Commit graph

221 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yu Zhang f2546b6623 Support returning write unix time in iterator property (#12428)
Summary:
This PR adds support to return data's approximate unix write time in the iterator property API. The general implementation is:
1) If the entry comes from a SST file, the sequence number to time mapping recorded in that file's table properties will be used to deduce the entry's write time from its sequence number. If no such recording is available, `std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()` is returned to indicate the write time is unknown except if the entry's sequence number is zero, in which case, 0 is returned. This also means that even if `preclude_last_level_data_seconds` and `preserve_internal_time_seconds` can be toggled off between DB reopens, as long as the SST file's table property has the mapping available, the entry's write time can be deduced and returned.

2) If the entry comes from memtable, we will use the DB's sequence number to write time mapping to do similar things. A copy of the DB's seqno to write time mapping is kept in SuperVersion to allow iterators to have lock free access. This also means a new `SuperVersion` is installed each time DB's seqno to time mapping updates, which is originally proposed by Peter in  https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11928 . Similarly, if the feature is not enabled, `std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()` is returned to indicate the write time is unknown.

Needed follow up:
1) The write time for `kTypeValuePreferredSeqno` should be special cased, where it's already specified by the user, so we can directly return it.

2) Flush job can be updated to use DB's seqno to time mapping copy in the SuperVersion.

3) Handle the case when `TimedPut` is called with a write time that is `std::numeric_limits<uint64_t>::max()`. We can make it a regular `Put`.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12428

Test Plan: Added unit test

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D54967067

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: c795b1b7ec142e09e53f2ed3461cf719833cb37a
2024-03-15 15:37:37 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 1d6dbfb8b7 Rename IntTblPropCollector -> InternalTblPropColl (#12320)
Summary:
I've always found this name difficult to read, because it sounds like it's for collecting int(eger)
table properties.

I'm fixing this now to set up for a change that I have stubbed out in the public API (table_properties.h):
a new adapter function `TablePropertiesCollector::AsInternal()` that allows RocksDB-provided
TablePropertiesCollectors (such as CompactOnDeletionCollector) to implement the easier-to-upgrade
internal interface while still (superficially) implementing the public interface. In addition to added flexibility,
this should be a performance improvement as the adapter class UserKeyTablePropertiesCollector can be
avoided for such cases where a RocksDB-provided collector is used (AsInternal() returns non-nullptr).

table_properties.h is the only file with changes that aren't simple find-replace renaming.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12320

Test Plan: existing tests, CI

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D53336945

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 02535bcb30bbfb00e29e8478af62e5dad50a63b8
2024-02-02 14:14:43 -08:00
Hui Xiao 06e593376c Group SST write in flush, compaction and db open with new stats (#11910)
Summary:
## Context/Summary
Similar to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11288, https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11444, categorizing SST/blob file write according to different io activities allows more insight into the activity.

For that, this PR does the following:
- Tag different write IOs by passing down and converting WriteOptions to IOOptions
- Add new SST_WRITE_MICROS histogram in WritableFileWriter::Append() and breakdown FILE_WRITE_{FLUSH|COMPACTION|DB_OPEN}_MICROS

Some related code refactory to make implementation cleaner:
- Blob stats
   - Replace high-level write measurement with low-level WritableFileWriter::Append() measurement for BLOB_DB_BLOB_FILE_WRITE_MICROS. This is to make FILE_WRITE_{FLUSH|COMPACTION|DB_OPEN}_MICROS  include blob file. As a consequence, this introduces some behavioral changes on it, see HISTORY and db bench test plan below for more info.
   - Fix bugs where BLOB_DB_BLOB_FILE_SYNCED/BLOB_DB_BLOB_FILE_BYTES_WRITTEN include file failed to sync and bytes failed to write.
- Refactor WriteOptions constructor for easier construction with io_activity and rate_limiter_priority
- Refactor DBImpl::~DBImpl()/BlobDBImpl::Close() to bypass thread op verification
- Build table
   - TableBuilderOptions now includes Read/WriteOpitons so BuildTable() do not need to take these two variables
   - Replace the io_priority passed into BuildTable() with TableBuilderOptions::WriteOpitons::rate_limiter_priority. Similar for BlobFileBuilder.
This parameter is used for dynamically changing file io priority for flush, see  https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9988?fbclid=IwAR1DtKel6c-bRJAdesGo0jsbztRtciByNlvokbxkV6h_L-AE9MACzqRTT5s for more
   - Update ThreadStatus::FLUSH_BYTES_WRITTEN to use io_activity to track flush IO in flush job and db open instead of io_priority

## Test
### db bench

Flush
```
./db_bench --statistics=1 --benchmarks=fillseq --num=100000 --write_buffer_size=100

rocksdb.sst.write.micros P50 : 1.830863 P95 : 4.094720 P99 : 6.578947 P100 : 26.000000 COUNT : 7875 SUM : 20377
rocksdb.file.write.flush.micros P50 : 1.830863 P95 : 4.094720 P99 : 6.578947 P100 : 26.000000 COUNT : 7875 SUM : 20377
rocksdb.file.write.compaction.micros P50 : 0.000000 P95 : 0.000000 P99 : 0.000000 P100 : 0.000000 COUNT : 0 SUM : 0
rocksdb.file.write.db.open.micros P50 : 0.000000 P95 : 0.000000 P99 : 0.000000 P100 : 0.000000 COUNT : 0 SUM : 0
```

compaction, db oopen
```
Setup: ./db_bench --statistics=1 --benchmarks=fillseq --num=10000 --disable_auto_compactions=1 -write_buffer_size=100 --db=../db_bench

Run:./db_bench --statistics=1 --benchmarks=compact  --db=../db_bench --use_existing_db=1

rocksdb.sst.write.micros P50 : 2.675325 P95 : 9.578788 P99 : 18.780000 P100 : 314.000000 COUNT : 638 SUM : 3279
rocksdb.file.write.flush.micros P50 : 0.000000 P95 : 0.000000 P99 : 0.000000 P100 : 0.000000 COUNT : 0 SUM : 0
rocksdb.file.write.compaction.micros P50 : 2.757353 P95 : 9.610687 P99 : 19.316667 P100 : 314.000000 COUNT : 615 SUM : 3213
rocksdb.file.write.db.open.micros P50 : 2.055556 P95 : 3.925000 P99 : 9.000000 P100 : 9.000000 COUNT : 23 SUM : 66
```

blob stats - just to make sure they aren't broken by this PR
```
Integrated Blob DB

Setup: ./db_bench --enable_blob_files=1 --statistics=1 --benchmarks=fillseq --num=10000 --disable_auto_compactions=1 -write_buffer_size=100 --db=../db_bench

Run:./db_bench --enable_blob_files=1 --statistics=1 --benchmarks=compact  --db=../db_bench --use_existing_db=1

pre-PR:
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.write.micros P50 : 7.298246 P95 : 9.771930 P99 : 9.991813 P100 : 16.000000 COUNT : 235 SUM : 1600
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.synced COUNT : 1
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.bytes.written COUNT : 34842

post-PR:
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.write.micros P50 : 2.000000 P95 : 2.829360 P99 : 2.993779 P100 : 9.000000 COUNT : 707 SUM : 1614
- COUNT is higher and values are smaller as it includes header and footer write
- COUNT is 3X higher due to each Append() count as one post-PR, while in pre-PR, 3 Append()s counts as one. See https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11910/files#diff-32b811c0a1c000768cfb2532052b44dc0b3bf82253f3eab078e15ff201a0dabfL157-L164

rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.synced COUNT : 1 (stay the same)
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.bytes.written COUNT : 34842 (stay the same)
```

```
Stacked Blob DB

Run: ./db_bench --use_blob_db=1 --statistics=1 --benchmarks=fillseq --num=10000 --disable_auto_compactions=1 -write_buffer_size=100 --db=../db_bench

pre-PR:
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.write.micros P50 : 12.808042 P95 : 19.674497 P99 : 28.539683 P100 : 51.000000 COUNT : 10000 SUM : 140876
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.synced COUNT : 8
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.bytes.written COUNT : 1043445

post-PR:
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.write.micros P50 : 1.657370 P95 : 2.952175 P99 : 3.877519 P100 : 24.000000 COUNT : 30001 SUM : 67924
- COUNT is higher and values are smaller as it includes header and footer write
- COUNT is 3X higher due to each Append() count as one post-PR, while in pre-PR, 3 Append()s counts as one. See https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11910/files#diff-32b811c0a1c000768cfb2532052b44dc0b3bf82253f3eab078e15ff201a0dabfL157-L164

rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.synced COUNT : 8 (stay the same)
rocksdb.blobdb.blob.file.bytes.written COUNT : 1043445 (stay the same)
```

