Summary:
This also updates WriteBatch's protection info to include write time since there are several places in memtable that by default protects the whole value slice.
This PR is stacked on https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/12543
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12559
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D56308285
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 5524339fe0dd6c918dc940ca2f0657b5f2111c56
Summary:
ScopedArenaIterator is not an iterator. It is a pointer wrapper. And we don't need a custom implemented pointer wrapper when std::unique_ptr can be instantiated with what we want.
So this adds ScopedArenaPtr<T> to replace those uses.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12470
Test Plan: CI (including ASAN/UBSAN)
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D55254362
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: cc96a0b9840df99aa807f417725e120802c0ae18
Summary:
This PR contains a few follow ups from https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/12419 and https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/12428 including:
1) Handle a special case for `WriteBatch::TimedPut`. When the user specified write time is `std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()`, it's not treated as an error, but it instead creates and writes a regular `Put` entry.
2) Update the `InternalIterator::write_unix_time` APIs to handle `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno` entries.
3) FlushJob is updated to use the seqno to time mapping copy in `SuperVersion`. FlushJob currently copy the DB's seqno to time mapping while holding db mutex and only copies the part of interest, a.k.a, the part that only goes back to the earliest sequence number of the to-be-flushed memtables. While updating FlushJob to use the mapping copy in `SuperVersion`, it's given access to the full mapping to help cover the need to convert `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno`'s write time to preferred seqno as much as possible.
Test plans:
Added unit tests
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12455
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D55165422
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: dc022653077f678c24661de5743146a74cce4b47
Summary:
Update `compaction_service_test` to make sure remote compaction works with multiple column family set up. Minor refactor to get rid of duplicate code
Fixing one quick bug in the existing test util: Test util's `FilesPerLevel` didn't honor `cf_id` properly)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12430
Test Plan:
```
./compaction_service_test
```
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D54883035
Pulled By: jaykorean
fbshipit-source-id: 83b4f6f566fed5c4824bfef7de01074354a72b44
Summary:
This PR adds support for `TimedPut` API. We introduced a new type `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno` for entries added to the DB via the `TimedPut` API.
The life cycle of such an entry on the write/flush/compaction paths are:
1) It is initially added to memtable as:
`<user_key, seq, kTypeValuePreferredSeqno>: {value, write_unix_time}`
2) When it's flushed to L0 sst files, it's converted to:
`<user_key, seq, kTypeValuePreferredSeqno>: {value, preferred_seqno}`
when we have easy access to the seqno to time mapping.
3) During compaction, if certain conditions are met, we swap in the `preferred_seqno` and the entry will become:
`<user_key, preferred_seqno, kTypeValue>: value`. This step helps fast track these entries to the cold tier if they are eligible after the sequence number swap.
On the read path:
A `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno` entry acts the same as a `kTypeValue` entry, the unix_write_time/preferred seqno part packed in value is completely ignored.
Needed follow ups:
1) The seqno to time mapping accessible in flush needs to be extended to cover the `write_unix_time` for possible `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno` entries. This also means we need to track these `write_unix_time` in memtable.
2) Compaction filter support for the new `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno` type for feature parity with other `kTypeValue` and equivalent types.
3) Stress test coverage for the feature
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12419
Test Plan: Added unit tests
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D54920296
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: c8b43f7a7c465e569141770e93c748371ff1da9e
Summary:
... when compiled with ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED = 1.
The main change is in iterator_wrapper.h. The remaining changes are just fixing existing unit tests. Adding this check to IteratorWrapper gives a good coverage as the class is used in many places, including child iterators under merging iterator, merging iterator under DB iter, file_iter under level iterator, etc. This change can catch the bug fixed in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11782.
Future follow up: enable `ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED=1` for stress test and for DEBUG_LEVEL=0.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11975
Test Plan:
* `ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED=1 DEBUG_LEVEL=2 make -j32 J=32 check`
* I tried to run stress test with `ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED=1`, but there are a lot of existing stress code that ignore status checking, and fail without the change in this PR. So defer that to a follow up task.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D50383790
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 1a28ce0f5fdf1890f93400b26b3b1b3a287624ce
Summary:
This change has two primary goals (follow-up to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11917, https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11920):
* Ensure the DB seqno_to_time_mapping has entries that allow us to put a good time lower bound on any writes that happen after setting up preserve/preclude options (either in a new DB, new CF, SetOptions, etc.) and haven't yet aged out of that time window. This allows us to remove a bunch of work-arounds in tests.
* For new DBs using preserve/preclude options, automatically reserve some sequence numbers and pre-map them to cover the time span back to the preserve/preclude cut-off time. In the future, this will allow us to import data from another DB by key, value, and write time by assigning an appropriate seqno in this DB for that write time.
Note that the pre-population (historical mappings) does not happen if the original options at DB Open time do not have preserve/preclude, so it is recommended to create initial column families at that time with create_missing_column_families, to take advantage of this (future) feature. (Adding these historical mappings after DB Open would risk non-monotonic seqno_to_time_mapping, which is dubious if not dangerous.)
Recommended follow-up:
* Solve existing race conditions (not memory safety) where parallel operations like CreateColumnFamily or SetDBOptions could leave the wrong setting in effect.
* Make SeqnoToTimeMapping more gracefully handle a possible case in which too many mappings are added for the time range of concern. It seems like there could be cases where data is massively excluded from the cold tier because of entries falling off the front of the mapping list (causing GetProximalSeqnoBeforeTime() to return 0). (More investigation needed.)
No release note for the minor bug fix because this is still an experimental feature with limited usage.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11922
Test Plan: tests added / updated
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D49956563
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 92beb918c3a298fae9ca8e509717b1067caa1519
Summary:
This PR implements support for a three tier cache - primary block cache, compressed secondary cache, and a nvm (local flash) secondary cache. This allows more effective utilization of the nvm cache, and minimizes the number of reads from local flash by caching compressed blocks in the compressed secondary cache.
The basic design is as follows -
1. A new secondary cache implementation, ```TieredSecondaryCache```, is introduced. It keeps the compressed and nvm secondary caches and manages the movement of blocks between them and the primary block cache. To setup a three tier cache, we allocate a ```CacheWithSecondaryAdapter```, with a ```TieredSecondaryCache``` instance as the secondary cache.
2. The table reader passes both the uncompressed and compressed block to ```FullTypedCacheInterface::InsertFull```, allowing the block cache to optionally store the compressed block.
3. When there's a miss, the block object is constructed and inserted in the primary cache, and the compressed block is inserted into the nvm cache by calling ```InsertSaved```. This avoids the overhead of recompressing the block, as well as avoiding putting more memory pressure on the compressed secondary cache.
4. When there's a hit in the nvm cache, we attempt to insert the block in the compressed secondary cache and the primary cache, subject to the admission policy of those caches (i.e admit on second access). Blocks/items evicted from any tier are simply discarded.
We can easily implement additional admission policies if desired.
Todo (In a subsequent PR):
1. Add to db_bench and run benchmarks
2. Add to db_stress
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11812
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D49461842
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: b40ac1330ef7cd8c12efa0a3ca75128e602e3a0b
Summary:
It seems the flag `-fno-elide-constructors` is incorrectly overwritten in Makefile by 9c2ebcc2c3/Makefile (L243)
Applying the change in PR https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11675 shows a lot of missing status checks. This PR adds the missing status checks.
