Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
Motived by user need of investigating db iterator behavior during an interval of any time length of a certain thread, we decide to collect and expose related counters in `PerfContext` as an experimental feature, in addition to the existing db-scope ones (i.e, tickers)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11320
Test Plan:
- new UT
- db bench
Setup
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -benchmarks="fillseq" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=1000000 -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3
```
Test till converges
```
./db_bench -seed=1679526311157283 -use_existing_db=1 -perf_level=2 -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -benchmarks="seekrandom[-X60]"
```
pre-change
`seekrandom [AVG 33 runs] : 7545 (± 100) ops/sec`
post-change (no regression)
`seekrandom [AVG 33 runs] : 7688 (± 67) ops/sec`
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D44321931
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: f98a254ba3e3ced95eb5928884e33f1b99dca401
Summary:
…evel_bytes
During DB open, if a column family uses level compaction with level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true, trivially move its files down in the LSM such that the bottommost files are in Lmax, the second from bottommost level files are in Lmax-1 and so on. This is aimed to make it easier to migrate level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes from false to true. Before this change, a full manual compaction is suggested for such migration. After this change, user can just restart DB to turn on this option. db_crashtest.py is updated to randomly choose value for level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes.
Note that there may still be too many unnecessary levels if a user is migrating from universal compaction or level compaction with a smaller level multiplier. A full manual compaction may still be needed in that case before some PR that automatically drain unnecessary levels like https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/3921 lands. Eventually we may want to change the default value of option level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes to true.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11321
Test Plan:
1. Added unit tests.
2. Crash test: ran a variation of db_crashtest.py (like 32516507e77521ae887e45091b69139e32e8efb7) that turns level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes on and off and switches between LC and UC for the same DB.
TODO: Update `OptionChangeMigration`, either after this PR or https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/3921.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D44341930
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 013de19a915c6a0502be569f07c4cc8f1c3c6be2
Summary:
Internally refactors SecondaryCache integration out of LRUCache specifically and into a wrapper/adapter class that works with various Cache implementations. Notably, this relies on separating the notion of async lookup handles from other cache handles, so that HyperClockCache doesn't have to deal with the problem of allocating handles from the hash table for lookups that might fail anyway, and might be on the same key without support for coalescing. (LRUCache's hash table can incorporate previously allocated handles thanks to its pointer indirection.) Specifically, I'm worried about the case in which hundreds of threads try to access the same block and probing in the hash table degrades to linear search on the pile of entries with the same key.
This change is a big step in the direction of supporting stacked SecondaryCaches, but there are obstacles to completing that. Especially, there is no SecondaryCache hook for evictions to pass from one to the next. It has been proposed that evictions be transmitted simply as the persisted data (as in SaveToCallback), but given the current structure provided by the CacheItemHelpers, that would require an extra copy of the block data, because there's intentionally no way to ask for a contiguous Slice of the data (to allow for flexibility in storage). `AsyncLookupHandle` and the re-worked `WaitAll()` should be essentially prepared for stacked SecondaryCaches, but several "TODO with stacked secondaries" issues remain in various places.
It could be argued that the stacking instead be done as a SecondaryCache adapter that wraps two (or more) SecondaryCaches, but at least with the current API that would require an extra heap allocation on SecondaryCache Lookup for a wrapper SecondaryCacheResultHandle that can transfer a Lookup between secondaries. We could also consider trying to unify the Cache and SecondaryCache APIs, though that might be difficult if `AsyncLookupHandle` is kept a fixed struct.
## cache.h (public API)
Moves `secondary_cache` option from LRUCacheOptions to ShardedCacheOptions so that it is applicable to HyperClockCache.
## advanced_cache.h (advanced public API)
* Add `Cache::CreateStandalone()` so that the SecondaryCache support wrapper can use it.
* Add `SetEvictionCallback()` / `eviction_callback_` so that the SecondaryCache support wrapper can use it. Only a single callback is supported for efficiency. If there is ever a need for more than one, hopefully that can be handled with a broadcast callback wrapper.
These are essentially the two "extra" pieces of `Cache` for pulling out specific SecondaryCache support from the `Cache` implementation. I think it's a good trade-off as these are reasonable, limited, and reusable "cut points" into the `Cache` implementations.
* Remove async capability from standard `Lookup()` (getting rid of awkward restrictions on pending Handles) and add `AsyncLookupHandle` and `StartAsyncLookup()`. As noted in the comments, the full struct of `AsyncLookupHandle` is exposed so that it can be stack allocated, for efficiency, though more data is being copied around than before, which could impact performance. (Lookup info -> AsyncLookupHandle -> Handle vs. Lookup info -> Handle)
I could foresee a future in which a Cache internally saves a pointer to the AsyncLookupHandle, which means it's dangerous to allow it to be copyable or even movable. It also means it's not compatible with std::vector (which I don't like requiring as an API parameter anyway), so `WaitAll()` expects any contiguous array of AsyncLookupHandles. I believe this is best for common case efficiency, while behaving well in other cases also. For example, `WaitAll()` has no effect on default-constructed AsyncLookupHandles, which look like a completed cache miss.
## cacheable_entry.h
A couple of functions are obsolete because Cache::Handle can no longer be pending.
## cache.cc
Provides default implementations for new or revamped Cache functions, especially appropriate for non-blocking caches.
## secondary_cache_adapter.{h,cc}
The full details of the Cache wrapper adding SecondaryCache support. Essentially replicates the SecondaryCache handling that was in LRUCache, but obviously refactored. There is a bit of logic duplication, where Lookup() is essentially a manually optimized version of StartAsyncLookup() and Wait(), but it's roughly a dozen lines of code.
## sharded_cache.h, typed_cache.h, charged_cache.{h,cc}, sim_cache.cc
Simply updated for Cache API changes.
## lru_cache.{h,cc}
Carefully remove SecondaryCache logic, implement `CreateStandalone` and eviction handler functionality.
## clock_cache.{h,cc}
Expose existing `CreateStandalone` functionality, add eviction handler functionality. Light refactoring.
## block_based_table_reader*
Mostly re-worked the only usage of async Lookup, which is in BlockBasedTable::MultiGet. Used arrays in place of autovector in some places for efficiency. Simplified some logic by not trying to process some cache results before they're all ready.
Created new function `BlockBasedTable::GetCachePriority()` to reduce some pre-existing code duplication (and avoid making it worse).
Fixed at least one small bug from the prior confusing mixture of async and sync Lookups. In MaybeReadBlockAndLoadToCache(), called by RetrieveBlock(), called by MultiGet() with wait=false, is_cache_hit for the block_cache_tracer entry would not be set to true if the handle was pending after Lookup and before Wait.
## Intended follow-up work
* Figure out if there are any missing stats or block_cache_tracer work in refactored BlockBasedTable::MultiGet
* Stacked secondary caches (see above discussion)
* See if we can make up for the small MultiGet performance regression.
* Study more performance with SecondaryCache
* Items evicted from over-full LRUCache in Release were not being demoted to SecondaryCache, and still aren't to minimize unit test churn. Ideally they would be demoted, but it's an exceptional case so not a big deal.
* Use CreateStandalone for cache reservations (save unnecessary hash table operations). Not a big deal, but worthy cleanup.
* Somehow I got the contract for SecondaryCache::Insert wrong in #10945. (Doesn't take ownership!) That API comment needs to be fixed, but didn't want to mingle that in here.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11301
Test Plan:
## Unit tests
Generally updated to include HCC in SecondaryCache tests, though HyperClockCache has some different, less strict behaviors that leads to some tests not really being set up to work with it. Some of the tests remain disabled with it, but I think we have good coverage without them.
## Crash/stress test
Updated to use the new combination.
## Performance
First, let's check for regression on caches without secondary cache configured. Adding support for the eviction callback is likely to have a tiny effect, but it shouldn't be worrisome. LRUCache could benefit slightly from less logic around SecondaryCache handling. We can test with cache_bench default settings, built with DEBUG_LEVEL=0 and PORTABLE=0.
```
(while :; do base/cache_bench --cache_type=hyper_clock_cache | grep Rough; done) | awk '{ sum += $9; count++; print $0; print "Average: " int(sum / count) }'
```
**Before** this and #11299 (which could also have a small effect), running for about an hour, before & after running concurrently for each cache type:
HyperClockCache: 3168662 (average parallel ops/sec)
LRUCache: 2940127
**After** this and #11299, running for about an hour:
HyperClockCache: 3164862 (average parallel ops/sec) (0.12% slower)
LRUCache: 2940928 (0.03% faster)
This is an acceptable difference IMHO.
Next, let's consider essentially the worst case of new CPU overhead affecting overall performance. MultiGet uses the async lookup interface regardless of whether SecondaryCache or folly are used. We can configure a benchmark where all block cache queries are for data blocks, and all are hits.
Create DB and test (before and after tests running simultaneously):
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=30000000 -disable_wal=1 -bloom_bits=16
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm base/db_bench -benchmarks=multireadrandom[-X30] -readonly -multiread_batched -batch_size=32 -num=30000000 -bloom_bits=16 -cache_size=6789000000 -duration 20 -threads=16
```
**Before**:
multireadrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 3444202 (± 57049) ops/sec; 240.9 (± 4.0) MB/sec
multireadrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 3514443 ops/sec; 245.8 MB/sec
**After**:
multireadrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 3291022 (± 58851) ops/sec; 230.2 (± 4.1) MB/sec
multireadrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 3366179 ops/sec; 235.4 MB/sec
So that's roughly a 3% regression, on kind of a *worst case* test of MultiGet CPU. Similar story with HyperClockCache:
**Before**:
multireadrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 3933777 (± 41840) ops/sec; 275.1 (± 2.9) MB/sec
multireadrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 3970667 ops/sec; 277.7 MB/sec
**After**:
multireadrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 3755338 (± 30391) ops/sec; 262.6 (± 2.1) MB/sec
multireadrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 3785696 ops/sec; 264.8 MB/sec
Roughly a 4-5% regression. Not ideal, but not the whole story, fortunately.
Let's also look at Get() in db_bench:
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=readrandom[-X30] -readonly -num=30000000 -bloom_bits=16 -cache_size=6789000000 -duration 20 -threads=16
```
**Before**:
readrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 2198685 (± 13412) ops/sec; 153.8 (± 0.9) MB/sec
readrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 2209498 ops/sec; 154.5 MB/sec
**After**:
readrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 2292814 (± 43508) ops/sec; 160.3 (± 3.0) MB/sec
readrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 2365181 ops/sec; 165.4 MB/sec
That's showing roughly a 4% improvement, perhaps because of the secondary cache code that is no longer part of LRUCache. But weirdly, HyperClockCache is also showing 2-3% improvement:
**Before**:
readrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 2272333 (± 9992) ops/sec; 158.9 (± 0.7) MB/sec
readrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 2273239 ops/sec; 159.0 MB/sec
**After**:
readrandom [AVG 30 runs] : 2332407 (± 11252) ops/sec; 163.1 (± 0.8) MB/sec
readrandom [MEDIAN 30 runs] : 2335329 ops/sec; 163.3 MB/sec
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D44177044
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: e808e48ff3fe2f792a79841ba617be98e48689f5
Summary:
In PosixFileSystem, IO uring support is opt-in. If the support is not enabled by the user, then ignore the async_io ReadOption in MultiGet and iteration at the top, rather than follow the async_io codepath and transparently switch to sync IO at the FileSystem layer.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11296
Test Plan: Add new unit tests
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D44045776
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: a0881bf763ca2fde50b84063d0068bb521edd8b9
Summary:
**Context:**
Atomic flush should guarantee recoverability of all data of seqno up to the max seqno of the flush. It achieves this by ensuring all such data are flushed by the time this atomic flush finishes through `SelectColumnFamiliesForAtomicFlush()`. However, our crash test exposed the following case where an excluded CF from an atomic flush contains unflushed data of seqno less than the max seqno of that atomic flush and loses its data with `WriteOptions::DisableWAL=true` in face of a crash right after the atomic flush finishes .
