Summary:
add option `block_protection_bytes_per_key` and implementation for block per key-value checksum. The main changes are
1. checksum construction and verification in block.cc/h
2. pass the option `block_protection_bytes_per_key` around (mainly for methods defined in table_cache.h)
3. unit tests/crash test updates
Tests:
* Added unit tests
* Crash test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py blackbox --simple --block_protection_bytes_per_key=1 --write_buffer_size=1048576`
Follow up (maybe as a separate PR): make sure corruption status returned from BlockIters are correctly handled.
Performance:
Turning on block per KV protection has a non-trivial negative impact on read performance and costs additional memory.
For memory, each block includes additional 24 bytes for checksum-related states beside checksum itself. For CPU, I set up a DB of size ~1.2GB with 5M keys (32 bytes key and 200 bytes value) which compacts to ~5 SST files (target file size 256 MB) in L6 without compression. I tested readrandom performance with various block cache size (to mimic various cache hit rates):
```
SETUP
make OPTIMIZE_LEVEL="-O3" USE_LTO=1 DEBUG_LEVEL=0 -j32 db_bench
./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq,compact0,waitforcompaction,compact,waitforcompaction -write_buffer_size=33554432 -level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true -max_background_jobs=8 -target_file_size_base=268435456 --num=5000000 --key_size=32 --value_size=200 --compression_type=none
BENCHMARK
./db_bench --use_existing_db -benchmarks=readtocache,readrandom[-X10] --num=5000000 --key_size=32 --disable_auto_compactions --reads=1000000 --block_protection_bytes_per_key=[0|1] --cache_size=$CACHESIZE
The readrandom ops/sec looks like the following:
Block cache size: 2GB 1.2GB * 0.9 1.2GB * 0.8 1.2GB * 0.5 8MB
Main 240805 223604 198176 161653 139040
PR prot_bytes=0 238691 226693 200127 161082 141153
PR prot_bytes=1 214983 193199 178532 137013 108211
prot_bytes=1 vs -10% -15% -10.8% -15% -23%
prot_bytes=0
```
The benchmark has a lot of variance, but there was a 5% to 25% regression in this benchmark with different cache hit rates.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11287
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D43970708
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: ef98d898b71779846fa74212b9ec9e08b7183940
Summary:
**Context:**
The existing stat rocksdb.sst.read.micros does not reflect each of compaction and flush cases but aggregate them, which is not so helpful for us to understand IO read behavior of each of them.
**Summary**
- Update `StopWatch` and `RandomAccessFileReader` to record `rocksdb.sst.read.micros` and `rocksdb.file.{flush/compaction}.read.micros`
- Fixed the default histogram in `RandomAccessFileReader`
- New field `ReadOptions/IOOptions::io_activity`; Pass `ReadOptions` through paths under db open, flush and compaction to where we can prepare `IOOptions` and pass it to `RandomAccessFileReader`
- Use `thread_status_util` for assertion in `DbStressFSWrapper` for continuous testing on we are passing correct `io_activity` under db open, flush and compaction
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11288
Test Plan:
- **Stress test**
- **Db bench 1: rocksdb.sst.read.micros COUNT ≈ sum of rocksdb.file.read.flush.micros's and rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros's.** (without blob)
- May not be exactly the same due to `HistogramStat::Add` only guarantees atomic not accuracy across threads.
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -statistics=true -benchmarks="fillseq" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=50000 -write_buffer_size=655 -target_file_size_base=655 -disable_auto_compactions=false -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3 (-use_plain_table=1 -prefix_size=10)
```
```
// BlockBasedTable
rocksdb.sst.read.micros P50 : 2.009374 P95 : 4.968548 P99 : 8.110362 P100 : 43.000000 COUNT : 40456 SUM : 114805
rocksdb.file.read.flush.micros P50 : 1.871841 P95 : 3.872407 P99 : 5.540541 P100 : 43.000000 COUNT : 2250 SUM : 6116
rocksdb.file.read.compaction.micros P50 : 2.023109 P95 : 5.029149 P99 : 8.196910 P100 : 26.000000 COUNT : 38206 SUM : 108689
// PlainTable
Does not apply
```
- **Db bench 2: performance**
**Read**
SETUP: db with 900 files
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb/ -benchmarks="fillseq" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=50000 -write_buffer_size=655 -disable_auto_compactions=true -target_file_size_base=655 -compression_type=none
```run till convergence
```
./db_bench -seed=1678564177044286 -use_existing_db=true -db=/dev/shm/testdb -benchmarks=readrandom[-X60] -statistics=true -num=1000000 -disable_auto_compactions=true -compression_type=none -bloom_bits=3
```
Pre-change
`readrandom [AVG 60 runs] : 21568 (± 248) ops/sec`
Post-change (no regression, -0.3%)
`readrandom [AVG 60 runs] : 21486 (± 236) ops/sec`
**Compaction/Flush**run till convergence
```
./db_bench -db=/dev/shm/testdb2/ -seed=1678564177044286 -benchmarks="fillseq[-X60]" -key_size=32 -value_size=512 -num=50000 -write_buffer_size=655 -disable_auto_compactions=false -target_file_size_base=655 -compression_type=none
rocksdb.sst.read.micros COUNT : 33820
rocksdb.sst.read.flush.micros COUNT : 1800
rocksdb.sst.read.compaction.micros COUNT : 32020
```
Pre-change
`fillseq [AVG 46 runs] : 1391 (± 214) ops/sec; 0.7 (± 0.1) MB/sec`
Post-change (no regression, ~-0.4%)
`fillseq [AVG 46 runs] : 1385 (± 216) ops/sec; 0.7 (± 0.1) MB/sec`
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D44007011
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: a54c89e4846dfc9a135389edf3f3eedfea257132
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:
This makes it possible to eliminate some copies in `GetEntity` / `MultiGetEntity`,
in particular when `Merge`s or blobs are involved.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11248
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D43544215
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: bc4c8955a24bbd8bc4ab098e72133ead757f9707
Summary:
The new `MultiGetEntity` API can be used to get a consistent view of
a batch of keys, with the results presented as wide-column entities.