Most of changes are just adding asserts in unit tests. I'll add pr comment around more interesting changes that need review.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11686
Test Plan: change Makefile as in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11675, and run `ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED=1 TEST_UINT128_COMPAT=1 ROCKSDB_MODIFY_NPHASH=1 LIB_MODE=static OPT="-DROCKSDB_NAMESPACE=alternative_rocksdb_ns" make V=1 -j24 J=24 check`
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D48176132
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 6758946cfb1c6ff84c4c1e0ca540d05e6fc390bd
Summary:
after https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11321 and https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11340 (both included in RocksDB v8.2), migration from `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=false` to `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true` is automatic by RocksDB and requires no manual compaction from user. Making the option true by default as it has several advantages: 1. better space amplification guarantee (a more stable LSM shape). 2. compaction is more adaptive to write traffic. 3. automatic draining of unneeded levels. Wiki is updated with more detail: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/wiki/Leveled-Compaction#option-level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes-and-levels-target-size.
The PR mostly contains fixes for unit tests as they assumed `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=false`. Most notable change is commit f742be330c and b1928e42b3 which override the default option in DBTestBase to still set `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=false` by default. This helps to reduce the change needed for unit tests. I think this default option override in unit tests is okay since the behavior of `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true` is tested by explicitly setting this option. Also, `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=false` may be more desired in unit tests as it makes it easier to create a desired LSM shape.
Comment for option `level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes` is updated to reflect this change and change made in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10057.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11525
Test Plan: `make -j32 J=32 check` several times to try to catch flaky tests due to this option change.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D46654256
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 6b5827dae124f6f1fdc8cca2ac6f6fcd878830e1
Summary:
the test is flaky when compiled with `make -j56 COERCE_CONTEXT_SWITCH=1 ./db_universal_compaction_test`. The cause is that a manual compaction `CompactRange()` can finish and return before obsolete files are deleted. One reason for this is that a manual compaction waits until `manual.done` is set here 62fc15f009/db/db_impl/db_impl_compaction_flush.cc (L1978)
and the compaction thread can set `manual.done`:
62fc15f009/db/db_impl/db_impl_compaction_flush.cc (L3672)
and then temporarily release mutex_:
62fc15f009/db/db_impl/db_impl_files.cc (L317)
before purging obsolete files:
62fc15f009/db/db_impl/db_impl_compaction_flush.cc (L3144)
With `COERCE_CONTEXT_SWITCH=1`, `bg_cv_.SignalAll()` is called during `mutex_.Lock()`, so the manual compaction thread can wake up and return before obsolete files are deleted. Updated the test to only count live SST files.
Also updated `FindObsoleteFiles()` to avoid locking a locked mutex.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11412
Test Plan: `make -j56 COERCE_CONTEXT_SWITCH=1 ./db_universal_compaction_test`
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D45342242
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 955c9796aa3f484e3557d300f97cffacb3ed9b0c
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
Summary:
Compressed block cache is replaced by compressed secondary cache. Remove the feature.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11117
Test Plan: See CI passes
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D42700164
fbshipit-source-id: 6cbb24e460da29311150865f60ecb98637f9f67d
Summary:
This is several refactorings bundled into one to avoid having to incrementally re-modify uses of Cache several times. Overall, there are breaking changes to Cache class, and it becomes more of low-level interface for implementing caches, especially block cache. New internal APIs make using Cache cleaner than before, and more insulated from block cache evolution. Hopefully, this is the last really big block cache refactoring, because of rather effectively decoupling the implementations from the uses. This change also removes the EXPERIMENTAL designation on the SecondaryCache support in Cache. It seems reasonably mature at this point but still subject to change/evolution (as I warn in the API docs for Cache).
The high-level motivation for this refactoring is to minimize code duplication / compounding complexity in adding SecondaryCache support to HyperClockCache (in a later PR). Other benefits listed below.
* static_cast lines of code +29 -35 (net removed 6)
* reinterpret_cast lines of code +6 -32 (net removed 26)
## cache.h and secondary_cache.h
* Always use CacheItemHelper with entries instead of just a Deleter. There are several motivations / justifications:
* Simpler for implementations to deal with just one Insert and one Lookup.
* Simpler and more efficient implementation because we don't have to track which entries are using helpers and which are using deleters
* Gets rid of hack to classify cache entries by their deleter. Instead, the CacheItemHelper includes a CacheEntryRole. This simplifies a lot of code (cache_entry_roles.h almost eliminated). Fixes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9428.
* Makes it trivial to adjust SecondaryCache behavior based on kind of block (e.g. don't re-compress filter blocks).
* It is arguably less convenient for many direct users of Cache, but direct users of Cache are now rare with introduction of typed_cache.h (below).
* I considered and rejected an alternative approach in which we reduce customizability by assuming each secondary cache compatible value starts with a Slice referencing the uncompressed block contents (already true or mostly true), but we apparently intend to stack secondary caches. Saving an entry from a compressed secondary to a lower tier requires custom handling offered by SaveToCallback, etc.
* Make CreateCallback part of the helper and introduce CreateContext to work with it (alternative to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10562). This cleans up the interface while still allowing context to be provided for loading/parsing values into primary cache. This model works for async lookup in BlockBasedTable reader (reader owns a CreateContext) under the assumption that it always waits on secondary cache operations to finish. (Otherwise, the CreateContext could be destroyed while async operation depending on it continues.) This likely contributes most to the observed performance improvement because it saves an std::function backed by a heap allocation.
* Use char* for serialized data, e.g. in SaveToCallback, where void* was confusingly used. (We use `char*` for serialized byte data all over RocksDB, with many advantages over `void*`. `memcpy` etc. are legacy APIs that should not be mimicked.)
* Add a type alias Cache::ObjectPtr = void*, so that we can better indicate the intent of the void* when it is to be the object associated with a Cache entry. Related: started (but did not complete) a refactoring to move away from "value" of a cache entry toward "object" or "obj". (It is confusing to call Cache a key-value store (like DB) when it is really storing arbitrary in-memory objects, not byte strings.)
* Remove unnecessary key param from DeleterFn. This is good for efficiency in HyperClockCache, which does not directly store the cache key in memory. (Alternative to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10774)
* Add allocator to Cache DeleterFn. This is a kind of future-proofing change in case we get more serious about using the Cache allocator for memory tracked by the Cache. Right now, only the uncompressed block contents are allocated using the allocator, and a pointer to that allocator is saved as part of the cached object so that the deleter can use it. (See CacheAllocationPtr.) If in the future we are able to "flatten out" our Cache objects some more, it would be good not to have to track the allocator as part of each object.
* Removes legacy `ApplyToAllCacheEntries` and changes `ApplyToAllEntries` signature for Deleter->CacheItemHelper change.
## typed_cache.h
Adds various "typed" interfaces to the Cache as internal APIs, so that most uses of Cache can use simple type safe code without casting and without explicit deleters, etc. Almost all of the non-test, non-glue code uses of Cache have been migrated. (Follow-up work: CompressedSecondaryCache deserves deeper attention to migrate.) This change expands RocksDB's internal usage of metaprogramming and SFINAE (https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/sfinae).
The existing usages of Cache are divided up at a high level into these new interfaces. See updated existing uses of Cache for examples of how these are used.
* PlaceholderCacheInterface - Used for making cache reservations, with entries that have a charge but no value.