```
./db_stress --preserve_unverified_changes=1 --reopen=0 --acquire_snapshot_one_in=0 --adaptive_readahead=1 --allow_data_in_errors=True --async_io=1 --atomic_flush=1 --avoid_flush_during_recovery=0 --avoid_unnecessary_blocking_io=0 --backup_max_size=104857600 --backup_one_in=0 --batch_protection_bytes_per_key=0 --block_size=16384 --bloom_bits=15 --bottommost_compression_type=none --bytes_per_sync=262144 --cache_index_and_filter_blocks=0 --cache_size=8388608 --cache_type=lru_cache --charge_compression_dictionary_building_buffer=0 --charge_file_metadata=1 --charge_filter_construction=0 --charge_table_reader=0 --checkpoint_one_in=0 --checksum_type=kXXH3 --clear_column_family_one_in=0 --compact_files_one_in=0 --compact_range_one_in=0 --compaction_pri=1 --compaction_ttl=100 --compression_max_dict_buffer_bytes=134217727 --compression_max_dict_bytes=16384 --compression_parallel_threads=1 --compression_type=lz4hc --compression_use_zstd_dict_trainer=0 --compression_zstd_max_train_bytes=0 --continuous_verification_interval=0 --data_block_index_type=0 --db=$db --db_write_buffer_size=1048576 --delpercent=4 --delrangepercent=1 --destroy_db_initially=0 --detect_filter_construct_corruption=0 --disable_wal=1 --enable_compaction_filter=0 --enable_pipelined_write=0 --expected_values_dir=$exp --fail_if_options_file_error=0 --fifo_allow_compaction=0 --file_checksum_impl=none --flush_one_in=0 --format_version=5 --get_current_wal_file_one_in=0 --get_live_files_one_in=100 --get_property_one_in=0 --get_sorted_wal_files_one_in=0 --index_block_restart_interval=2 --index_type=0 --ingest_external_file_one_in=0 --initial_auto_readahead_size=524288 --iterpercent=10 --key_len_percent_dist=1,30,69 --level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=True --long_running_snapshots=1 --manual_wal_flush_one_in=100 --mark_for_compaction_one_file_in=0 --max_auto_readahead_size=0 --max_background_compactions=20 --max_bytes_for_level_base=10485760 --max_key=10000 --max_key_len=3 --max_manifest_file_size=1073741824 --max_write_batch_group_size_bytes=64 --max_write_buffer_number=3 --max_write_buffer_size_to_maintain=0 --memtable_prefix_bloom_size_ratio=0.01 --memtable_protection_bytes_per_key=4 --memtable_whole_key_filtering=0 --memtablerep=skip_list --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=2 --mmap_read=1 --mock_direct_io=False --nooverwritepercent=1 --num_file_reads_for_auto_readahead=0 --open_files=-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_filters=0 --partition_pinning=3 --pause_background_one_in=0 --periodic_compaction_seconds=100 --prefix_size=8 --prefixpercent=5 --prepopulate_block_cache=0 --preserve_internal_time_seconds=3600 --progress_reports=0 --read_fault_one_in=32 --readahead_size=16384 --readpercent=50 --recycle_log_file_num=0 --ribbon_starting_level=6 --secondary_cache_fault_one_in=0 --set_options_one_in=10000 --snapshot_hold_ops=100000 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_sec=104857600 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_truncate=1048576 --stats_dump_period_sec=10 --subcompactions=1 --sync=0 --sync_fault_injection=0 --target_file_size_base=524288 --target_file_size_multiplier=2 --test_batches_snapshots=0 --top_level_index_pinning=0 --unpartitioned_pinning=1 --use_direct_io_for_flush_and_compaction=0 --use_direct_reads=0 --use_full_merge_v1=0 --use_merge=0 --use_multiget=1 --use_put_entity_one_in=0 --user_timestamp_size=0 --value_size_mult=32 --verify_checksum=1 --verify_checksum_one_in=0 --verify_db_one_in=1000 --verify_sst_unique_id_in_manifest=1 --wal_bytes_per_sync=524288 --wal_compression=none --write_buffer_size=524288 --write_dbid_to_manifest=1 --write_fault_one_in=0 --writepercent=30 &
pid=$!
sleep 0.2
sleep 10
kill $pid
sleep 0.2
./db_stress --ops_per_thread=1 --preserve_unverified_changes=1 --reopen=0 --acquire_snapshot_one_in=0 --adaptive_readahead=1 --allow_data_in_errors=True --async_io=1 --atomic_flush=1 --avoid_flush_during_recovery=0 --avoid_unnecessary_blocking_io=0 --backup_max_size=104857600 --backup_one_in=0 --batch_protection_bytes_per_key=0 --block_size=16384 --bloom_bits=15 --bottommost_compression_type=none --bytes_per_sync=262144 --cache_index_and_filter_blocks=0 --cache_size=8388608 --cache_type=lru_cache --charge_compression_dictionary_building_buffer=0 --charge_file_metadata=1 --charge_filter_construction=0 --charge_table_reader=0 --checkpoint_one_in=0 --checksum_type=kXXH3 --clear_column_family_one_in=0 --compact_files_one_in=0 --compact_range_one_in=0 --compaction_pri=1 --compaction_ttl=100 --compression_max_dict_buffer_bytes=134217727 --compression_max_dict_bytes=16384 --compression_parallel_threads=1 --compression_type=lz4hc --compression_use_zstd_dict_trainer=0 --compression_zstd_max_train_bytes=0 --continuous_verification_interval=0 --data_block_index_type=0 --db=$db --db_write_buffer_size=1048576 --delpercent=4 --delrangepercent=1 --destroy_db_initially=0 --detect_filter_construct_corruption=0 --disable_wal=1 --enable_compaction_filter=0 --enable_pipelined_write=0 --expected_values_dir=$exp --fail_if_options_file_error=0 --fifo_allow_compaction=0 --file_checksum_impl=none --flush_one_in=0 --format_version=5 --get_current_wal_file_one_in=0 --get_live_files_one_in=100 --get_property_one_in=0 --get_sorted_wal_files_one_in=0 --index_block_restart_interval=2 --index_type=0 --ingest_external_file_one_in=0 --initial_auto_readahead_size=524288 --iterpercent=10 --key_len_percent_dist=1,30,69 --level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=True --long_running_snapshots=1 --manual_wal_flush_one_in=100 --mark_for_compaction_one_file_in=0 --max_auto_readahead_size=0 --max_background_compactions=20 --max_bytes_for_level_base=10485760 --max_key=10000 --max_key_len=3 --max_manifest_file_size=1073741824 --max_write_batch_group_size_bytes=64 --max_write_buffer_number=3 --max_write_buffer_size_to_maintain=0 --memtable_prefix_bloom_size_ratio=0.01 --memtable_protection_bytes_per_key=4 --memtable_whole_key_filtering=0 --memtablerep=skip_list --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=2 --mmap_read=1 --mock_direct_io=False --nooverwritepercent=1 --num_file_reads_for_auto_readahead=0 --open_files=-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_filters=0 --partition_pinning=3 --pause_background_one_in=0 --periodic_compaction_seconds=100 --prefix_size=8 --prefixpercent=5 --prepopulate_block_cache=0 --preserve_internal_time_seconds=3600 --progress_reports=0 --read_fault_one_in=32 --readahead_size=16384 --readpercent=50 --recycle_log_file_num=0 --ribbon_starting_level=6 --secondary_cache_fault_one_in=0 --set_options_one_in=10000 --snapshot_hold_ops=100000 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_sec=104857600 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_truncate=1048576 --stats_dump_period_sec=10 --subcompactions=1 --sync=0 --sync_fault_injection=0 --target_file_size_base=524288 --target_file_size_multiplier=2 --test_batches_snapshots=0 --top_level_index_pinning=0 --unpartitioned_pinning=1 --use_direct_io_for_flush_and_compaction=0 --use_direct_reads=0 --use_full_merge_v1=0 --use_merge=0 --use_multiget=1 --use_put_entity_one_in=0 --user_timestamp_size=0 --value_size_mult=32 --verify_checksum=1 --verify_checksum_one_in=0 --verify_db_one_in=1000 --verify_sst_unique_id_in_manifest=1 --wal_bytes_per_sync=524288 --wal_compression=none --write_buffer_size=524288 --write_dbid_to_manifest=1 --write_fault_one_in=0 --writepercent=30 &
pid=$!
sleep 0.2
sleep 40
kill $pid
sleep 0.2
Verification failed for column family 6 key 0000000000000239000000000000012B0000000000000138 (56622): value_from_db: , value_from_expected: 4A6331754E4F4C4D42434041464744455A5B58595E5F5C5D5253505156575455, msg: Value not found: NotFound:
Crash-recovery verification failed :(
No writes or ops?
Verification failed :(
```
The bug is due to the following:
- When atomic flush is used, an empty CF is legally [excluded](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.10.fb/db/db_filesnapshot.cc#L39) in `SelectColumnFamiliesForAtomicFlush` as the first step of `DBImpl::FlushForGetLiveFiles` before [passing](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.10.fb/db/db_filesnapshot.cc#L42) the included CFDs to `AtomicFlushMemTables`.
- But [later](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.10.fb/db/db_impl/db_impl_compaction_flush.cc#L2133) in `AtomicFlushMemTables`, `WaitUntilFlushWouldNotStallWrites` will [release the db mutex](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.10.fb/db/db_impl/db_impl_compaction_flush.cc#L2403), during which data@seqno N can be inserted into the excluded CF and data@seqno M can be inserted into one of the included CFs, where M > N.
- However, data@seqno N in an already-excluded CF is thus excluded from this atomic flush while we seqno N is less than seqno M.
**Summary:**
- Replace `SelectColumnFamiliesForAtomicFlush()`-before-`AtomicFlushMemTables()` with `SelectColumnFamiliesForAtomicFlush()`-after-wait-within-`AtomicFlushMemTables()` so we ensure no write affecting the recoverability of this atomic job (i.e, change to max seqno of this atomic flush or insertion of data with less seqno than the max seqno of the atomic flush to excluded CF) can happen after calling `SelectColumnFamiliesForAtomicFlush()`.
- For above, refactored and clarified comments on `SelectColumnFamiliesForAtomicFlush()` and `AtomicFlushMemTables()` for clearer semantics of passed-in CFDs to atomic-flush
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11148
Test Plan:
- New unit test failed before the fix and passes after
- Make check
- Rehearsal stress test
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42799871
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: 13636b63e9c25c5895857afc36ea580d57f6d644
Summary:
CreateColumnFamilyWithImport() did not support range tombstones for two reasons:
1. it uses point keys of a input file to determine its boundary (smallest and largest internal key), which means range tombstones outside of the point key range will be effectively dropped.
