Summary:
.. so write time can be measured under the new perf level for single-threaded writes.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12394
Test Plan: * add a new UT `PerfContextTest.WriteMemtableTimePerfLevel`
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D54326263
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: d0e334d9581851ba6cf53c776c0bd876365d1e00
Summary:
Currently SST files that aren't applicable to last_level_temperature nor file_temperature_age_thresholds are written with temperature kUnknown, which is a little weird and doesn't support CF-based tiering. The default_temperature option only affects how kUnknown is interpreted for stats.
This change adds a new per-CF option default_write_temperature that determines the temperature of new SST files when those other options do not apply.
Also made a change to ignore last_level_temperature with FIFO compaction, because I found that could lead to an infinite loop in compaction.
Needed follow-up: Fix temperature handling with external file ingestion
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12388
Test Plan: unit tests extended appropriately. (Ignore whitespace changes when reviewing.)
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D54266574
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: c9ec9a74dbf22be6e986f77f9689d05fea8ef0bb
Summary:
Fix some issues introduced in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12199 (CC rhubner)
1. Previous `jar -v -c -f` was not valid command syntax.
2. Javadoc and source Jar files were prefixed `rocksdb-`, now corrected to `rocksdbjni-`
pdillinger This needs to be merged to `main` and also `8.11.fb` (to fix the Windows build for the RocksJava release of 8.11.2) please.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12371
Reviewed By: pdillinger, jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D54136834
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: f356f2401042af359ada607e5f0be627418ccd6c
Summary:
Reorder writers list to allow a leader can take as more commits as possible to maximize the throughput of the system and reduce IOPS.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12138
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D53955592
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 4d899d038faef691b63801d9d85f5cc079b7bbb5
Summary:
When the rate limiter does not have any waiting requests, the first request to arrive may consume all of the available bandwidth, despite potentially having lower priority than requests that arrive later in the same refill interval. Then, those higher priority requests must wait for a refill. So even in scenarios in which we have an overall bandwidth surplus, the highest priority requests can be sporadically delayed up to a whole refill period.
Alone, this isn't necessarily problematic as the refill period is configurable via `refill_period_us` and can be tuned down as needed until the max sporadic delay is tolerable. However, tuning down `refill_period_us` had a side effect of reducing burst size. Some users require a certain burst size to issue optimal I/O sizes to the underlying storage system.
To satisfy those users, this PR decouples the refill period from the burst size. That way, the max sporadic delay can be limited without impacting I/O sizes issued to the underlying storage system.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12379
Test Plan:
The goal is to show we can now limit the max sporadic delay without impacting compaction's I/O size.
The benchmark runs compaction with a large I/O size, while user reads simultaneously run at a low rate that does not consume all of the available bandwidth. The max sporadic delay is measured using the P100 of rocksdb.file.read.get.micros. I just used strace to verify the compaction reads follow `rate_limiter_single_burst_bytes`
Setup: `./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom,flush -write_buffer_size=67108864 -disable_auto_compactions=true -value_size=256 -num=1048576`
Benchmark: `./db_bench -benchmarks=readrandom -use_existing_db=true -num=1048576 -duration=10 -benchmark_read_rate_limit=4096 -rate_limiter_bytes_per_sec=67108864 -rate_limiter_refill_period_us=$refill_micros -rate_limiter_single_burst_bytes=16777216 -rate_limit_bg_reads=true -rate_limit_user_ops=true -statistics=true -cache_size=0 -stats_level=5 -compaction_readahead_size=16777216 -use_direct_reads=true`
Results:
refill_micros | rocksdb.file.read.get.micros (P100)
-- | --
10000 | 10802
100000 | 100240
1000000 | 922061
For verifying compaction read sizes: `strace -fye pread64 ./db_bench -benchmarks=compact -use_existing_db=true -rate_limiter_bytes_per_sec=67108864 -rate_limiter_refill_period_us=$refill_micros -rate_limiter_single_burst_bytes=16777216 -rate_limit_bg_reads=true -compaction_readahead_size=16777216 -use_direct_reads=true`
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D54165675
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: c5968486316cbfb7ff8e5b7d75d3589883dd1105
Summary:
Fix compatibility with transparent huge pages by allocating in increments (1MiB) smaller than the
typical smallest huge page size of 2MiB.