###  Rehearsal CI stress test
Trigger 3 full runs of all our CI stress tests

###  Performance

Flush
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_basic_bench_pre_pr --benchmark_filter=ManualFlush/key_num:524288/per_key_size:256 --benchmark_repetitions=1000
-- default: 1 thread is used to run benchmark; enable_statistics = true

Pre-pr: avg 507515519.3 ns
497686074,499444327,500862543,501389862,502994471,503744435,504142123,504224056,505724198,506610393,506837742,506955122,507695561,507929036,508307733,508312691,508999120,509963561,510142147,510698091,510743096,510769317,510957074,511053311,511371367,511409911,511432960,511642385,511691964,511730908,

Post-pr: avg 511971266.5 ns, regressed 0.88%
502744835,506502498,507735420,507929724,508313335,509548582,509994942,510107257,510715603,511046955,511352639,511458478,512117521,512317380,512766303,512972652,513059586,513804934,513808980,514059409,514187369,514389494,514447762,514616464,514622882,514641763,514666265,514716377,514990179,515502408,
```

Compaction
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_basic_bench_{pre|post}_pr --benchmark_filter=ManualCompaction/comp_style:0/max_data:134217728/per_key_size:256/enable_statistics:1  --benchmark_repetitions=1000
-- default: 1 thread is used to run benchmark

Pre-pr: avg 495346098.30 ns
492118301,493203526,494201411,494336607,495269217,495404950,496402598,497012157,497358370,498153846

Post-pr: avg 504528077.20, regressed 1.85%. "ManualCompaction" include flush so the isolated regression for compaction should be around 1.85-0.88 = 0.97%
502465338,502485945,502541789,502909283,503438601,504143885,506113087,506629423,507160414,507393007
```

Put with WAL (in case passing WriteOptions slows down this path even without collecting SST write stats)
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_basic_bench_pre_pr --benchmark_filter=DBPut/comp_style:0/max_data:107374182400/per_key_size:256/enable_statistics:1/wal:1  --benchmark_repetitions=1000
-- default: 1 thread is used to run benchmark