2. it does not handle files with no point keys.
Also included a fix in external_sst_file_ingestion_job.cc where the blocks read in `GetIngestedFileInfo()` can be added to block cache now (issue fixed in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6429).
This PR adds support for exporting and importing column family with range tombstones. The main change is to add smallest internal key and largest internal key to `SstFileMetaData` that will be part of the output of `ExportColumnFamily()`. Then during `CreateColumnFamilyWithImport(...,const ExportImportFilesMetaData& metadata,...)`, file boundaries can be set from `metadata` directly. This is needed since when file boundaries are extended by range tombstones, sometimes they cannot be deduced from a file's content alone.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11252
Test Plan:
- added unit tests that fails before this change
Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11245
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D43577443
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 6bff78e583cc50c44854994dea0a8dd519398f2f
Summary:
The existing PerfContext counter `internal_merge_count` only tracks the
Merge operands applied during range scans. The patch adds a new counter
called `internal_merge_count_point_lookups` to track the same metric
for point lookups (`Get` / `MultiGet` / `GetEntity` / `MultiGetEntity`), and
also fixes a couple of cases in the iterator where the existing counter wasn't
updated.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11284
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: jowlyzhang
Differential Revision: D43926082
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 321566d8b4cf0a3b6c9b73b7a5c984fb9bb492e9
Summary:
During backward iteration, blob verification would fail because the user key (ts included) in `saved_key_` doesn't match the blob. This happens because during`FindValueForCurrentKey`, `saved_key_` is not updated when the user key(ts not included) is the same for all cases except when `timestamp_lb_` is specified. This breaks the blob verification logic when user defined timestamp is enabled and `timestamp_lb_` is not specified. Fix this by always updating `saved_key_` when a smaller user key (ts included) is seen.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11258
Test Plan:
`make check`
`./db_blob_basic_test --gtest_filter=DBBlobWithTimestampTest.IterateBlobs`
Run db_bench (built with DEBUG_LEVEL=0) to demonstrate that no overhead is introduced with:
`./db_bench -user_timestamp_size=8 -db=/dev/shm/rocksdb -disable_wal=1 -benchmarks=fillseq,seekrandom[-W1-X6] -reverse_iterator=1 -seek_nexts=5`
Baseline:
- seekrandom [AVG 6 runs] : 72188 (± 1481) ops/sec; 37.2 (± 0.8) MB/sec
With this PR:
- seekrandom [AVG 6 runs] : 74171 (± 1427) ops/sec; 38.2 (± 0.7) MB/sec
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D43675642
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 8022ae8522d1f66548821855e6eed63640c14e04
Summary:
Add more stats for better visibility into the usefulness of the secondary cache.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11246
Test Plan: Add a new unit test
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D43521364
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: a92f04884e738a9bf40ad4047acaaaea343838a7
Summary:
A second attempt after https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10802, with bug fixes and refactoring. This PR updates compaction logic to take range tombstones into account when determining whether to cut the current compaction output file (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/4811). Before this change, only point keys were considered, and range tombstones could cause large compactions. For example, if the current compaction outputs is a range tombstone [a, b) and 2 point keys y, z, they would be added to the same file, and may overlap with too many files in the next level and cause a large compaction in the future. This PR also includes ajkr's effort to simplify the logic to add range tombstones to compaction output files in `AddRangeDels()` ([https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11078](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11078#issuecomment-1386078861)).
The main change is for `CompactionIterator` to emit range tombstone start keys to be processed by `CompactionOutputs`. A new class `CompactionMergingIterator` is introduced to replace `MergingIterator` under `CompactionIterator` to enable emitting of range tombstone start keys. Further improvement after this PR include cutting compaction output at some grandparent boundary key (instead of the next output key) when cutting within a range tombstone to reduce overlap with grandparents.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11113
Test Plan:
* added unit test in db_range_del_test
* crash test with a small key range: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py blackbox --simple --max_key=100 --interval=600 --write_buffer_size=262144 --target_file_size_base=256 --max_bytes_for_level_base=262144 --block_size=128 --value_size_mult=33 --subcompactions=10 --use_multiget=1 --delpercent=3 --delrangepercent=2 --verify_iterator_with_expected_state_one_in=2 --num_iterations=10`
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42655709
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 8367e36ef5640e8f21c14a3855d4a8d6e360a34c
Summary:
8.0.fb branch is cut so changes going forward will be part of 8.1. Updated version.h and HISTORY.md accordingly
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11238
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D43428345
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: d344b6e504c81a85563ae9d3705b11c533b1cd43
Summary:
The primary purpose of the FactoryFunc was to support LITE mode where the ObjectRegistry was not available. With the removal of LITE mode, the function was no longer required.
Note that the MergeOperator had some private classes defined in header files. To gain access to their constructors (and name methods), the class definitions were moved into header files.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11203
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D43160255
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: f3a465fd5d1a7049b73ecf31e4b8c3762f6dae6c
Summary:
From HISTORY.md: Added a subcode of `Status::Corruption`, `Status::SubCode::kMergeOperatorFailed`, for users to identify corruption failures originating in the merge operator, as opposed to RocksDB's internally identified data corruptions.
This is a followup to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11092, where we gave users the ability to keep running a DB despite merge operator failing. Now that the DB keeps running despite such failures, they want to be able to distinguish such failures from real corruptions.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11231
Test Plan: updated unit test
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D43396607
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 17fbcc779ad724dafada8abd73efd38e1c5208b9
Summary:
- Return NotSupported in scan if IOUring not supported if async_io is enabled
- Enable IOUring in db_stress for async_io testing
- Disable async_io in circleci crash testing as circleci doesn't support IOUring
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11197
Test Plan: CircleCI jobs
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D43096313
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: c2c53a87636950c0243038b9f5bd0d91608e4fda
Summary:
Added `do_not_compress_roles` to `CompressedSecondaryCacheOptions` to disable compression on certain kinds of block. Filter blocks are now not compressed by CompressedSecondaryCache by default.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11204
Test Plan: unit test added
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D43147698
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: db496975ae975fa18f157f93fe131a16315ac875
Summary:
The definition of the Cache class should not be needed by the vast majority of RocksDB users, so I think it is just distracting to include it in cache.h, which is primarily needed for configuring and creating caches. This change moves the class to a new header advanced_cache.h. It is just cut-and-paste except for modifying the class API comment.
In general, operations on shared_ptr<Cache> should continue to work when only a forward declaration of Cache is available, as long as all the Cache instances provided are already shared_ptr. See https://stackoverflow.com/a/17650101/454544
Also, the most common way to customize a Cache is by wrapping an existing implementation, so it makes sense to provide CacheWrapper in the public API. This was a cut-and-paste job except removing the implementation of Name() so that derived classes must provide it.
Intended follow-up: consolidate Release() into one function to reduce customization bugs / confusion
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11192
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D43055487
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 7b05492df35e0f30b581b4c24c579bc275b6d110
Summary:
Fix a bug in the calculation of the input buffer address/offset in log_reader.cc. The bug is when consecutive fragments of a compressed record are located at the same offset in the log reader buffer, the second fragment input buffer is treated as a leftover from the previous input buffer. As a result, the offset in the `ZSTD_inBuffer` is not reset.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11198
Test Plan: Add a unit test in log_test.cc that fails without the fix and passes with it.
Reviewed By: ajkr, cbi42
Differential Revision: D43102692
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: aa2648f4802c33991b76a3233c5a58d4cc9e77fd
Summary:
The patch adds compaction filter support for wide-column entities by introducing
a new `CompactionFilter` API called `FilterV3`. This API is called for regular
key-values, merge operands, and wide-column entities as well. It is passed the
existing value/operand or wide-column structure and it can update the value or
columns or keep/delete/etc. the key-value as usual. For compatibility, the default
implementation of `FilterV3` keeps all wide-column entities and falls back to calling
`FilterV2` for plain old key-values and merge operands.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11196
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D43094147
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 75acabe9a35254f7f404ba6173ee9c2774382ebd
Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
As instructed by convenience.h comments, a few deprecated APIs are removed.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11120
Test Plan:
- make check & CI
- eyeball check on test semantics.
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D42937507
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: a9e4709387da01b1d0e9148c2e210f02e9746ee1
Summary:
With https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11150 this becomes a practical change that I think is overall good for developer efficiency.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11168
Test Plan:
More efficient build of all unit tests and tools:
```
$ git clean -fdx
$ du -sh .
522M .
$ /usr/bin/time make -j32 LIB_MODE=static
...
14270.63user 1043.33system 11:19.85elapsed 2252%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 1929944maxresident)k
...
$ du -sh .
62G .
$
```
Vs.
```
$ git clean -fdx
$ du -sh .
522M .
$ /usr/bin/time make -j32 LIB_MODE=shared
...
9479.87user 478.26system 7:20.82elapsed 2258%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 1929272maxresident)k
...
$ du -sh .
5.4G .
$
```
So 1/3 less build time and >90% less space usage.
Individual unit test edit-compile-run is not too different. Modifying an average unit test source file:
```
$ touch db/version_builder_test.cc
$ /usr/bin/time make -j32 LIB_MODE=static version_builder_test
...
34.74user 3.37system 0:38.29elapsed 99%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 945520maxresident)k
```
Vs.
```
$ touch db/version_builder_test.cc
$ /usr/bin/time make -j32 LIB_MODE=shared version_builder_test
...
116.26user 43.91system 0:28.65elapsed 559%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 675160maxresident)k
```
A little faster with shared.
However, modifying an average DB implementation file has an extra linking step with shared lib:
```
$ touch db/db_impl/db_impl_files.cc
$ /usr/bin/time make -j32 LIB_MODE=static version_builder_test
...
33.17user 5.13system 0:39.70elapsed 96%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 945544maxresident)k
```
Vs.
```
$ touch db/db_impl/db_impl_files.cc
$ /usr/bin/time make -j32 LIB_MODE=shared version_builder_test
...
40.80user 4.66system 0:45.54elapsed 99%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 1056340maxresident)k
```
A little slower with shared.
On the whole, should be faster and lighter weight because of the many unit test files case
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D42894004
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 9e827e52ace79b86f849b6a24466e318b4b605a7
Summary:
This option has long been intended to be set to false by default and deprecated. It might never be practical to completely remove the feature, so that we can continue to test for backward compatibility by keeping the ability to generate DBs in the old way.
Also improved API comments.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11179
Test Plan: existing tests (with one tiny update)
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D42973927
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: e9bc161cb933266e094aea2dff8cc03753c39dab
Summary:
Currently, we incorrectly return a Status::Corruption to the MultiGet caller if the file system ReadAsync cannot issue a read and returns an error for some reason, such as IOStatus::NotSupported(). In this PR, we copy the ReadAsync error to the request status so it can be returned to the user.