Similarly to `GetEntity` and the iterator's `columns` API, if the entry
corresponding to the key is a wide-column entity to start with, it is
returned as-is, and if it is a plain key-value, it is wrapped into an entity
with a single default column.
Implementation-wise, the new API shares the logic of the batched `MultiGet`
API (via the `MultiGetCommon` methods). Both single-CF and multi-CF
`MultiGetEntity` APIs are provided, and blobs are also supported.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11222
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D43256950
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 47fb2cb7e2d0470e3580f43fdb2fe9e51f0e7005
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: Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11136
Test Plan: the provided unit test used to fail due to `GetMergeOperands()` returning `Status::MergeInProgress()`; it passes now because the `GetMergeOperands()` call returns `Status::OK()`
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D42759198
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 878f9f40ccc1d7e2fe7b1352814bae3a49c19939
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:
The patch refines/reworks `MergeHelper::TimedFullMerge(WithEntity)`
a bit in two ways. First, it eliminates the recently introduced `TimedFullMerge`
overload, which makes the responsibilities clearer by making sure the query
result (`value` for `Get`, `columns` for `GetEntity`) is set uniformly in
`SaveValue` and `GetContext`. Second, it changes the interface of
`TimedFullMergeWithEntity` so it exposes its result in a serialized form; this
is a more decoupled design which will come in handy when adding support
for `Merge` with wide-column entities to `DBIter`.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10932
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D41129399
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 69d8da358c77d4fc7e8c40f4dafc2c129a710677
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:
The patch adds `Merge` support for wide-column entities to the point lookup
APIs, i.e. `Get`, `MultiGet`, `GetEntity`, and `GetMergeOperands`. (I plan to
update the iterator and compaction logic in separate PRs.) In terms of semantics,
the `Merge` operation is applied to the default (anonymous) column; any other
columns in the entity are unaffected.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10916
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D40962311
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 244bc9d172be1af2f204796b2f89104e4d2fa373
Summary:
Ran `find ./db/ -type f | xargs clang-format -i`. Excluded minor changes it tried to make on db/db_impl/. Everything else it changed was directly under db/ directory. Included minor manual touchups mentioned in PR commit history.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10910
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D40880683
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: cfe26cda05b3fb9a72e3cb82c286e21d8c5c4174
Summary:
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:
Currently, a memtable's stats `num_deletes_` is incremented only if the entry is a regular delete (kTypeDeletion). We need to fix it by accounting for kTypeSingleDeletion and kTypeDeletionWithTimestamp.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10886
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D40740754
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 7bde62cd6df136585bc5bfb1c426c7a8276c08e1
Summary:
The PR fixes the handling of `Merge`s in `GetEntity`. Note that `Merge` is not yet
supported for wide-column entities written using `PutEntity`; this change is
about returning correct (i.e. consistent with `Get`) results in cases like when the
base value is a plain old key-value written using `Put` or when there is no real base
value because we hit either a tombstone or the beginning of history.
Implementation-wise, the patch introduces a new wrapper around the existing
`MergeHelper::TimedFullMerge` that can store the merge result in either a string
(for the purposes of `Get`) or a `PinnableWideColumns` instance (for `GetEntity`).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10894
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D40782708
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 3d700d56b2ef81f02ba1e2d93f6481bf13abcc90
Summary:
FragmentedRangeTombstoneList has a member variable `seq_set_` that contains the sequence numbers of all range tombstones in a set. The set is constructed in `FragmentTombstones()` and is used only in `FragmentedRangeTombstoneList::ContainsRange()` which only happens during compaction. This PR moves the initialization of `seq_set_` to `FragmentedRangeTombstoneList::ContainsRange()`. This should speed up `FragmentTombstones()` when the range tombstone list is used for read/scan requests. Microbench shows the speed improvement to be ~45%.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10848
Test Plan:
- Existing tests and stress test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py whitebox --simple --verify_iterator_with_expected_state_one_in=5`.