Pre-pr: avg 3848.10 ns
3814,3838,3839,3848,3854,3854,3854,3860,3860,3860

Post-pr: avg 3874.20 ns, regressed 0.68%
3863,3867,3871,3874,3875,3877,3877,3877,3880,3881
```

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11910

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D49788060

Pulled By: hx235

fbshipit-source-id: 79e73699cda5be3b66461687e5147c2484fc5eff
2023-12-29 15:29:23 -08:00
anand76 a036525809 Lightweight verification of MANIFEST file after close on shutdown (#12174)
Summary:
Do a size verification on the MANIFEST file during DB shutdown, after closing the file. If the verification fails, write a new MANIFEST file. In the future, we can do a more thorough verification if we want to.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12174

Test Plan: Unit test, and some manual verification

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D52451184

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: fc3bc170e22f6c9a9c482ee5ff592abab889df83
2023-12-28 18:25:29 -08:00
Yu Zhang 509947ce2c Quarantine files in a limbo state after a manifest error (#12030)
Summary:
Part of the procedures to handle manifest IO error is to disable file deletion in case some files in limbo state get deleted prematurely. This is not ideal because: 1) not all the VersionEdits whose commit encounter such an error contain updates for files, disabling file deletion sometimes are not necessary. 2) `EnableFileDeletion` has a force mode that could make other threads accidentally disrupt this procedure in recovery.  3) Disabling file deletion as a whole is also not as efficient as more precisely tracking impacted files from being prematurely deleted.  This PR replaces this mechanism with tracking such files and quarantine them from being deleted in `ErrorHandler`.

These are the types of files being actively tracked in quarantine in this PR:
1) new table files and blob files from a background job
2) old manifest file whose immediately following new manifest file's CURRENT file creation gets into unclear state. Current handling is not sufficient to make sure the old manifest file is kept in case it's needed.

Note that WAL logs are not part of the quarantine because `min_log_number_to_keep` is a safe mechanism and it's only updated after successful manifest commits so it can prevent this premature deletion issue from happening.

We track these files' file numbers because they share the same file number space.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12030

Test Plan: Modified existing unit tests

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D51036774

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: 84ef26271fbbc888ef70da5c40fe843bd7038716
2023-11-11 08:11:11 -08:00
Jay Huh 2dab137182 Mark more files for periodic compaction during offpeak (#12031)
Summary:
- The struct previously named `OffpeakTimeInfo` has been renamed to `OffpeakTimeOption` to indicate that it's a user-configurable option. Additionally, a new struct, `OffpeakTimeInfo`, has been introduced, which includes two fields: `is_now_offpeak` and `seconds_till_next_offpeak_start`. This change prevents the need to parse the `daily_offpeak_time_utc` string twice.
- It's worth noting that we may consider adding more fields to the `OffpeakTimeInfo` struct, such as `elapsed_seconds` and `total_seconds`, as needed for further optimization.
- Within `VersionStorageInfo::ComputeFilesMarkedForPeriodicCompaction()`, we've adjusted the `allowed_time_limit` to include files that are expected to expire by the next offpeak start.
- We might explore further optimizations, such as evenly distributing files to mark during offpeak hours, if the initial approach results in marking too many files simultaneously during the first scoring in offpeak hours. The primary objective of this PR is to prevent periodic compactions during non-offpeak hours when offpeak hours are configured. We'll start with this straightforward solution and assess whether it suffices for now.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12031

Test Plan:
Unit Tests added
- `DBCompactionTest::LevelPeriodicCompactionOffpeak` for Leveled
- `DBTestUniversalCompaction2::PeriodicCompaction` for Universal

Reviewed By: cbi42

Differential Revision: D50900292

Pulled By: jaykorean

fbshipit-source-id: 267e7d3332d45a5d9881796786c8650fa0a3b43d
2023-11-06 11:43:59 -08:00
Jay Huh e230e4d248 Make OffpeakTimeInfo available in VersionSet (#12018)
Summary:
As mentioned in  https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11893, we are going to use the offpeak time information to pre-process TTL-based compactions. To do so, we need to access `daily_offpeak_time_utc` in `VersionStorageInfo::ComputeCompactionScore()` where we pick the files to compact. This PR is to make the offpeak time information available at the time of compaction-scoring. We are not changing any compaction scoring logic just yet. Will follow up in a separate PR.

There were two ways to achieve what we want.
1.  Make `MutableDBOptions` available in `ColumnFamilyData` and `ComputeCompactionScore()` take `MutableDBOptions` along with `ImmutableOptions` and `MutableCFOptions`.
2. Make `daily_offpeak_time_utc` and `IsNowOffpeak()` available in `VersionStorageInfo`.

We chose the latter as it involves smaller changes.

This change includes the following
- Introduction of `OffpeakTimeInfo` and `IsNowOffpeak()` has been moved from `MutableDBOptions`
- `OffpeakTimeInfo` added to `VersionSet` and it can be set during construction and by `ChangeOffpeakTimeInfo()`
- During `SetDBOptions()`, if offpeak time info needs to change, it calls `MaybeScheduleFlushOrCompaction()` to re-compute compaction scores and process compactions as needed

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12018

Test Plan:
- `DBOptionsTest::OffpeakTimes` changed to include checks for `MaybeScheduleFlushOrCompaction()` calls and `VersionSet`'s OffpeakTimeInfo value change during `SetDBOptions()`.
- `VersionSetTest::OffpeakTimeInfoTest` added to test `ChangeOffpeakTimeInfo()`. `IsNowOffpeak()` tests moved from `DBOptionsTest::OffpeakTimes`

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D50723881

Pulled By: jaykorean

fbshipit-source-id: 3cff0291936f3729c0e9c7750834b9378fb435f6
2023-10-27 15:56:48 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 02443dd93f Refactor, clean up, fixes, and more testing for SeqnoToTimeMapping (#11905)
Summary:
This change is before a planned DBImpl change to ensure all sufficiently recent sequence numbers since Open are covered by SeqnoToTimeMapping (bug fix with existing test work-arounds). **Intended follow-up**

However, I found enough issues with SeqnoToTimeMapping to warrant this PR first, including very small fixes in DB implementation related to API contract of SeqnoToTimeMapping.

Functional fixes / changes:
* This fixes some mishandling of boundary cases. For example, if the user decides to stop writing to DB, the last written sequence number would perpetually have its write time updated to "now" and would always be ineligible for migration to cold tier. Part of the problem is that the SeqnoToTimeMapping would return a seqno known to have been written before (immediately or otherwise) the requested time, but compaction_job.cc would include that seqno in the preserve/exclude set. That is fixed (in part) by adding one in compaction_job.cc
* That problem was worse because a whole range of seqnos could be updated perpetually with new times in SeqnoToTimeMapping::Append (if no writes to DB). That logic was apparently optimized for GetOldestApproximateTime (now GetProximalTimeBeforeSeqno), which is not used in production, to the detriment of GetOldestSequenceNum (now GetProximalSeqnoBeforeTime), which is used in production. (Perhaps plans changed during development?) This is fixed in Append to optimize for accuracy of GetProximalSeqnoBeforeTime. (Unit tests added and updated.)
* Related: SeqnoToTimeMapping did not have a clear contract about the relationships between seqnos and times, just the idea of a rough correspondence. Now the class description makes it clear that the write time of each recorded seqno comes before or at the associated time, to support getting best results for GetProximalSeqnoBeforeTime. And this makes it easier to make clear the contract of each API function.
  * Update `DBImpl::RecordSeqnoToTimeMapping()` to follow this ordering in gathering samples.

Some part of these changes has required an expanded test work-around for the problem (see intended follow-up above) that the DB does not immediately ensure recent seqnos are covered by its mapping. These work-arounds will be removed with that planned work.

An apparent compaction bug is revealed in
PrecludeLastLevelTest::RangeDelsCauseFileEndpointsToOverlap, so that test is disabled. Filed GitHub issue #11909

Cosmetic / code safety things (not exhaustive):
* Fix some confusing names.
  * `seqno_time_mapping` was used inconsistently in places. Now just `seqno_to_time_mapping` to correspond to class name.
  * Rename confusing `GetOldestSequenceNum` -> `GetProximalSeqnoBeforeTime` and `GetOldestApproximateTime` -> `GetProximalTimeBeforeSeqno`. Part of the motivation is that our times and seqnos here have the same underlying type, so we want to be clear about which is expected where to avoid mixing.
  * Rename `kUnknownSeqnoTime` to `kUnknownTimeBeforeAll` because the value is a bad choice for unknown if we ever add ProximalAfterBlah functions.
  * Arithmetic on SeqnoTimePair doesn't make sense except for delta encoding, so use better names / APIs with that in mind.
  * (OMG) Don't allow direct comparison between SeqnoTimePair and SequenceNumber. (There is no checking that it isn't compared against time by accident.)
  * A field name essentially matching the containing class name is a confusing pattern (`seqno_time_mapping_`).
  * Wrap calls to confusing (but useful) upper_bound and lower_bound functions to have clearer names and more code reuse.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11905

Test Plan: GetOldestSequenceNum (now GetProximalSeqnoBeforeTime) and TruncateOldEntries were lacking unit tests, despite both being used in production (experimental feature). Added those and expanded others.

Reviewed By: jowlyzhang

Differential Revision: D49755592

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: f72a3baac74d24b963c77e538bba89a7fc8dce51
2023-09-29 11:21:59 -07:00
Changyu Bi d1ff401472 Delay bottommost level single file compactions (#11701)
Summary:
For leveled compaction, RocksDB has a special kind of compaction with reason "kBottommmostFiles" that compacts bottommost level files to clear data held by snapshots (more detail in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/3009). Such compactions can happen soon after a relevant snapshot is released. For some use cases, a bottommost file may contain only a small amount of keys that can be cleared, so compacting such a file has a high write amp. In addition, these bottommost files may be compacted in compactions with reason other than "kBottommmostFiles" if we wait for some time (so that enough data is ingested to trigger such a compaction). This PR introduces an option `bottommost_file_compaction_delay` to specify the delay of these bottommost level single file compactions.

* The main change is in `VersionStorageInfo::ComputeBottommostFilesMarkedForCompaction()` where we only add a file to `bottommost_files_marked_for_compaction_` if it oldest_snapshot is larger than its non-zero largest_seqno **and** the file is old enough. Note that if a file is not old enough but its largest_seqno is less than oldest_snapshot, we exclude it from the calculation of `bottommost_files_mark_threshold_`. This makes the change simpler, but such a file's eligibility for compaction will only be checked the next time `ComputeBottommostFilesMarkedForCompaction()` is called. This happens when a new Version is created (compaction, flush, SetOptions()...), a new enough snapshot is released (`VersionStorageInfo::UpdateOldestSnapshot()`) or when a compaction is picked and compaction score has to be re-calculated.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11701

Test Plan:
* Add two unit tests to test when bottommost_file_compaction_delay > 0.
* Ran crash test with the new option.

Reviewed By: jaykorean, ajkr

Differential Revision: D48331564

Pulled By: cbi42

fbshipit-source-id: c584f3dc5f6354fce3ed65f4c6366dc450b15ba8
2023-08-16 17:45:44 -07:00
Yu Zhang c24ef26ca7 Support switching on / off UDT together with in-Memtable-only feature (#11623)
Summary:
Add support to allow enabling / disabling user-defined timestamps feature for an existing column family in combination with the in-Memtable only feature.

To do this, this PR includes:
1) Log the `persist_user_defined_timestamps` option per column family in Manifest to facilitate detecting an attempt to enable / disable UDT. This entry is enforced to be logged in the same VersionEdit as the user comparator name entry.

2) User-defined timestamps related options are validated when re-opening a column family, including user comparator name and the `persist_user_defined_timestamps` flag. These type of settings and settings change are considered valid:
     a) no user comparator change and no effective `persist_user_defined_timestamp` flag change.
     b) switch user comparator to enable UDT provided the immediately effective `persist_user_defined_timestamps` flag
         is false.
     c) switch user comparator to disable UDT provided that the before-change `persist_user_defined_timestamps` is
         already false.
3) when an attempt to enable UDT is detected, we mark all its existing SST files as "having no UDT" by marking its `FileMetaData.user_defined_timestamps_persisted` flag to false and handle their file boundaries `FileMetaData.smallest`, `FileMetaData.largest` by padding a min timestamp.

4) while enabling / disabling UDT feature, timestamp size inconsistency in existing WAL logs are handled to make it compatible with the running user comparator.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11623

Test Plan:
```
make all check
./db_with_timestamp_basic_test --gtest-filter="*EnableDisableUDT*"
./db_wal_test --gtest_filter="*EnableDisableUDT*"
```

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D47636862

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: dcd19f67292da3c3cc9584c09ad00331c9ab9322
2023-07-26 20:16:32 -07:00
Yu Zhang 7521478b43 Record the persist_user_defined_timestamps flag in manifest (#11515)
Summary:
Start to record the value of the flag `AdvancedColumnFamilyOptions.persist_user_defined_timestamps` in the Manifest and table properties for a SST file when it is created. And use the recorded flag when creating a table reader for the SST file. This flag's default value is true, it is only explicitly recorded if it's false.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11515

Test Plan:
```
make all check
./version_edit_test
```

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D46920386

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: 075c20363d3d2cc1368422ecc805617ed135cc26
2023-06-21 21:49:01 -07:00
Yu Zhang 4dafa5b220 switch to use RocksDB UnorderedMap (#11507)
Summary:
Switch from std::unordered_map to RocksDB UnorderedMap for all the places that logging user-defined timestamp size in WAL used.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11507

Test Plan:
```
make all check
```

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D46448975

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: bdb4d56a723b697a33daaf0f856a61d49a367a99
2023-06-05 13:36:26 -07:00
Yu Zhang 56ca9e3106 Logging timestamp size record in WAL and use it during recovery (#11471)
Summary:
Start logging the timestamp size record in WAL and use the record during recovery.  Currently, user comparator cannot be different from what was used to create a column family, so the timestamp size record is just used to confirm it's consistent with the timestamp size the running user comparator indicates.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11471

Test Plan:
```
make all check
./db_secondary_test
./db_wal_test --gtest_filter="*WithTimestamp*"
./repair_test --gtest_filter="*WithTimestamp*"
```

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D46236769

Pulled By: jowlyzhang

fbshipit-source-id: f6c60b5c8defdb05021c63df302ccc0be1275ad0
2023-05-30 19:32:00 -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
Changyu Bi cc6f323705 Include estimated bytes deleted by range tombstones in compensated file size (#10734)
Summary:
compensate file sizes in compaction picking so files with range tombstones are preferred, such that they get compacted down earlier as they tend to delete a lot of data. This PR adds a `compensated_range_deletion_size` field in FileMeta that is computed during Flush/Compaction and persisted in MANIFEST. This value is added to `compensated_file_size` which will be used for compaction picking. Currently, for a file in level L, `compensated_range_deletion_size` is set to the estimated bytes deleted by range tombstone of this file in all levels > L. This helps to reduce space amp when data in older levels are covered by range tombstones in level L.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10734

Test Plan:
- Added unit tests.
- benchmark to check if the above definition `compensated_range_deletion_size` is reducing space amp as intended, without affecting write amp too much. The experiment set up favorable for this optimization: large range tombstone issued infrequently. Command used:
```
./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom,waitforcompaction,stats,levelstats -use_existing_db=false -avoid_flush_during_recovery=true -write_buffer_size=33554432 -level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true -max_background_jobs=8 -max_bytes_for_level_base=134217728 -target_file_size_base=33554432 -writes_per_range_tombstone=500000 -range_tombstone_width=5000000 -num=50000000 -benchmark_write_rate_limit=8388608 -threads=16 -duration=1800 --max_num_range_tombstones=1000000000
```

In this experiment, each thread wrote 16 range tombstones over the duration of 30 minutes, each range tombstone has width 5M that is the 10% of the key space width. Results shows this PR generates a smaller DB size.

Compaction stats from this PR:
```
Level    Files   Size     Score Read(GB)  Rn(GB) Rnp1(GB) Write(GB) Wnew(GB) Moved(GB) W-Amp Rd(MB/s) Wr(MB/s) Comp(sec) CompMergeCPU(sec) Comp(cnt) Avg(sec) KeyIn KeyDrop Rblob(GB) Wblob(GB)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  L0      2/0   31.54 MB   0.5      0.0     0.0      0.0       8.4      8.4       0.0   1.0      0.0     63.4    135.56            110.94       544    0.249       0      0       0.0       0.0
  L4      3/0   96.55 MB   0.8     18.5     6.7     11.8      18.4      6.6       0.0   2.7     65.3     64.9    290.08            284.03       108    2.686    284M  1957K       0.0       0.0
  L5     15/0   404.41 MB   1.0     19.1     7.7     11.4      18.8      7.4       0.3   2.5     66.6     65.7    292.93            285.34       220    1.332    293M  3808K       0.0       0.0
  L6    143/0    4.12 GB   0.0     45.0     7.5     37.5      41.6      4.1       0.0   5.5     71.2     65.9    647.00            632.66       251    2.578    739M    47M       0.0       0.0
 Sum    163/0    4.64 GB   0.0     82.6    21.9     60.7      87.2     26.5       0.3  10.4     61.9     65.4   1365.58           1312.97      1123    1.216   1318M    52M       0.0       0.0
```

Compaction stats from main:
```
Level    Files   Size     Score Read(GB)  Rn(GB) Rnp1(GB) Write(GB) Wnew(GB) Moved(GB) W-Amp Rd(MB/s) Wr(MB/s) Comp(sec) CompMergeCPU(sec) Comp(cnt) Avg(sec) KeyIn KeyDrop Rblob(GB) Wblob(GB)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  L0      0/0    0.00 KB   0.0      0.0     0.0      0.0       8.4      8.4       0.0   1.0      0.0     60.5    142.12            115.89       569    0.250       0      0       0.0       0.0
  L4      3/0   85.68 MB   1.0     17.7     6.8     10.9      17.6      6.7       0.0   2.6     62.7     62.3    289.05            281.79       112    2.581    272M  2309K       0.0       0.0
  L5     11/0   293.73 MB   1.0     18.8     7.5     11.2      18.5      7.2       0.5   2.5     64.9     63.9    296.07            288.50       220    1.346    288M  4365K       0.0       0.0
  L6    130/0    3.94 GB   0.0     51.5     7.6     43.9      47.9      3.9       0.0   6.3     67.2     62.4    784.95            765.92       258    3.042    848M    51M       0.0       0.0
 Sum    144/0    4.31 GB   0.0     88.0    21.9     66.0      92.3     26.3       0.5  11.0     59.6     62.5   1512.19           1452.09      1159    1.305   1409M    58M       0.0       0.0```

