Commit Graph

207 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Hui Xiao dcc6fc99f9 Fix StopWatch bug; Remove setting `record_read_stats` (#11474)
Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
- StopWatch enable stats even when `StatsLevel::kExceptTimers` is set. It's a harmless bug though since `reportTimeToHistogram()` will not report it anyway according to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/main/include/rocksdb/statistics.h#L705
-  https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11288 should have removed logics of setting `record_read_stats = !for_compaction` as we don't differentiate `RandomAccessFileReader`'s stats behavior based on compaction or not (instead we now report stats of different IO activities including compaction to different stats). Fixing this should report more compaction related file read micros that aren't reported previously due to `for_compaction==true`

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11474

Test Plan:
- DB bench pre vs post fix with small max_open_files

Setup command
`./db_ bench  -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -statistics=true -benchmarks=fillseq -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=5000 -write_buffer_size=655 -target_file_size_base=655 -disable_auto_compactions=true -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3`

Run command
`./db_bench --open_files=1 -use_existing_db=true -db=/dev/shm/testdb2/ -statistics=true -benchmarks=compactall -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=5000 -write_buffer_size=655 -target_file_size_base=655 -disable_auto_compactions=true -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3`

Pre-fix
```
rocksdb.sst.read.micros P50 : 2.056175 P95 : 4.647739 P99 : 8.948475 P100 : 25.000000 COUNT : 4451 SUM : 12827
rocksdb.file.read.flush.micros P50 : 0.000000 P95 : 0.000000 P99 : 0.000000 P100 : 0.000000 COUNT : 0 SUM : 0
rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros P50 : 2.057397 P95 : 4.625253 P99 : 8.749474 P100 : 25.000000 COUNT : 4382 SUM : 12608
rocksdb.file.read.db.open.micros P50 : 1.985294 P95 : 9.100000 P99 : 13.000000 P100 : 13.000000 COUNT : 69 SUM : 219
```

Post-fix (with a higher `rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros` count)
```
rocksdb.sst.read.micros P50 : 1.858968 P95 : 3.653086 P99 : 5.968000 P100 : 21.000000 COUNT : 3548 SUM : 9119
rocksdb.file.read.flush.micros P50 : 0.000000 P95 : 0.000000 P99 : 0.000000 P100 : 0.000000 COUNT : 0 SUM : 0
rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros P50 : 1.857027 P95 : 3.627614 P99 : 5.738621 P100 : 21.000000 COUNT : 3479 SUM : 8904
rocksdb.file.read.db.open.micros P50 : 2.000000 P95 : 6.733333 P99 : 11.000000 P100 : 11.000000 COUNT : 69 SUM : 215
```
- CI

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D46137221

Pulled By: hx235

fbshipit-source-id: e5b4ee7001af26f2ee0377bc6334f43b2a527388
2023-05-25 10:16:58 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 17bc27741f Improve memory efficiency of many OptimisticTransactionDBs (#11439)
Summary:
Currently it's easy to use a ton of memory with many small OptimisticTransactionDB instances, because each one by default allocates a million mutexes (40 bytes each on my compiler) for validating transactions. It even puts a lot of pressure on the allocator by allocating each one individually!

In this change:
* Create a new object and option that enables sharing these buckets of mutexes between instances. This is generally good for load balancing potential contention as various DBs become hotter or colder with txn writes. About the only cases where this sharing wouldn't make sense (e.g. each DB usually written by one thread) are cases that would be better off with OccValidationPolicy::kValidateSerial which doesn't use the buckets anyway.
* Allocate the mutexes in a contiguous array, for efficiency
* Add an option to ensure the mutexes are cache-aligned. In several other places we use cache-aligned mutexes but OptimisticTransactionDB historically does not. It should be a space-time trade-off the user can choose.
* Provide some visibility into the memory used by the mutex buckets with an ApproximateMemoryUsage() function (also used in unit testing)
* Share code with other users of "striped" mutexes, appropriate refactoring for customization & efficiency (e.g. using FastRange instead of modulus)

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11439

Test Plan: unit tests added. Ran sized-up versions of stress test in unit test, including a before-and-after performance test showing no consistent difference. (NOTE: OptimisticTransactionDB not currently covered by db_stress!)

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D45796393

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: ae2b3a26ad91ceeec15debcdc63ff48df6736a54
2023-05-24 11:57:15 -07:00
Hui Xiao 8f763bdeab Record and use the tail size to prefetch table tail (#11406)
Summary:
**Context:**
We prefetch the tail part of a SST file (i.e, the blocks after data blocks till the end of the file) during each SST file open in hope to prefetch all the stuff at once ahead of time for later read e.g, footer, meta index, filter/index etc. The existing approach to estimate the tail size to prefetch is through `TailPrefetchStats` heuristics introduced in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/4156, which has caused small reads in unlucky case (e.g,  small read into the tail buffer during table open in thread 1 under the same BlockBasedTableFactory object can make thread 2's tail prefetching use a small size that it shouldn't) and is hard to debug.  Therefore we decide to record the exact tail size and use it directly  to prefetch tail of the SST instead of relying heuristics.

**Summary:**
- Obtain and record in manifest the tail size in `BlockBasedTableBuilder::Finish()`
   - For backward compatibility, we fall back to TailPrefetchStats and last to simple heuristics that the tail size is a linear portion of the file size - see PR conversation for more.
- Make`tail_start_offset` part of the table properties and deduct tail size to record in manifest for external files (e.g, file ingestion, import CF) and db repair (with no access to manifest).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11406

