_`; in rare cases (e.g. `SetBackgroundThreadsInternal` is called when some threads are already reserved), `num_waiting_threads_` can be less than `reserved_threads`.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10278

Test Plan: Add `ReserveThreads` unit test in `env_test`. Update the unit test `SimpleColumnFamilyInfoTest` in `thread_list_test` with adding `ReserveThreads` related assertions.

Reviewed By: hx235

Differential Revision: D37640946

Pulled By: littlepig2013

fbshipit-source-id: 4d691f6b9a433569f96ab52d52c3defe5b065367
2022-07-08 19:48:09 -07:00
Johnny Shaw c2dc4c0c52 Fix GetWindowsErrSz nullptr bug (#10282)
Summary:
`GetWindowsErrSz` may assign a `nullptr` to `std::string` in the event it cannot format the error code to a string. This will result in a crash when `std::string` attempts to calculate the length from `nullptr`.

The change here checks the output from `FormatMessageA` and only assigns to the otuput `std::string` if it is not null. Additionally, the call to free the buffer is only made if a non-null value is returned from `FormatMessageA`. In the event `FormatMessageA` does not output a string, an empty string is returned instead.

Fixes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10274

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10282

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D37542143

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: c21f5119ddb451f76960acec94639d0f538052f2
2022-06-29 20:41:54 -07:00
Bo Wang c073ed7601 Fix typo in comments and code (#10233)
Summary:
Fix typo in comments and code.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10233

Test Plan: Existing unit tests should pass.

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang, anand1976

Differential Revision: D37356702

Pulled By: gitbw95

fbshipit-source-id: 32c019adcc6dcc95a9882b38147a310091368e51
2022-06-22 15:45:21 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 1aac814578 Use optimized folly DistributedMutex in LRUCache when available (#10179)
Summary:
folly DistributedMutex is faster than standard mutexes though
imposes some static obligations on usage. See
https://github.com/facebook/folly/blob/main/folly/synchronization/DistributedMutex.h
for details. Here we use this alternative for our Cache implementations
(especially LRUCache) for better locking performance, when RocksDB is
compiled with folly.

Also added information about which distributed mutex implementation is
being used to cache_bench output and to DB LOG.

Intended follow-up:
* Use DMutex in more places, perhaps improving API to support non-scoped
locking
* Fix linking with fbcode compiler (needs ROCKSDB_NO_FBCODE=1 currently)

Credit: Thanks Siying for reminding me about this line of work that was previously
left unfinished.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10179

Test Plan:
for correctness, existing tests. CircleCI config updated.
Also Meta-internal buck build updated.

For performance, ran simultaneous before & after cache_bench. Out of three
comparison runs, the middle improvement to ops/sec was +21%:

Baseline: USE_CLANG=1 DEBUG_LEVEL=0 make -j24 cache_bench (fbcode
compiler)

```
Complete in 20.201 s; Rough parallel ops/sec = 1584062
Thread ops/sec = 107176

Operation latency (ns):
Count: 32000000 Average: 9257.9421  StdDev: 122412.04
Min: 134  Median: 3623.0493  Max: 56918500
Percentiles: P50: 3623.05 P75: 10288.02 P99: 30219.35 P99.9: 683522.04 P99.99: 7302791.63
```

New: (add USE_FOLLY=1)

```
Complete in 16.674 s; Rough parallel ops/sec = 1919135  (+21%)
Thread ops/sec = 135487

Operation latency (ns):
Count: 32000000 Average: 7304.9294  StdDev: 108530.28
Min: 132  Median: 3777.6012  Max: 91030902
Percentiles: P50: 3777.60 P75: 10169.89 P99: 24504.51 P99.9: 59721.59 P99.99: 1861151.83
```

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D37182983

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: a17eb05f25b832b6a2c1356f5c657e831a5af8d1
2022-06-17 13:08:45 -07:00
Ali Saidi 2e5a323dbd Change the instruction used for a pause on arm64 (#10118)
Summary:
While the yield instruction conseptually sounds correct on most platforms it is
a simple nop that doesn't delay the execution anywhere close to what an x86
pause instruction does. In other projects with spin-wait loops an isb has been
observed to be much closer to the x86 behavior.