Tests:
Update existing unit tests and add a new one for this scenario
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11171
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D42950057
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 85ffcb015fa6c064c311f8a28488fec78c487869
Summary:
This PR adds logic to the `RunManualCompaction()` loop to check for cancellation before waiting on any conflicting compactions to finish. In case of cancellation, `RunManualCompaction()` no longer waits on conflicting compactions
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11165
Test Plan: repro test case
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D42864058
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: ea4dd1a8f294abe212905495a8fbe8f07fca3f5a
Summary:
The patch fixes a feature interaction bug between BlobDB and the `GetEntity` API:
without the patch, `GetEntity` would return the blob reference (wrapped into a
single-column entity) instead of the actual blob value.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11162
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D42854092
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: f750d0ff57def107da16f545077ddce9860ff21a
Summary:
The previous API comments for LockWAL didn't provide much about why you might want to use it, and didn't really meet what one would infer its contract was. Also, LockWAL was not in db_stress / crash test. In this change:
* Implement a counting semantics for LockWAL()+UnlockWAL(), so that they can safely be used concurrently across threads or recursively within a thread. This should make the API much less bug-prone and easier to use.
* Make sure no UnlockWAL() is needed after non-OK LockWAL() (to match RocksDB conventions)
* Make UnlockWAL() reliably return non-OK when there's no matching LockWAL() (for debug-ability)
* Clarify API comments on LockWAL(), UnlockWAL(), FlushWAL(), and SyncWAL(). Their exact meanings are not obvious, and I don't think it's appropriate to talk about implementation mutexes in the API comments, but about what operations might block each other.
* Add LockWAL()/UnlockWAL() to db_stress and crash test, mostly to check for assertion failures, but also checks that latest seqno doesn't change while WAL is locked. This is simpler to add when LockWAL() is allowed in multiple threads.
* Remove unnecessary use of sync points in test DBWALTest::LockWal. There was a bug during development of above changes that caused this test to fail sporadically, with and without this sync point change.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11143
Test Plan: unit tests added / updated, added to stress/crash test
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42848627
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 6d976c51791941a31fd8fbf28b0f82e888d9f4b4
Summary:
Use the user key on sst file for blob verification for `Get` and `MultiGet` instead of the user key passed from caller.
Add tests for `Get` and `MultiGet` operations when user defined timestamp feature is enabled in a BlobDB.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11105
Test Plan:
make V=1 db_blob_basic_test
./db_blob_basic_test --gtest_filter="DBBlobTestWithTimestamp.*"
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D42716487
Pulled By: jowlyzhang
fbshipit-source-id: 5987ecbb7e56ddf46d2467a3649369390789506a
Summary:
We haven't been actively mantaining RocksDB LITE recently and the size must have been gone up significantly. We are removing the support.
Most of changes were done through following comments:
unifdef -m -UROCKSDB_LITE `git grep -l ROCKSDB_LITE | egrep '[.](cc|h)'`
by Peter Dillinger. Others changes were manually applied to build scripts, CircleCI manifests, ROCKSDB_LITE is used in an expression and file db_stress_test_base.cc.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11147
Test Plan: See CI
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D42796341
fbshipit-source-id: 4920e15fc2060c2cd2221330a6d0e5e65d4b7fe2
Summary:
These tickers/histograms have been obsolete (and not populated) for a long time.
The patch removes them from the API completely. Note that this means that the
numeric values of the remaining tickers change in the C++ code as they get shifted up.
This should be OK: the values of some existing tickers have changed many times
over the years as items have been added in the middle. (In contrast, the convention
in the Java bindings is to keep the ids, which are not guaranteed to be the same
as the ids on the C++ side, the same across releases.)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11123
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D42727793
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: e058a155a20b05b45f53e67ee380aece1b43b6c5
Summary:
Compressed block cache is replaced by compressed secondary cache. Remove the feature.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11117
Test Plan: See CI passes
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D42700164
fbshipit-source-id: 6cbb24e460da29311150865f60ecb98637f9f67d
Summary:
**Context:**
Concurrent flushes on the same CF can set on `ColumnFamilyData::flush_reason` before each other flush finishes. An symptom is one CF has different flush_reason with others though all of them are in an atomic flush `db_stress: db/db_impl/db_impl_compaction_flush.cc:423: rocksdb::Status rocksdb::DBImpl::AtomicFlushMemTablesToOutputFiles(const rocksdb::autovector<rocksdb::DBImpl::BGFlushArg>&, bool*, rocksdb::JobContext*, rocksdb::LogBuffer*, rocksdb::Env::Priority): Assertion cfd->GetFlushReason() == cfds[0]->GetFlushReason() failed. `
**Summary:**
Suggested by ltamasi, we now refactor and let FlushRequest/Job to own flush_reason as there is no good way to define `ColumnFamilyData::flush_reason` in face of concurrent flushes on the same CF (which wasn't the case a long time ago when `ColumnFamilyData::flush_reason ` first introduced`)
**Tets:**
- new unit test
- make check
- aggressive crash test rehearsal
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11111
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42644600
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: 8589c8184869d3415e5b780c887f877818a5ebaf
Summary:
Prior to this PR, `FullMergeV2()` can only return `false` to indicate failure, which causes any operation invoking it to fail. During a compaction, such a failure causes the compaction to fail and causes the DB to irreversibly enter read-only mode. Some users asked for a way to allow the merge operator to fail without such widespread damage.
To limit the blast radius of merge operator failures, this PR introduces the `MergeOperationOutput::op_failure_scope` API. When unpopulated (`kDefault`) or set to `kTryMerge`, the merge operator failure handling is the same as before. When set to `kMustMerge`, merge operator failure still causes failure to operations that must merge (`Get()`, iterator, `MultiGet()`, etc.). However, under `kMustMerge`, flushes/compactions can survive merge operator failures by outputting the unmerged input operands.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11092
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D42525673
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 951dc3bf190f86347dccf3381be967565cda52ee
Summary:
Upgrading xxhash.h to latest dev version as of 1/17/2023, which is d7197ddea81364a539051f116ca77926100fc77f This should improve performance on some ARM machines.
I allowed some of our RocksDB-specific changes to be made obsolete where it seemed appropriate, for example
* xxhash.h has its own fallthrough marker (which I hope works for us)
* As in https://github.com/Cyan4973/xxHash/pull/549
Merging and resolving conflicts one way or the other was all that went into this diff. Except I had to mix the two sides around `defined(__loongarch64)`
How I did the upgrade (for future reference), so that I could use usual merge conflict resolution:
```
# New branch to help with merging
git checkout -b xxh_merge_base
# Check out RocksDB revision before last xxhash.h upgrade
git reset --hard 22161b7547652af82a5dc67458de9ca8946ac83d^
# Create a commit with the raw base version from xxHash repo (from xxHash repo)
git show 2c611a76f914828bed675f0f342d6c4199ffee1e:xxhash.h > ../rocksdb/util/xxhash.h
# In RocksDB repo
git commit -a
# Merge in the last xxhash.h upgrade
git merge 22161b7547
# Resolve conflict using committed version
git show 22161b7547652af82a5dc67458de9ca8946ac83d:util/xxhash.h > util/xxhash.h
git commit -a
# Catch up to upstream
git merge upstream/main
# Create a different branch for applying raw upgrade
git checkout -b xxh_upgrade_2023
# Find the RocksDB commit we made for the raw base version from xxHash
git log main..HEAD
# Rewind to it
git reset --hard 2428b727a9
# Copy in latest raw version (from xxHash repo)
cat xxhash.h > ../rocksdb/util/xxhash.h
# Merge in RocksDB changes, use typical tools for conflict resolution
git merge xxh_merge_base
```
Branch https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/tree/xxhash_merge_base can be used as a base for future xxhash merges.
Fixes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11073
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11098
Test Plan:
existing tests (e.g. Bloom filter schema stability tests)
Also seems to include a small performance boost on my Intel dev machine, using `./db_bench --benchmarks=xxh3[-X50] 2>&1 | egrep -o 'operations;.*' | sort`
Fastest out of 50 runs, before: 15477.3 MB/s
Fastest out of 50 runs, after: 15850.7 MB/s, and 11 more runs faster than the "before" number
Slowest out of 50 runs, before: 12267.5 MB/s
Slowest out of 50 runs, after: 13897.1 MB/s
More repetitions show the distinction is repeatable
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D42560010
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: c43ee52f1c5fe0ba3d6d6e4eebb22ded5f5492ea
Summary:
in `CompactionOutputs::ShouldStopBefore()`, TTL-related states, `cur_files_to_cut_for_ttl_` and `next_files_to_cut_for_ttl_`, are not updated if the function returns early. This can cause unnecessary compaction output file cuttings and hence produce smaller output files, which may hurt write amp. See the example in the unit test for how this "unnecessary file cutting" can happen. This PR fixes this issue by moving the code for updating TTL states earlier in `CompactionOutputs::ShouldStopBefore()` so that the states are updated for each key.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11075
Test Plan: - Added new unit test.
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D42398739
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 09fab66679c1a734abcfc31bcea33dd9aeb9dbc7
Summary:
This reverts commit f02c708aa3 since it introduced several bugs (see https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11078 and https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11067 for attempts to fix them) and that I do not have a high confidence to fix all of them and ensure no further ones before the next release branch cut. There are also come existing issue found during bug fixing. We will work on it and try to merge it to the release after.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11089
Test Plan: existing CI.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42505972
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 2f66dcde6b85dc94977b317c2ce513872cfbc153
Summary:
This is several refactorings bundled into one to avoid having to incrementally re-modify uses of Cache several times. Overall, there are breaking changes to Cache class, and it becomes more of low-level interface for implementing caches, especially block cache. New internal APIs make using Cache cleaner than before, and more insulated from block cache evolution. Hopefully, this is the last really big block cache refactoring, because of rather effectively decoupling the implementations from the uses. This change also removes the EXPERIMENTAL designation on the SecondaryCache support in Cache. It seems reasonably mature at this point but still subject to change/evolution (as I warn in the API docs for Cache).
The high-level motivation for this refactoring is to minimize code duplication / compounding complexity in adding SecondaryCache support to HyperClockCache (in a later PR). Other benefits listed below.
* static_cast lines of code +29 -35 (net removed 6)
* reinterpret_cast lines of code +6 -32 (net removed 26)
## cache.h and secondary_cache.h
* Always use CacheItemHelper with entries instead of just a Deleter. There are several motivations / justifications:
* Simpler for implementations to deal with just one Insert and one Lookup.
* Simpler and more efficient implementation because we don't have to track which entries are using helpers and which are using deleters
* Gets rid of hack to classify cache entries by their deleter. Instead, the CacheItemHelper includes a CacheEntryRole. This simplifies a lot of code (cache_entry_roles.h almost eliminated). Fixes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/9428.
* Makes it trivial to adjust SecondaryCache behavior based on kind of block (e.g. don't re-compress filter blocks).
* It is arguably less convenient for many direct users of Cache, but direct users of Cache are now rare with introduction of typed_cache.h (below).
* I considered and rejected an alternative approach in which we reduce customizability by assuming each secondary cache compatible value starts with a Slice referencing the uncompressed block contents (already true or mostly true), but we apparently intend to stack secondary caches. Saving an entry from a compressed secondary to a lower tier requires custom handling offered by SaveToCallback, etc.