Test Plan:
1. New UT
2. db bench
Note: db bench on /tmp/ where direct read is supported is too slow to finish and the default pinning setting in db bench is not helpful to profile # sst read of Get. Therefore I hacked the following to obtain the following comparison.
```
 diff --git a/table/block_based/block_based_table_reader.cc b/table/block_based/block_based_table_reader.cc
index bd5669f0f..791484c1f 100644
 --- a/table/block_based/block_based_table_reader.cc
+++ b/table/block_based/block_based_table_reader.cc
@@ -838,7 +838,7 @@ Status BlockBasedTable::PrefetchTail(
                            &tail_prefetch_size);

   // Try file system prefetch
-  if (!file->use_direct_io() && !force_direct_prefetch) {
+  if (false && !file->use_direct_io() && !force_direct_prefetch) {
     if (!file->Prefetch(prefetch_off, prefetch_len, ro.rate_limiter_priority)
              .IsNotSupported()) {
       prefetch_buffer->reset(new FilePrefetchBuffer(
 diff --git a/tools/db_bench_tool.cc b/tools/db_bench_tool.cc
index ea40f5fa0..39a0ac385 100644
 --- a/tools/db_bench_tool.cc
+++ b/tools/db_bench_tool.cc
@@ -4191,6 +4191,8 @@ class Benchmark {
           std::shared_ptr<TableFactory>(NewCuckooTableFactory(table_options));
     } else {
       BlockBasedTableOptions block_based_options;
+      block_based_options.metadata_cache_options.partition_pinning =
+      PinningTier::kAll;
       block_based_options.checksum =
           static_cast<ChecksumType>(FLAGS_checksum_type);
       if (FLAGS_use_hash_search) {
```
Create DB
```
./db_bench --bloom_bits=3 --use_existing_db=1 --seed=1682546046158958 --partition_index_and_filters=1 --statistics=1 -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -benchmarks=readrandom -key_size=3200 -value_size=512 -num=1000000 -write_buffer_size=6550000 -disable_auto_compactions=false -target_file_size_base=6550000 -compression_type=none
```
ReadRandom
```
./db_bench --bloom_bits=3 --use_existing_db=1 --seed=1682546046158958 --partition_index_and_filters=1 --statistics=1 -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -benchmarks=readrandom -key_size=3200 -value_size=512 -num=1000000 -write_buffer_size=6550000 -disable_auto_compactions=false -target_file_size_base=6550000 -compression_type=none
```
(a) Existing (Use TailPrefetchStats for tail size + use seperate prefetch buffer in PartitionedFilter/IndexReader::CacheDependencies())
```
rocksdb.table.open.prefetch.tail.hit COUNT : 3395
rocksdb.sst.read.micros P50 : 5.655570 P95 : 9.931396 P99 : 14.845454 P100 : 585.000000 COUNT : 999905 SUM : 6590614
```

(b) This PR (Record tail size + use the same tail buffer in PartitionedFilter/IndexReader::CacheDependencies())
```
rocksdb.table.open.prefetch.tail.hit COUNT : 14257
rocksdb.sst.read.micros P50 : 5.173347 P95 : 9.015017 P99 : 12.912610 P100 : 228.000000 COUNT : 998547 SUM : 5976540
```

As we can see, we increase the prefetch tail hit count and decrease SST read count with this PR

3. Test backward compatibility by stepping through reading with post-PR code on a db generated pre-PR.

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D45413346

Pulled By: hx235

fbshipit-source-id: 7d5e36a60a72477218f79905168d688452a4c064
2023-05-08 13:14:28 -07:00
Changyu Bi 62fc15f009 Block per key-value checksum (#11287)
Summary:
add option `block_protection_bytes_per_key` and implementation for block per key-value checksum. The main changes are
1. checksum construction and verification in block.cc/h
2. pass the option `block_protection_bytes_per_key` around (mainly for methods defined in table_cache.h)
3. unit tests/crash test updates

Tests:
* Added unit tests
* Crash test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py blackbox --simple --block_protection_bytes_per_key=1 --write_buffer_size=1048576`

Follow up (maybe as a separate PR): make sure corruption status returned from BlockIters are correctly handled.

Performance:
Turning on block per KV protection has a non-trivial negative impact on read performance and costs additional memory.
For memory, each block includes additional 24 bytes for checksum-related states beside checksum itself. For CPU, I set up a DB of size ~1.2GB with 5M keys (32 bytes key and 200 bytes value) which compacts to ~5 SST files (target file size 256 MB) in L6 without compression. I tested readrandom performance with various block cache size (to mimic various cache hit rates):

```
SETUP
make OPTIMIZE_LEVEL="-O3" USE_LTO=1 DEBUG_LEVEL=0 -j32 db_bench
./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq,compact0,waitforcompaction,compact,waitforcompaction -write_buffer_size=33554432 -level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true -max_background_jobs=8 -target_file_size_base=268435456 --num=5000000 --key_size=32 --value_size=200 --compression_type=none

BENCHMARK
./db_bench --use_existing_db -benchmarks=readtocache,readrandom[-X10] --num=5000000 --key_size=32 --disable_auto_compactions --reads=1000000 --block_protection_bytes_per_key=[0|1] --cache_size=$CACHESIZE

The readrandom ops/sec looks like the following:
Block cache size:  2GB        1.2GB * 0.9    1.2GB * 0.8     1.2GB * 0.5   8MB
Main              240805     223604         198176           161653       139040
PR prot_bytes=0   238691     226693         200127           161082       141153
PR prot_bytes=1   214983     193199         178532           137013       108211
prot_bytes=1 vs    -10%        -15%          -10.8%          -15%        -23%
prot_bytes=0
```

The benchmark has a lot of variance, but there was a 5% to 25% regression in this benchmark with different cache hit rates.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11287

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D43970708

Pulled By: cbi42

fbshipit-source-id: ef98d898b71779846fa74212b9ec9e08b7183940
2023-04-25 12:08:23 -07:00
Hui Xiao 151242ce46 Group rocksdb.sst.read.micros stat by IOActivity flush and compaction (#11288)
Summary:
**Context:**
The existing stat rocksdb.sst.read.micros does not reflect each of compaction and flush cases but aggregate them, which is not so helpful for us to understand IO read behavior of each of them.