* BasicTypedCacheInterface<TValue> - Used for primary cache storage of objects of type TValue, which can be cleaned up with std::default_delete<TValue>. The role is provided by TValue::kCacheEntryRole or given in an optional template parameter.
* FullTypedCacheInterface<TValue, TCreateContext> - Used for secondary cache compatible storage of objects of type TValue. In addition to BasicTypedCacheInterface constraints, we require TValue::ContentSlice() to return persistable data. This simplifies usage for the normal case of simple secondary cache compatibility (can give you a Slice to the data already in memory). In addition to TCreateContext performing the role of Cache::CreateContext, it is also expected to provide a factory function for creating TValue.
* For each of these, there's a "Shared" version (e.g. FullTypedSharedCacheInterface) that holds a shared_ptr to the Cache, rather than assuming external ownership by holding only a raw `Cache*`.
These interfaces introduce specific handle types for each interface instantiation, so that it's easy to see what kind of object is controlled by a handle. (Ultimately, this might not be worth the extra complexity, but it seems OK so far.)
Note: I attempted to make the cache 'charge' automatically inferred from the cache object type, such as by expecting an ApproximateMemoryUsage() function, but this is not so clean because there are cases where we need to compute the charge ahead of time and don't want to re-compute it.
## block_cache.h
This header is essentially the replacement for the old block_like_traits.h. It includes various things to support block cache access with typed_cache.h for block-based table.
## block_based_table_reader.cc
Before this change, accessing the block cache here was an awkward mix of static polymorphism (template TBlocklike) and switch-case on a dynamic BlockType value. This change mostly unifies on static polymorphism, relying on minor hacks in block_cache.h to distinguish variants of Block. We still check BlockType in some places (especially for stats, which could be improved in follow-up work) but at least the BlockType is a static constant from the template parameter. (No more awkward partial redundancy between static and dynamic info.) This likely contributes to the overall performance improvement, but hasn't been tested in isolation.
The other key source of simplification here is a more unified system of creating block cache objects: for directly populating from primary cache and for promotion from secondary cache. Both use BlockCreateContext, for context and for factory functions.
## block_based_table_builder.cc, cache_dump_load_impl.cc
Before this change, warming caches was super ugly code. Both of these source files had switch statements to basically transition from the dynamic BlockType world to the static TBlocklike world. None of that mess is needed anymore as there's a new, untyped WarmInCache function that handles all the details just as promotion from SecondaryCache would. (Fixes `TODO akanksha: Dedup below code` in block_based_table_builder.cc.)
## Everything else
Mostly just updating Cache users to use new typed APIs when reasonably possible, or changed Cache APIs when not.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10975
Test Plan:
tests updated
Performance test setup similar to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10626 (by cache size, LRUCache when not "hyper" for HyperClockCache):
34MB 1thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 0.745 io_bytes/op: 2.52504e+06 miss_ratio: 0.140906 max_rss_mb: 76.4844
34MB 1thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 0.751 io_bytes/op: 2.5123e+06 miss_ratio: 0.140161 max_rss_mb: 79.3594
34MB 1thread base -> kops/s: 0.254 io_bytes/op: 1.36073e+07 miss_ratio: 0.918818 max_rss_mb: 45.9297
34MB 1thread new -> kops/s: 0.252 io_bytes/op: 1.36157e+07 miss_ratio: 0.918999 max_rss_mb: 44.1523
34MB 32thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 7.272 io_bytes/op: 2.88323e+06 miss_ratio: 0.162532 max_rss_mb: 516.602
34MB 32thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 7.214 io_bytes/op: 2.99046e+06 miss_ratio: 0.168818 max_rss_mb: 518.293
34MB 32thread base -> kops/s: 3.528 io_bytes/op: 1.35722e+07 miss_ratio: 0.914691 max_rss_mb: 264.926
34MB 32thread new -> kops/s: 3.604 io_bytes/op: 1.35744e+07 miss_ratio: 0.915054 max_rss_mb: 264.488
233MB 1thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 53.909 io_bytes/op: 2552.35 miss_ratio: 0.0440566 max_rss_mb: 241.984
233MB 1thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 62.792 io_bytes/op: 2549.79 miss_ratio: 0.044043 max_rss_mb: 241.922
233MB 1thread base -> kops/s: 1.197 io_bytes/op: 2.75173e+06 miss_ratio: 0.103093 max_rss_mb: 241.559
233MB 1thread new -> kops/s: 1.199 io_bytes/op: 2.73723e+06 miss_ratio: 0.10305 max_rss_mb: 240.93
233MB 32thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 1298.69 io_bytes/op: 2539.12 miss_ratio: 0.0440307 max_rss_mb: 371.418
233MB 32thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 1421.35 io_bytes/op: 2538.75 miss_ratio: 0.0440307 max_rss_mb: 347.273
233MB 32thread base -> kops/s: 9.693 io_bytes/op: 2.77304e+06 miss_ratio: 0.103745 max_rss_mb: 569.691
233MB 32thread new -> kops/s: 9.75 io_bytes/op: 2.77559e+06 miss_ratio: 0.103798 max_rss_mb: 552.82
1597MB 1thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 58.607 io_bytes/op: 1449.14 miss_ratio: 0.0249324 max_rss_mb: 1583.55
1597MB 1thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 69.6 io_bytes/op: 1434.89 miss_ratio: 0.0247167 max_rss_mb: 1584.02
1597MB 1thread base -> kops/s: 60.478 io_bytes/op: 1421.28 miss_ratio: 0.024452 max_rss_mb: 1589.45
1597MB 1thread new -> kops/s: 63.973 io_bytes/op: 1416.07 miss_ratio: 0.0243766 max_rss_mb: 1589.24
1597MB 32thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 1436.2 io_bytes/op: 1357.93 miss_ratio: 0.0235353 max_rss_mb: 1692.92
1597MB 32thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 1605.03 io_bytes/op: 1358.04 miss_ratio: 0.023538 max_rss_mb: 1702.78
1597MB 32thread base -> kops/s: 280.059 io_bytes/op: 1350.34 miss_ratio: 0.023289 max_rss_mb: 1675.36
1597MB 32thread new -> kops/s: 283.125 io_bytes/op: 1351.05 miss_ratio: 0.0232797 max_rss_mb: 1703.83
Almost uniformly improving over base revision, especially for hot paths with HyperClockCache, up to 12% higher throughput seen (1597MB, 32thread, hyper). The improvement for that is likely coming from much simplified code for providing context for secondary cache promotion (CreateCallback/CreateContext), and possibly from less branching in block_based_table_reader. And likely a small improvement from not reconstituting key for DeleterFn.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D42417818
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: f86bfdd584dce27c028b151ba56818ad14f7a432
Summary:
Ran `find ./db/ -type f | xargs clang-format -i`. Excluded minor changes it tried to make on db/db_impl/. Everything else it changed was directly under db/ directory. Included minor manual touchups mentioned in PR commit history.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10910
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D40880683
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: cfe26cda05b3fb9a72e3cb82c286e21d8c5c4174
Summary:
FIFO compaction can theoretically open a DB with any compaction style.
However, the current code only allows FIFO compaction to open a DB with
a single level.
This PR relaxes the limitation of FIFO compaction and allows it to open a
DB with multiple levels. Below is the read / write / compaction behavior:
* The read behavior is untouched, and it works like a regular rocksdb instance.