On a Graviton3 system the following test improves on average by 2x with this
change averaged over 20 runs:

```
./db_bench  -benchmarks=fillrandom -threads=64 -batch_size=1
-memtablerep=skip_list -value_size=100 --num=100000
level0_slowdown_writes_trigger=9999 -level0_stop_writes_trigger=9999
-disable_auto_compactions --max_write_buffer_number=8 -max_background_flushes=8
--disable_wal --write_buffer_size=160000000 --block_size=16384
--allow_concurrent_memtable_write -compression_type none
```

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10118

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D37120578

fbshipit-source-id: c20bde4298222edfab7ff7cb6d42497e7012400d
2022-06-15 13:08:11 -07:00
Ali Saidi b550fc0b09 Modify the instructions emited for PREFETCH on arm64 (#10117)
Summary:
__builtin_prefetch(...., 1) prefetches into the L2 cache on x86 while the same
emits a pldl3keep instruction on arm64 which doesn't seem to be close enough.

Testing on a Graviton3, and M1 system with memtablerep_bench fillrandom and
skiplist througpuh increased as follows adjusting the 1 to 2 or 3:
```
           1 -> 2     1 -> 3
----------------------------
Graviton3   +10%        +15%
M1          +10%        +10%
```

Given that prefetching into the L1 cache seems to help, I chose that conversion

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10117

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D37120475

fbshipit-source-id: db1ef43f941445019c68316500a2250acc643d5e
2022-06-14 17:58:44 -07:00
Zichen Zhu 65893ad959 Explicitly closing all directory file descriptors (#10049)
Summary:
Currently, the DB directory file descriptor is left open until the deconstruction process (`DB::Close()` does not close the file descriptor). To verify this, comment out the lines between `db_ = nullptr` and `db_->Close()` (line 512, 513, 514, 515 in ldb_cmd.cc) to leak the ``db_'' object, build `ldb` tool and run
```
strace --trace=open,openat,close ./ldb --db=$TEST_TMPDIR --ignore_unknown_options put K1 V1 --create_if_missing
```
There is one directory file descriptor that is not closed in the strace log.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10049

Test Plan: Add a new unit test DBBasicTest.DBCloseAllDirectoryFDs: Open a database with different WAL directory and three different data directories, and all directory file descriptors should be closed after calling Close(). Explicitly call Close() after a directory file descriptor is not used so that the counter of directory open and close should be equivalent.

Reviewed By: ajkr, hx235

Differential Revision: D36722135

Pulled By: littlepig2013

fbshipit-source-id: 07bdc2abc417c6b30997b9bbef1f79aa757b21ff
2022-06-01 18:03:34 -07:00
tagliavini 6c50082654 Remove code that only compiles for Visual Studio versions older than 2015 (#10065)
Summary:
There are currently some preprocessor checks that assume support for Visual Studio versions older than 2015 (i.e., 0 < _MSC_VER < 1900), although we don't support them any more.

We removed all code that only compiles on those older versions, except third-party/ files.

The ROCKSDB_NOEXCEPT symbol is now obsolete, since it now always gets replaced by noexcept. We removed it.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10065

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D36721901

Pulled By: guidotag

fbshipit-source-id: a2892d365ef53cce44a0a7d90dd6b72ee9b5e5f2
2022-05-26 16:55:08 -07:00
Levi Tamasi af7ae912e2 Fix potential ambiguities in/around port/sys_time.h (#10045)
Summary:
There are some time-related POSIX APIs that are not available on Windows
(e.g. `localtime_r`), which we have worked around by providing our own
implementations in `port/sys_time.h`. This workaround actually relies on
some ambiguity: on Windows, a call to `localtime_r` calls
`ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::port::localtime_r` (which is pulled into
`ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE` by a using-declaration), while on other platforms
it calls the global `localtime_r`. This works fine as long as there is only one
candidate function; however, it breaks down when there is more than one
`localtime_r` visible in a scope.