- Microbench: update `range_del_aggregator_bench` to benchmark speed of `FragmentTombstones()`:
```
./range_del_aggregator_bench --num_range_tombstones=1000 --tombstone_start_upper_bound=50000000 --num_runs=10000 --tombstone_width_mean=200 --should_deletes_per_run=100 --use_compaction_range_del_aggregator=true
Before this PR:
=========================
Fragment Tombstones: 270.286 us
AddTombstones: 1.28933 us
ShouldDelete (first): 0.525528 us
ShouldDelete (rest): 0.0797519 us
After this PR: time to fragment tombstones is pushed to AddTombstones() which only happen during compaction.
=========================
Fragment Tombstones: 149.879 us
AddTombstones: 102.131 us
ShouldDelete (first): 0.565871 us
ShouldDelete (rest): 0.0729444 us
```
- db_bench: this should improve speed for fragmenting range tombstones for mutable memtable:
```
./db_bench --benchmarks=readwhilewriting --writes_per_range_tombstone=100 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=500000 --reads=250000 --disable_auto_compactions --max_num_range_tombstones=100000 --finish_after_writes --write_buffer_size=1073741824 --threads=25
Before this PR:
readwhilewriting : 18.301 micros/op 1310445 ops/sec 4.769 seconds 6250000 operations; 28.1 MB/s (41001 of 250000 found)
After this PR:
readwhilewriting : 16.943 micros/op 1439376 ops/sec 4.342 seconds 6250000 operations; 23.8 MB/s (28977 of 250000 found)
```
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D40646227
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: ea471667edb258f67d01cfd828588e80a89e4083
Summary:
Currently, the code in `SaveValue` that handles `kTypeValue` and
`kTypeBlobIndex` (and more recently, `kTypeWideColumnEntity`) is
mostly shared. This made sense originally; however, by now the
handling of these three value types has diverged significantly. The
patch makes the logic cleaner and also eliminates quite a bit of branching
by giving each value type its own `case` and removing a fall-through.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10840
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D40568420
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 2e614606afd1c3d9c76d9b5f1efa0959fc174103
Summary:
The motivation for this change is a planned feature (related to HyperClockCache) that will depend on a large array that can essentially grow automatically, up to some bound, without the pointer address changing and with guaranteed zero-initialization of the data. Anonymous mmaps provide such functionality, and this change provides an internal API for that.
The other existing use of anonymous mmap in RocksDB is for allocating in huge pages. That code and other related Arena code used some awkward non-RAII and pre-C++11 idioms, so I cleaned up much of that as well, with RAII, move semantics, constexpr, etc.
More specifcs:
* Minimize conditional compilation
* Add Windows support for anonymous mmaps
* Use std::deque instead of std::vector for more efficient bag
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10810
Test Plan: unit test added for new functionality
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D40347204
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: ca83fcc47e50fabf7595069380edd2954f4f879c
Summary:
Add user-defined timestamp support for range deletion. The new API is `DeleteRange(opt, cf, begin_key, end_key, ts)`. Most of the change is to update the comparator to compare without timestamp. Other than that, major changes are
- internal range tombstone data structures (`FragmentedRangeTombstoneList`, `RangeTombstone`, etc.) to store timestamps.
- Garbage collection of range tombstones and range tombstone covered keys during compaction.
- Get()/MultiGet() to return the timestamp of a range tombstone when needed.
- Get/Iterator with range tombstones bounded by readoptions.timestamp.
- timestamp crash test now issues DeleteRange by default.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10661
Test Plan:
- Added unit test: `make check`
- Stress test: `python3 tools/db_crashtest.py --enable_ts whitebox --readpercent=57 --prefixpercent=4 --writepercent=25 -delpercent=5 --iterpercent=5 --delrangepercent=4`
- Ran `db_bench` to measure regression when timestamp is not enabled. The tests are for write (with some range deletion) and iterate with DB fitting in memory: `./db_bench--benchmarks=fillrandom,seekrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=200 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=500000 --reads=500000 --seek_nexts=10 --disable_auto_compactions -disable_wal=true --max_num_range_tombstones=1000`. Did not see consistent regression in no timestamp case.