**Summary**
- Update `StopWatch` and `RandomAccessFileReader` to record `rocksdb.sst.read.micros` and `rocksdb.file.{flush/compaction}.read.micros`
   - Fixed the default histogram in `RandomAccessFileReader`
- New field `ReadOptions/IOOptions::io_activity`; Pass `ReadOptions` through paths under db open, flush and compaction to where we can prepare `IOOptions` and pass it to `RandomAccessFileReader`
- Use `thread_status_util` for assertion in `DbStressFSWrapper` for continuous testing on we are passing correct `io_activity` under db open, flush and compaction

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11288

Test Plan:
- **Stress test**
- **Db bench 1: rocksdb.sst.read.micros COUNT ≈ sum of rocksdb.file.read.flush.micros's and rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros's.**  (without blob)
     - May not be exactly the same due to `HistogramStat::Add` only guarantees atomic not accuracy across threads.
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -statistics=true -benchmarks="fillseq" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=50000 -write_buffer_size=655 -target_file_size_base=655 -disable_auto_compactions=false -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3 (-use_plain_table=1 -prefix_size=10)
```
```
// BlockBasedTable
rocksdb.sst.read.micros P50 : 2.009374 P95 : 4.968548 P99 : 8.110362 P100 : 43.000000 COUNT : 40456 SUM : 114805
rocksdb.file.read.flush.micros P50 : 1.871841 P95 : 3.872407 P99 : 5.540541 P100 : 43.000000 COUNT : 2250 SUM : 6116
rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros P50 : 2.023109 P95 : 5.029149 P99 : 8.196910 P100 : 26.000000 COUNT : 38206 SUM : 108689

// PlainTable
Does not apply
```
- **Db bench 2: performance**

**Read**

SETUP: db with 900 files
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -benchmarks="fillseq" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=50000 -write_buffer_size=655  -disable_auto_compactions=true -target_file_size_base=655 -compression_type=none
```run till convergence
```
./db_bench -seed=1678564177044286 -use_existing_db=true -db=/dev/shm/testdb -benchmarks=readrandom[-X60] -statistics=true -num=1000000 -disable_auto_compactions=true -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3
```
Pre-change
`readrandom [AVG 60 runs] : 21568 (± 248) ops/sec`
Post-change (no regression, -0.3%)
`readrandom [AVG 60 runs] : 21486 (± 236) ops/sec`

**Compaction/Flush**run till convergence
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb2/ -seed=1678564177044286 -benchmarks="fillseq[-X60]" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=50000 -write_buffer_size=655  -disable_auto_compactions=false -target_file_size_base=655 -compression_type=none