* Make CreateCallback part of the helper and introduce CreateContext to work with it (alternative to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10562). This cleans up the interface while still allowing context to be provided for loading/parsing values into primary cache. This model works for async lookup in BlockBasedTable reader (reader owns a CreateContext) under the assumption that it always waits on secondary cache operations to finish. (Otherwise, the CreateContext could be destroyed while async operation depending on it continues.) This likely contributes most to the observed performance improvement because it saves an std::function backed by a heap allocation.
* Use char* for serialized data, e.g. in SaveToCallback, where void* was confusingly used. (We use `char*` for serialized byte data all over RocksDB, with many advantages over `void*`. `memcpy` etc. are legacy APIs that should not be mimicked.)
* Add a type alias Cache::ObjectPtr = void*, so that we can better indicate the intent of the void* when it is to be the object associated with a Cache entry. Related: started (but did not complete) a refactoring to move away from "value" of a cache entry toward "object" or "obj". (It is confusing to call Cache a key-value store (like DB) when it is really storing arbitrary in-memory objects, not byte strings.)
* Remove unnecessary key param from DeleterFn. This is good for efficiency in HyperClockCache, which does not directly store the cache key in memory. (Alternative to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10774)
* Add allocator to Cache DeleterFn. This is a kind of future-proofing change in case we get more serious about using the Cache allocator for memory tracked by the Cache. Right now, only the uncompressed block contents are allocated using the allocator, and a pointer to that allocator is saved as part of the cached object so that the deleter can use it. (See CacheAllocationPtr.) If in the future we are able to "flatten out" our Cache objects some more, it would be good not to have to track the allocator as part of each object.
* Removes legacy `ApplyToAllCacheEntries` and changes `ApplyToAllEntries` signature for Deleter->CacheItemHelper change.
## typed_cache.h
Adds various "typed" interfaces to the Cache as internal APIs, so that most uses of Cache can use simple type safe code without casting and without explicit deleters, etc. Almost all of the non-test, non-glue code uses of Cache have been migrated. (Follow-up work: CompressedSecondaryCache deserves deeper attention to migrate.) This change expands RocksDB's internal usage of metaprogramming and SFINAE (https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/sfinae).
The existing usages of Cache are divided up at a high level into these new interfaces. See updated existing uses of Cache for examples of how these are used.
* PlaceholderCacheInterface - Used for making cache reservations, with entries that have a charge but no value.
* BasicTypedCacheInterface<TValue> - Used for primary cache storage of objects of type TValue, which can be cleaned up with std::default_delete<TValue>. The role is provided by TValue::kCacheEntryRole or given in an optional template parameter.
* FullTypedCacheInterface<TValue, TCreateContext> - Used for secondary cache compatible storage of objects of type TValue. In addition to BasicTypedCacheInterface constraints, we require TValue::ContentSlice() to return persistable data. This simplifies usage for the normal case of simple secondary cache compatibility (can give you a Slice to the data already in memory). In addition to TCreateContext performing the role of Cache::CreateContext, it is also expected to provide a factory function for creating TValue.
* For each of these, there's a "Shared" version (e.g. FullTypedSharedCacheInterface) that holds a shared_ptr to the Cache, rather than assuming external ownership by holding only a raw `Cache*`.
These interfaces introduce specific handle types for each interface instantiation, so that it's easy to see what kind of object is controlled by a handle. (Ultimately, this might not be worth the extra complexity, but it seems OK so far.)
Note: I attempted to make the cache 'charge' automatically inferred from the cache object type, such as by expecting an ApproximateMemoryUsage() function, but this is not so clean because there are cases where we need to compute the charge ahead of time and don't want to re-compute it.
## block_cache.h
This header is essentially the replacement for the old block_like_traits.h. It includes various things to support block cache access with typed_cache.h for block-based table.
## block_based_table_reader.cc
Before this change, accessing the block cache here was an awkward mix of static polymorphism (template TBlocklike) and switch-case on a dynamic BlockType value. This change mostly unifies on static polymorphism, relying on minor hacks in block_cache.h to distinguish variants of Block. We still check BlockType in some places (especially for stats, which could be improved in follow-up work) but at least the BlockType is a static constant from the template parameter. (No more awkward partial redundancy between static and dynamic info.) This likely contributes to the overall performance improvement, but hasn't been tested in isolation.
The other key source of simplification here is a more unified system of creating block cache objects: for directly populating from primary cache and for promotion from secondary cache. Both use BlockCreateContext, for context and for factory functions.
## block_based_table_builder.cc, cache_dump_load_impl.cc
Before this change, warming caches was super ugly code. Both of these source files had switch statements to basically transition from the dynamic BlockType world to the static TBlocklike world. None of that mess is needed anymore as there's a new, untyped WarmInCache function that handles all the details just as promotion from SecondaryCache would. (Fixes `TODO akanksha: Dedup below code` in block_based_table_builder.cc.)
## Everything else
Mostly just updating Cache users to use new typed APIs when reasonably possible, or changed Cache APIs when not.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10975
Test Plan:
tests updated
Performance test setup similar to https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10626 (by cache size, LRUCache when not "hyper" for HyperClockCache):
34MB 1thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 0.745 io_bytes/op: 2.52504e+06 miss_ratio: 0.140906 max_rss_mb: 76.4844
34MB 1thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 0.751 io_bytes/op: 2.5123e+06 miss_ratio: 0.140161 max_rss_mb: 79.3594
34MB 1thread base -> kops/s: 0.254 io_bytes/op: 1.36073e+07 miss_ratio: 0.918818 max_rss_mb: 45.9297
34MB 1thread new -> kops/s: 0.252 io_bytes/op: 1.36157e+07 miss_ratio: 0.918999 max_rss_mb: 44.1523
34MB 32thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 7.272 io_bytes/op: 2.88323e+06 miss_ratio: 0.162532 max_rss_mb: 516.602
34MB 32thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 7.214 io_bytes/op: 2.99046e+06 miss_ratio: 0.168818 max_rss_mb: 518.293
34MB 32thread base -> kops/s: 3.528 io_bytes/op: 1.35722e+07 miss_ratio: 0.914691 max_rss_mb: 264.926
34MB 32thread new -> kops/s: 3.604 io_bytes/op: 1.35744e+07 miss_ratio: 0.915054 max_rss_mb: 264.488
233MB 1thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 53.909 io_bytes/op: 2552.35 miss_ratio: 0.0440566 max_rss_mb: 241.984
233MB 1thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 62.792 io_bytes/op: 2549.79 miss_ratio: 0.044043 max_rss_mb: 241.922
233MB 1thread base -> kops/s: 1.197 io_bytes/op: 2.75173e+06 miss_ratio: 0.103093 max_rss_mb: 241.559
233MB 1thread new -> kops/s: 1.199 io_bytes/op: 2.73723e+06 miss_ratio: 0.10305 max_rss_mb: 240.93
233MB 32thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 1298.69 io_bytes/op: 2539.12 miss_ratio: 0.0440307 max_rss_mb: 371.418
233MB 32thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 1421.35 io_bytes/op: 2538.75 miss_ratio: 0.0440307 max_rss_mb: 347.273
233MB 32thread base -> kops/s: 9.693 io_bytes/op: 2.77304e+06 miss_ratio: 0.103745 max_rss_mb: 569.691
233MB 32thread new -> kops/s: 9.75 io_bytes/op: 2.77559e+06 miss_ratio: 0.103798 max_rss_mb: 552.82
1597MB 1thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 58.607 io_bytes/op: 1449.14 miss_ratio: 0.0249324 max_rss_mb: 1583.55
1597MB 1thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 69.6 io_bytes/op: 1434.89 miss_ratio: 0.0247167 max_rss_mb: 1584.02
1597MB 1thread base -> kops/s: 60.478 io_bytes/op: 1421.28 miss_ratio: 0.024452 max_rss_mb: 1589.45
1597MB 1thread new -> kops/s: 63.973 io_bytes/op: 1416.07 miss_ratio: 0.0243766 max_rss_mb: 1589.24
1597MB 32thread base.hyper -> kops/s: 1436.2 io_bytes/op: 1357.93 miss_ratio: 0.0235353 max_rss_mb: 1692.92
1597MB 32thread new.hyper -> kops/s: 1605.03 io_bytes/op: 1358.04 miss_ratio: 0.023538 max_rss_mb: 1702.78
1597MB 32thread base -> kops/s: 280.059 io_bytes/op: 1350.34 miss_ratio: 0.023289 max_rss_mb: 1675.36
1597MB 32thread new -> kops/s: 283.125 io_bytes/op: 1351.05 miss_ratio: 0.0232797 max_rss_mb: 1703.83
Almost uniformly improving over base revision, especially for hot paths with HyperClockCache, up to 12% higher throughput seen (1597MB, 32thread, hyper). The improvement for that is likely coming from much simplified code for providing context for secondary cache promotion (CreateCallback/CreateContext), and possibly from less branching in block_based_table_reader. And likely a small improvement from not reconstituting key for DeleterFn.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D42417818
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: f86bfdd584dce27c028b151ba56818ad14f7a432
Summary:
**Context:**
File ingestion never checks whether the key range it acts on overlaps with an ongoing RefitLevel() (used in `CompactRange()` with `change_level=true`). That's because RefitLevel() doesn't register and make its key range known to file ingestion. Though it checks overlapping with other compactions by https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.8.fb/db/external_sst_file_ingestion_job.cc#L998.
RefitLevel() (used in `CompactRange()` with `change_level=true`) doesn't check whether the key range it acts on overlaps with an ongoing file ingestion. That's because file ingestion does not register and make its key range known to other compactions.
- Note that non-refitlevel-compaction (e.g, manual compaction w/o RefitLevel() or general compaction) also does not check key range overlap with ongoing file ingestion for the same reason.
- But it's fine. Credited to cbi42's discovery, `WaitForIngestFile` was called by background and foreground compactions. They were introduced in 0f88160f67, 5c64fb67d2 and 87dfc1d23e.
- Regardless, this PR registers file ingestion like a compaction is a general approach that will also add range conflict check between file ingestion and non-refitlevel-compaction, though it has not been the issue motivated this PR.
Above are bugs resulting in two bad consequences:
- If file ingestion and RefitLevel() creates files in the same level, then range-overlapped files will be created at that level and caught as corruption by `force_consistency_checks=true`
- If file ingestion and RefitLevel() creates file in different levels, then with one further compaction on the ingested file, it can result in two same keys both with seqno 0 in two different levels. Then with iterator's [optimization](c62f322169/db/db_iter.cc (L342-L343)) that assumes no two same keys both with seqno 0, it will either break this assertion in debug build or, even worst, return value of this same key for the key after it, which is the wrong value to return, in release build.
Therefore we decide to introduce range conflict check for file ingestion and RefitLevel() inspired from the existing range conflict check among compactions.
**Summary:**
- Treat file ingestion job and RefitLevel() as `Compaction` of new compaction reasons: `CompactionReason::kExternalSstIngestion` and `CompactionReason::kRefitLevel` and register/unregister them. File ingestion is treated as compaction from L0 to different levels and RefitLevel() as compaction from source level to target level.
- Check for `RangeOverlapWithCompaction` with other ongoing compactions, `RegisterCompaction()` on this "compaction" before changing the LSM state in `VersionStorageInfo`, and `UnregisterCompaction()` after changing.