| micros/op | fillrandom | seekrandom |
| --- | --- | --- |
|main| 2.58 |10.96|
|PR 10661| 2.68 |10.63|
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D39441192
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: f05aca3c41605caf110daf0ff405919f300ddec2
Summary:
Currently, without this fix, DBImpl::GetLatestSequenceForKey() may not return the latest sequence number for merge operands of the key. This can cause conflict checking during optimistic transaction commit phase to fail. Fix it by always returning the latest sequence number of the key, also considering range tombstones.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10724
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D39756847
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 0764c3dd4cb24960b37e18adccc6e7feed0e6876
Summary:
fix a data race introduced in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10547 (P5295241720), first reported by pdillinger. The race is between the `std::atomic_load_explicit` in NewRangeTombstoneIteratorInternal and the `std::atomic_store_explicit` in MemTable::Add() that operate on `cached_range_tombstone_`. P5295241720 shows that `atomic_store_explicit` initializes some mutex which `atomic_load_explicit` could be trying to call `lock()` on at the same time. This fix moves the initialization to memtable constructor.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10680
Test Plan: `USE_CLANG=1 COMPILE_WITH_TSAN=1 make -j24 whitebox_crash_test`
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D39528696
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: ee740841044438e18ad2b8ea567444dd542dd8e2
Summary:
Each read from memtable used to read and fragment all the range tombstones into a `FragmentedRangeTombstoneList`. https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10380 improved the inefficient here by caching a `FragmentedRangeTombstoneList` with each immutable memtable. This PR extends the caching to mutable memtables. The fragmented range tombstone can be constructed in either read (This PR) or write path (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10584). With both implementation, each `DeleteRange()` will invalidate the cache, and the difference is where the cache is re-constructed.`CoreLocalArray` is used to store the cache with each memtable so that multi-threaded reads can be efficient. More specifically, each core will have a shared_ptr to a shared_ptr pointing to the current cache. Each read thread will only update the reference count in its core-local shared_ptr, and this is only needed when reading from mutable memtables.
The choice between write path and read path is not an easy one: they are both improvement compared to no caching in the current implementation, but they favor different operations and could cause regression in the other operation (read vs write). The write path caching in (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10584) leads to a cleaner implementation, but I chose the read path caching here to avoid significant regression in write performance when there is a considerable amount of range tombstones in a single memtable (the number from the benchmark below suggests >1000 with concurrent writers). Note that even though the fragmented range tombstone list is only constructed in `DeleteRange()` operations, it could block other writes from proceeding, and hence affects overall write performance.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10547
Test Plan:
- TestGet() in stress test is updated in https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10553 to compare Get() result against expected state: `./db_stress_branch --readpercent=57 --prefixpercent=4 --writepercent=25 -delpercent=5 --iterpercent=5 --delrangepercent=4`
- Perf benchmark: tested read and write performance where a memtable has 0, 1, 10, 100 and 1000 range tombstones.
```
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,readrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=200 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=200000 --reads=100000 --disable_auto_compactions --max_num_range_tombstones=1000
```
Write perf regressed since the cost of constructing fragmented range tombstone list is shifted from every read to a single write. 6cbe5d8e172dc5f1ef65c9d0a6eedbd9987b2c72 is included in the last column as a reference to see performance impact on multi-thread reads if `CoreLocalArray` is not used.
micros/op averaged over 5 runs: first 4 columns are for fillrandom, last 4 columns are for readrandom.
| |fillrandom main | write path caching | read path caching |memtable V3 (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10308) | readrandom main | write path caching | read path caching |memtable V3 |
|--- |--- |--- |--- |--- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| 0 |6.35 |6.15 |5.82 |6.12 |2.24 |2.26 |2.03 |2.07 |
| 1 |5.99 |5.88 |5.77 |6.28 |2.65 |2.27 |2.24 |2.5 |
| 10 |6.15 |6.02 |5.92 |5.95 |5.15 |2.61 |2.31 |2.53 |
| 100 |5.95 |5.78 |5.88 |6.23 |28.31 |2.34 |2.45 |2.94 |
| 100 25 threads |52.01 |45.85 |46.18 |47.52 |35.97 |3.34 |3.34 |3.56 |
| 1000 |6.0 |7.07 |5.98 |6.08 |333.18 |2.86 |2.7 |3.6 |
| 1000 25 threads |52.6 |148.86 |79.06 |45.52 |473.49 |3.66 |3.48 |4.38 |
- Benchmark performance of`readwhilewriting` from https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10552, 100 range tombstones are written: `./db_bench --benchmarks=readwhilewriting --writes_per_range_tombstone=500 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=100000 --reads=500000 --disable_auto_compactions --max_num_range_tombstones=10000 --finish_after_writes`
readrandom micros/op:
| |main |write path caching |read path caching |memtable V3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| single thread |48.28 |1.55 |1.52 |1.96 |
| 25 threads |64.3 |2.55 |2.67 |2.64 |
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D38895410
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 930bfc309dd1b2f4e8e9042f5126785bba577559
Summary:
The patch adds a new API `GetEntity` that can be used to perform
wide-column point lookups. It also extends the `Get` code path and
the `MemTable` / `MemTableList` and `Version` / `GetContext` logic
accordingly so that wide-column entities can be served from both
memtables and SSTs. If the result of a lookup is a wide-column entity
(`kTypeWideColumnEntity`), it is passed to the application in deserialized
form; if it is a plain old key-value (`kTypeValue`), it is presented as a
wide-column entity with a single default (anonymous) column.