rocksdb.sst.read.micros  COUNT : 33820
rocksdb.sst.read.flush.micros COUNT : 1800
rocksdb.sst.read.compaction.micros COUNT : 32020
```
Pre-change
`fillseq [AVG 46 runs] : 1391 (± 214) ops/sec;    0.7 (± 0.1) MB/sec`

Post-change (no regression, ~-0.4%)
`fillseq [AVG 46 runs] : 1385 (± 216) ops/sec;    0.7 (± 0.1) MB/sec`

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D44007011

Pulled By: hx235

fbshipit-source-id: a54c89e4846dfc9a135389edf3f3eedfea257132
2023-04-21 09:07:18 -07:00
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
Peter Dillinger 9f7801c5f1 Major Cache refactoring, CPU efficiency improvement (#10975)
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
2023-01-11 14:20:40 -08:00
anand76 8ffabdc226 Fix table cache leak in MultiGet with async_io (#10997)
Summary:
When MultiGet with the async_io option encounters an IO error in TableCache::GetTableReader, it may result in leakage of table cache handles due to queued coroutines being abandoned. This PR fixes it by ensuring any queued coroutines are run before aborting the MultiGet.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10997

Test Plan:
1. New unit test in db_basic_test
2. asan_crash

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D41587244

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: 900920cd3fba47cb0fc744a62facc5ffe2eccb64
2022-12-04 22:58:25 -08:00
Andrew Kryczka 5cf6ab6f31 Ran clang-format on db/ directory (#10910)
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
2022-11-02 14:34:24 -07:00
Changyu Bi 9f2363f4c4 User-defined timestamp support for `DeleteRange()` (#10661)
Summary:
Add user-defined timestamp support for range deletion. The new API is `DeleteRange(opt, cf, begin_key, end_key, ts)`. Most of the change is to update the comparator to compare without timestamp. Other than that, major changes are
- internal range tombstone data structures (`FragmentedRangeTombstoneList`, `RangeTombstone`, etc.) to store timestamps.
- Garbage collection of range tombstones and range tombstone covered keys during compaction.
- Get()/MultiGet() to return the timestamp of a range tombstone when needed.
- Get/Iterator with range tombstones bounded by readoptions.timestamp.
- timestamp crash test now issues DeleteRange by default.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10661

Test Plan:
- Added unit test: `make check`
- Stress test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py --enable_ts whitebox --readpercent=57 --prefixpercent=4 --writepercent=25 -delpercent=5 --iterpercent=5 --delrangepercent=4`
- Ran `db_bench` to measure regression when timestamp is not enabled. The tests are for write (with some range deletion) and iterate with DB fitting in memory: `./db_bench--benchmarks=fillrandom,seekrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=200 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=500000 --reads=500000 --seek_nexts=10 --disable_auto_compactions -disable_wal=true --max_num_range_tombstones=1000`.  Did not see consistent regression in no timestamp case.

| micros/op | fillrandom | seekrandom |
| --- | --- | --- |
|main| 2.58 |10.96|
|PR 10661| 2.68 |10.63|

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D39441192

Pulled By: cbi42

fbshipit-source-id: f05aca3c41605caf110daf0ff405919f300ddec2
2022-09-30 16:13:03 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 6de7081cf3 Always verify SST unique IDs on SST file open (#10532)
Summary:
Although we've been tracking SST unique IDs in the DB manifest
unconditionally, checking has been opt-in and with an extra pass at DB::Open
time. This changes the behavior of `verify_sst_unique_id_in_manifest` to
check unique ID against manifest every time an SST file is opened through
table cache (normal DB operations), replacing the explicit pass over files
at DB::Open time. This change also enables the option by default and
removes the "EXPERIMENTAL" designation.

One possible criticism is that the option no longer ensures the integrity
of a DB at Open time. This is far from an all-or-nothing issue. Verifying
the IDs of all SST files hardly ensures all the data in the DB is readable.
(VerifyChecksum is supposed to do that.) Also, with
max_open_files=-1 (default, extremely common), all SST files are
opened at DB::Open time anyway.

Implementation details:
* `VerifySstUniqueIdInManifest()` functions are the extra/explicit pass
that is now removed.
* Unit tests that manipulate/corrupt table properties have to opt out of
this check, because that corrupts the "actual" unique id. (And even for
testing we don't currently have a mechanism to set "no unique id"
in the in-memory file metadata for new files.)
* A lot of other unit test churn relates to (a) default checking on, and
(b) checking on SST open even without DB::Open (e.g. on flush)
* Use `FileMetaData` for more `TableCache` operations (in place of
`FileDescriptor`) so that we have access to the unique_id whenever
we might need to open an SST file. **There is the possibility of
performance impact because we can no longer use the more
localized `fd` part of an `FdWithKeyRange` but instead follow the
`file_metadata` pointer. However, this change (possible regression)
is only done for `GetMemoryUsageByTableReaders`.**
* Removed a completely unnecessary constructor overload of
`TableReaderOptions`

Possible follow-up:
* Verification only happens when opening through table cache. Are there
more places where this should happen?
* Improve error message when there is a file size mismatch vs. manifest
(FIXME added in the appropriate place).
* I'm not sure there's a justification for `FileDescriptor` to be distinct from
`FileMetaData`.
* I'm skeptical that `FdWithKeyRange` really still makes sense for
optimizing some data locality by duplicating some data in memory, but I
could be wrong.
* An unnecessary overload of NewTableReader was recently added, in
the public API nonetheless (though unusable there). It should be cleaned
up to put most things under `TableReaderOptions`.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10532

Test Plan:
updated unit tests

Performance test showing no significant difference (just noise I think):
`./db_bench -benchmarks=readwhilewriting[-X10] -num=3000000 -disable_wal=1 -bloom_bits=8 -write_buffer_size=1000000 -target_file_size_base=1000000`
Before: readwhilewriting [AVG 10 runs] : 68702 (± 6932) ops/sec
After: readwhilewriting [AVG 10 runs] : 68239 (± 7198) ops/sec

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D38765551

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: a827a708155f12344ab2a5c16e7701c7636da4c2
2022-09-07 22:52:42 -07:00
Changyu Bi 30bc495c03 Skip swaths of range tombstone covered keys in merging iterator (2022 edition) (#10449)
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
2022-09-02 09:51:19 -07:00
anand76 65814a4ae6 Fix range deletion handling in async MultiGet (#10534)
Summary:
The fix in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10513 was not complete w.r.t range deletion handling. It didn't handle the case where a file with a range tombstone covering a key also overlapped another key in the batch. In that case, ```mget_range``` would be non-empty. However, ```mget_range``` would only have the second key and, therefore, the first key would be skipped when iterating through the range tombstones in ```TableCache::MultiGet```.

Test plan -
1. Add a unit test
2. Run stress tests

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10534

Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D38773880

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: dae491dbe52e18bbce5179b77b63f20771a66c00
2022-08-17 13:51:39 -07:00
anand76 0b02960d8c Fix MultiGet range deletion handling and a memory leak (#10513)
Summary:
This PR fixes 2 bugs introduced in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10432 -
1. If the bloom filter returned a negative result for all MultiGet keys in a file, the range tombstones in that file were being ignored, resulting in incorrect results if those tombstones covered a key in a higher level.
2. If all the keys in a file were filtered out in `TableCache::MultiGetFilter`, the table cache handle was not being released.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10513

Test Plan: Add a new unit test that fails without this fix

Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D38548739