Also, bypass the test when jemalloc config.fill is used, which means the allocator is explicitly
configured to write to memory before we get it, which is not what this test expects.
Fixes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/12351
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12378
Test Plan:
```
sudo bash -c 'echo "always" > /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled'
```
And see unit test fails before this change, passes after this change
Also tested internal buck build with dbg mode (previously failing).
Reviewed By: jaykorean, hx235
Differential Revision: D54139634
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 179accebe918d8eecd46a979fcf21d356f9b5519
Summary:
`nullptr` is typesafe. `0` and `NULL` are not. In the future, only `nullptr` will be allowed.
This diff helps us embrace the future _now_ in service of enabling `-Wzero-as-null-pointer-constant`.
Reviewed By: meyering
Differential Revision: D54163069
fbshipit-source-id: e5bb4b6ee79d82f1437ffed602bdb41dcfc0e59a
Summary:
This option is used for encoding keys in block based table files. It has been having a default true value since its introduction.
Users may not notice this option is not persisted in options file unless they are explicitly setting it to false. If the users expect `Iterator::GetProperty("rocksdb.iterator.is-key-pinned")` to return 1 when setting `ReadOptions.pin_data = true`, they should have noticed loading options file won't work and have work around for this by always explicitly set this option to false for opening DB. This change won't impact those users except that now they can remove their work around. If the users are not relying on key pinning behavior at all and as a result didn't notice the option is not persisted, this change shouldn't have any visible behavior impact either.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11987
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D54093238
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 256a3348c44cf91349034d1f6e242c437b32b9a5
Summary:
Replace unreliable-in-chrome PDF w/PNG of same graph
jmh-result-pinnable-vs-output-plot.pdf is showing as thumbnail on Chrome, rendering OK on Safari for some; I have converted it to PNG in the hope that will display correctly in all environments.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12372
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D54076718
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 2eff995f0239ab7850a40063d841380738953533
Summary:
Enabling time PerfCounter stats in RocksDB is currently very expensive, as it enables all sorts of relatively uninteresting stats, such as iteration, point lookup breakdown etc. This PR adds a new perf level between `kEnableCount` and `kEnableTimeExceptForMutex` to enable stats for time spent by user (i.e a RocksDB user) threads blocked by other RocksDB threads or events, such as a write group leader, write delay or stalls etc. It does not include time spent waiting to acquire mutexes, or waiting for IO.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12368
Test Plan: Add a unit test for write_thread_wait_nanos
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D54021583
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 3f6fcf71010132ffffca0391a5565f3b59fddd48
Summary:
This PR expands on the capabilities added in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/12343. It adds sanity checks for external file's comparator name and user-defined timestamps related flag. With this, it now supports ingesting files to a column family that enables user-defined timestamps in Memtable only feature.
Two fields in the table properties are used for aformentioned check: 1) the comparator name, it records what comparator is used to create this external sst file, 2) the flag `user_defined_timestamps_persisted`. We compare these two fields with the column family's settings. The details are in util function `ValidateUserDefinedTimestampsOptions`.
To optimize for the majority of the cases where sanity check should pass and the table properties read should not affect how `TableReader` is constructed, instead of read the table properties block separately and use it for sanity check before creating a `TableReader`. We continue using the current flow to first create a `TableReader`, use it for reading table properties and do sanity checks, and reset the`TableReader` for the case where the column family enables UDTs in memtable only feature, and the external file does not contain user-defined timestamps.
This PR also groups other table properties related sanity check in function `GetIngestedFileInfo` into the newly added `SanityCheckTableProperties` function.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12356
Test Plan:
added unit test
existing unit test
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D54025116
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: a918276c15f9908bd9df8513ce667638882e1554
Summary:
This occasional filesystem read in the write path has caused user pain. It doesn't seem very useful considering it only limits one component's merge chain length, and only helps merge uncached (i.e., infrequently read) values. This PR proposes allowing `max_successive_merges` to be exceeded when the value cannot be read from in-memory components. I included a rollback flag (`strict_max_successive_merges`) just in case.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12365
Test Plan:
"rocksdb.block.cache.data.add" is number of data blocks read from filesystem. Since the benchmark is write-only, compaction is disabled, and flush doesn't read data blocks, any nonzero value means the user write issued the read.