(In contrast, regular `Get` returns plain old key-values as-is, and
returns the value of the default column for wide-column entities, see
https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10483 .)
The result of `GetEntity` is a self-contained `PinnableWideColumns` object.
`PinnableWideColumns` contains a `PinnableSlice`, which either stores the
underlying data in its own buffer or holds on to a cache handle. It also contains
a `WideColumns` instance, which indexes the contents of the `PinnableSlice`,
so applications can access the values of columns efficiently.
There are several pieces of functionality which are currently not supported
for wide-column entities: there is currently no `MultiGetEntity` or wide-column
iterator; also, `Merge` and `GetMergeOperands` are not supported, and there
is no `GetEntity` implementation for read-only and secondary instances.
We plan to implement these in future PRs.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10540
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D38847474
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 42311a34ccdfe88b3775e847a5e2a5296e002b5b
Summary:
The patch adds support for wide-column entities to the existing query
APIs (`Get`, `MultiGet`, and iterator). Namely, when during a query a
wide-column entity is encountered, we will return the value of the default
(anonymous) column as the result. Later, we plan to add wide-column
specific query APIs which will enable retrieving entire wide-column entities
or a subset of their columns.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10483
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D38441881
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 6444e79a31aff2470e866698e3a97985bc2b3543
Summary:
- Right now each read fragments the memtable range tombstones https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/4808. This PR explores the idea of fragmenting memtable range tombstones in the write path and reads can just read this cached fragmented tombstone without any fragmenting cost. This PR only does the caching for immutable memtable, and does so right before a memtable is added to an immutable memtable list. The fragmentation is done without holding mutex to minimize its performance impact.
- db_bench is updated to print out the number of range deletions executed if there is any.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10380
Test Plan:
- CI, added asserts in various places to check whether a fragmented range tombstone list should have been constructed.
- Benchmark: as this PR only optimizes immutable memtable path, the number of writes in the benchmark is chosen such an immutable memtable is created and range tombstones are in that memtable.
```
single thread:
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,readrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=1 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=500000 --reads=100000 --max_num_range_tombstones=100
multi_thread
./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,readrandom --writes_per_range_tombstone=1 --max_write_buffer_number=100 --min_write_buffer_number_to_merge=100 --writes=15000 --reads=20000 --threads=32 --max_num_range_tombstones=100
```
Commit 99cdf16464 is included in benchmark result. It was an earlier attempt where tombstones are fragmented for each write operation. Reader threads share it using a shared_ptr which would slow down multi-thread read performance as seen in benchmark results.
Results are averaged over 5 runs.
Single thread result:
| Max # tombstones | main fillrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464 | Post PR | main readrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464 | Post PR |
| ------------- | ------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |
| 0 |6.68 |6.57 |6.72 |4.72 |4.79 |4.54 |
| 1 |6.67 |6.58 |6.62 |5.41 |4.74 |4.72 |
| 10 |6.59 |6.5 |6.56 |7.83 |4.69 |4.59 |
| 100 |6.62 |6.75 |6.58 |29.57 |5.04 |5.09 |
| 1000 |6.54 |6.82 |6.61 |320.33 |5.22 |5.21 |
32-thread result: note that "Max # tombstones" is per thread.
| Max # tombstones | main fillrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464 | Post PR | main readrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464 | Post PR |
| ------------- | ------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |------------- |
| 0 |234.52 |260.25 |239.42 |5.06 |5.38 |5.09 |
| 1 |236.46 |262.0 |231.1 |19.57 |22.14 |5.45 |
| 10 |236.95 |263.84 |251.49 |151.73 |21.61 |5.73 |
| 100 |268.16 |296.8 |280.13 |2308.52 |22.27 |6.57 |
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D37916564
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 05d6d2e16df26c374c57ddcca13a5bfe9d5b731e
Summary:
The patch fixes a couple of issues related to in-place updates: 1) the value type was not passed from
`MemTableInserter::PutCFImpl` to `MemTable::Update` and 2) `MemTable::UpdateCallback` was called
for any value type (with the callee's logic assuming `kTypeValue`) even though the callback mechanism
is only safe for plain values.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10254
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D37463644
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 33802477dac0691681f416ae84c4d9742c6fe41a
Summary:
The patch builds on https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9915 and adds
a new API called `PutEntity` that can be used to write a wide-column entity
to the database. The new API is added to both `DB` and `WriteBatch`. Note
that currently there is no way to retrieve these entities; more precisely, all
read APIs (`Get`, `MultiGet`, and iterator) return `NotSupported` when they
encounter a wide-column entity that is required to answer a query. Read-side
support (as well as other missing functionality like `Merge`, compaction filter,
and timestamp support) will be added in later PRs.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10242
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D37369748
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 7f5e412359ed7a400fd80b897dae5599dbcd685d
Summary:
When a key is "out of domain" for the prefix_extractor (no
prefix assigned) then the Bloom filter is not queried. PerfContext
was counting this as a Bloom "hit" while Statistics doesn't count this
as a prefix Bloom checked. I think it's more accurate to call it neither
hit nor miss, so changing the counting to make it PerfContext coounting
more like Statistics.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10244
Test Plan:
tests updates and expanded (Get and MultiGet). Iterator test
coverage of the change will come in next PR
Reviewed By: bjlemaire
Differential Revision: D37371297
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: fed132fba6a92b2314ab898d449fce2d1586c157
Summary:
Added an option, `WriteOptions::protection_bytes_per_key`, that controls how many bytes per key we use for integrity protection in `WriteBatch`. It takes effect when `WriteBatch::GetProtectionBytesPerKey() == 0`.