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D39834713

Pulled By: cbi42

fbshipit-source-id: fe9341040b8704a8fbb10cad5cf5c43e962c7e6b
2022-12-29 13:28:24 -08:00
Hui Xiao 98d5db5c2e Sort L0 files by newly introduced epoch_num (#10922)
Summary:
**Context:**
Sorting L0 files by `largest_seqno` has at least two inconvenience:
-  File ingestion and compaction involving ingested files can create files of overlapping seqno range with the existing files. `force_consistency_check=true` will catch such overlap seqno range even those harmless overlap.
    - For example, consider the following sequence of events ("key@n" indicates key at seqno "n")
       - insert k1@1 to memtable m1
       - ingest file s1 with k2@2, ingest file s2 with k3@3
        - insert k4@4 to m1
       - compact files s1, s2 and  result in new file s3 of seqno range [2, 3]
       - flush m1 and result in new file s4 of seqno range [1, 4]. And `force_consistency_check=true` will think s4 and s3 has file reordering corruption that might cause retuning an old value of k1
    - However such caught corruption is a false positive since s1, s2 will not have overlapped keys with k1 or whatever inserted into m1 before ingest file s1 by the requirement of file ingestion (otherwise the m1 will be flushed first before any of the file ingestion completes). Therefore there in fact isn't any file reordering corruption.
- Single delete can decrease a file's largest seqno and ordering by `largest_seqno` can introduce a wrong ordering hence file reordering corruption
    - For example, consider the following sequence of events ("key@n" indicates key at seqno "n", Credit to ajkr  for this example)
        - an existing SST s1 contains only k1@1
        - insert k1@2 to memtable m1
        - ingest file s2 with k3@3, ingest file s3 with k4@4
        - insert single delete k5@5 in m1
        - flush m1 and result in new file s4 of seqno range [2, 5]
        - compact s1, s2, s3 and result in new file s5 of seqno range [1, 4]
        - compact s4 and result in new file s6 of seqno range [2] due to single delete
    - By the last step, we have file ordering by largest seqno (">" means "newer") : s5 > s6 while s6 contains a newer version of the k1's value (i.e, k1@2) than s5, which is a real reordering corruption. While this can be caught by `force_consistency_check=true`, there isn't a good way to prevent this from happening if ordering by `largest_seqno`

Therefore, we are redesigning the sorting criteria of L0 files and avoid above inconvenience. Credit to ajkr , we now introduce `epoch_num` which describes the order of a file being flushed or ingested/imported (compaction output file will has the minimum `epoch_num` among input files'). This will avoid the above inconvenience in the following ways:
- In the first case above, there will no longer be overlap seqno range check in `force_consistency_check=true` but `epoch_number`  ordering check. This will result in file ordering s1 <  s2 <  s4 (pre-compaction) and s3 < s4 (post-compaction) which won't trigger false positive corruption. See test class `DBCompactionTestL0FilesMisorderCorruption*` for more.
- In the second case above, this will result in file ordering s1 < s2 < s3 < s4 (pre-compacting s1, s2, s3), s5 < s4 (post-compacting s1, s2, s3), s5 < s6 (post-compacting s4), which are correct file ordering without causing any corruption.

**Summary:**
- Introduce `epoch_number` stored per `ColumnFamilyData` and sort CF's L0 files by their assigned `epoch_number` instead of `largest_seqno`.
  - `epoch_number` is increased and assigned upon `VersionEdit::AddFile()` for flush (or similarly for WriteLevel0TableForRecovery) and file ingestion (except for allow_behind_true, which will always get assigned as the `kReservedEpochNumberForFileIngestedBehind`)
  - Compaction output file  is assigned with the minimum `epoch_number` among input files'
      - Refit level: reuse refitted file's epoch_number
  -  Other paths needing `epoch_number` treatment:
     - Import column families: reuse file's epoch_number if exists. If not, assign one based on `NewestFirstBySeqNo`
     - Repair: reuse file's epoch_number if exists. If not, assign one based on `NewestFirstBySeqNo`.
  -  Assigning new epoch_number to a file and adding this file to LSM tree should be atomic. This is guaranteed by us assigning epoch_number right upon `VersionEdit::AddFile()` where this version edit will be apply to LSM tree shape right after by holding the db mutex (e.g, flush, file ingestion, import column family) or  by there is only 1 ongoing edit per CF (e.g, WriteLevel0TableForRecovery, Repair).
  - Assigning the minimum input epoch number to compaction output file won't misorder L0 files (even through later `Refit(target_level=0)`). It's due to for every key "k" in the input range, a legit compaction will cover a continuous epoch number range of that key. As long as we assign the key "k" the minimum input epoch number, it won't become newer or older than the versions of this key that aren't included in this compaction hence no misorder.
- Persist `epoch_number` of each file in manifest and recover `epoch_number` on db recovery
   - Backward compatibility with old db without `epoch_number` support is guaranteed by assigning `epoch_number` to recovered files by `NewestFirstBySeqno` order. See `VersionStorageInfo::RecoverEpochNumbers()` for more
   - Forward compatibility with manifest is guaranteed by flexibility of `NewFileCustomTag`
- Replace `force_consistent_check` on L0 with `epoch_number` and remove false positive check like case 1 with `largest_seqno` above
   - Due to backward compatibility issue, we might encounter files with missing epoch number at the beginning of db recovery. We will still use old L0 sorting mechanism (`NewestFirstBySeqno`) to check/sort them till we infer their epoch number. See usages of `EpochNumberRequirement`.
- Remove fix https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930 and their outdated tests to file reordering corruption because such fix can be replaced by this PR.
- Misc:
   - update existing tests with `epoch_number` so make check will pass
   - update https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930 tests to verify corruption is fixed using `epoch_number` and cover universal/fifo compaction/CompactRange/CompactFile cases
   - assert db_mutex is held for a few places before calling ColumnFamilyData::NewEpochNumber()