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: a741a1e25d2e991d63f038100f126c2dc404a87c
2022-08-09 14:44:47 -07:00
anand76 bf4532eb5c Break TableReader MultiGet into filter and lookup stages (#10432)
Summary:
This PR is the first step in enhancing the coroutines MultiGet to be able to lookup a batch in parallel across levels. By having a separate TableReader function for probing the bloom filters, we can quickly figure out which overlapping keys from a batch are definitely not in the file and can move on to the next level.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10432

Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D38245910

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: 3d20db2350378c3fe6f086f0c7ba5ff01d7f04de
2022-08-04 12:51:57 -07:00
sdong 252bea405e Improve SubCompaction Partitioning (#10393)
Summary:
Unit tests still haven't been fixed. Also need to add more tests. But I ran some simple fillrandom db_bench and the partitioning feels reasonable.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10393

Test Plan:
1. Make sure existing tests pass. This should cover some basic sub compaction logic to be correct and the partitioning result is reasonable;
2. Add a new unit test to ApproximateKeyAnchors()
3. Run some db_bench with max_subcompaction = 4 and watch the compaction is indeed partitioned evenly.

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D38043783

fbshipit-source-id: 085008e0f85f9b7c5abff7800307618320efb19f
2022-07-23 17:38:49 -07:00
anand76 e015206dd6 Fix crash due to MultiGet async IO and direct IO (#10024)
Summary:
MultiGet with async IO is not officially supported with Posix yet. Avoid a crash by using synchronous MultiRead when direct IO is enabled.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10024

Test Plan: Run db_crashtest.py manually

Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D36551053

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: 72190418fa92dd0397e87825df618b12c9bdecda
2022-05-20 12:38:21 -07:00
anand76 57997ddaaf Multi file concurrency in MultiGet using coroutines and async IO (#9968)
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
2022-05-19 15:36:27 -07:00
Wang Yuan 89571b30e5 Improve the precision of row entry charge in row_cache (#9337)
Summary:
- For entry charge, we should only calculate the value size instead of including key size in LRUCache
- The capacity of string could show the memory usage precisely

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9337

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D36219855

fbshipit-source-id: 393e48ca419d230dc552ae62dd0eb1cc9f45961d
2022-05-09 12:27:38 -07:00
gukaifeng 89429a9081 fix a bug of the ticker NO_FILE_OPENS (#9677)
Summary:
In the original code, the value of `NO_FILE_OPENS` corresponding to the Ticker item will be increased regardless of whether the file is successfully opened or not. Even counts are repeated, which can lead to skewed counts.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9677

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D34725733

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 841234ed03802c0105fd2107d82a740265ead576
2022-03-15 09:55:49 -07:00
Jay Zhuang f4b2500e12 Add last level and non-last level read statistics (#9519)
Summary:
Add last level and non-last level read statistics:
```
LAST_LEVEL_READ_BYTES,
LAST_LEVEL_READ_COUNT,
NON_LAST_LEVEL_READ_BYTES,
NON_LAST_LEVEL_READ_COUNT,
```

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9519

Test Plan: added unittest

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D34062539

Pulled By: jay-zhuang

fbshipit-source-id: 908644c3050878b4234febdc72e3e19d89af38cd
2022-02-18 14:23:07 -08:00
Peter Dillinger fc9d4071f0 Fast path for detecting unchanged prefix_extractor (#9407)
Summary:
Fixes a major performance regression in 6.26, where
extra CPU is spent in SliceTransform::AsString when reads involve
a prefix_extractor (Get, MultiGet, Seek). Common case performance
is now better than 6.25.

This change creates a "fast path" for verifying that the current prefix
extractor is unchanged and compatible with what was used to
generate a table file. This fast path detects the common case by
pointer comparison on the current prefix_extractor and a "known
good" prefix extractor (if applicable) that is saved at the time the
table reader is opened. The "known good" prefix extractor is saved
as another shared_ptr copy (in an existing field, however) to ensure
the pointer is not recycled.

When the prefix_extractor has changed to a different instance but
same compatible configuration (rare, odd), performance is still a
regression compared to 6.25, but this is likely acceptable because
of the oddity of such a case. The performance of incompatible
prefix_extractor is essentially unchanged.

Also fixed a minor case (ForwardIterator) where a prefix_extractor
could be used via a raw pointer after being freed as a shared_ptr,
if replaced via SetOptions.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9407

Test Plan:
## Performance
Populate DB with `TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=10000000 -disable_wal=1 -write_buffer_size=10000000 -bloom_bits=16 -compaction_style=2 -fifo_compaction_max_table_files_size_mb=10000 -fifo_compaction_allow_compaction=0 -prefix_size=12`

Running head-to-head comparisons simultaneously with `TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb ./db_bench -use_existing_db -readonly -benchmarks=seekrandom -num=10000000 -duration=20 -disable_wal=1 -bloom_bits=16 -compaction_style=2 -fifo_compaction_max_table_files_size_mb=10000 -fifo_compaction_allow_compaction=0 -prefix_size=12`

Below each is compared by ops/sec vs. baseline which is version 6.25 (multiple baseline runs because of variable machine load)

v6.26: 4833 vs. 6698 (<- major regression!)
v6.27: 4737 vs. 6397 (still)
New: 6704 vs. 6461 (better than baseline in common case)
Disabled fastpath: 4843 vs. 6389 (e.g. if prefix extractor instance changes but is still compatible)
Changed prefix size (no usable filter) in new: 787 vs. 5927
Changed prefix size (no usable filter) in new & baseline: 773 vs. 784

Reviewed By: mrambacher

Differential Revision: D33677812

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 571d9711c461fb97f957378a061b7e7dbc4d6a76
2022-01-21 11:37:46 -08:00
sdong 88875df821 File temperature information should be preserved when restart the DB (#9242)
Summary:
Fix a bug that causes file temperature not preserved after DB is restarted, or options.max_manifest_file_size is hit.
Also, pass temperature information to NewRandomAccessFile() to allow users to hack a solution where they don't preserve tiering information.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9242

Test Plan: Add a unit test that would fail without the fix.

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D32818150

fbshipit-source-id: 36aa3f148c60107f7b8e9d65b63b039f9e1a1eec
2021-12-03 14:43:14 -08:00
Peter Dillinger 230660be73 Improve / clean up meta block code & integrity (#9163)
Summary:
* Checksums are now checked on meta blocks unless specifically
suppressed or not applicable (e.g. plain table). (Was other way around.)
This means a number of cases that were not checking checksums now are,
including direct read TableProperties in Version::GetTableProperties
(fixed in meta_blocks ReadTableProperties), reading any block from
PersistentCache (fixed in BlockFetcher), read TableProperties in
SstFileDumper (ldb/sst_dump/BackupEngine) before table reader open,
maybe more.
* For that to work, I moved the global_seqno+TableProperties checksum
logic to the shared table/ code, because that is used by many utilies
such as SstFileDumper.
* Also for that to work, we have to know when we're dealing with a block
that has a checksum (trailer), so added that capability to Footer based
on magic number, and from there BlockFetcher.
* Knowledge of trailer presence has also fixed a problem where other
table formats were reading blocks including bytes for a non-existant
trailer--and awkwardly kind-of not using them, e.g. no shared code
checking checksums. (BlockFetcher compression type was populated
incorrectly.) Now we only read what is needed.
* Minimized code duplication and differing/incompatible/awkward
abstractions in meta_blocks.{cc,h} (e.g. SeekTo in metaindex block