Currently the only supported value is eight. Invoking a user API with it set to any other nonzero value will result in `Status::NotSupported` returned to the user.
There is also a bug fix for integrity protection with `inplace_callback`, where we forgot to take into account the possible change in varint length when calculating KV checksum for the final encoded buffer.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10037
Test Plan:
- Manual
- Set default value of `WriteOptions::protection_bytes_per_key` to eight and ran `make check -j24`
- Enabled in MyShadow for 1+ week
- Automated
- Unit tests have a `WriteMode` that enables the integrity protection via `WriteOptions`
- Crash test - in most cases, use `WriteOptions::protection_bytes_per_key` to enable integrity protection
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D36614569
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 8650087ceac9b61b560f1e5fafe5e1baf9c725fb
Summary:
If caller specifies a non-null `timestamp` argument in `DB::Get()` or a non-null `timestamps` in `DB::MultiGet()`,
RocksDB will return the timestamps of the point tombstones.
Note: DeleteRange is still unsupported.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10056
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D36677956
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 2d7af02cc7237b1829cd269086ea895a49d501ae
Summary:
Right now we still don't fully use std::numeric_limits but use a macro, mainly for supporting VS 2013. Right now we only support VS 2017 and up so it is not a problem. The code comment claims that MinGW still needs it. We don't have a CI running MinGW so it's hard to validate. since we now require C++17, it's hard to imagine MinGW would still build RocksDB but doesn't support std::numeric_limits<>.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9954
Test Plan: See CI Runs.
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D36173954
fbshipit-source-id: a35a73af17cdcae20e258cdef57fcf29a50b49e0
Summary:
MemTable::MultiGet was not considering range tombstones before
querying Bloom filter. This means range tombstones would be skipped for
keys (or prefixes) with no other entries in the memtable. This could cause
old values for a key (in SST files) to still show up until the range tombstone
covering it has been flushed.
This is fixed by essentially disabling the memtable Bloom filter when there
are any range tombstones. (This could be better optimized in the future, but
good enough for now.)
Did some other cleanup/optimization in the same code to (more than) offset
the cost of checking on range tombstones in more cases. There is now
notable improvement when memtable_whole_key_filtering and prefix_extractor
are used together (unusual), and this makes MultiGet closer to the Get
implementation.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/9453
Test Plan:
new unit test added. Added memtable Bloom to crash test.
Performance testing
--------------------
Build WAL-only DB (recovers to memtable):
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=1000000 -write_buffer_size=250000000
```
Query test command, to maximize sensitivity to the changed code:
```
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm/rocksdb ./db_bench -use_existing_db -readonly -benchmarks=multireadrandom -num=10000000 -write_buffer_size=250000000 -memtable_bloom_size_ratio=0.015 -multiread_batched -batch_size=24 -threads=8 -memtable_whole_key_filtering=$MWKF -prefix_size=$PXS
```
(Note -num here is 10x larger for mostly memtable misses)
Before & after run simultaneously, average over 10 iterations per data point, ops/sec.
MWKF=0 PXS=0 (Bloom disabled)
Before: 5724844
After: 6722066
MWKF=0 PXS=7 (prefixes hardly unique; Bloom not useful)
Before: 9981319
After: 10237990
MWKF=0 PXS=8 (prefixes unique; Bloom useful)
Before: 12081715
After: 12117603
MWKF=1 PXS=0 (whole key Bloom useful)
Before: 11944354
After: 12096085
MWKF=1 PXS=7 (whole key Bloom useful in new version; prefixes not useful in old version)
Before: 9444299
After: 11826029
MWKF=1 PXS=7 (whole key Bloom useful in new version; prefixes useful in old version)
Before: 11784465
After: 11778591
Only in this last case is the 'before' *slightly* faster, perhaps because hashing prefixes is slightly faster than hashing whole keys. Otherwise, 'after' is faster.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D33805025
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 597523cae4f4eafdf6ae6bb2bc6cb46f83b017bf
Summary:
This header file was including everything and the kitchen sink when it did not need to. This resulted in many places including this header when they needed other pieces instead.