The patch fixes this by introducing `ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE::port::{TimeVal, GetTimeOfDay, LocalTimeR}`
to eliminate any ambiguity.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10045

Test Plan: `make check`

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D36639372

Pulled By: ltamasi

fbshipit-source-id: fc13dbfa421b7c8918111a6d9e24ce77e91a7c50
2022-05-24 18:20:17 -07:00
Yaroslav Stepanchuk 0a43061f8d Remove ROCKSDB_SUPPORT_THREAD_LOCAL define because it's a part of C++11 (#10015)
Summary:
ROCKSDB_SUPPORT_THREAD_LOCAL definition has been removed.
`__thread`(#define) has been replaced with `thread_local`(C++ keyword) across the code base.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10015

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D36485491

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 6522d212514ee190b90b4e2750c80c7e34013c78
2022-05-18 15:25:19 -07:00
mrambacher b11ff347b4 Use STATIC_AVOID_DESTRUCTION for static objects with non-trivial destructors (#9958)
Summary:
Changed the static objects that had non-trivial destructors to use the STATIC_AVOID_DESTRUCTION construct.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9958

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D36442982

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: 029d47b1374d30d198bfede369a4c0ae7a4eb519
2022-05-17 09:39:22 -07:00
mrambacher 204a42ca97 Added GetFactoryCount/Names/Types to ObjectRegistry (#9358)
Summary:
These methods allow for more thorough testing of the ObjectRegistry and Customizable infrastructure in a simpler manner.  With this change, the Customizable tests can now check what factories are registered and attempt to create each of them in a systematic fashion.

With this change, I think all of the factories registered with the ObjectRegistry/CreateFromString are now tested via the customizable_test classes.

Note that there were a few other minor changes.  There was a "posix://*" register with the ObjectRegistry which was missed during the PatternEntry conversion -- these changes found that.  The nickname and default names for the FileSystem classes was also inverted.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9358

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D33433542

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: 9a32da74e6620745b4eeffb2712be70eeeadfa7e
2022-05-16 09:44:43 -07:00
sdong 49628c9a83 Use std::numeric_limits<> (#9954)
Summary:
Right now we still don't fully use std::numeric_limits but use a macro, mainly for supporting VS 2013. Right now we only support VS 2017 and up so it is not a problem. The code comment claims that MinGW still needs it. We don't have a CI running MinGW so it's hard to validate. since we now require C++17, it's hard to imagine MinGW would still build RocksDB but doesn't support std::numeric_limits<>.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9954

Test Plan: See CI Runs.

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D36173954

fbshipit-source-id: a35a73af17cdcae20e258cdef57fcf29a50b49e0
2022-05-05 13:08:21 -07:00
Peter Dillinger efd035164b Meta-internal folly integration with F14FastMap (#9546)
Summary:
Especially after updating to C++17, I don't see a compelling case for
*requiring* any folly components in RocksDB. I was able to purge the existing
hard dependencies, and it can be quite difficult to strip out non-trivial components
from folly for use in RocksDB. (The prospect of doing that on F14 has changed
my mind on the best approach here.)

But this change creates an optional integration where we can plug in
components from folly at compile time, starting here with F14FastMap to replace
std::unordered_map when possible (probably no public APIs for example). I have
replaced the biggest CPU users of std::unordered_map with compile-time
pluggable UnorderedMap which will use F14FastMap when USE_FOLLY is set.
USE_FOLLY is always set in the Meta-internal buck build, and a simulation of
that is in the Makefile for public CI testing. A full folly build is not needed, but
checking out the full folly repo is much simpler for getting the dependency,
and anything else we might want to optionally integrate in the future.

Some picky details:
* I don't think the distributed mutex stuff is actually used, so it was easy to remove.
* I implemented an alternative to `folly::constexpr_log2` (which is much easier
in C++17 than C++11) so that I could pull out the hard dependencies on
`ConstexprMath.h`
* I had to add noexcept move constructors/operators to some types to make
F14's complainUnlessNothrowMoveAndDestroy check happy, and I added a
macro to make that easier in some common cases.
* Updated Meta-internal buck build to use folly F14Map (always)

No updates to HISTORY.md nor INSTALL.md as this is not (yet?) considered a
production integration for open source users.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9546

Test Plan:
CircleCI tests updated so that a couple of them use folly.