* The write behavior is untouched as well. When a FIFO compacted DB
is opened with multiple levels, all new files will still be in level 0, and no files
will be moved to a different level.
* Compaction logic is extended. It will first identify the bottom-most non-empty level.
Then, it will delete the oldest file in that level.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10348
Test Plan:
Added a new test to verify the migration from level to FIFO where the db has multiple levels.
Extended existing test cases in db_test and db_basic_test to also verify
all entries of a key after reopening the DB with FIFO compaction.
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D40233744
fbshipit-source-id: 6cc011d6c3467e6bfb9b6a4054b87619e69815e1
Summary:
Delete range logic is moved from `DBIter` to `MergingIterator`, and `MergingIterator` will seek to the end of a range deletion if possible instead of scanning through each key and check with `RangeDelAggregator`.
With the invariant that a key in level L (consider memtable as the first level, each immutable and L0 as a separate level) has a larger sequence number than all keys in any level >L, a range tombstone `[start, end)` from level L covers all keys in its range in any level >L. This property motivates optimizations in iterator:
- in `Seek(target)`, if level L has a range tombstone `[start, end)` that covers `target.UserKey`, then for all levels > L, we can do Seek() on `end` instead of `target` to skip some range tombstone covered keys.
- in `Next()/Prev()`, if the current key is covered by a range tombstone `[start, end)` from level L, we can do `Seek` to `end` for all levels > L.
This PR implements the above optimizations in `MergingIterator`. As all range tombstone covered keys are now skipped in `MergingIterator`, the range tombstone logic is removed from `DBIter`. The idea in this PR is similar to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/7317, but this PR leaves `InternalIterator` interface mostly unchanged. **Credit**: the cascading seek optimization and the sentinel key (discussed below) are inspired by [Pebble](https://github.com/cockroachdb/pebble/blob/master/merging_iter.go) and suggested by ajkr in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/7317. The two optimizations are mostly implemented in `SeekImpl()/SeekForPrevImpl()` and `IsNextDeleted()/IsPrevDeleted()` in `merging_iterator.cc`. See comments for each method for more detail.
One notable change is that the minHeap/maxHeap used by `MergingIterator` now contains range tombstone end keys besides point key iterators. This helps to reduce the number of key comparisons. For example, for a range tombstone `[start, end)`, a `start` and an `end` `HeapItem` are inserted into the heap. When a `HeapItem` for range tombstone start key is popped from the minHeap, we know this range tombstone becomes "active" in the sense that, before the range tombstone's end key is popped from the minHeap, all the keys popped from this heap is covered by the range tombstone's internal key range `[start, end)`.
Another major change, *delete range sentinel key*, is made to `LevelIterator`. Before this PR, when all point keys in an SST file are iterated through in `MergingIterator`, a level iterator would advance to the next SST file in its level. In the case when an SST file has a range tombstone that covers keys beyond the SST file's last point key, advancing to the next SST file would lose this range tombstone. Consequently, `MergingIterator` could return keys that should have been deleted by some range tombstone. We prevent this by pretending that file boundaries in each SST file are sentinel keys. A `LevelIterator` now only advance the file iterator once the sentinel key is processed.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10449
Test Plan:
- Added many unit tests in db_range_del_test
- Stress test: `./db_stress --readpercent=5 --prefixpercent=19 --writepercent=20 -delpercent=10 --iterpercent=44 --delrangepercent=2`
- Additional iterator stress test is added to verify against iterators against expected state: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10538. This is based on ajkr's previous attempt https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5506#issuecomment-506021913.
```
python3 ./tools/db_crashtest.py blackbox --simple --write_buffer_size=524288 --target_file_size_base=524288 --max_bytes_for_level_base=2097152 --compression_type=none --max_background_compactions=8 --value_size_mult=33 --max_key=5000000 --interval=10 --duration=7200 --delrangepercent=3 --delpercent=9 --iterpercent=25 --writepercent=60 --readpercent=3 --prefixpercent=0 --num_iterations=1000 --range_deletion_width=100 --verify_iterator_with_expected_state_one_in=1
```
- Performance benchmark: I used a similar setup as in the blog [post](http://rocksdb.org/blog/2018/11/21/delete-range.html) that introduced DeleteRange, "a database with 5 million data keys, and 10000 range tombstones (ignoring those dropped during compaction) that were written in regular intervals after 4.5 million data keys were written". As expected, the performance with this PR depends on the range tombstone width.
```
# Setup:
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench_main --benchmarks=fillrandom --writes=4500000 --num=5000000
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench_main --benchmarks=overwrite --writes=500000 --num=5000000 --use_existing_db=true --writes_per_range_tombstone=50
# Scan entire DB
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench_main --benchmarks=readseq[-X5] --use_existing_db=true --num=5000000 --disable_auto_compactions=true
# Short range scan (10 Next())
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/width-100/ ./db_bench_main --benchmarks=seekrandom[-X5] --use_existing_db=true --num=500000 --reads=100000 --seek_nexts=10 --disable_auto_compactions=true
# Long range scan(1000 Next())
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/width-100/ ./db_bench_main --benchmarks=seekrandom[-X5] --use_existing_db=true --num=500000 --reads=2500 --seek_nexts=1000 --disable_auto_compactions=true
```
Avg over of 10 runs (some slower tests had fews runs):
For the first column (tombstone), 0 means no range tombstone, 100-10000 means width of the 10k range tombstones, and 1 means there is a single range tombstone in the entire DB (width is 1000). The 1 tombstone case is to test regression when there's very few range tombstones in the DB, as no range tombstone is likely to take a different code path than with range tombstones.
- Scan entire DB
| tombstone width | Pre-PR ops/sec | Post-PR ops/sec | ±% |
| ------------- | ------------- | ------------- | ------------- |
| 0 range tombstone |2525600 (± 43564) |2486917 (± 33698) |-1.53% |
| 100 |1853835 (± 24736) |2073884 (± 32176) |+11.87% |
| 1000 |422415 (± 7466) |1115801 (± 22781) |+164.15% |
| 10000 |22384 (± 227) |227919 (± 6647) |+918.22% |
| 1 range tombstone |2176540 (± 39050) |2434954 (± 24563) |+11.87% |
- Short range scan
| tombstone width | Pre-PR ops/sec | Post-PR ops/sec | ±% |
| ------------- | ------------- | ------------- | ------------- |
| 0 range tombstone |35398 (± 533) |35338 (± 569) |-0.17% |
| 100 |28276 (± 664) |31684 (± 331) |+12.05% |
| 1000 |7637 (± 77) |25422 (± 277) |+232.88% |
| 10000 |1367 |28667 |+1997.07% |
| 1 range tombstone |32618 (± 581) |32748 (± 506) |+0.4% |
- Long range scan
| tombstone width | Pre-PR ops/sec | Post-PR ops/sec | ±% |
| ------------- | ------------- | ------------- | ------------- |
| 0 range tombstone |2262 (± 33) |2353 (± 20) |+4.02% |
| 100 |1696 (± 26) |1926 (± 18) |+13.56% |
| 1000 |410 (± 6) |1255 (± 29) |+206.1% |
| 10000 |25 |414 |+1556.0% |
| 1 range tombstone |1957 (± 30) |2185 (± 44) |+11.65% |
- Microbench does not show significant regression: https://gist.github.com/cbi42/59f280f85a59b678e7e5d8561e693b61
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D38450331
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: b5ef12e8d8c289ed2e163ccdf277f5039b511fca
Summary:
Using the Sequence number to time mapping to decide if a key is hot or not in
compaction and place it in the corresponding level.