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10922

Test Plan:
- `make check`
- New unit tests under `db/db_compaction_test.cc`, `db/db_test2.cc`, `db/version_builder_test.cc`, `db/repair_test.cc`
- Updated tests (i.e, `DBCompactionTestL0FilesMisorderCorruption*`) under https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930
- [Ongoing] Compatibility test: manually run 36a5686ec0 (with file ingestion off for running the `.orig` binary to prevent this bug affecting upgrade/downgrade formality checking) for 1 hour on `simple black/white box`, `cf_consistency/txn/enable_ts with whitebox + test_best_efforts_recovery with blackbox`
- [Ongoing] normal db stress test
- [Ongoing] db stress test with aggressive value https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10761

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D41063187

Pulled By: hx235

fbshipit-source-id: 826cb23455de7beaabe2d16c57682a82733a32a9
2022-12-13 13:29:37 -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
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
Hui Xiao e484b81eee Sync dir containing CURRENT after RenameFile on CURRENT as much as possible (#10573)
Summary:
**Context:**
Below crash test revealed a bug that directory containing CURRENT file (short for `dir_contains_current_file` below) was not always get synced after a new CURRENT is created and being called with `RenameFile` as part of the creation.

This bug exposes a risk that such un-synced directory containing the updated CURRENT can’t survive a host crash (e.g, power loss) hence get corrupted. This then will be followed by a recovery from a corrupted CURRENT that we don't want.

The root-cause is that a nullptr `FSDirectory* dir_contains_current_file` sometimes gets passed-down to `SetCurrentFile()` hence in those case `dir_contains_current_file->FSDirectory::FsyncWithDirOptions()` will be skipped  (which otherwise will internally call`Env/FS::SyncDic()` )
```
./db_stress --acquire_snapshot_one_in=10000 --adaptive_readahead=1 --allow_data_in_errors=True --avoid_unnecessary_blocking_io=0 --backup_max_size=104857600 --backup_one_in=100000 --batch_protection_bytes_per_key=8 --block_size=16384 --bloom_bits=134.8015470676662 --bottommost_compression_type=disable --cache_size=8388608 --checkpoint_one_in=1000000 --checksum_type=kCRC32c --clear_column_family_one_in=0 --compact_files_one_in=1000000 --compact_range_one_in=1000000 --compaction_pri=2 --compaction_ttl=100 --compression_max_dict_buffer_bytes=511 --compression_max_dict_bytes=16384 --compression_type=zstd --compression_use_zstd_dict_trainer=1 --compression_zstd_max_train_bytes=65536 --continuous_verification_interval=0 --data_block_index_type=0 --db=$db --db_write_buffer_size=1048576 --delpercent=5 --delrangepercent=0 --destroy_db_initially=0 --disable_wal=0 --enable_compaction_filter=0 --enable_pipelined_write=1 --expected_values_dir=$exp --fail_if_options_file_error=1 --file_checksum_impl=none --flush_one_in=1000000 --get_current_wal_file_one_in=0 --get_live_files_one_in=1000000 --get_property_one_in=1000000 --get_sorted_wal_files_one_in=0 --index_block_restart_interval=4 --ingest_external_file_one_in=0 --iterpercent=10 --key_len_percent_dist=1,30,69 --level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=True --mark_for_compaction_one_file_in=10 --max_background_compactions=20 --max_bytes_for_level_base=10485760 --max_key=10000 --max_key_len=3 --max_manifest_file_size=16384 --max_write_batch_group_size_bytes=64 --max_write_buffer_number=3 --max_write_buffer_size_to_maintain=0 --memtable_prefix_bloom_size_ratio=0.001 --memtable_protection_bytes_per_key=1 --memtable_whole_key_filtering=1 --mmap_read=1 --nooverwritepercent=1 --open_metadata_write_fault_one_in=0 --open_read_fault_one_in=0 --open_write_fault_one_in=0 --ops_per_thread=100000000 --optimize_filters_for_memory=1 --paranoid_file_checks=1 --partition_pinning=2 --pause_background_one_in=1000000 --periodic_compaction_seconds=0 --prefix_size=5 --prefixpercent=5 --prepopulate_block_cache=1 --progress_reports=0 --read_fault_one_in=1000 --readpercent=45 --recycle_log_file_num=0 --reopen=0 --ribbon_starting_level=999 --secondary_cache_fault_one_in=32 --secondary_cache_uri=compressed_secondary_cache://capacity=8388608 --set_options_one_in=10000 --snapshot_hold_ops=100000 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_sec=0 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_truncate=0 --subcompactions=3 --sync_fault_injection=1 --target_file_size_base=2097 --target_file_size_multiplier=2 --test_batches_snapshots=1 --top_level_index_pinning=1 --use_full_merge_v1=1 --use_merge=1 --value_size_mult=32 --verify_checksum=1 --verify_checksum_one_in=1000000 --verify_db_one_in=100000 --verify_sst_unique_id_in_manifest=1 --wal_bytes_per_sync=524288 --write_buffer_size=4194 --writepercent=35
```

```
stderr:
WARNING: prefix_size is non-zero but memtablerep != prefix_hash
db_stress: utilities/fault_injection_fs.cc:748: virtual rocksdb::IOStatus rocksdb::FaultInjectionTestFS::RenameFile(const std::string &, const std::string &, const rocksdb::IOOptions &, rocksdb::IODebugContext *): Assertion `tlist.find(tdn.second) == tlist.end()' failed.`
```

**Summary:**
The PR ensured the non-test path pass down a non-null dir containing CURRENT (which is by current RocksDB assumption just db_dir) by doing the following:
- Renamed `directory_to_fsync` as `dir_contains_current_file` in `SetCurrentFile()` to tighten the association between this directory and CURRENT file
- Changed `SetCurrentFile()` API to require `dir_contains_current_file` being passed-in, instead of making it by default nullptr.
    -  Because `SetCurrentFile()`'s `dir_contains_current_file` is passed down from `VersionSet::LogAndApply()` then `VersionSet::ProcessManifestWrites()` (i.e, think about this as a chain of 3 functions related to MANIFEST update), these 2 functions also got refactored to require `dir_contains_current_file`
- Updated the non-test-path callers of these 3 functions to obtain and pass in non-nullptr `dir_contains_current_file`, which by current assumption of RocksDB, is the `FSDirectory* db_dir`.
    - `db_impl` path will obtain `DBImpl::directories_.getDbDir()` while others with no access to such `directories_` are obtained on the fly by creating such object `FileSystem::NewDirectory(..)` and manage it by unique pointers to ensure short life time.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10573

Test Plan:
- `make check`
- Passed the repro db_stress command
- For future improvement, since we currently don't assert dir containing CURRENT to be non-nullptr due to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10573#pullrequestreview-1087698899, there is still chances that future developers mistakenly pass down nullptr dir containing CURRENT thus resulting skipped sync dir and cause the bug again. Therefore a smarter test (e.g, such as quoted from ajkr  "(make) unsynced data loss to be dropping files corresponding to unsynced directory entries") is still needed.