- Replace scattered fixes (0f88160f67, 5c64fb67d2 and 87dfc1d23e.) that prevents overlapping between file ingestion and non-refit-level compaction with this fix cuz those practices are easy to overlook.
- Misc: logic cleanup, see PR comments
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10988
Test Plan:
- New unit test `DBCompactionTestWithOngoingFileIngestionParam*` that failed pre-fix and passed afterwards.
- Made compatible with existing tests, see PR comments
- make check
- [Ongoing] Stress test rehearsal with normal value and aggressive CI value https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10761
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D41535685
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: 549833a577ba1496d20a870583d4caa737da1258
Summary:
We have a request for RocksDB to essentially support
disconnected incremental backup. In other words, if there is limited
or no connectivity to the primary backup dir, we should still be able to
take an incremental backup relative to that primary backup dir,
assuming some metadata about that primary dir is available (and
obviously anticipating primary backup dir will be fully available if
restore is needed).
To support that, this feature allows the API user to "exclude" DB
files from backup. This only applies to files that can be shared
between backups (sst and blob files), and excluded files are
tracked in the backup metadata sufficiently to ensure they are
restored at restore time. At restore time, the user provides
a set of alternate backup directories (as open BackupEngines, which
can be read-only), and excluded files must be found in one of the
backup directories ("included" in some backup).
This feature depends on backup schema version 2 features, though
schema version 2.0 support is not sufficient to read / restore a
backup with exclusions. This change updates the schema version to
2.1 because of this feature, so that it's easy to recognize whether
a RocksDB release supports this feature, while backups not using the
feature are fully compatible with 2.0.
Also in this PR:
* Stacked on https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11029
* Allow progress_callback to be empty, not just no-op function, and
recover from exceptions thrown by BackupEngine callbacks.
* The internal-only `AsBackupEngine()` function is working around the
diamond hierarchy of `BackupEngineImplThreadSafe` to get to the
internals, without using confusing features like virtual inheritance.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11030
Test Plan: unit tests added / updated
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42004388
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 31b6e533d308a5462e528d9012d650482d974077
Summary:
Reading uncompression dict block always uses sync reads, while data blocks may use async reads and prefetching. This causes problems in FilePrefetchBuffer. So avoid mixing the two by reading the uncompression dict straight from the file.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11050
Test Plan: Crash test
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D42194682
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: aaa8b396fdfe966b157e210f5ef8501c45b7b69e
Summary:
Some users are at least considering using SstPartitioner to support efficient physical migration of specific key ranges between RocksDB instances. One might expect manual `CompactRange()` over a narrow key range across some partition to enforce partitioning of any SST files crossing that partition boundary, but that currently only works if there are keys within that range.
This change makes the overlap logic in CompactRange more aware of the partitioner to automatically select relevant files crossing a partition boundary, even when they otherwise would not be selected due to the compaction range falling in a gap between entries.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11032
Test Plan: unit test included
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D41981380
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 2fe445bdddc73c00276c20f295cc1fa33d15b05a
Summary:
This PR fixes a heap use after free bug in the async prefetch code that happens in the following scenario -
1. Scan thread starts 2 async reads for Seek, one for the seek block and one for prefetching
2. Before the first read in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/1 completes, another thread reads and loads the block in cache
3. The first scan thread finds the block in cache, continues and the next block cache miss is for a block that spans the boundary of the 2 prefetch buffers, and the 1st read is complete but the 2nd one is not complete yet
4. The scan thread will reallocate (i.e free the old buffer and allocate a new one) the 2nd prefetch buffer, and the in-progress prefetch is orphaned
5. The orphaned prefetch finally completes, resulting in a use after free
Also add a few asserts to surface bugs earlier in the crash tests.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11049
Test Plan: Repro with db_stress and verify the fix
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D42181118
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 1ac55d2f64a89ce128c1c574262b8aa7d82eb8cc
Summary:
This PR is the first step for Issue https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/4811. Currently compaction output files are cut at point keys, and the decision is made mainly in `CompactionOutputs::ShouldStopBefore()`. This makes it possible for range tombstones to cause large compactions that does not respect `max_compaction_bytes`. For example, we can have a large range tombstone that overlaps with too many files from the next level. Another example is when there is a gap between a range tombstone and another key. The first issue may be more acceptable, as a lot of data is deleted. This PR address the second issue by calling `ShouldStopBefore()` for range tombstone start keys. The main change is for `CompactionIterator` to emit range tombstone start keys to be processed by `CompactionOutputs`. A new `CompactionMergingIterator` is introduced and only used under `CompactionIterator` for this purpose. Further improvement after this PR include 1) cut compaction output at some grandparent boundary key instead of at the next point key or range tombstone start key and 2) cut compaction output file within a large range tombstone (it may be easier and reasonable to only do it for range tombstones at the end of a compaction output).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10802
Test Plan:
- added unit tests in db_range_del_test.
- stress test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py whitebox --[simple|enable_ts] --verify_iterator_with_expected_state_one_in=5 --delrangepercent=5 --prefixpercent=2 --writepercent=58 --readpercen=21 --duration=36000 --range_deletion_width=1000000`
Reviewed By: ajkr, jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D40308827
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: a8fd6f70a3f09d0ef7a40e006f6c964bba8c00df
Summary:
RocksDB has two public APIs: `DB::LockWAL()`/`DB::UnlockWAL()`. The current implementation acquires and
releases the internal `DBImpl::log_write_mutex_`.
According to the comment on `DBImpl::log_write_mutex_`: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.8.fb/db/db_impl/db_impl.h#L2287:L2288
> Note: to avoid dealock, if needed to acquire both log_write_mutex_ and mutex_, the order should be first mutex_ and then log_write_mutex_.
This puts limitations on how applications can use the `LockWAL()` API. After `LockWAL()` returns ok, then application
should not perform any operation that acquires `mutex_`. Currently, the use case of `LockWAL()` is MyRocks implementing
the MySQL storage engine handlerton `lock_hton_log` interface. The operation that MyRocks performs after `LockWAL()`
is `GetSortedWalFiless()` which not only acquires mutex_, but also `log_write_mutex_`.
There are two issues:
1. Applications using these two APIs may hang if one thread calls `GetSortedWalFiles()` after
calling `LockWAL()` because log_write_mutex is not recursive.
2. Two threads may dead lock due to lock order inversion.
To fix these issues, we can modify the implementation of LockWAL so that it does not keep
`log_write_mutex_` held until UnlockWAL. To achieve the goal of locking the WAL, we can
instead manually inject a write stall so that all future writes will be stopped.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11020
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D41785203
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 5ccb7a9c6eb9a2c3fa80fd2c399cc2568b8f89ce
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
Summary:
Previously, the "latest" valid backup would not be updated on delete.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11029
Test Plan: unit test included (added to an existing test for efficiency)
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D41967925
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: ca143354d281eb979557ea421902cd26803a1137
Summary:
When MultiGet with the async_io option encounters an IO error in TableCache::GetTableReader, it may result in leakage of table cache handles due to queued coroutines being abandoned. This PR fixes it by ensuring any queued coroutines are run before aborting the MultiGet.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10997
Test Plan:
1. New unit test in db_basic_test
2. asan_crash
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D41587244
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 900920cd3fba47cb0fc744a62facc5ffe2eccb64
Summary:
**Context**
`Options::track_and_verify_wals_in_manifest = true` verifies each of the WALs tracked in manifest indeed presents in the WAL folder. If not, a corruption "Missing WAL with log number" will be thrown.
`DB::SyncWAL()` called at a specific timing (i.e, at the `TEST_SYNC_POINT("FindObsoleteFiles::PostMutexUnlock")`) can record in a new manifest the WAL addition of a WAL file that already had a WAL deletion recorded in the previous manifest.
And the WAL deletion record is not rollover-ed to the new manifest. So the new manifest creates the illusion of such WAL never gets deleted and should presents at db re/open.
- Such WAL deletion record can be caused by flushing the memtable associated with that WAL and such WAL deletion can actually happen in` PurgeObsoleteFiles()`.
As a consequence, upon `DB::Reopen()`, this WAL file can be deleted while manifest still has its WAL addition record , which causes a false alarm of corruption "Missing WAL with log number" to be thrown.
**Summary**
This PR fixes this false alarm by rolling over the WAL deletion record from prev manifest to the new manifest by adding the WAL deletion record to the new manifest.
**Test**
- Make check
- Added new unit test `TEST_F(DBWALTest, FixSyncWalOnObseletedWalWithNewManifestCausingMissingWAL)` that failed before the fix and passed after
- [Ongoing]CI stress test + aggressive value as in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10761 , which is how this false alarm was first surfaced, to confirm such false alarm disappears
- [Ongoing]Regular CI stress test to confirm such fix didn't harm anything
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10892
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D40778965
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: a512364bfdeb0b1a55c171890e60d856c528f37f
Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
This reverts commit fc74abb436 and related HISTORY record.
The issue with PR 10777 or general approach using earliest_mem_seqno like https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930 is that the earliest seqno of memtable of each CFs does not get persisted and will always start with 0 upon Recover(). Later when creating a new memtable in certain CF, we use the last seqno of the whole DB (but not of that CF from previous DB session) for this CF. This will lead to false positive overlapping seqno and PR 10777 will throw something like https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/main/db/compaction/compaction_picker.cc#L1002-L1004
Luckily a more elegant and complete solution to the overlapping seqno problem these PR aim to solve does not have above problem, see https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10922. It is already being pursued and in the process of review. So we can just revert this PR and focus on getting PR10922 to land.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10999
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D41572604
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: 9d9bdf594abd235e2137045cef513ca0b14e0a3a
Summary:
Currently, `iterate_upper_bound` is not checked for range tombstone keys in MergingIterator. This may impact performance when there is a large number of range tombstones right after `iterate_upper_bound`. This PR fixes this issue by checking `iterate_upper_bound` in MergingIterator for range tombstone keys.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10966
Test Plan:
- added unit test
- stress test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py whitebox --simple --verify_iterator_with_expected_state_one_in=5 --delrangepercent=5 --prefixpercent=18 --writepercent=48 --readpercen=15 --duration=36000 --range_deletion_width=100`
- ran different stress tests over sandcastle
- Falcon team ran some test traffic and saw reduced CPU usage on processing range tombstones.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D41414172
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 9b2c29eb3abb99327c6a649bdc412e70d863f981
Summary:
The check for SST unique IDs added to best-efforts recovery (`Options::best_efforts_recovery` is true).