Note: the feature is not complete, level compaction will run indefinitely until
all penultimate level data is cold and small enough to not trigger compaction.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10370
Test Plan:
CI
* Run basic db_bench for universal compaction manually
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D37892338
Pulled By: jay-zhuang
fbshipit-source-id: 792bbd91b1ccc2f62b5d14c53118434bcaac4bbe
Summary:
This PR implements a coroutine version of batched MultiGet in order to concurrently read from multiple SST files in a level using async IO, thus reducing the latency of the MultiGet. The API from the user perspective is still synchronous and single threaded, with the RocksDB part of the processing happening in the context of the caller's thread. In Version::MultiGet, the decision is made whether to call synchronous or coroutine code.
A good way to review this PR is to review the first 4 commits in order - de773b3, 70c2f70, 10b50e1, and 377a597 - before reviewing the rest.
TODO:
1. Figure out how to build it in CircleCI (requires some dependencies to be installed)
2. Do some stress testing with coroutines enabled
No regression in synchronous MultiGet between this branch and main -
```
./db_bench -use_existing_db=true --db=/data/mysql/rocksdb/prefix_scan -benchmarks="readseq,multireadrandom" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=5000000 -batch_size=64 -multiread_batched=true -use_direct_reads=false -duration=60 -ops_between_duration_checks=1 -readonly=true -adaptive_readahead=true -threads=16 -cache_size=10485760000 -async_io=false -multiread_stride=40000 -statistics
```
Branch - ```multireadrandom : 4.025 micros/op 3975111 ops/sec 60.001 seconds 238509056 operations; 2062.3 MB/s (14767808 of 14767808 found)```
Main - ```multireadrandom : 3.987 micros/op 4013216 ops/sec 60.001 seconds 240795392 operations; 2082.1 MB/s (15231040 of 15231040 found)```
More benchmarks in various scenarios are given below. The measurements were taken with ```async_io=false``` (no coroutines) and ```async_io=true``` (use coroutines). For an IO bound workload (with every key requiring an IO), the coroutines version shows a clear benefit, being ~2.6X faster. For CPU bound workloads, the coroutines version has ~6-15% higher CPU utilization, depending on how many keys overlap an SST file.
1. Single thread IO bound workload on remote storage with sparse MultiGet batch keys (~1 key overlap/file) -
No coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 831.774 micros/op 1202 ops/sec 60.001 seconds 72136 operations; 0.6 MB/s (72136 of 72136 found)```
Using coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 318.742 micros/op 3137 ops/sec 60.003 seconds 188248 operations; 1.6 MB/s (188248 of 188248 found)```
2. Single thread CPU bound workload (all data cached) with ~1 key overlap/file -
No coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 4.127 micros/op 242322 ops/sec 60.000 seconds 14539384 operations; 125.7 MB/s (14539384 of 14539384 found)```
Using coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 4.741 micros/op 210935 ops/sec 60.000 seconds 12656176 operations; 109.4 MB/s (12656176 of 12656176 found)```
3. Single thread CPU bound workload with ~2 key overlap/file -
No coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 3.717 micros/op 269000 ops/sec 60.000 seconds 16140024 operations; 139.6 MB/s (16140024 of 16140024 found)```
Using coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 4.146 micros/op 241204 ops/sec 60.000 seconds 14472296 operations; 125.1 MB/s (14472296 of 14472296 found)```
4. CPU bound multi-threaded (16 threads) with ~4 key overlap/file -
No coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 4.534 micros/op 3528792 ops/sec 60.000 seconds 211728728 operations; 1830.7 MB/s (12737024 of 12737024 found) ```
Using coroutines - ```multireadrandom : 4.872 micros/op 3283812 ops/sec 60.000 seconds 197030096 operations; 1703.6 MB/s (12548032 of 12548032 found) ```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9968
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D36348563
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: c0ce85a505fd26ebfbb09786cbd7f25202038696
Summary:
**Context:**
Previous PR https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9748, https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9073, https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8428 added separate flag for each charged memory area. Such API design is not scalable as we charge more and more memory areas. Also, we foresee an opportunity to consolidate this feature with other cache usage related features such as `cache_index_and_filter_blocks` using `CacheEntryRole`.
Therefore we decided to consolidate all these flags with `CacheUsageOptions cache_usage_options` and this PR serves as the first step by consolidating memory-charging related flags.
**Summary:**
- Replaced old API reference with new ones, including making `kCompressionDictionaryBuildingBuffer` opt-out and added a unit test for that
- Added missing db bench/stress test for some memory charging features
- Renamed related test suite to indicate they are under the same theme of memory charging
- Refactored a commonly used mocked cache component in memory charging related tests to reduce code duplication
- Replaced the phrases "memory tracking" / "cache reservation" (other than CacheReservationManager-related ones) with "memory charging" for standard description of this feature.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9926
Test Plan:
- New unit test for opt-out `kCompressionDictionaryBuildingBuffer` `TEST_F(ChargeCompressionDictionaryBuildingBufferTest, Basic)`
- New unit test for option validation/sanitization `TEST_F(CacheUsageOptionsOverridesTest, SanitizeAndValidateOptions)`
- CI
- db bench (in case querying new options introduces regression) **+0.5% micros/op**: `TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/testdb ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq -db=$TEST_TMPDIR -charge_compression_dictionary_building_buffer=1(remove this for comparison) -compression_max_dict_bytes=10000 -disable_auto_compactions=1 -write_buffer_size=100000 -num=4000000 | egrep 'fillseq'`
#-run | (pre-PR) avg micros/op | std micros/op | (post-PR) micros/op | std micros/op | change (%)
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | --
10 | 3.9711 | 0.264408 | 3.9914 | 0.254563 | 0.5111933721
20 | 3.83905 | 0.0664488 | 3.8251 | 0.0695456 | **-0.3633711465**
40 | 3.86625 | 0.136669 | 3.8867 | 0.143765 | **0.5289363078**
- db_stress: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py blackbox -charge_compression_dictionary_building_buffer=1 -charge_filter_construction=1 -charge_table_reader=1 -cache_size=1` killed as normal
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D36054712
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: d406e90f5e0c5ea4dbcb585a484ad9302d4302af
Summary:
ToString() is created as some platform doesn't support std::to_string(). However, we've already used std::to_string() by mistake for 16 months (in db/db_info_dumper.cc). This commit just remove ToString().
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9955
Test Plan: Watch CI tests
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D36176799
fbshipit-source-id: bdb6dcd0e3a3ab96a1ac810f5d0188f684064471
Summary:
When MultiGet() determines that multiple query keys can be
served by examining the same data block in block cache (one Lookup()),
each PinnableSlice referring to data in that data block needs to hold
on to the block in cache so that they can be released at arbitrary
times by the API user. Historically this is accomplished with extra
calls to Ref() on the Handle from Lookup(), with each PinnableSlice
cleanup calling Release() on the Handle, but this creates extra
contention on the block cache for the extra Ref()s and Release()es,
especially because they hit the same cache shard repeatedly.