without parsing block handle)
* Moved some meta block handling code from table_properties*.*
* Moved some code specific to block-based table from shared table/ code
to BlockBasedTable class. The checksum stuff means we can't completely
separate it, but things that don't need to be in shared table/ code
should not be.
* Use unique_ptr rather than raw ptr in more places. (Note: you can
std::move from unique_ptr to shared_ptr.)

Without enhancements to GetPropertiesOfAllTablesTest (see below),
net reduction of roughly 100 lines of code.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9163

Test Plan:
existing tests and
* Enhanced DBTablePropertiesTest.GetPropertiesOfAllTablesTest to verify that
checksums are now checked on direct read of table properties by TableCache
(new test would fail before this change)
* Also enhanced DBTablePropertiesTest.GetPropertiesOfAllTablesTest to test
putting table properties under old meta name
* Also generally enhanced that same test to actually test what it was
supposed to be testing already, by kicking things out of table cache when
we don't want them there.

Reviewed By: ajkr, mrambacher

Differential Revision: D32514757

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 507964b9311d186ae8d1131182290cbd97a99fa9
2021-11-18 11:43:44 -08:00
Zhichao Cao b632ed0c67 Add file temperature related counter and bytes stats to and io_stats (#8710)
Summary:
For tiered storage project, we need to know the block read count and read bytes of files with different temperature. Add FileIOByTemperature to IOStatsContext and collect the bytes read and read count from different temperature files through the RandomAccessFileReader.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8710

Test Plan: make check, add the testing cases

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D30582400

Pulled By: zhichao-cao

fbshipit-source-id: d83173de594374fc8404af5ce93a6a9be72c7141
2021-10-07 14:58:41 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 74b7c0d249 Fix use-after-free on implicit temporary FileOptions (#8571)
Summary:
FileOptions has an implicit conversion from EnvOptions and some
internal APIs take `const FileOptions&` and save the reference, which is
counter to Google C++ guidelines,

> Avoid defining functions that require a const reference parameter to outlive the call, because const reference parameters bind to temporaries. Instead, find a way to eliminate the lifetime requirement (for example, by copying the parameter), or pass it by const pointer and document the lifetime and non-null requirements.

This is at least a problem for repair.cc, which passes an EnvOptions to
TableCache(), which would save a reference to the temporary copy as
FileOptions. This was unfortunately only caught as a side effect of
changes in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8544.

This change fixes the repair.cc case and updates the involved internal
APIs that save a reference to use `const FileOptions*` instead.

Unfortunately, I don't know how to get any of our sanitizers to reliably
report bugs like this, so I can't rule out more existing in our
codebase.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8571

Test Plan:
Test that issues seen with https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8544 are fixed (can reproduce on
AWS EC2)

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D29943890

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 95f9c5251548777b4dc994c1a083dd2add5799c9
2021-07-27 21:49:14 -07:00
Peter Dillinger e352bd5742 Fix missing Handle release in TableCache::GetRangeTombstoneIterator (#8589)
Summary:
This appears to be little used code so not a major bug, but is
blocking https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8544

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8589

Test Plan:
Added regression test to the end of
DBRangeDelTest::TableEvictedDuringScan. Without this fix, ASAN reports
memory leak.

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D29943623

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: f7115fa6d4440aef83888ff609aa03d09216463b
2021-07-27 21:32:11 -07:00
Zhichao Cao f44e69c64a Use DbSessionId as cache key prefix when secondary cache is enabled (#8360)
Summary:
Currently, we either use the file system inode or a monotonically incrementing runtime ID as the block cache key prefix. However, if we use a monotonically incrementing runtime ID (in the case that the file system does not support inode id generation), in some cases, it cannot ensure uniqueness (e.g., we have secondary cache migrated from host to host). We use DbSessionID (20 bytes) + current file number (at most 10 bytes) as the new cache block key prefix when the secondary cache is enabled. So can accommodate scenarios such as transfer of cache state across hosts.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8360

Test Plan: add the test to lru_cache_test

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D29006215

Pulled By: zhichao-cao

fbshipit-source-id: 6cff686b38d83904667a2bd39923cd030df16814
2021-06-10 11:02:43 -07:00
mrambacher 8948dc8524 Make ImmutableOptions struct that inherits from ImmutableCFOptions and ImmutableDBOptions (#8262)
Summary:
The ImmutableCFOptions contained a bunch of fields that belonged to the ImmutableDBOptions.  This change cleans that up by introducing an ImmutableOptions struct.  Following the pattern of Options struct, this class inherits from the DB and CFOption structs (of the Immutable form).

Only one structural change (the ImmutableCFOptions::fs was changed to a shared_ptr from a raw one) is in this PR.  All of the other changes involve moving the member variables from the ImmutableCFOptions into the ImmutableOptions and changing member variables or function parameters as required for compilation purposes.

Follow-on PRs may do a further clean-up of the code, such as renaming variables (such as "ImmutableOptions cf_options") and potentially eliminating un-needed function parameters (there is no longer a need to pass both an ImmutableDBOptions and an ImmutableOptions to a function).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8262

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D28226540

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: 18ae71eadc879dedbe38b1eb8e6f9ff5c7147dbf
2021-05-05 14:00:17 -07:00
mrambacher 0ca6d6297f Rename variables in ImmutableCFOptions to avoid conflicts with ImmutableDBOptions (#8227)
Summary:
Renaming ImmutableCFOptions::info_log and statistics to logger and stats.  This is stage 2 in creating an ImmutableOptions class.  It is necessary because the names match those in ImmutableOptions and have different types.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8227

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D28000967

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: 3bf2aa04e8f1e8724d825b7deacf41080c14420b
2021-04-26 12:43:45 -07:00
mrambacher 01e460d538 Make types of Immutable/Mutable Options fields match that of the underlying Option (#8176)
Summary:
This PR is a first step at attempting to clean up some of the Mutable/Immutable Options code.  With this change, a DBOption and a ColumnFamilyOption can be reconstructed from their Mutable and Immutable equivalents, respectively.

readrandom tests do not show any performance degradation versus master (though both are slightly slower than the current 6.19 release).

There are still fields in the ImmutableCFOptions that are not CF options but DB options.  Eventually, I would like to move those into an ImmutableOptions (= ImmutableDBOptions+ImmutableCFOptions).  But that will be part of a future PR to minimize changes and disruptions.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8176

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D27954339

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: ec6b805ba9afe6e094bffdbd76246c2d99aa9fad
2021-04-22 20:43:54 -07:00
mrambacher 3dff28cf9b Use SystemClock* instead of std::shared_ptr<SystemClock> in lower level routines (#8033)
Summary:
For performance purposes, the lower level routines were changed to use a SystemClock* instead of a std::shared_ptr<SystemClock>.  The shared ptr has some performance degradation on certain hardware classes.