With best_efforts_recovery being true, RocksDB will recover to the latest point in
MANIFEST such that all valid SST files included up to this point pass unique ID checks as well.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10962
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D41378241
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: a036064e2c17dec13d080a24ef2a9f85d607b16c
Summary:
Can simplify some ugly code in cache_dump_load_impl.cc by having an API in SecondaryCache that can directly consume persisted data.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10945
Test Plan: existing tests for CacheDumper, added basic unit test
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D41231497
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: b8ec993ef7d3e7efd68aae8602fd3f858da58068
Summary:
We were not resetting it in non-debug mode so it could be true once and then stay true for future keys where it should be false. This PR adds the reset logic.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10967
Test Plan:
- built `db_bench` with DEBUG_LEVEL=0
- ran benchmark: `TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/prefix ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -compaction_style=1 -preserve_internal_time_seconds=100 -preclude_last_level_data_seconds=10 -write_buffer_size=1048576 -target_file_size_base=1048576 -subcompactions=8 -duration=120`
- compared "output_to_penultimate_level: X bytes + last: Y bytes" lines in LOG output
- Before this fix, Y was always zero
- After this fix, Y gradually increased throughout the benchmark
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D41417726
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: ace1e9a289e751a5b0c2fbaa8addd4eda5525329
Summary:
Background. One of the core risks of chosing HyperClockCache is ending up with degraded performance if estimated_entry_charge is very significantly wrong. Too low leads to under-utilized hash table, which wastes a bit of (tracked) memory and likely increases access times due to larger working set size (more TLB misses). Too high leads to fully populated hash table (at some limit with reasonable lookup performance) and not being able to cache as many objects as the memory limit would allow. In either case, performance degradation is graceful/continuous but can be quite significant. For example, cutting block size in half without updating estimated_entry_charge could lead to a large portion of configured block cache memory (up to roughly 1/3) going unused.
Fix. This change adds a mechanism through which the DB periodically probes the block cache(s) for "problems" to report, and adds diagnostics to the HyperClockCache for bad estimated_entry_charge. The periodic probing is currently done with DumpStats / stats_dump_period_sec, and diagnostics reported to info_log (normally LOG file).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10965
Test Plan:
unit test included. Doesn't cover all the implemented subtleties of reporting, but ensures basics of when to report or not.
Also manual testing with db_bench. Create db with
```
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,flush --num=3000000 --disable_wal=1
```
Use and check LOG file for HyperClockCache for various block sizes (used as estimated_entry_charge)
```
./db_bench --use_existing_db --benchmarks=readrandom --num=3000000 --duration=20 --stats_dump_period_sec=8 --cache_type=hyper_clock_cache -block_size=XXXX
```
Seeing warnings / errors or not as expected.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D41406932
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 4ca56162b73017e4b9cec2cad74466f49c27a0a7
Summary:
After a couple minor bug fixes and successful productions roll-outs in a few places, I think we can mark this as production-ready. It has a clear value proposition for many workloads, even if we don't have clear advice for every workload yet.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10963
Test Plan: existing tests, comment changes only
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D41384083
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 56359f01a57bb28de8697666b342382fac72ce6d
Summary:
Add stats for time spent in the ReadAsync call, and async read errors.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10947
Test Plan: Run db_bench and look at stats
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D41236637
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 70539b69a28491d57acead449436a761f7108acf
Summary:
Compressed block cache depends on reading the block compression marker beyond the payload block size. Only the payload bytes were being saved and loaded from SecondaryCache -> boom!
This removes some unnecessary code attempting to combine these two competing features. Note that BlockContents was previously used for block-based filter in block cache, but that support has been removed.
Also marking block_cache_compressed as deprecated in this commit as we expect it to be replaced with SecondaryCache.
This problem was discovered during refactoring but didn't want to combine bug fix with that refactoring.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10944
Test Plan: test added that fails on base revision (at least with ASAN)
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D41205578
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 1b29d36c7a6552355ac6511fcdc67038ef4af29f
Summary:
The patch fixes a bug where `GetContext::Merge` (and `MergeEntity`) does not update the ticker `READ_NUM_MERGE_OPERANDS` because it implicitly uses the default parameter value of `update_num_ops_stats=false` when calling `MergeHelper::TimedFullMerge`. Also, to prevent such issues going forward, the PR removes the default parameter values from the `TimedFullMerge` methods. In addition, it removes an unused/unnecessary parameter from `TimedFullMergeWithEntity`, and does some cleanup at the call sites of these methods.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10925
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D41096453
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: fc60646d32b4d516b8fe81e265c3f020a32fd7f8
Summary:
Prevents `MemTableList::PickMemtablesToFlush()` from picking non-consecutive memtables. It leads to wrong ordering in L0 if the files are committed, or an error like below if force_consistency_checks=true catches it:
```
Corruption: force_consistency_checks: VersionBuilder: L0 file https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/25 with seqno 320416 368066 vs. file https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/24 with seqno 336037 352068
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10921
Test Plan: fix the expectation in the existing test of this behavior
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D41046935
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 783696bff56115063d5dc5856dfaed6a9881d1ab
Summary:
Fix memory corruption error in scans if async_io is enabled. Memory corruption happened if data is overlapping between two buffers. If there is IOError while reading the data, it leads to empty buffer and other buffer already in progress of async read goes again for reading causing the error.
Fix: Added check to abort IO in second buffer if curr_ got empty.
This PR also fixes db_stress failures which happened when buffers are not aligned.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10890
Test Plan:
- Ran make crash_test -j32 with async_io enabled.
- Ran benchmarks to make sure there is no regression.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D40881731
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: 39fcf2134c7b1bbb08415ede3e1ef261ac2dbc58
Summary:
This PR implements the originally disabled `Merge()` APIs when user-defined timestamp is enabled.
Simplest usage:
```cpp
// assume string append merge op is used with '.' as delimiter.
// ts1 < ts2
db->Put(WriteOptions(), "key", ts1, "v0");
db->Merge(WriteOptions(), "key", ts2, "1");
ReadOptions ro;
ro.timestamp = &ts2;
db->Get(ro, "key", &value);
ASSERT_EQ("v0.1", value);
```
Some code comments are added for clarity.
Note: support for timestamp in `DB::GetMergeOperands()` will be done in a follow-up PR.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10819
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D40603195
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: f96d6f183258f3392d80377025529f7660503013
Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10777 mistakenly added a history entry under 7.8 release but the PR is not included in 7.8. This mistake was due to rebase and merge didn't realize it was a conflict when "## Unreleased" was changed to "## 7.8.0 (10/22/2022)".
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10898
Test Plan: Make check
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D40861001
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: b2310c95490f6ebb90834a210c965a74c9560b51
Summary:
When there is a column family that doesn't get any traffic, its stats are still dumped when options.options.stats_dump_period_sec triggers. This sometimes spam the information logs. With this change, we skip the printing if there is not change, until 8 periods.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10891
Test Plan: Manually test the behavior with hacked db_bench setups.
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D40777183
fbshipit-source-id: ef0b9a793e4f6282df099b464f01d1fb4c5a2cab
Summary:
Right now in MergingIterator, for each range tombstone start and end key, we pop one end from heap and push the other end into the heap. This involves extra downheap and upheap cost. In the likely cases when a range tombstone iterator emits relatively adjacent keys, these keys should have similar order within all keys in the heap. This can happen when there is a burst of consecutive range tombstones, and most of the keys covered by them are dropped already. This PR uses `replace_top()` when inserting new range tombstone keys, which is more efficient in these common cases.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10877
Test Plan:
- existing UT
- ran all flavors of stress test through sandcastle
- benchmark:
```
# Set up: --writes_per_range_tombstone=1 means one point write and one delete range
TEST_TMPDIR=/tmp/rocksdb-rangedel-test-all-tombstone ./db_bench --benchmarks=fillseq,levelstats --writes_per_range_tombstone=1 --max_num_range_tombstones=1000000 --range_tombstone_width=2 --num=100000000 --writes=800000 --max_bytes_for_level_base=4194304 --disable_auto_compactions --write_buffer_size=33554432 --key_size=64
Level Files Size(MB)
--------------------
0 8 152
1 0 0
2 0 0
3 0 0
4 0 0
5 0 0
6 0 0
# Benchmark
TEST_TMPDIR=/tmp/rocksdb-rangedel-test-all-tombstone/ ./db_bench --benchmarks=readseq[-W1][-X5],levelstats --use_existing_db=true --cache_size=3221225472 --num=100000000 --reads=1000000 --disable_auto_compactions=true --avoid_flush_during_recovery=true
# Pre PR
readseq [AVG 5 runs] : 1432116 (± 59664) ops/sec; 224.0 (± 9.3) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 5 runs] : 1454886 ops/sec; 227.5 MB/sec
# Post PR
readseq [AVG 5 runs] : 1944425 (± 29521) ops/sec; 304.1 (± 4.6) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 5 runs] : 1959430 ops/sec; 306.5 MB/sec
```
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D40710936
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: cb782fb9cdcd26c0c3eb9443215a4ef4d2f79022
Summary:
**Context:**
Same as https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930 but apply the fix to FIFO Compaction case
Repro:
```
COERCE_CONTEXT_SWICH=1 make -j56 db_stress
./db_stress --acquire_snapshot_one_in=0 --adaptive_readahead=0 --allow_data_in_errors=True --async_io=1 --avoid_flush_during_recovery=0 --avoid_unnecessary_blocking_io=0 --backup_max_size=104857600 --backup_one_in=0 --batch_protection_bytes_per_key=0 --block_size=16384 --bloom_bits=18 --bottommost_compression_type=disable --bytes_per_sync=262144 --cache_index_and_filter_blocks=0 --cache_size=8388608 --cache_type=lru_cache --charge_compression_dictionary_building_buffer=0 --charge_file_metadata=1 --charge_filter_construction=1 --charge_table_reader=1 --checkpoint_one_in=0 --checksum_type=kCRC32c --clear_column_family_one_in=0 --column_families=1 --compact_files_one_in=0 --compact_range_one_in=1000 --compaction_pri=3 --open_files=-1 --compaction_style=2 --fifo_allow_compaction=1 --compaction_ttl=0 --compression_max_dict_buffer_bytes=8388607 --compression_max_dict_bytes=16384 --compression_parallel_threads=1 --compression_type=zlib --compression_use_zstd_dict_trainer=1 --compression_zstd_max_train_bytes=0 --continuous_verification_interval=0 --data_block_index_type=0 --db=/dev/shm/rocksdb_test0/rocksdb_crashtest_whitebox --db_write_buffer_size=8388608 --delpercent=4 --delrangepercent=1 --destroy_db_initially=1 --detect_filter_construct_corruption=0 --disable_wal=0 --enable_compaction_filter=0 --enable_pipelined_write=1 --fail_if_options_file_error=1 --file_checksum_impl=none --flush_one_in=1000 --format_version=5 --get_current_wal_file_one_in=0 --get_live_files_one_in=0 --get_property_one_in=0 --get_sorted_wal_files_one_in=0 --index_block_restart_interval=15 --index_type=3 --ingest_external_file_one_in=100 --initial_auto_readahead_size=0 --iterpercent=10 --key_len_percent_dist=1,30,69 --level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=True --log2_keys_per_lock=10 --long_running_snapshots=0 --mark_for_compaction_one_file_in=10 --max_auto_readahead_size=16384 --max_background_compactions=20 --max_bytes_for_level_base=10485760 --max_key=100000 --max_key_len=3 --max_manifest_file_size=1073741824 --max_write_batch_group_size_bytes=1048576 --max_write_buffer_number=3 --max_write_buffer_size_to_maintain=4194304 --memtable_prefix_bloom_size_ratio=0.5 --memtable_protection_bytes_per_key=1 --memtable_whole_key_filtering=1 --memtablerep=skip_list --mmap_read=1 --mock_direct_io=False --nooverwritepercent=1 --num_file_reads_for_auto_readahead=0 --num_levels=1 --open_metadata_write_fault_one_in=0 --open_read_fault_one_in=32 --open_write_fault_one_in=0 --ops_per_thread=200000 --optimize_filters_for_memory=0 --paranoid_file_checks=1 --partition_filters=0 --partition_pinning=1 --pause_background_one_in=0 --periodic_compaction_seconds=0 --prefix_size=8 --prefixpercent=5 --prepopulate_block_cache=0 --progress_reports=0 --read_fault_one_in=0 --readahead_size=16384 --readpercent=45 --recycle_log_file_num=1 --reopen=20 --ribbon_starting_level=999 --snapshot_hold_ops=1000 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_sec=0 --sst_file_manager_bytes_per_truncate=0 --subcompactions=2 --sync=0 --sync_fault_injection=0 --target_file_size_base=524288 --target_file_size_multiplier=2 --test_batches_snapshots=0 --top_level_index_pinning=3 --unpartitioned_pinning=0 --use_direct_io_for_flush_and_compaction=0 --use_direct_reads=0 --use_full_merge_v1=1 --use_merge=0 --use_multiget=1 --user_timestamp_size=0 --value_size_mult=32 --verify_checksum=1 --verify_checksum_one_in=0 --verify_db_one_in=1000 --verify_sst_unique_id_in_manifest=1 --wal_bytes_per_sync=0 --wal_compression=zstd --write_buffer_size=524288 --write_dbid_to_manifest=0 --writepercent=35
put or merge error: Corruption: force_consistency_checks(DEBUG): VersionBuilder: L0 file https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/479 with seqno 23711 29070 vs. file https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/482 with seqno 27138 29049
```
**Summary:**
FIFO only does intra-L0 compaction in the following four cases. For other cases, FIFO drops data instead of compacting on data, which is irrelevant to the overlapping seqno issue we are solving.