In the case of merge operands (possibly more cases?), the problem was
compounded by doing an extra Ref()+eventual Release() for each merge
operand for a key reusing a block (which could be the same key!), rather
than one Ref() per key. (Note: the non-shared case with `biter` was
already one per key.)
This change optimizes MultiGet not to rely on these extra, contentious
Ref()+Release() calls by instead, in the shared block case, wrapping
the cache Release() cleanup in a refcounted object referenced by the
PinnableSlices, such that after the last wrapped reference is released,
the cache entry is Release()ed. Relaxed atomic refcounts should be
much faster than mutex-guarded Ref() and Release(), and much less prone
to a performance cliff when MultiGet() does a lot of block sharing.
Note that I did not use std::shared_ptr, because that would require an
extra indirection object (shared_ptr itself new/delete) in order to
associate a ref increment/decrement with a Cleanable cleanup entry. (If
I assumed it was the size of two pointers, I could do some hackery to
make it work without the extra indirection, but that's too fragile.)
Some details:
* Fixed (removed) extra block cache tracing entries in cases of cache
entry reuse in MultiGet, but it's likely that in some other cases traces
are missing (XXX comment inserted)
* Moved existing implementations for cleanable.h from iterator.cc to
new cleanable.cc
* Improved API comments on Cleanable
* Added a public SharedCleanablePtr class to cleanable.h in case others
could benefit from the same pattern (potentially many Cleanables and/or
smart pointers referencing a shared Cleanable)
* Add a typedef for MultiGetContext::Mask
* Some variable renaming for clarity
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9899
Test Plan:
Added unit tests for SharedCleanablePtr.
Greatly enhanced ability of existing tests to detect cache use-after-free.
* Release PinnableSlices from MultiGet as they are read rather than in
bulk (in db_test_util wrapper).
* In ASAN build, default to using a trivially small LRUCache for block_cache
so that entries are immediately erased when unreferenced. (Updated two
tests that depend on caching.) New ASAN testsuite running time seems
OK to me.
If I introduce a bug into my implementation where we skip the shared
cleanups on block reuse, ASAN detects the bug in
`db_basic_test *MultiGet*`. If I remove either of the above testing
enhancements, the bug is not detected.
Consider for follow-up work: manipulate or randomize ordering of
PinnableSlice use and release from MultiGet db_test_util wrapper. But in
typical cases, natural ordering gives pretty good functional coverage.
Performance test:
In the extreme (but possible) case of MultiGetting the same or adjacent keys
in a batch, throughput can improve by an order of magnitude.
`./db_bench -benchmarks=multireadrandom -db=/dev/shm/testdb -readonly -num=5 -duration=10 -threads=20 -multiread_batched -batch_size=200`
Before ops/sec, num=5: 1,384,394
Before ops/sec, num=500: 6,423,720
After ops/sec, num=500: 10,658,794
After ops/sec, num=5: 16,027,257
Also note that previously, with high parallelism, having query keys
concentrated in a single block was worse than spreading them out a bit. Now
concentrated in a single block is faster than spread out, which is hopefully
consistent with natural expectation.
Random query performance: with num=1000000, over 999 x 10s runs running before & after simultaneously (each -threads=12):
Before: multireadrandom [AVG 999 runs] : 1088699 (± 7344) ops/sec; 120.4 (± 0.8 ) MB/sec
After: multireadrandom [AVG 999 runs] : 1090402 (± 7230) ops/sec; 120.6 (± 0.8 ) MB/sec
Possibly better, possibly in the noise.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D35907003
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: bbd244d703649a8ca12d476f2d03853ed9d1a17e
Summary:
The patch replaces `std::map` with a sorted `std::vector` for
`VersionStorageInfo::blob_files_` and preallocates the space
for the `vector` before saving the `BlobFileMetaData` into the
new `VersionStorageInfo` in `VersionBuilder::Rep::SaveBlobFilesTo`.
These changes reduce the time the DB mutex is held while
saving new `Version`s, and using a sorted `vector` also makes
lookups faster thanks to better memory locality.
In addition, the patch introduces helper methods
`VersionStorageInfo::GetBlobFileMetaData` and
`VersionStorageInfo::GetBlobFileMetaDataLB` that can be used by
clients to perform lookups in the `vector`, and does some general
cleanup in the parts of code where blob file metadata are used.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9526
Test Plan:
Ran `make check` and the crash test script for a while.
Performance was tested using a load-optimized benchmark (`fillseq` with vector memtable, no WAL) and small file sizes so that a significant number of files are produced:
```
numactl --interleave=all ./db_bench --benchmarks=fillseq --allow_concurrent_memtable_write=false --level0_file_num_compaction_trigger=4 --level0_slowdown_writes_trigger=20 --level0_stop_writes_trigger=30 --max_background_jobs=8 --max_write_buffer_number=8 --db=/data/ltamasi-dbbench --wal_dir=/data/ltamasi-dbbench --num=800000000 --num_levels=8 --key_size=20 --value_size=400 --block_size=8192 --cache_size=51539607552 --cache_numshardbits=6 --compression_max_dict_bytes=0 --compression_ratio=0.5 --compression_type=lz4 --bytes_per_sync=8388608 --cache_index_and_filter_blocks=1 --cache_high_pri_pool_ratio=0.5 --benchmark_write_rate_limit=0 --write_buffer_size=16777216 --target_file_size_base=16777216 --max_bytes_for_level_base=67108864 --verify_checksum=1 --delete_obsolete_files_period_micros=62914560 --max_bytes_for_level_multiplier=8 --statistics=0 --stats_per_interval=1 --stats_interval_seconds=20 --histogram=1 --memtablerep=skip_list --bloom_bits=10 --open_files=-1 --subcompactions=1 --compaction_style=0 --min_level_to_compress=3 --level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true --pin_l0_filter_and_index_blocks_in_cache=1 --soft_pending_compaction_bytes_limit=167503724544 --hard_pending_compaction_bytes_limit=335007449088 --min_level_to_compress=0 --use_existing_db=0 --sync=0 --threads=1 --memtablerep=vector --allow_concurrent_memtable_write=false --disable_wal=1 --enable_blob_files=1 --blob_file_size=16777216 --min_blob_size=0 --blob_compression_type=lz4 --enable_blob_garbage_collection=1 --seed=<some value>
```
Final statistics before the patch:
```
Cumulative writes: 0 writes, 700M keys, 0 commit groups, 0.0 writes per commit group, ingest: 284.62 GB, 121.27 MB/s
Interval writes: 0 writes, 334K keys, 0 commit groups, 0.0 writes per commit group, ingest: 139.28 MB, 72.46 MB/s
```
With the patch:
```
Cumulative writes: 0 writes, 760M keys, 0 commit groups, 0.0 writes per commit group, ingest: 308.66 GB, 131.52 MB/s
Interval writes: 0 writes, 445K keys, 0 commit groups, 0.0 writes per commit group, ingest: 185.35 MB, 93.15 MB/s
```
Total time to complete the benchmark is 2611 seconds with the patch, down from 2986 secs.
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D34082728
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: fc598abf676dce436734d06bb9d2d99a26a004fc
Summary:
In RocksDB option new_table_reader_for_compaction_inputs has
not effect on Compaction or on the behavior of RocksDB library.