For most of the system, there is no risk of the pointer being deleted/invalid because the shared_ptr will be stored elsewhere.  For example, the ImmutableDBOptions stores the Env which has a std::shared_ptr<SystemClock> in it.  The SystemClock* within the ImmutableDBOptions is essentially a "short cut" to gain access to this constant resource.

There were a few classes (PeriodicWorkScheduler?) where the "short cut" property did not hold.  In those cases, the shared pointer was preserved.

Using db_bench readrandom perf_level=3 on my EC2 box, this change performed as well or better than 6.17:

6.17: readrandom   :      28.046 micros/op 854902 ops/sec;   61.3 MB/s (355999 of 355999 found)
6.18: readrandom   :      32.615 micros/op 735306 ops/sec;   52.7 MB/s (290999 of 290999 found)
PR: readrandom   :      27.500 micros/op 871909 ops/sec;   62.5 MB/s (367999 of 367999 found)

(Note that the times for 6.18 are prior to revert of the SystemClock).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8033

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D27014563

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: ad0459eba03182e454391b5926bf5cdd45657b67
2021-03-15 04:34:11 -07:00
Andrew Kryczka 78ee8564ad Integrity protection for live updates to WriteBatch (#7748)
Summary:
This PR adds the foundation classes for key-value integrity protection and the first use case: protecting live updates from the source buffers added to `WriteBatch` through the destination buffer in `MemTable`. The width of the protection info is not yet configurable -- only eight bytes per key is supported. This PR allows users to enable protection by constructing `WriteBatch` with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`. It does not yet expose a way for users to get integrity protection via other write APIs (e.g., `Put()`, `Merge()`, `Delete()`, etc.).

The foundation classes (`ProtectionInfo.*`) embed the coverage info in their type, and provide `Protect.*()` and `Strip.*()` functions to navigate between types with different coverage. For making bytes per key configurable (for powers of two up to eight) in the future, these classes are templated on the unsigned integer type used to store the protection info. That integer contains the XOR'd result of hashes with independent seeds for all covered fields. For integer fields, the hash is computed on the raw unadjusted bytes, so the result is endian-dependent. The most significant bytes are truncated when the hash value (8 bytes) is wider than the protection integer.

When `WriteBatch` is constructed with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`, we hold a `ProtectionInfoKVOTC` (i.e., one that covers key, value, optype aka `ValueType`, timestamp, and CF ID) for each entry added to the batch. The protection info is generated from the original buffers passed by the user, as well as the original metadata generated internally. When writing to memtable, each entry is transformed to a `ProtectionInfoKVOTS` (i.e., dropping coverage of CF ID and adding coverage of sequence number), since at that point we know the sequence number, and have already selected a memtable corresponding to a particular CF. This protection info is verified once the entry is encoded in the `MemTable` buffer.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7748

Test Plan:
- an integration test to verify a wide variety of single-byte changes to the encoded `MemTable` buffer are caught
- add to stress/crash test to verify it works in variety of configs/operations without intentional corruption
- [deferred] unit tests for `ProtectionInfo.*` classes for edge cases like KV swap, `SliceParts` and `Slice` APIs are interchangeable, etc.

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D25754492

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: e481bac6c03c2ab268be41359730f1ceb9964866
2021-01-29 12:18:58 -08:00
mrambacher 12f1137355 Add a SystemClock class to capture the time functions of an Env (#7858)
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
2021-01-25 22:09:11 -08:00
Jay Zhuang 881e0dcc09 Fix MultiGet unable to query timestamp data issue (#7589)
Summary:
The filter query key should not contain timestamp. The timestamp is
stripped for Get(), but not MultiGet().

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7589

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D24494661

Pulled By: jay-zhuang

fbshipit-source-id: fc5ff40f9d683a89a760c6ff0ab3aed05a70c317
2020-11-03 09:45:41 -08:00
sdong 94fc676d3f Fix db_properties_test for ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED (#7490)
Summary:
Add all status handling in db_properties_test so that it can pass ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7490

Test Plan: Run the test with ASSERT_STATUS_CHECKED

Reviewed By: jay-zhuang

Differential Revision: D24065382

fbshipit-source-id: e008916155196891478c964df0226545308ca71d
2020-10-01 17:47:09 -07:00
Andrew Kryczka 8115eb520d add Status check assertions for repair_test (#7455)
Summary: Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7455

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D23985283

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: 5dd2be62350f6e31d13a1e7821cb848a37699c93
2020-09-29 16:30:08 -07:00
sdong d08a9005b7 Make db_basic_test pass assert status checked (#7452)
Summary:
Add db_basic_test status check list. Some of the warnings are suppressed. It is possible that some of them are due to real bugs.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7452

Test Plan: See CI tests pass.

Reviewed By: zhichao-cao

Differential Revision: D23979764

fbshipit-source-id: 6151570c2a9b931b0fbb3fe939a94b2bd1583cbe
2020-09-29 09:49:04 -07:00
Akanksha Mahajan 8e0df9050c Store FSRandomAccessPtr object in RandomAccessFileReader (#7192)
Summary:
Replace FSRandomAccessFile pointer with FSRandomAccessFilePtr
    object in RandomAccessFileReader.
    This new object wraps FSRandomAccessFile pointer.

    Objective: If tracing is enabled, FSRandomAccessFile Ptr returns
    FSRandomAccessFileTracingWrapper pointer that includes all necessary
    information in IORecord and calls underlying FileSystem and invokes
    IOTracer to dump that record in a binary file. If tracing is disabled
    then, underlying FileSystem pointer is returned directly.
    FSRandomAccessFilePtr wrapper class is added to bypass the FSRandomAccessFileWrapper when
    tracing is disabled.

    Test Plan: make check -j64

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7192

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D23356867

Pulled By: akankshamahajan15

fbshipit-source-id: 48f31168166a17a7444b40be44a9a9d4a5c7182c
2020-08-27 11:21:52 -07:00
Anand Ananthabhotla 9a5886bd8c Extend Get/MultiGet deadline support to table open (#6982)
Summary:
Current implementation of the ```read_options.deadline``` option only checks the deadline for random file reads during point lookups. This PR extends the checks to file opens, prefetches and preloads as part of table open.

The main changes are in the ```BlockBasedTable```, partitioned index and filter readers, and ```TableCache``` to take ReadOptions as an additional parameter. In ```BlockBasedTable::Open```, in order to retain existing behavior w.r.t checksum verification and block cache usage, we filter out most of the options in ```ReadOptions``` except ```deadline```. However, having the ```ReadOptions``` gives us more flexibility to honor other options like verify_checksums, fill_cache etc. in the future.

Additional changes in callsites due to function signature changes in ```NewTableReader()``` and ```FilePrefetchBuffer```.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6982

Test Plan: Add new unit tests in db_basic_test

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D22219515

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: 8a3b92f4a889808013838603aa3ca35229cd501b
2020-06-29 14:53:17 -07:00
Andrew Kryczka 02db03af8d make L0 index/filter pinned memory usage predictable (#6911)
Summary:
Memory pinned by `pin_l0_filter_and_index_blocks_in_cache` needs to be predictable based on user config. This PR makes sure
we do not pin extra memory for large files generated by intra-L0 (see https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/6889).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6911

Test Plan: unit test