Cleaned up this header to only include what was needed and fixed up the remaining code to include what was now missing.
Hopefully, this sort of code hygiene cleanup will speed up the builds...
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8930
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D31142788
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: 6b45de3f300750c79f751f6227dece9cfd44085d
Summary:
After https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/8725, keys added to `WriteBatch` may be timestamp-suffixed, while `WriteBatch` has no awareness of the timestamp size. Therefore, `WriteBatch` can no longer calculate timestamp checksum separately from the rest of the key's checksum in all cases.
This PR changes the definition of key in KV checksum to include the timestamp suffix. That way we do not need to worry about where the timestamp begins within the key. I believe the only practical effect of this change is now `AssignTimestamp()` requires recomputing the whole key checksum (`UpdateK()`) rather than just the timestamp portion (`UpdateT()`).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8914
Test Plan:
run stress command that used to fail
```
$ ./db_stress --batch_protection_bytes_per_key=8 -clear_column_family_one_in=0 -test_batches_snapshots=1
```
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D30925715
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: c143f7ccb46c0efb390ad57ef415c250d754deff
Summary:
The main challenge to make the memtable garbage collection prototype (nicknamed `mempurge`) was to not get rid of WAL files that contain unflushed (but mempurged) data. That was successfully guaranteed by not writing the VersionEdit to the MANIFEST file after a successful mempurge.
By not writing VersionEdits to the `MANIFEST` file after a succesful mempurge operation, we do not change the earliest log file number that contains unflushed data: `cfd->GetLogNumber()` (`cfd->SetLogNumber()` is only called in `VersionSet::ProcessManifestWrites`). As a result, a number of functions introduced earlier just for the mempurge operation are not obscolete/redundant. (e.g.: `FlushJob::ExtractEarliestLogFileNumber`), and this PR aims at cleaning up all these now-unnecessary functions. In particular, we no longer need to store the earliest log file number in the `MemTable` struct itself. This PR therefore also reverts the `MemTable` struct to its original form.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8558
Test Plan: Already included in `db_flush_test.cc`.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D29764351
Pulled By: bjlemaire
fbshipit-source-id: 0f43b260fa270251862512f397d3f24ee62e8437
Summary:
In this PR, `mempurge` is made compatible with the Write Ahead Log: in case of recovery, the DB is now capable of recovering the data that was "mempurged" and kept in the `imm()` list of immutable memtables.
The twist was to add a uint64_t to the `memtable` struct to store the number of the earliest log file containing entries from the `memtable`. When a `Flush` operation is replaced with a `MemPurge`, the `VersionEdit` (which usually contains the new min log file number to pick up for recovery and the level 0 file path of the newly created SST file) is no longer appended to the manifest log, and every time the `deleteWal` method is called, a check is made on the list of immutable memtables.
This PR also includes a unit test that verifies that no data is lost upon Reopening of the database when the mempurge feature is activated. This extensive unit test includes two column families, with valid data contained in the imm() at time of "crash"/reopening (recovery).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8528
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D29701097
Pulled By: bjlemaire
fbshipit-source-id: 072a900fb6ccc1edcf5eef6caf88f3060238edf9
Summary:
The ImmutableCFOptions contained a bunch of fields that belonged to the ImmutableDBOptions. This change cleans that up by introducing an ImmutableOptions struct. Following the pattern of Options struct, this class inherits from the DB and CFOption structs (of the Immutable form).
Only one structural change (the ImmutableCFOptions::fs was changed to a shared_ptr from a raw one) is in this PR. All of the other changes involve moving the member variables from the ImmutableCFOptions into the ImmutableOptions and changing member variables or function parameters as required for compilation purposes.
Follow-on PRs may do a further clean-up of the code, such as renaming variables (such as "ImmutableOptions cf_options") and potentially eliminating un-needed function parameters (there is no longer a need to pass both an ImmutableDBOptions and an ImmutableOptions to a function).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8262
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D28226540
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: 18ae71eadc879dedbe38b1eb8e6f9ff5c7147dbf
Summary:
Renaming ImmutableCFOptions::info_log and statistics to logger and stats. This is stage 2 in creating an ImmutableOptions class. It is necessary because the names match those in ImmutableOptions and have different types.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8227
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D28000967
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: 3bf2aa04e8f1e8724d825b7deacf41080c14420b
Summary:
This PR is a first step at attempting to clean up some of the Mutable/Immutable Options code. With this change, a DBOption and a ColumnFamilyOption can be reconstructed from their Mutable and Immutable equivalents, respectively.
readrandom tests do not show any performance degradation versus master (though both are slightly slower than the current 6.19 release).