Therefore, we are removing it in the upcoming 7.0 release.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9443
Test Plan: CircleCI
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D33788508
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: 324ca6f12bfd019e9bd5e1b0cdac39be5c3cec7d
Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
AdvancedColumnFamilyOptions::soft_rate_limit/hard_rate_limit have been marked as deprecated and it's time to actually remove the code.
- Keep `soft_rate_limit`/`hard_rate_limit` in `cf_mutable_options_type_info` to prevent throwing `InvalidArgument` in `GetColumnFamilyOptionsFromMap` when reading an option file still with these options (e.g, old option file generated from RocksDB before the deprecation)
- Keep `soft_rate_limit`/`hard_rate_limit` in under `OptionsOldApiTest.GetOptionsFromMapTest` to test the case mentioned above.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9452
Test Plan: Rely on my eyeball and CI
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D33804938
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: 133d49f7ec5238d7efceeb0a3122a5792a2b9945
Summary:
In response to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9354, this PR adds a way for users to "opt out"
of extra checks that can impact peak write performance, which
currently only includes force_consistency_checks. I considered including
some other options but did not see a db_bench performance difference.
Also clarify in comment for force_consistency_checks that it can "slow
down saturated writing."
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9363
Test Plan:
basic coverage in unit tests
Using my perf test in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9354 comment, I see
force_consistency_checks=true -> 725360 ops/s
force_consistency_checks=false -> 783072 ops/s
Reviewed By: mrambacher
Differential Revision: D33636559
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 25bfd006f4844675e7669b342817dd4c6a641e84
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9266
This diff adds a new tag `CommitWithTimestamp`. Currently, there is no API to trigger writing
this tag to WAL, thus it is unavailable to users.
This is an ongoing effort to add user-defined timestamp support to write-committed transactions.
This diff also indicates all column families that may potentially participate in the same
transaction must either disable timestamp or have the same timestamp format, since
`CommitWithTimestamp` tag is followed by a single byte-array denoting the commit
timestamp of the transaction. We will enforce this checking in a future diff. We keep this
diff small.
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D31721350
fbshipit-source-id: e1450811443647feb6ca01adec4c8aaae270ffc6
Summary:
I'm working on a new format_version=6 to support context
checksum (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9058) and this includes much of the refactoring and test
updates to support that change.
Test coverage data and manual inspection agree on dead code in
block_based_table_reader.cc (removed).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9240
Test Plan:
tests enhanced to cover more cases etc.
Extreme case performance testing indicates small % regression in fillseq (w/ compaction), though CPU profile etc. doesn't suggest any explanation. There is enhanced correctness checking in Footer::DecodeFrom, but this should be negligible.
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/ ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq -memtablerep=vector -allow_concurrent_memtable_write=false -num=30000000 -checksum_type=1 --disable_wal={false,true}
(Each is ops/s averaged over 50 runs, run simultaneously with competing configuration for load fairness)
Before w/ wal: 454512
After w/ wal: 444820 (-2.1%)
Before w/o wal: 1004560
After w/o wal: 998897 (-0.6%)
Since this doesn't modify WAL code, one would expect real effects to be larger in w/o wal case.
This regression will be corrected in a follow-up PR.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D32813769
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 444a244eabf3825cd329b7d1b150cddce320862f
Summary:
XXH3 - latest hash function that is extremely fast on large
data, easily faster than crc32c on most any x86_64 hardware. In
integrating this hash function, I have handled the compression type byte
in a non-standard way to avoid using the streaming API (extra data
movement and active code size because of hash function complexity). This
approach got a thumbs-up from Yann Collet.
Existing functionality change:
* reject bad ChecksumType in options with InvalidArgument
This change split off from https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9058 because context-aware checksum is
likely to be handled through different configuration than ChecksumType.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9069
Test Plan:
tests updated, and substantially expanded. Unit tests now check
that we don't accidentally change the values generated by the checksum
algorithms ("schema test") and that we properly handle
invalid/unrecognized checksum types in options or in file footer.
DBTestBase::ChangeOptions (etc.) updated from two to one configuration
changing from default CRC32c ChecksumType. The point of this test code
is to detect possible interactions among features, and the likelihood of
some bad interaction being detected by including configurations other
than XXH3 and CRC32c--and then not detected by stress/crash test--is
extremely low.
Stress/crash test also updated (manual run long enough to see it accepts
new checksum type). db_bench also updated for microbenchmarking
checksums.
### Performance microbenchmark (PORTABLE=0 DEBUG_LEVEL=0, Broadwell processor)
./db_bench -benchmarks=crc32c,xxhash,xxhash64,xxh3,crc32c,xxhash,xxhash64,xxh3,crc32c,xxhash,xxhash64,xxh3
crc32c : 0.200 micros/op 5005220 ops/sec; 19551.6 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxhash : 0.807 micros/op 1238408 ops/sec; 4837.5 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxhash64 : 0.421 micros/op 2376514 ops/sec; 9283.3 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxh3 : 0.171 micros/op 5858391 ops/sec; 22884.3 MB/s (4096 per op)
crc32c : 0.206 micros/op 4859566 ops/sec; 18982.7 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxhash : 0.793 micros/op 1260850 ops/sec; 4925.2 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxhash64 : 0.410 micros/op 2439182 ops/sec; 9528.1 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxh3 : 0.161 micros/op 6202872 ops/sec; 24230.0 MB/s (4096 per op)
crc32c : 0.203 micros/op 4924686 ops/sec; 19237.1 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxhash : 0.839 micros/op 1192388 ops/sec; 4657.8 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxhash64 : 0.424 micros/op 2357391 ops/sec; 9208.6 MB/s (4096 per op)
xxh3 : 0.162 micros/op 6182678 ops/sec; 24151.1 MB/s (4096 per op)
As you can see, especially once warmed up, xxh3 is fastest.
### Performance macrobenchmark (PORTABLE=0 DEBUG_LEVEL=0, Broadwell processor)
Test
for I in `seq 1 50`; do for CHK in 0 1 2 3 4; do TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb$CHK ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq -memtablerep=vector -allow_concurrent_memtable_write=false -num=30000000 -checksum_type=$CHK 2>&1 | grep 'micros/op' | tee -a results-$CHK & done; wait; done
Results (ops/sec)
for FILE in results*; do echo -n "$FILE "; awk '{ s += $5; c++; } END { print 1.0 * s / c; }' < $FILE; done
results-0 252118 # kNoChecksum
results-1 251588 # kCRC32c
results-2 251863 # kxxHash
results-3 252016 # kxxHash64
results-4 252038 # kXXH3
Reviewed By: mrambacher
Differential Revision: D31905249
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: cb9b998ebe2523fc7c400eedf62124a78bf4b4d1
Summary:
* New public header unique_id.h and function GetUniqueIdFromTableProperties
which computes a universally unique identifier based on table properties
of table files from recent RocksDB versions.
* Generation of DB session IDs is refactored so that they are
guaranteed unique in the lifetime of a process running RocksDB.
(SemiStructuredUniqueIdGen, new test included.) Along with file numbers,
this enables SST unique IDs to be guaranteed unique among SSTs generated
in a single process, and "better than random" between processes.
See https://github.com/pdillinger/unique_id
* In addition to public API producing 'external' unique IDs, there is a function
for producing 'internal' unique IDs, with functions for converting between the
two. In short, the external ID is "safe" for things people might do with it, and
the internal ID enables more "power user" features for the future. Specifically,
the external ID goes through a hashing layer so that any subset of bits in the
external ID can be used as a hash of the full ID, while also preserving
uniqueness guarantees in the first 128 bits (bijective both on first 128 bits
and on full 192 bits).