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D39005886

Pulled By: hx235

fbshipit-source-id: 336fb9090d0cfa6ca3dd580db86268007dde7f5a
2022-08-29 17:35:21 -07:00
Changyu Bi 9d77bf8f7b Fragment memtable range tombstone in the write path (#10380)
Summary:
- Right now each read fragments the memtable range tombstones https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/4808. This PR explores the idea of fragmenting memtable range tombstones in the write path and reads can just read this cached fragmented tombstone without any fragmenting cost. This PR only does the caching for immutable memtable, and does so right before a memtable is added to an immutable memtable list. The fragmentation is done without holding mutex to minimize its performance impact.
- db_bench is updated to print out the number of range deletions executed if there is any.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10380

Test Plan:
- CI, added asserts in various places to check whether a fragmented range tombstone list should have been constructed.
- Benchmark: as this PR only optimizes immutable memtable path, the number of writes in the benchmark is chosen such  an immutable memtable is created and range tombstones are in that memtable.

```
single thread:
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,readrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=1 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=500000 --reads=100000 --max_num_range_tombstones=100

multi_thread
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,readrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=1 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=15000 --reads=20000 --threads=32 --max_num_range_tombstones=100
```
Commit 99cdf16464 is included in benchmark result. It was an earlier attempt where tombstones are fragmented for each write operation. Reader threads share it using a shared_ptr which would slow down multi-thread read performance as seen in benchmark results.
Results are averaged over 5 runs.

Single thread result:
| Max # tombstones  | main fillrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464 | Post PR | main readrandom micros/op |  99cdf16464 | Post PR |
| ------------- | ------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |
| 0    |6.68     |6.57     |6.72     |4.72     |4.79     |4.54     |
| 1    |6.67     |6.58     |6.62     |5.41     |4.74     |4.72     |
| 10   |6.59     |6.5      |6.56     |7.83     |4.69     |4.59     |
| 100  |6.62     |6.75     |6.58     |29.57    |5.04     |5.09     |
| 1000 |6.54     |6.82     |6.61     |320.33   |5.22     |5.21     |

32-thread result: note that "Max # tombstones" is per thread.
| Max # tombstones  | main fillrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464 | Post PR | main readrandom micros/op |  99cdf16464 | Post PR |
| ------------- | ------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |
| 0    |234.52   |260.25   |239.42   |5.06     |5.38     |5.09     |
| 1    |236.46   |262.0    |231.1    |19.57    |22.14    |5.45     |
| 10   |236.95   |263.84   |251.49   |151.73   |21.61    |5.73     |
| 100  |268.16   |296.8    |280.13   |2308.52  |22.27    |6.57     |

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D37916564

Pulled By: cbi42

fbshipit-source-id: 05d6d2e16df26c374c57ddcca13a5bfe9d5b731e
2022-08-05 12:02:33 -07:00
Yanqin Jin fbfcf5cbcd Remove unused fields from FileMetaData (temporarily) (#10443)
Summary:
FileMetaData::[min|max]_timestamp are not currently being used or
tracked by RocksDB, even when user-defined timestamp is enabled. Each of
them is a std::string which can occupy 32 bytes. Remove them for now.
They may be added back when we have a pressing need for them. When we do
add them back, consider store them in a more compact way, e.g. one
boolean flag and a byte array of size 16.

Per file min/max timestamp bounds are available as table properties.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10443

Test Plan: make check

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D38292275

Pulled By: riversand963

fbshipit-source-id: 841dc4e855ad8f8481c80cb020603de9607c9c94
2022-08-01 17:56:13 -07:00
Jay Zhuang a3acf2ef87 Add seqno to time mapping (#10338)
Summary:
Which will be used for tiered storage to preclude hot data from
compacting to the cold tier (the last level).
Internally, adding seqno to time mapping. A periodic_task is scheduled
to record the current_seqno -> current_time in certain cadence. When
memtable flush, the mapping informaiton is stored in sstable property.
During compaction, the mapping information are merged and get the
approximate time of sequence number, which is used to determine if a key
is recently inserted or not and preclude it from the last level if it's
recently inserted (within the `preclude_last_level_data_seconds`).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10338

Test Plan: CI

Reviewed By: siying

Differential Revision: D37810187

Pulled By: jay-zhuang

fbshipit-source-id: 6953be7a18a99de8b1cb3b162d712f79c2b4899f
2022-07-14 21:49:34 -07:00
Gang Liao deff48bcef Add blob source to retrieve blobs in RocksDB (#10198)
Summary:
There is currently no caching mechanism for blobs, which is not ideal especially when the database resides on remote storage (where we cannot rely on the OS page cache). As part of this task, we would like to make it possible for the application to configure a blob cache.
In this task, we formally introduced the blob source to RocksDB.  BlobSource is a new abstraction layer that provides universal access to blobs, regardless of whether they are in the blob cache, secondary cache, or (remote) storage. Depending on user settings, it always fetch blobs from multi-tier cache and storage with minimal cost.

Note: The new `MultiGetBlob()` implementation is not included in the current PR. To go faster, we aim to create a separate PR for it in parallel!

This PR is a part of https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10156

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10198

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D37294735

Pulled By: gangliao

fbshipit-source-id: 9cb50422d9dd1bc03798501c2778b6c7520c7a1e
2022-06-20 20:58:11 -07:00
Changyu Bi 8515bd50c9 Support read rate-limiting in SequentialFileReader (#9973)
Summary:
Added rate limiter and read rate-limiting support to SequentialFileReader. I've updated call sites to SequentialFileReader::Read with appropriate IO priority (or left a TODO and specified IO_TOTAL for now).

The PR is separated into four commits: the first one added the rate-limiting support, but with some fixes in the unit test since the number of request bytes from rate limiter in SequentialFileReader are not accurate (there is overcharge at EOF). The second commit fixed this by allowing SequentialFileReader to check file size and determine how many bytes are left in the file to read. The third commit added benchmark related code. The fourth commit moved the logic of using file size to avoid overcharging the rate limiter into backup engine (the main user of SequentialFileReader).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9973

Test Plan:
- `make check`, backup_engine_test covers usage of SequentialFileReader with rate limiter.
- Run db_bench to check if rate limiting is throttling as expected: Verified that reads and writes are together throttled at 2MB/s, and at 0.2MB chunks that are 100ms apart.
  - Set up: `./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom -db=/dev/shm/test_rocksdb`
  - Benchmark:
```
strace -ttfe read,write ./db_bench --benchmarks=backup -db=/dev/shm/test_rocksdb --backup_rate_limit=2097152 --use_existing_db
strace -ttfe read,write ./db_bench --benchmarks=restore -db=/dev/shm/test_rocksdb --restore_rate_limit=2097152 --use_existing_db
```
- db bench on backup and restore to ensure no performance regression.
  - backup (avg over 50 runs): pre-change: 1.90443e+06 micros/op; post-change: 1.8993e+06 micros/op (improve by 0.2%)
  - restore (avg over 50 runs): pre-change: 1.79105e+06 micros/op; post-change: 1.78192e+06 micros/op (improve by 0.5%)

```
# Set up
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom -db=/tmp/test_rocksdb -num=10000000

# benchmark
TEST_TMPDIR=/tmp/test_rocksdb
NUM_RUN=50
for ((j=0;j<$NUM_RUN;j++))
do
   ./db_bench -db=$TEST_TMPDIR -num=10000000 -benchmarks=backup -use_existing_db | egrep 'backup'
  # Restore
  #./db_bench -db=$TEST_TMPDIR -num=10000000 -benchmarks=restore -use_existing_db
done > rate_limit.txt && awk -v NUM_RUN=$NUM_RUN '{sum+=$3;sum_sqrt+=$3^2}END{print sum/NUM_RUN, sqrt(sum_sqrt/NUM_RUN-(sum/NUM_RUN)^2)}' rate_limit.txt >> rate_limit_2.txt
```

Reviewed By: hx235

Differential Revision: D36327418

Pulled By: cbi42

fbshipit-source-id: e75d4307cff815945482df5ba630c1e88d064691
2022-05-24 10:28:57 -07:00
Jay Zhuang c6d326d3d7 Track SST unique id in MANIFEST and verify (#9990)
Summary:
Start tracking SST unique id in MANIFEST, which is used to verify with
SST properties to make sure the SST file is not overwritten or
misplaced. A DB option `try_verify_sst_unique_id` is introduced to
enable/disable the verification, if enabled, it opens all SST files
during DB-open to read the unique_id from table properties (default is
false), so it's recommended to use it with `max_open_files = -1` to
pre-open the files.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9990

Test Plan: unittests, format-compatible test, mini-crash

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D36381863

Pulled By: jay-zhuang

fbshipit-source-id: 89ea2eb6b35ed3e80ead9c724eb096083eaba63f
2022-05-19 11:04:21 -07:00
sdong 736a7b5433 Remove own ToString() (#9955)
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
2022-05-06 13:03:58 -07:00
Levi Tamasi db536ee045 Propagate errors from UpdateBoundaries (#9851)
Summary:
In `FileMetaData`, we keep track of the lowest-numbered blob file
referenced by the SST file in question for the purposes of BlobDB's
garbage collection in the `oldest_blob_file_number` field, which is
updated in `UpdateBoundaries`. However, with the current code,
`BlobIndex` decoding errors (or invalid blob file numbers) are swallowed
in this method. The patch changes this by propagating these errors
and failing the corresponding flush/compaction. (Note that since blob
references are generated by the BlobDB code and also parsed by
`CompactionIterator`, in reality this can only happen in the case of
memory corruption.)