```
$ for s in false true; do echo -n "strict_max_successive_merges=$s: " && ./db_bench -value_size=64 -write_buffer_size=131072 -writes=128 -num=1 -benchmarks=mergerandom,flush,mergerandom -merge_operator=stringappend -disable_auto_compactions=true -compression_type=none -strict_max_successive_merges=$s -max_successive_merges=100 -statistics=true |& grep 'block.cache.data.add COUNT' ; done
strict_max_successive_merges=false: rocksdb.block.cache.data.add COUNT : 0
strict_max_successive_merges=true: rocksdb.block.cache.data.add COUNT : 1
```
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D53982520
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: e40f761a60bd601f232417ac0058e4a33ee9c0f4
Summary:
We did some experimental work with FFI and native memory as a potential improvement to the Java API.
The work lives (unmerged) in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11095
This is the report text from that branch, extract as a blog post.
Along with some supporting files (png, pdf of graphs).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11760
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D53943442
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 7c9f800e25be22c10e736cdd3b0d65422ecfc826
Summary:
In RocksDb jni threre is no method to know if the instance is closed or not.
so when using a closed instance it makes jvm crash.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11337
Reviewed By: jaykorean
Differential Revision: D53941387
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: e3e4e6fe48409fa70a312810e467ec0c4ce356ef
Summary:
with release notes for 9.0.fb, format_compatible test update, and version.h update.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12360
Test Plan: CI
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D53879416
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 29598893d9ce2d0bb181345ddb78f9b1529aee75
Summary:
pdillinger This fixes the RocksJava build, is also needed in the 8.10.fb and 8.11.fb branches please?
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12358
Reviewed By: jaykorean
Differential Revision: D53859743
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: b8417fccfee931591805f9aecdfae7c086fee708
Summary:
A lot of variants of Get and MultiGet have been added to `include/rocksdb/db.h` over the years. Try to consolidate them by marking variants that don't return timestamps as deprecated. The underlying DB implementation will check and return Status::NotSupported() if it doesn't support returning timestamps and the caller asks for it.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12327
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D53828151
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: e0b5ca42d32daa2739d5f439a729815a2d4ff050
Summary:
Modify ReadAsync callback API to remove const from FSReadRequest as const doesn't let to fs_scratch to move the ownership.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11649
Test Plan: CircleCI jobs
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D53585309
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: 3bff9035db0e6fbbe34721a5963443355807420d
Summary:
The RocksDB ticker and histogram statistics were out of sync between the C++ and Java code, with a number of newer stats missing in TickerType.java and HistogramType.java. Also, there were gaps in numbering in portal.h, which could soon become an issue due to the number of tickers and the fact that we're limited to 1 byte in Java. This PR adds the missing stats, and re-numbers all of them. It also moves some stats around to try to group related stats together. Since this will go into a major release, compatibility shouldn't be an issue.
This should be automated at some point, since the current process is somewhat error prone.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12355
Reviewed By: jaykorean
Differential Revision: D53825324
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 298c180872f4b9f1ee54b8bb22f4e280458e7e09
Summary:
This change contains a prototype new API for "higher dimensional" filtering of read queries. Existing filters treat keys as one-dimensional, either as distinct points (whole key) or as contiguous ranges in comparator order (prefix filters). The proposed KeySegmentsExtractor allows treating keys as multi-dimensional for filtering purposes even though they still have a single total order across dimensions. For example, consider these keys in different LSM levels:
L0:
abc_0123
abc_0150
def_0114
ghi_0134
L1:
abc_0045
bcd_0091
def_0077
xyz_0080
If we get a range query for [def_0100, def_0200), a prefix filter (up to the underscore) will tell us that both levels are potentially relevant. However, if each SST file stores a simple range of the values for the second segment of the key, we would see that L1 only has [0045, 0091] which (under certain required assumptions) we are sure does not overlap with the given range query. Thus, we can filter out processing or reading any index or data blocks from L1 for the query.
This kind of case shows up with time-ordered data but is more general than filtering based on user timestamp. See https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11332 . Here the "time" segments of the keys are meaningfully ordered with respect to each other even when the previous segment is different, so summarizing data along an alternate dimension of the key like this can work well for filtering.