Most internal unit & stress/crash tests updated to use Meta-internal latest folly.
(Note: they should probably use buck but they currently use Makefile.)

Example performance improvement: when filter partitions are pinned in cache,
they are tracked by PartitionedFilterBlockReader::filter_map_ and we can build
a test that exercises that heavily. Build DB with

```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=10000000 -disable_wal=1 -write_buffer_size=30000000 -bloom_bits=16 -compaction_style=2 -fifo_compaction_max_table_files_size_mb=10000 -fifo_compaction_allow_compaction=0 -partition_index_and_filters
```

and test with (simultaneous runs with & without folly, ~20 times each to see
convergence)

```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb ./db_bench_folly -readonly -use_existing_db -benchmarks=readrandom -num=10000000 -bloom_bits=16 -compaction_style=2 -fifo_compaction_max_table_files_size_mb=10000 -fifo_compaction_allow_compaction=0 -partition_index_and_filters -duration=40 -pin_l0_filter_and_index_blocks_in_cache
```

Average ops/s no folly: 26229.2
Average ops/s with folly: 26853.3 (+2.4%)

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D34181736

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: ffa6ad5104c2880321d8a1aa7187e00ab0d02e94
2022-04-13 07:34:01 -07:00
Yuriy Chernyshov a6a179859e #include <winioctl.h> as MSDN prescribes (#9612)
Summary:
The recommendation can be found e. g. [here](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winioctl/ns-winioctl-storage_property_query).

While `<windows.h>` transitively includes `<winioctl.h>` by default, this can be switched off by `/DWIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN` which forces the user to include-what-you-use.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9612

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D34845629

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 1ef9273074e3d84864c6833a7de6eb9df81e29d9
2022-03-13 17:01:21 -07:00
Peter Dillinger fd3e0f43b3 Require C++17 (#9481)
Summary:
Drop support for some old compilers by requiring C++17 standard
(or higher). See https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9388

First modification based on this is to remove some conditional compilation in slice.h (also
better for ODR)

Also in this PR:
* Fix some Makefile formatting that seems to affect ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED config in
some cases
* Add c_test to NON_PARALLEL_TEST in Makefile
* Fix a clang-analyze reported "potential leak" in lru_cache_test
* Better "compatibility" definition of DEFINE_uint32 for old versions of gflags
* Fix a linking problem with shared libraries in Makefile (`./random_test: error while loading shared libraries: librocksdb.so.6.29: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory`)
* Always set ROCKSDB_SUPPORT_THREAD_LOCAL and use thread_local (from C++11)
  * TODO in later PR: clean up that obsolete flag
* Fix a cosmetic typo in c.h (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9488)

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9481

Test Plan:
CircleCI config substantially updated.

* Upgrade to latest Ubuntu images for each release
* Generally prefer Ubuntu 20, but keep a couple Ubuntu 16 builds with oldest supported
compilers, to ensure compatibility
* Remove .circleci/cat_ignore_eagain except for Ubuntu 16 builds, because this is to work
around a kernel bug that should not affect anything but Ubuntu 16.
* Remove designated gcc-9 build, because the default linux build now uses GCC 9 from
Ubuntu 20.
* Add some `apt-key add` to fix some apt "couldn't be verified" errors
* Generally drop SKIP_LINK=1; work-around no longer needed
* Generally `add-apt-repository` before `apt-get update` as manual testing indicated the
reverse might not work.

Travis:
* Use gcc-7 by default (remove specific gcc-7 and gcc-4.8 builds)
* TODO in later PR: fix s390x "Assembler messages: Error: invalid switch -march=z14" failure

AppVeyor:
* Completely dropped because we are dropping VS2015 support and CircleCI covers
VS >= 2017

Also local testing with old gflags (out of necessity when using ROCKSDB_NO_FBCODE=1).

Reviewed By: mrambacher

Differential Revision: D33946377

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: ae077c823905b45370a26c0103ada119459da6c1
2022-02-04 17:13:10 -08:00