This change necessitated updating some unit tests that involved
fake/corrupt `BlobIndex` objects. Some of these just used a dummy string like
`"blob_index"` as a placeholder; these were replaced with real `BlobIndex`es.
Some were relying on the earlier behavior to simulate corruption; these
were replaced with `SyncPoint`-based test code that corrupts a valid
blob reference at read time.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9851

Test Plan: `make check`

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D35683671

Pulled By: ltamasi

fbshipit-source-id: f7387af9945c48e4d5c4cd864f1ba425c7ad51f6
2022-04-15 20:25:48 -07:00
Yanqin Jin 0bd4dcde6b CompactionIterator sees consistent view of which keys are committed (#9830)
Summary:
**This PR does not affect the functionality of `DB` and write-committed transactions.**

`CompactionIterator` uses `KeyCommitted(seq)` to determine if a key in the database is committed.
As the name 'write-committed' implies, if write-committed policy is used, a key exists in the database only if
it is committed. In fact, the implementation of `KeyCommitted()` is as follows:

```
inline bool KeyCommitted(SequenceNumber seq) {
  // For non-txn-db and write-committed, snapshot_checker_ is always nullptr.
  return snapshot_checker_ == nullptr ||
         snapshot_checker_->CheckInSnapshot(seq, kMaxSequence) == SnapshotCheckerResult::kInSnapshot;
}
```

With that being said, we focus on write-prepared/write-unprepared transactions.

A few notes:
- A key can exist in the db even if it's uncommitted. Therefore, we rely on `snapshot_checker_` to determine data visibility. We also require that all writes go through transaction API instead of the raw `WriteBatch` + `Write`, thus at most one uncommitted version of one user key can exist in the database.
- `CompactionIterator` outputs a key as long as the key is uncommitted.

Due to the above reasons, it is possible that `CompactionIterator` decides to output an uncommitted key without
doing further checks on the key (`NextFromInput()`). By the time the key is being prepared for output, the key becomes
committed because the `snapshot_checker_(seq, kMaxSequence)` becomes true in the implementation of `KeyCommitted()`.
Then `CompactionIterator` will try to zero its sequence number and hit assertion error if the key is a tombstone.

To fix this issue, we should make the `CompactionIterator` see a consistent view of the input keys. Note that
for write-prepared/write-unprepared, the background flush/compaction jobs already take a "job snapshot" before starting
processing keys. The job snapshot is released only after the entire flush/compaction finishes. We can use this snapshot
to determine whether a key is committed or not with minor change to `KeyCommitted()`.

```
inline bool KeyCommitted(SequenceNumber sequence) {
  // For non-txn-db and write-committed, snapshot_checker_ is always nullptr.
  return snapshot_checker_ == nullptr ||
         snapshot_checker_->CheckInSnapshot(sequence, job_snapshot_) ==
             SnapshotCheckerResult::kInSnapshot;
}
```

As a result, whether a key is committed or not will remain a constant throughout compaction, causing no trouble
for `CompactionIterator`s assertions.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9830

Test Plan: make check

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D35561162

Pulled By: riversand963

fbshipit-source-id: 0e00d200c195240341cfe6d34cbc86798b315b9f
2022-04-14 11:11:04 -07:00
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
slk 937fbcbddc Track per-SST user-defined timestamp information in MANIFEST (#9092)
Summary:
Track per-SST user-defined timestamp information in MANIFEST https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8957

Rockdb has supported user-defined timestamp feature. Application can specify a timestamp
when writing each k-v pair. When data flush from memory to disk file called SST files, file
creation activity will commit to MANIFEST. This commit is for tracking timestamp info in the
MANIFEST for each file. The changes involved are as follows:
1) Track max/min timestamp in FileMetaData, and fix invoved codes.
2) Add NewFileCustomTag::kMinTimestamp and NewFileCustomTag::kMinTimestamp in
    NewFileCustomTag ( in the kNewFile4 part ), and support invoved codes such as
    VersionEdit Encode and Decode etc.
3) Add unit test code for VersionEdit EncodeDecodeNewFile4, and fix invoved test codes.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9092

Reviewed By: ajkr, akankshamahajan15

Differential Revision: D32252323

Pulled By: riversand963

fbshipit-source-id: d2642898d6e3ad1fef0eb866b98045408bd4e162
2021-11-10 10:49:04 -08:00
mrambacher 13ae16c315 Cleanup includes in dbformat.h (#8930)
Summary:
This header file was including everything and the kitchen sink when it did not need to.  This resulted in many places including this header when they needed other pieces instead.

Cleaned up this header to only include what was needed and fixed up the remaining code to include what was now missing.

Hopefully, this sort of code hygiene cleanup will speed up the builds...

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8930

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D31142788

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: 6b45de3f300750c79f751f6227dece9cfd44085d
2021-09-29 04:04:40 -07:00
Akanksha Mahajan d6aa8c49f8 Expose blob file information through the EventListener interface (#8675)
Summary:
1. Extend FlushJobInfo and CompactionJobInfo with information about the blob files generated by flush/compaction jobs. This PR add two structures BlobFileInfo and BlobFileGarbageInfo that contains the required information of blob files.
 2. Notify the creation and deletion of blob files through OnBlobFileCreationStarted, OnBlobFileCreated, and OnBlobFileDeleted.
 3. Test OnFile*Finish operations notifications with Blob Files.
 4. Log the blob file creation/deletion events through EventLogger in Log file.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8675

Test Plan: Add new unit tests in listener_test

Reviewed By: ltamasi

Differential Revision: D30412613

Pulled By: akankshamahajan15

fbshipit-source-id: ca51b63c6e8c8d0485a38c503572bc5a82bd5d07
2021-09-16 17:23:36 -07:00
Peter Dillinger b6269b078a Stable cache keys on ingested SST files (#8669)
Summary:
Extends https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8659 to work for ingested external SST files, even
the same file ingested into different DBs sharing a block cache.

Note: These new cache keys are currently only enabled when FileSystem
does not provide GetUniqueId. For now, they are typically larger,
so slightly less efficient.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8669

Test Plan: Extended unit test

Reviewed By: zhichao-cao

Differential Revision: D30398532

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 1f13e2af4b8bfff5741953a69466e9589fbc23c7
2021-08-18 11:33:03 -07:00
mrambacher ab7f7c9e49 Allow WAL dir to change with db dir (#8582)
Summary:
Prior to this change, the "wal_dir"  DBOption would always be set (defaults to dbname) when the DBOptions were sanitized.  Because of this setitng in the options file, it was not possible to rename/relocate a database directory after it had been created and use the existing options file.

After this change, the "wal_dir" option is only set under specific circumstances.  Methods were added to the ImmutableDBOptions class to see if it is set and if it is set to something other than the dbname.  Additionally, a method was added to retrieve the effective value of the WAL dir (either the option or the dbname/path).