This prototype implementation simply leverages existing APIs for user table properties and table filtering, which is not very CPU efficient. Eventually, we expect to create a native implementation. However, I have put some significant
thought and engineering into the new APIs overall, which I expect to be close to refined enough for production.
For details, see new public APIs in experimental.h. For a detailed example, see the new unit test in db_bloom_filter_test.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12075
Test Plan: Unit test included
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D53619406
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 9e6e7b82b4db8d815db76a6ab340e90db2c191f2
Summary:
It's in production for a large storage service, and it was initially released 6 months ago (8.6.0). IMHO that's enough room for "easy downgrade" to most any user's previously integrated version, even if they only update a few times a year.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12352
Test Plan:
tests updated, including format capatibility test
table_test: ApproximateOffsetOfCompressed is affected because adding index block to metaindex adds about 13 bytes
to SST files in format_version 6. This test has historically been problematic and one reason is that, apparently, not only
could it pass/fail depending on snappy compression version, but also how long your host name is, because of db_host_id.
I've cleared that out for the test, which takes care of format_version=6 and hopefully improves long-term reliability.
Suggested follow-up: FinishImpl in table_test.cc takes a table_options that is ignored in some cases and might not match
the ioptions.table_factory configuration unless the caller is very careful. This should be cleaned up somehow.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D53786884
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 1964cbd40d3ab0a821fdc01c458031df716fcf51
Summary:
.. for public api change related to sst_dump.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12353
Reviewed By: jaykorean
Differential Revision: D53791123
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 3fbe9c7a3eb0a30dc1a00d39bc8a46028baa3779
Summary:
Update llvm-fb to 15 and some other dependency versions.
## Test
Copied over the two script files to tp2 librocksdb source and ran tp2_build, it succeeded.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12342
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D53690631
Pulled By: bunnypak
fbshipit-source-id: 68f884b2a565f98bc3510290b411a901ef781adb
Summary:
This PR adds support in `SstFileWriter` to create SST files without persisting timestamps when the column family has enabled UDTs in Memtable only feature. The sst files created from flush and compaction do not contain timestamps, we want to make the sst files created by `SstFileWriter` to follow the same pattern and not persist timestamps. This is to prepare for ingesting external SST files for this type of column family.
There are timestamp-aware APIs and non timestamp-aware APIs in `SstFileWriter`. The former are exclusively used for when the column family's comparator is timestamp-aware, a.k.a `Comparator::timestamp_size() > 0`, while the latter are exclusively used for the column family's comparator is non timestamp-aware, a.k.a `Comparator::timestamp_size() == 0`. There are sanity checks to make sure these APIs are correctly used.
In this PR, the APIs usage continue with above enforcement, where even though timestamps are not eventually persisted, users are still asked to use only the timestamp-aware APIs. But because data points will logically all have minimum timestamps, we don't allow multiple versions of the same user key (without timestamp) to be added.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12348
Test Plan:
Added unit tests
Manual inspection of generated sst files with `sst_dump`
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D53732667
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: e43beba0d3a1736b94ee5c617163a6280efd65b7
Summary:
There is no strong reason for user to need this mode while on the other hand, its behavior is destructive.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12337
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D53630393
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: ce94b537258102cd98f89aa4090025663664dd78
Summary:
This PR adds initial support to bulk loading external sst files with user-defined timestamps.
To ensure this invariant is met while ingesting external files:
assume there are two internal keys: <K, ts1, seq1> and <K, ts2, seq2>, the following should hold:
ts1 < ts2 iff. seq1 < seq2
These extra requirements are added for ingesting external files with user-defined timestamps:
1) A file with overlapping user key (without timestamp) range with the db cannot be ingested. This is because we cannot ensure above invariant is met without checking each overlapped key's timestamp and compare it with the timestamp from the db. This is an expensive step. This bulk loading feature will be used by MyRocks and currently their usage can guarantee ingested file's key range doesn't overlap with db.
4f3a57a13f/storage/rocksdb/ha_rocksdb.cc (L3312)
We can consider loose this requirement by doing this check in the future, this initial support just disallow this.