Intended follow-up:
* Use the internal unique IDs in cache keys. (Avoid conflicts with https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8912) (The file offset can be XORed into
the third 64-bit value of the unique ID.)
* Publish the external unique IDs in FileStorageInfo (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8968)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8990
Test Plan:
Unit tests added, and checking of unique ids in stress test.
NOTE in stress test we do not generate nearly enough files to thoroughly
stress uniqueness, but the test trims off pieces of the ID to check for
uniqueness so that we can infer (with some assumptions) stronger
properties in the aggregate.
Reviewed By: zhichao-cao, mrambacher
Differential Revision: D31582865
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 1f620c4c86af9abe2a8d177b9ccf2ad2b9f48243
Summary:
Made SystemClock into a Customizable class, complete with CreateFromString.
Cleaned up some of the existing SystemClock implementations that were redundant (NoSleep was the same as the internal one for MockEnv).
Changed MockEnv construction to allow Clock to be passed to the Memory/MockFileSystem.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8636
Reviewed By: zhichao-cao
Differential Revision: D30483360
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: cd0e3a876c39f8c98fe13374c06e8edbd5b9f2a1
Summary:
* FullKey and ParseFullKey appear to serve no purpose in the public API
(or anything else) so removed. Only use in one test updated.
* NumberToString serves no purpose vs. ToString so removed, numerous
calls updated
* Remove unnecessary forward declarations in metadata.h by re-arranging
class definitions.
* Remove some unneeded semicolons
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8736
Test Plan: existing tests
Reviewed By: mrambacher
Differential Revision: D30700039
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 1e436a576f511a6ed8b4d97af7cc8216bc729af2
Summary:
Made the EncryptionProvider and BlockCipher classes inherit from Customizable. Added/fixed the CreateFromString method to these classes to create instances from builtin or registered classes. Added tests to verify that instances can be registered and retrieved as appropriate.
Added the ability to configure the builtin (CTR, ROT13) classes from configurable properties. Added the appropriate tests.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8354
Reviewed By: zhichao-cao
Differential Revision: D29558949
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: c20286b32d179777e060f51a58943e9b0cf81d04
Summary:
- Added CreateFromString method to Env and FilesSystem to replace LoadEnv/Load. This method/signature is a precursor to making these classes extend Customizable.
- Added CreateFromSystem to Env. This method standardizes creating an Env from the environment variables. Previously, some places would check TEST_ENV_URI and others would also check TEST_FS_URI. Now the code is more command/standardized.
- Added CreateFromFlags to Env. These method allows Env to be create from string options (such as GFLAGS options) in a more standard way.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8174
Reviewed By: zhichao-cao
Differential Revision: D28999603
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: 88e6911e7e91f908458a7fe10a20e93ecbc275fb
Summary:
In a distributed environment, a file `rename()` operation can succeed on server (remote)
side, but the client can somehow return non-ok status to RocksDB. Possible reasons include
network partition, connection issue, etc. This happens in `rocksdb::SetCurrentFile()`, which
can be called in `LogAndApply() -> ProcessManifestWrites()` if RocksDB tries to switch to a
new MANIFEST. We currently always delete the new MANIFEST if an error occurs.
This is problematic in distributed world. If the server-side successfully updates the CURRENT
file via renaming, then a subsequent `DB::Open()` will try to look for the new MANIFEST and fail.
As a fix, we can track the execution result of IO operations on the new MANIFEST.
- If IO operations on the new MANIFEST fail, then we know the CURRENT must point to the original
MANIFEST. Therefore, it is safe to remove the new MANIFEST.
- If IO operations on the new MANIFEST all succeed, but somehow we end up in the clean up
code block, then we do not know whether CURRENT points to the new or old MANIFEST. (For local
POSIX-compliant FS, it should still point to old MANIFEST, but it does not matter if we keep the
new MANIFEST.) Therefore, we keep the new MANIFEST.
- Any future `LogAndApply()` will switch to a new MANIFEST and update CURRENT.
- If process reopens the db immediately after the failure, then the CURRENT file can point
to either the new MANIFEST or the old one, both of which exist. Therefore, recovery can
succeed and ignore the other.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8192
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: zhichao-cao
Differential Revision: D27804648
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 9c16f2a5ce41bc6aadf085e48449b19ede8423e4
Summary:
Resolves https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8014
- Add an assertion on `DB::Open` to ensure `db_options.max_open_files` is unlimited if FIFO Compaction is being used.
- This is to align with what the docs mention and to prevent premature data deletion.
- Update tests to work with this assertion.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8172
Test Plan:
```bash
$ make check -j$(nproc)
Generated TARGETS Summary:
- 6 libs
- 0 binarys
- 180 tests
```
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D27768792
Pulled By: thejchap
fbshipit-source-id: cf6350535e3a3577fec72bcba75b3c094dc7a6f3
Summary:
Extend support to track blob files in SST File manager.
This PR notifies SstFileManager whenever a new blob file is created,
via OnAddFile and an obsolete blob file deleted via OnDeleteFile
and delete file via ScheduleFileDeletion.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8037
Test Plan: Add new unit tests
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D26891237
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: 04c69ccfda2a73782fd5c51982dae58dd11979b6
Summary:
Haven't seen any production issues with new Bloom filter and
it's now > 1 year old (added in 6.6.0).
Updated check_format_compatible.sh and HISTORY.md
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8017
Test Plan: tests updated (or prior bugs fixed)
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D26762197
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 0e755c46b443087c1544da0fd545beb9c403d1c2
Summary:
Memtable bloom filter is useful in many use cases. A default value on with conservative 1.5% memory can benefit more use cases than use cases impacted.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6584
Test Plan: Run all existing tests.
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D20626739
fbshipit-source-id: 1dd45532b932139552519b8c2682bd954550c2f9
Summary:
Introduces and uses a SystemClock class to RocksDB. This class contains the time-related functions of an Env and these functions can be redirected from the Env to the SystemClock.
Many of the places that used an Env (Timer, PerfStepTimer, RepeatableThread, RateLimiter, WriteController) for time-related functions have been changed to use SystemClock instead. There are likely more places that can be changed, but this is a start to show what can/should be done. Over time it would be nice to migrate most (if not all) of the uses of the time functions from the Env to the SystemClock.
There are several Env classes that implement these functions. Most of these have not been converted yet to SystemClock implementations; that will come in a subsequent PR. It would be good to unify many of the Mock Timer implementations, so that they behave similarly and be tested similarly (some override Sleep, some use a MockSleep, etc).
Additionally, this change will allow new methods to be introduced to the SystemClock (like https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/7101 WaitFor) in a consistent manner across a smaller number of classes.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7858
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D26006406
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: ed10a8abbdab7ff2e23d69d85bd25b3e7e899e90
Summary:
Added "no-elide-constructors to the ASSERT_STATUS_CHECK builds. This flag gives more errors/warnings for some of the Status checks where an inner class checks a Status and later returns it. In this case, without the elide check on, the returned status may not have been checked in the caller, thereby bypassing the checked code.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7798
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D25680451
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: c3f14ed9e2a13f0a8c54d839d5fb4d1fc1e93917