Tests were added to the core and ldb to test that a database could be created and renamed without issue.  Additional tests for various permutations of wal_dir were also added.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8582

Reviewed By: pdillinger, autopear

Differential Revision: D29881122

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: 67d3d033dc8813d59917b0a3fba2550c0efd6dfb
2021-07-30 12:16:44 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 0804b44fb6 Some fixes and enhancements to ldb repair (#8544)
Summary:
* Basic handling of SST file with just range tombstones rather than
failing assertion about smallest_seqno <= largest_seqno
* Adds --verbose option so that there exists a way to see the INFO
output from Repairer.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8544

Test Plan: unit test added, manual testing for --verbose

Reviewed By: ajkr

Differential Revision: D29954805

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 696af25805fc36cc178b04ba6045922a22625fd9
2021-07-28 16:44:14 -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
Baptiste Lemaire c521a9ab2b Retire superfluous functions introduced in earlier mempurge PRs. (#8558)
Summary:
The main challenge to make the memtable garbage collection prototype (nicknamed `mempurge`) was to not get rid of WAL files that contain unflushed (but mempurged) data. That was successfully guaranteed by not writing the VersionEdit to the MANIFEST file after a successful mempurge.
By not writing VersionEdits to the `MANIFEST` file after a succesful mempurge operation, we do not change the earliest log file number that contains unflushed data: `cfd->GetLogNumber()` (`cfd->SetLogNumber()` is only called in `VersionSet::ProcessManifestWrites`). As a result, a number of functions introduced earlier just for the mempurge operation are not obscolete/redundant. (e.g.: `FlushJob::ExtractEarliestLogFileNumber`), and this PR aims at cleaning up all these now-unnecessary functions. In particular, we no longer need to store the earliest log file number in the `MemTable` struct itself. This PR therefore also reverts the `MemTable` struct to its original form.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8558

Test Plan: Already included in `db_flush_test.cc`.

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D29764351

Pulled By: bjlemaire

fbshipit-source-id: 0f43b260fa270251862512f397d3f24ee62e8437
2021-07-22 18:29:13 -07:00
Baptiste Lemaire 206845c057 Mempurge support for wal (#8528)
Summary:
In this PR, `mempurge` is made compatible with the Write Ahead Log: in case of recovery, the DB is now capable of recovering the data that was "mempurged" and kept in the `imm()` list of immutable memtables.
The twist was to add a uint64_t to the `memtable` struct to store the number of the earliest log file containing entries from the `memtable`. When a `Flush` operation is replaced with a `MemPurge`, the `VersionEdit` (which usually contains the new min log file number to pick up for recovery and the level 0 file path of the newly created SST file) is no longer appended to the manifest log, and every time the `deleteWal` method is called, a check is made on the list of immutable memtables.
This PR also includes a unit test that verifies that no data is lost upon Reopening of the database when the mempurge feature is activated. This extensive unit test includes two column families, with valid data contained in the imm() at time of "crash"/reopening (recovery).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8528

Reviewed By: pdillinger

Differential Revision: D29701097

Pulled By: bjlemaire

fbshipit-source-id: 072a900fb6ccc1edcf5eef6caf88f3060238edf9
2021-07-15 17:49:13 -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
Peter Dillinger d2ca04e3ed Add more LSM info to FilterBuildingContext (#8246)
Summary:
Add `num_levels`, `is_bottommost`, and table file creation
`reason` to `FilterBuildingContext`, in anticipation of more powerful
Bloom-like filter support.

To support this, added `is_bottommost` and `reason` to
`TableBuilderOptions`, which allowed removing `reason` parameter from
`rocksdb::BuildTable`.

I attempted to remove `skip_filters` from `TableBuilderOptions`, because
filter construction decisions should arise from options, not one-off
parameters. I could not completely remove it because the public API for
SstFileWriter takes a `skip_filters` parameter, and translating this
into an option change would mean awkwardly replacing the table_factory
if it is BlockBasedTableFactory with new filter_policy=nullptr option.
I marked this public skip_filters option as deprecated because of this
oddity. (skip_filters on the read side probably makes sense.)

At least `skip_filters` is now largely hidden for users of
`TableBuilderOptions` and is no longer used for implementing the
optimize_filters_for_hits option. Bringing the logic for that option
closer to handling of FilterBuildingContext makes it more obvious that
hese two are using the same notion of "bottommost." (Planned:
configuration options for Bloom-like filters that generalize
`optimize_filters_for_hits`)

Recommended follow-up: Try to get away from "bottommost level" naming of
things, which is inaccurate (see
VersionStorageInfo::RangeMightExistAfterSortedRun), and move to
"bottommost run" or just "bottommost."

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8246

Test Plan:
extended an existing unit test to exercise and check various
filter building contexts. Also, existing tests for
optimize_filters_for_hits validate some of the "bottommost" handling,
which is now closely connected to FilterBuildingContext::is_bottommost
through TableBuilderOptions::is_bottommost

Reviewed By: mrambacher

Differential Revision: D28099346

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: 2c1072e29c24d4ac404c761a7b7663292372600a
2021-04-30 13:50:13 -07:00
Peter Dillinger 85becd94c1 Refactor: use TableBuilderOptions to reduce parameter lists (#8240)
Summary:
Greatly reduced the not-quite-copy-paste giant parameter lists
of rocksdb::NewTableBuilder, rocksdb::BuildTable,
BlockBasedTableBuilder::Rep ctor, and BlockBasedTableBuilder ctor.

Moved weird separate parameter `uint32_t column_family_id` of
TableFactory::NewTableBuilder into TableBuilderOptions.

Re-ordered parameters to TableBuilderOptions ctor, so that `uint64_t
target_file_size` is not randomly placed between uint64_t timestamps
(was easy to mix up).

Replaced a couple of fields of BlockBasedTableBuilder::Rep with a
FilterBuildingContext. The motivation for this change is making it
easier to pass along more data into new fields in FilterBuildingContext
(follow-up PR).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8240

Test Plan: ASAN make check

Reviewed By: mrambacher

Differential Revision: D28075891

Pulled By: pdillinger

fbshipit-source-id: fddb3dbb8260a0e8bdcbb51b877ebabf9a690d4f
2021-04-29 07:00:50 -07:00
Andrew Kryczka c20a7cd6c7 Apply sample_for_compression to all block-based tables (#8105)
Summary:
Previously it only applied to block-based tables generated by flush. This restriction
was undocumented and blocked a new use case. Now compression sampling
applies to all block-based tables we generate when it is enabled.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8105

Test Plan: new unit test

Reviewed By: riversand963

Differential Revision: D27317275

Pulled By: ajkr

fbshipit-source-id: cd9fcc5178d6515e8cb59c6facb5ac01893cb5b0
2021-03-25 15:00:45 -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
mrambacher 4a09d632c4 Remove Legacy and Custom FileWrapper classes from header files (#7851)
Summary:
Removed the uses of the Legacy FileWrapper classes from the source code.  The wrappers were creating an additional layer of indirection/wrapping, as the Env already has a FileSystem.

Moved the Custom FileWrapper classes into the CustomEnv, as these classes are really for the private use the the CustomEnv class.

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7851

Reviewed By: anand1976

Differential Revision: D26114816

Pulled By: mrambacher

fbshipit-source-id: db32840e58d969d3a0fa6c25aaf13d6dcdc74150
2021-01-28 22:10:32 -08:00
mrambacher e628f59e87 Create a CustomEnv class; Add WinFileSystem; Make LegacyFileSystemWrapper private (#7703)
Summary:
This PR does the following:
-> Creates a WinFileSystem class.  This class is the Windows equivalent of the PosixFileSystem and will be used on Windows systems.
-> Introduces a CustomEnv class.  A CustomEnv is an Env that takes a FileSystem as constructor argument.  I believe there will only ever be two implementations of this class (PosixEnv and WinEnv).  There is still a CustomEnvWrapper class that takes an Env and a FileSystem and wraps the Env calls with the input Env but uses the FileSystem for the FileSystem calls
-> Eliminates the public uses of the LegacyFileSystemWrapper.

With this change in place, there are effectively the following patterns of Env:
- "Base Env classes" (PosixEnv, WinEnv).  These classes implement the core Env functions (e.g. Threads) and have a hard-coded input FileSystem.  These classes inherit from CompositeEnv, implement the core Env functions (threads) and delegate the FileSystem-like calls to the input file system.
- Wrapped Composite Env classes (MemEnv).  These classes take in an Env and a FileSystem.  The core env functions are re-directed to the wrapped env.  The file system calls are redirected to the input file system
- Legacy Wrapped Env classes.  These classes take in an Env input (but no FileSystem).  The core env functions are re-directed to the wrapped env.  A "Legacy File System" is created using this env and the file system calls directed to the env itself.

With these changes in place, the PosixEnv becomes a singleton -- there is only ever one created.  Any other use of the PosixEnv is via another wrapped env.  This cleans up some of the issues with the env construction and destruction.

Additionally, there were places in the code that required had an Env when they required a FileSystem.  Many of these places would wrap the Env with a LegacyFileSystemWrapper instead of using the env->GetFileSystem().  These places were changed, thereby removing layers of additional redirection (LegacyFileSystem --> Env --> Env::FileSystem).

Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7703

Reviewed By: zhichao-cao

Differential Revision: D25762190

Pulled By: anand1976

fbshipit-source-id: 1a088e97fc916f28ac69c149cd1dcad0ab31704b
2021-01-06 10:49:32 -08:00