2) Files with overlapping user key (without timestamp) range are not allowed to be ingested. For similar reasons, it's hard to ensure above invariant is met. For example, if we have two files where user keys are interleaved like this:
file1: [c10, c8, f10, f5]
file2: [b5, c11, f4]
Either file1 gets a bigger global seqno than file2, or the other way around, above invariant cannot be met.
So we disallow this.
2) When a column family enables user-defined timestamps, it doesn't support ingestion behind mode. Ingestion behind currently simply puts the file at the bottommost level, and assign a global seqno 0 to the file. We need to do similar search though the LSM tree for key range overlap checks to make sure aformentioned invariant is met. So this initial support disallow this mode. We can consider adding it in the future.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12343
Test Plan: Add unit tests
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D53686182
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: f05e3fb27967f7974ed40179d78634c40ecfb136
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12347
`DBImpl::disable_delete_obsolete_files_` should only be accessed while holding the DB mutex to prevent data races. There's a piece of logic in `DBImpl::RenameTempFileToOptionsFile` where this synchronization was previously missing. The patch fixes this issue similarly to how it's handled in `DisableFileDeletions` and `EnableFileDeletions`, that is, by saving the counter value while holding the mutex and then performing the actual file deletion outside the critical section. Note: this PR only fixes the race itself; as a followup, we can also look into cleaning up and optimizing the file deletion logic (which is currently inefficient on multiple different levels).
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D53675153
fbshipit-source-id: 5358e894ee6829d3edfadac50a93d97f8819e481
Summary:
The original [clang-format-diff.py script](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/llvm/llvm-project/main/clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py), referenced in format.sh, exits with a status of 1 at the end after writing diffs to stderr. Consequently, the format.sh script terminates after initializing the 'diffs' variable.
Implemented additional logic in format-diff.sh to ensure continuous execution, even when changes are detected and further formatting is required.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12329
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D53483185
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: b7adff26f129220941258fd6ee83d053fa12b077
Summary:
(as title)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12336
Test Plan: in use at Meta for a large service; in crash test
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D53537628
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 69e7ac9ab7b59b928d1144105667a7fde8a55a5a
Summary:
so the stress test does not fail.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12338
Reviewed By: jaykorean
Differential Revision: D53542941
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 83b2eb3cb5cc4c5a268da386c22c4aadeb039a74
Summary:
Some of the errors like data race and heap-after-use are error out based on crash test reporting them as error by relying on stderr. So reverting back to original form unless we come up with a more reliable solution to error out.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12335
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D53534781
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: b19aa560d1560ac2281f7bc04e13961ed751f178
Summary:
The following are risks associated with pointer-to-pointer reinterpret_cast:
* Can produce the "wrong result" (crash or memory corruption). IIRC, in theory this can happen for any up-cast or down-cast for a non-standard-layout type, though in practice would only happen for multiple inheritance cases (where the base class pointer might be "inside" the derived object). We don't use multiple inheritance a lot, but we do.
* Can mask useful compiler errors upon code change, including converting between unrelated pointer types that you are expecting to be related, and converting between pointer and scalar types unintentionally.
I can only think of some obscure cases where static_cast could be troublesome when it compiles as a replacement:
* Going through `void*` could plausibly cause unnecessary or broken pointer arithmetic. Suppose we have
`struct Derived: public Base1, public Base2`. If we have `Derived*` -> `void*` -> `Base2*` -> `Derived*` through reinterpret casts, this could plausibly work (though technical UB) assuming the `Base2*` is not dereferenced. Changing to static cast could introduce breaking pointer arithmetic.
* Unnecessary (but safe) pointer arithmetic could arise in a case like `Derived*` -> `Base2*` -> `Derived*` where before the Base2 pointer might not have been dereferenced. This could potentially affect performance.
With some light scripting, I tried replacing pointer-to-pointer reinterpret_casts with static_cast and kept the cases that still compile. Most occurrences of reinterpret_cast have successfully been changed (except for java/ and third-party/). 294 changed, 257 remain.
A couple of related interventions included here:
* Previously Cache::Handle was not actually derived from in the implementations and just used as a `void*` stand-in with reinterpret_cast. Now there is a relationship to allow static_cast. In theory, this could introduce pointer arithmetic (as described above) but is unlikely without multiple inheritance AND non-empty Cache::Handle.