- [FIFOCompactionPicker::PickSizeCompaction](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.6.fb/db/compaction/compaction_picker_fifo.cc#L155) when `total size < compaction_options_fifo.max_table_files_size` and `compaction_options_fifo.allow_compaction == true`
- For this path, we simply reuse the fix in `FindIntraL0Compaction` https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958/files#diff-c261f77d6dd2134333c4a955c311cf4a196a08d3c2bb6ce24fd6801407877c89R56
- This path was not stress-tested at all. Therefore we covered `fifo.allow_compaction` in stress test to surface the overlapping seqno issue we are fixing here.
- [FIFOCompactionPicker::PickCompactionToWarm](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.6.fb/db/compaction/compaction_picker_fifo.cc#L313) when `compaction_options_fifo.age_for_warm > 0`
- For this path, we simply replicate the idea in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930 and skip files of largest seqno greater than `earliest_mem_seqno`
- This path was not stress-tested at all. However covering `age_for_warm` option worths a separate PR to deal with db stress compatibility. Therefore we manually tested this path for this PR
- [FIFOCompactionPicker::CompactRange](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.6.fb/db/compaction/compaction_picker_fifo.cc#L365) that ends up picking one of the above two compactions
- [CompactionPicker::CompactFiles](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.6.fb/db/compaction/compaction_picker.cc#L378)
- Since `SanitizeCompactionInputFiles()` will be called [before](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/7.6.fb/db/compaction/compaction_picker.h#L111-L113) `CompactionPicker::CompactFiles` , we simply replicate the idea in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5958#issue-511150930 in `SanitizeCompactionInputFiles()`. To simplify implementation, we return `Stats::Abort()` on encountering seqno-overlapped file when doing compaction to L0 instead of skipping the file and proceed with the compaction.
Some additional clean-up included in this PR:
- Renamed `earliest_memtable_seqno` to `earliest_mem_seqno` for consistent naming
- Added comment about `earliest_memtable_seqno` in related APIs
- Made parameter `earliest_memtable_seqno` constant and required
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10777
Test Plan:
- make check
- New unit test `TEST_P(DBCompactionTestFIFOCheckConsistencyWithParam, FlushAfterIntraL0CompactionWithIngestedFile)`corresponding to the above 4 cases, which will fail accordingly without the fix
- Regular CI stress run on this PR + stress test with aggressive value https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10761 and on FIFO compaction only
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D40090485
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: 52624186952ee7109117788741aeeac86b624a4f
Summary:
Allow the last level only compaction able to output result to penultimate level if the penultimate level is empty. Which will also block the other compaction output to the penultimate level.
(it includes the PR https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10829)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10822
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D40389180
Pulled By: jay-zhuang
fbshipit-source-id: 4e5dcdce307795b5e07b5dd1fa29dd75bb093bad
Summary:
Right now UserComparatorWrapper is a Customizable object, although it is not, which introduces some intialization overhead for the object. In some benchmarks, it shows up in CPU profiling. Make it not configurable by defining most functions needed by UserComparatorWrapper to an interface and implement the interface.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10837
Test Plan: Make sure existing tests pass
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D40528511
fbshipit-source-id: 70eaac89ecd55401a26e8ed32abbc413a9617c62
Summary:
Refactor the classes, APIs and data structures for block cache tracing to allow a user provided trace writer to be used. Currently, only a TraceWriter is supported, with a default built-in implementation of FileTraceWriter. The TraceWriter, however, takes a flat trace record and is thus only suitable for file tracing. This PR introduces an abstract BlockCacheTraceWriter class that takes a structured BlockCacheTraceRecord. The BlockCacheTraceWriter implementation can then format and log the record in whatever way it sees fit. The default BlockCacheTraceWriterImpl does file tracing using a user provided TraceWriter.
`DB::StartBlockTrace` will internally redirect to changed `BlockCacheTrace::StartBlockCacheTrace`.
New API `DB::StartBlockTrace` is also added that directly takes `BlockCacheTraceWriter` pointer.
This same philosophy can be applied to KV and IO tracing as well.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10811
Test Plan:
existing unit tests
Old API DB::StartBlockTrace checked with db_bench tool
create database
```
./db_bench --benchmarks="fillseq" \
--key_size=20 --prefix_size=20 --keys_per_prefix=0 --value_size=100 \
--cache_index_and_filter_blocks --cache_size=1048576 \
--disable_auto_compactions=1 --disable_wal=1 --compression_type=none \
--min_level_to_compress=-1 --compression_ratio=1 --num=10000000
```
To trace block cache accesses when running readrandom benchmark:
```
./db_bench --benchmarks="readrandom" --use_existing_db --duration=60 \
--key_size=20 --prefix_size=20 --keys_per_prefix=0 --value_size=100 \
--cache_index_and_filter_blocks --cache_size=1048576 \
--disable_auto_compactions=1 --disable_wal=1 --compression_type=none \
--min_level_to_compress=-1 --compression_ratio=1 --num=10000000 \
--threads=16 \
-block_cache_trace_file="/tmp/binary_trace_test_example" \
-block_cache_trace_max_trace_file_size_in_bytes=1073741824 \
-block_cache_trace_sampling_frequency=1
```
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D40435289
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: fa2755f4788185e19f4605e731641cfd21ab3282
Summary:
This new property allows users to trigger the background block cache stats collection mode through the `GetProperty()` and `GetMapProperty()` APIs. The background mode has much lower overhead at the expense of returning stale values in more cases.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10832
Test Plan: updated unit test
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D40497883
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: bdcc93402f426463abb2153756aad9e295447343
Summary:
FIFO compaction can theoretically open a DB with any compaction style.
However, the current code only allows FIFO compaction to open a DB with
a single level.
This PR relaxes the limitation of FIFO compaction and allows it to open a
DB with multiple levels. Below is the read / write / compaction behavior:
* The read behavior is untouched, and it works like a regular rocksdb instance.
* The write behavior is untouched as well. When a FIFO compacted DB
is opened with multiple levels, all new files will still be in level 0, and no files
will be moved to a different level.
* Compaction logic is extended. It will first identify the bottom-most non-empty level.
Then, it will delete the oldest file in that level.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10348
Test Plan:
Added a new test to verify the migration from level to FIFO where the db has multiple levels.
Extended existing test cases in db_test and db_basic_test to also verify
all entries of a key after reopening the DB with FIFO compaction.
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D40233744
fbshipit-source-id: 6cc011d6c3467e6bfb9b6a4054b87619e69815e1
Summary:
Lock the penultimate level for the whole compaction inputs range, so any
key in that compaction is safe to move up from the last level to
penultimate level.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10782
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D40231540
Pulled By: siying
fbshipit-source-id: ca115cc8b4018b35d797329fa85a19b06cc8c13e
Summary:
This change is motivated by ensuring that `ldb update_manifest` or `UpdateManifestForFilesState` can run without expecting files to open when the old temperature is provided (in case the FileSystem strictly interprets non-kUnknown), but ended up fixing a problem in `OfflineManifestWriter` (used by `ldb unsafe_remove_sst_file`) where it would open some SST files during recovery and expect them to match the prior manifest state, even if not required by the intended new state.
Also update BackupEngine to retry with Temperature kUnknown when reading file with potentially "wrong" temperature.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10796
Test Plan: tests added/updated, that fail before the change(s) and now pass
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D40232645
Pulled By: jay-zhuang
fbshipit-source-id: b5aa2688aecfe0c320b80a7da689b315414c20be
Summary:
Provide support for async_io if ReadOptions.tailing is set true.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10781
Test Plan:
- Update unit tests
- Ran db_bench: ./db_bench --benchmarks="readrandom" --use_existing_db --use_tailing_iterator=1 --async_io=1
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D40128882
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 55e17855536871a5c47e2de92d238ae005c32d01
Summary:
Add option `preserve_internal_time_seconds` to preserve the internal
time information.
It's mostly for the migration of the existing data to tiered storage (
`preclude_last_level_data_seconds`). When the tiering feature is just
enabled, the existing data won't have the time information to decide if
it's hot or cold. Enabling this feature will start collect and preserve
the time information for the new data.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10747
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D39910141
Pulled By: siying
fbshipit-source-id: 25c21638e37b1a7c44006f636b7d714fe7242138
Summary:
We have seen some rare crash test failures in HyperClockCache, and the source could certainly be a bug fixed in this change, in ClockHandleTable::ConstApplyToEntriesRange. It wasn't properly accounting for the fact that incrementing the acquire counter could be ineffective, due to parallel updates. (When incrementing the acquire counter is ineffective, it is incorrect to then decrement it.)
This change includes some other minor clean-up in HyperClockCache, and adds stats_dump_period_sec with a much lower period to the crash test. This should be the primary caller of ApplyToEntries, in collecting cache entry stats.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10768
Test Plan: haven't been able to reproduce the failure, but should be in a better state (bug fix and improved crash test)
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D40034747
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: a06fcefe146e17ee35001984445cedcf3b63eb68
Summary:
With current implementation, within the same RocksDB instance, all column families with non-empty memtables will be scheduled for flush if RocksDB determines that any column family needs to be flushed, e.g. memtable full, write buffer manager, etc., if atomic flush is enabled. Not doing so can lead to data loss and inconsistency when WAL is disabled, which is a common setting when atomic flush is enabled. Therefore, setting a per-column-family knob, min_write_buffer_number_to_merge to a value greater than 1 is not compatible with atomic flush, and should be sanitized during column family creation and db open.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10773
Test Plan:
Reproduce: D39993203 has detailed steps.
Run the test with and without the fix.
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D40077955
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 451a9179eb531ac42eaccf40b451b9dec4085240