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D21835818

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: a11a088549d06bed8aacc2548d266e5983f0ead4
2020-06-09 16:51:23 -07:00
sdong 4a4b8a1344 sst_dump to reduce number of file reads (#6836)
Summary:
sst_dump can issue many file reads from the file system. This doesn't work well with file systems without a OS cache, especially remote file systems. In order to mitigate this problem, several improvements are done:
1. --readahead_size is added, so that users can specify readahead size when scanning the data.
2. Force a 512KB tail readahead, which prevents three I/Os for footer, meta index and property blocks and hopefully index and filter blocks too.
3. Consoldiate SSTDump's I/Os before opening the file for read. Use the same file prefetch buffer.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6836

Test Plan: Add a test that covers this new feature.

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D21516607

fbshipit-source-id: 3ae43526286f67b2f4a5bdedfbc92719d579b87e
2020-05-12 18:23:33 -07:00
Derrick Pallas 5272305437 Fix FilterBench when RTTI=0 (#6732)
Summary:
The dynamic_cast in the filter benchmark causes release mode to fail due to
no-rtti.  Replace with static_cast_with_check.

Signed-off-by: Derrick Pallas <derrick@pallas.us>

Addition by peterd: Remove unnecessary 2nd template arg on all static_cast_with_check
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6732

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D21304260

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 6e8eb437c4ca5a16dbbfa4053d67c4ad55f1608c
2020-04-29 13:09:23 -07:00
Tomas Kolda 6ee66cf8f0 Prevents Table Cache to open same files more times (#6707)
Summary:
In highly concurrent requests table cache opens same file more times which lowers purpose of max_open_files. Fixes (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/6699)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6707

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D21044965

fbshipit-source-id: f6e91d90b60dad86e518b5147021da42460ee1d2
2020-04-21 13:16:31 -07:00
Mike Kolupaev e45673dece Properly report IO errors when IndexType::kBinarySearchWithFirstKey is used (#6621)
Summary:
Context: Index type `kBinarySearchWithFirstKey` added the ability for sst file iterator to sometimes report a key from index without reading the corresponding data block. This is useful when sst blocks are cut at some meaningful boundaries (e.g. one block per key prefix), and many seeks land between blocks (e.g. for each prefix, the ranges of keys in different sst files are nearly disjoint, so a typical seek needs to read a data block from only one file even if all files have the prefix). But this added a new error condition, which rocksdb code was really not equipped to deal with: `InternalIterator::value()` may fail with an IO error or Status::Incomplete, but it's just a method returning a Slice, with no way to report error instead. Before this PR, this type of error wasn't handled at all (an empty slice was returned), and kBinarySearchWithFirstKey implementation was considered a prototype.

Now that we (LogDevice) have experimented with kBinarySearchWithFirstKey for a while and confirmed that it's really useful, this PR is adding the missing error handling.

It's a pretty inconvenient situation implementation-wise. The error needs to be reported from InternalIterator when trying to access value. But there are ~700 call sites of `InternalIterator::value()`, most of which either can't hit the error condition (because the iterator is reading from memtable or from index or something) or wouldn't benefit from the deferred loading of the value (e.g. compaction iterator that reads all values anyway). Adding error handling to all these call sites would needlessly bloat the code. So instead I made the deferred value loading optional: only the call sites that may use deferred loading have to call the new method `PrepareValue()` before calling `value()`. The feature is enabled with a new bool argument `allow_unprepared_value` to a bunch of methods that create iterators (it wouldn't make sense to put it in ReadOptions because it's completely internal to iterators, with virtually no user-visible effect). Lmk if you have better ideas.

Note that the deferred value loading only happens for *internal* iterators. The user-visible iterator (DBIter) always prepares the value before returning from Seek/Next/etc. We could go further and add an API to defer that value loading too, but that's most likely not useful for LogDevice, so it doesn't seem worth the complexity for now.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6621

Test Plan: make -j5 check . Will also deploy to some logdevice test clusters and look at stats.

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D20786930

Pulled By: al13n321

fbshipit-source-id: 6da77d918bad3780522e918f17f4d5513d3e99ee
2020-04-15 17:40:44 -07:00
Levi Tamasi e6f86cfb36 Revert the recent cache deleter change (#6620)
Summary:
Revert "Use function objects as deleters in the block cache (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/6545)"

    This reverts commit 6301dbe7a7.

    Revert "Call out the cache deleter related interface change in HISTORY.md (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/6606)"

    This reverts commit 3a35542f86.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6620

Test Plan: `make check`

Reviewed By: zhichao-cao

Differential Revision: D20773311

Pulled By: ltamasi

fbshipit-source-id: 7637a761f718f323ef0e7da959462e8fb06e7a2b
2020-03-31 16:11:06 -07:00
Levi Tamasi 6301dbe7a7 Use function objects as deleters in the block cache (#6545)
Summary:
As the first step of reintroducing eviction statistics for the block
cache, the patch switches from using simple function pointers as deleters
to function objects implementing an interface. This will enable using
deleters that have state, like a smart pointer to the statistics object
that is to be updated when an entry is removed from the cache. For now,
the patch adds a deleter template class `SimpleDeleter`, which simply
casts the `value` pointer to its original type and calls `delete` or
`delete[]` on it as appropriate. Note: to prevent object lifecycle
issues, deleters must outlive the cache entries referring to them;
`SimpleDeleter` ensures this by using the ("leaky") Meyers singleton
pattern.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6545

Test Plan: `make asan_check`

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D20475823

Pulled By: ltamasi

fbshipit-source-id: fe354c33dd96d9bafc094605462352305449a22a
2020-03-26 16:19:58 -07:00
sdong fdf882ded2 Replace namespace name "rocksdb" with ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE (#6433)
Summary:
When dynamically linking two binaries together, different builds of RocksDB from two sources might cause errors. To provide a tool for user to solve the problem, the RocksDB namespace is changed to a flag which can be overridden in build time.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6433

Test Plan: Build release, all and jtest. Try to build with ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE with another flag.

Differential Revision: D19977691

fbshipit-source-id: aa7f2d0972e1c31d75339ac48478f34f6cfcfb3e
2020-02-20 12:09:57 -08:00
anand76 3e49249d30 Ensure all MultiGet IO errors are propagated to user (#6403)
Summary:
Unrevert the previous fix to propagate error status, and an additional fix to not treat a memtable lookup MergeInProgress status as an error.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6403

Test Plan:
Unit tests
Tried running stress tests but couldn't repro the stress failure

Differential Revision: D19846721

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: 7db10cccbdc863d9b559497f0a46b608d2488ca4
2020-02-11 17:27:22 -08:00
anand76 35ed530d2c Revert "Check KeyContext status in MultiGet (#6387)" (#6401)
Summary:
This reverts commit d70011bccc. The commit is causing some stress test failure due to unexpected Status::MergeInProgress() return for some keys.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6401

Differential Revision: D19826623

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: edd634cede9cb7bdd2cb8f46e662ea709b16d2f1
2020-02-10 22:23:36 -08:00