* Remove some unnecessary casts to void* as this is allowed to be implicit (for better or worse).
Most of the remaining reinterpret_casts are for converting to/from raw bytes of objects. We could consider better idioms for these patterns in follow-up work.
I wish there were a way to implement a template variant of static_cast that would only compile if no pointer arithmetic is generated, but best I can tell, this is not possible. AFAIK the best you could do is a dynamic check that the void* conversion after the static cast is unchanged.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12308
Test Plan: existing tests, CI
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D53204947
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 9de23e618263b0d5b9820f4e15966876888a16e2
Summary:
Introduce some different range classes `UserKeyRange` and `UserKeyRangePtr` to be used by internal implementation. The `Range` class is used in both public APIs like `DB::GetApproximateSizes`, `DB::GetApproximateMemTableStats`, `DB::GetPropertiesOfTablesInRange` etc and internal implementations like `ColumnFamilyData::RangesOverlapWithMemtables`, `VersionSet::GetPropertiesOfTablesInRange`.
These APIs have different expectations of what keys this range class contain. Public API users are supposed to populate the range with the user keys without timestamp, in the same way that point lookup and range scan APIs' key input only expect the user key without timestamp. The internal APIs implementation expect a user key whose format is compatible with the user comparator, a.k.a a user key with the timestamp.
This PR contains:
1) introducing counterpart range class `UserKeyRange` `UserKeyRangePtr` for internal implementation while leave the existing `Range` and `RangePtr` class only for public APIs. Internal implementations are updated to use this new class instead.
2) add user-defined timestamp support for `DB::GetPropertiesOfTablesInRange` API and `DeleteFilesInRanges` API.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12071
Test Plan:
existing tests
Added test for `DB::GetPropertiesOfTablesInRange` and `DeleteFilesInRanges` APIs for when user-defined timestamp is enabled.
The change in external_file_ingestion_job doesn't have a user-defined timestamp enabled test case coverage, will add one in a follow up PR that adds file ingestion support for UDT.
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D53292608
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 9a9279e23c640a6d8f8232636501a95aef7638b8
Summary:
# Summary
Following up jowlyzhang 's comment in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/12283 .
- Remove `ARG_TTL` from help which is not relevant to `multi_get` command
- Treat NotFound status as non-error case for both `Get` and `MultiGet` and updated the unit test, `ldb_test.py`
- Print key along with value in `multi_get` command
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12332
Test Plan:
**Unit Test**
```
$>python3 tools/ldb_test.py
...
Ran 25 tests in 17.447s
OK
```
**Manual Run**
```
$> ./ldb --db=/data/users/jewoongh/rocksdb_test/T173992396/rocksdb_crashtest_blackbox --hex multi_get 0x0000000000000009000000000000012B00000000000000D8 0x0000000000000009000000000000002678787878BEEF
0x0000000000000009000000000000012B00000000000000D8 ==> 0x47000000434241404F4E4D4C4B4A494857565554535251505F5E5D5C5B5A595867666564636261606F6E6D6C6B6A696877767574737271707F7E7D7C7B7A797807060504030201000F0E0D0C0B0A090817161514131211101F1E1D1C1B1A1918
Key not found: 0x0000000000000009000000000000002678787878BEEF
```
```
$> ./ldb --db=/data/users/jewoongh/rocksdb_test/T173992396/rocksdb_crashtest_blackbox --hex get 0x00000000000000090000000000
Key not found
```
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D53450164
Pulled By: jaykorean
fbshipit-source-id: 9ccec78ad3695e65b1ed0c147c7cbac502a1bd48
Summary:
When using the Rocksdb Java API.
When we use Java code to call `db.compactRange (columnFamilyHandle, start, null)` which means we hope to perform range compaction on keys bigger than **start**.
we expected call to the corresponding C++ code : `db->compactRange (columnFamilyHandle, &start, nullptr)`
But in reality, what is being called is
`db ->compactRange (columnFamilyHandle,start,"")`
The problem here is the `null` in Java are not converted to `nullptr`, but rather to `""`, which may result in some unexpected results
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/12328
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D53432749
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: eeadd19d05667230568668946d2ef1d5b2568268