There are still fields in the ImmutableCFOptions that are not CF options but DB options. Eventually, I would like to move those into an ImmutableOptions (= ImmutableDBOptions+ImmutableCFOptions). But that will be part of a future PR to minimize changes and disruptions.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8176
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D27954339
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: ec6b805ba9afe6e094bffdbd76246c2d99aa9fad
Summary:
For performance purposes, the lower level routines were changed to use a SystemClock* instead of a std::shared_ptr<SystemClock>. The shared ptr has some performance degradation on certain hardware classes.
For most of the system, there is no risk of the pointer being deleted/invalid because the shared_ptr will be stored elsewhere. For example, the ImmutableDBOptions stores the Env which has a std::shared_ptr<SystemClock> in it. The SystemClock* within the ImmutableDBOptions is essentially a "short cut" to gain access to this constant resource.
There were a few classes (PeriodicWorkScheduler?) where the "short cut" property did not hold. In those cases, the shared pointer was preserved.
Using db_bench readrandom perf_level=3 on my EC2 box, this change performed as well or better than 6.17:
6.17: readrandom : 28.046 micros/op 854902 ops/sec; 61.3 MB/s (355999 of 355999 found)
6.18: readrandom : 32.615 micros/op 735306 ops/sec; 52.7 MB/s (290999 of 290999 found)
PR: readrandom : 27.500 micros/op 871909 ops/sec; 62.5 MB/s (367999 of 367999 found)
(Note that the times for 6.18 are prior to revert of the SystemClock).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/8033
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D27014563
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: ad0459eba03182e454391b5926bf5cdd45657b67
Summary:
This PR adds the foundation classes for key-value integrity protection and the first use case: protecting live updates from the source buffers added to `WriteBatch` through the destination buffer in `MemTable`. The width of the protection info is not yet configurable -- only eight bytes per key is supported. This PR allows users to enable protection by constructing `WriteBatch` with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`. It does not yet expose a way for users to get integrity protection via other write APIs (e.g., `Put()`, `Merge()`, `Delete()`, etc.).
The foundation classes (`ProtectionInfo.*`) embed the coverage info in their type, and provide `Protect.*()` and `Strip.*()` functions to navigate between types with different coverage. For making bytes per key configurable (for powers of two up to eight) in the future, these classes are templated on the unsigned integer type used to store the protection info. That integer contains the XOR'd result of hashes with independent seeds for all covered fields. For integer fields, the hash is computed on the raw unadjusted bytes, so the result is endian-dependent. The most significant bytes are truncated when the hash value (8 bytes) is wider than the protection integer.
When `WriteBatch` is constructed with `protection_bytes_per_key == 8`, we hold a `ProtectionInfoKVOTC` (i.e., one that covers key, value, optype aka `ValueType`, timestamp, and CF ID) for each entry added to the batch. The protection info is generated from the original buffers passed by the user, as well as the original metadata generated internally. When writing to memtable, each entry is transformed to a `ProtectionInfoKVOTS` (i.e., dropping coverage of CF ID and adding coverage of sequence number), since at that point we know the sequence number, and have already selected a memtable corresponding to a particular CF. This protection info is verified once the entry is encoded in the `MemTable` buffer.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7748
Test Plan:
- an integration test to verify a wide variety of single-byte changes to the encoded `MemTable` buffer are caught
- add to stress/crash test to verify it works in variety of configs/operations without intentional corruption
- [deferred] unit tests for `ProtectionInfo.*` classes for edge cases like KV swap, `SliceParts` and `Slice` APIs are interchangeable, etc.
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D25754492
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: e481bac6c03c2ab268be41359730f1ceb9964866
Summary:
Introduces and uses a SystemClock class to RocksDB. This class contains the time-related functions of an Env and these functions can be redirected from the Env to the SystemClock.
Many of the places that used an Env (Timer, PerfStepTimer, RepeatableThread, RateLimiter, WriteController) for time-related functions have been changed to use SystemClock instead. There are likely more places that can be changed, but this is a start to show what can/should be done. Over time it would be nice to migrate most (if not all) of the uses of the time functions from the Env to the SystemClock.
There are several Env classes that implement these functions. Most of these have not been converted yet to SystemClock implementations; that will come in a subsequent PR. It would be good to unify many of the Mock Timer implementations, so that they behave similarly and be tested similarly (some override Sleep, some use a MockSleep, etc).
Additionally, this change will allow new methods to be introduced to the SystemClock (like https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/7101 WaitFor) in a consistent manner across a smaller number of classes.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7858
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D26006406
Pulled By: mrambacher
fbshipit-source-id: ed10a8abbdab7ff2e23d69d85bd25b3e7e899e90
Summary:
The patch adds initial support for reading blobs to the batched `MultiGet` API.
The current implementation simply retrieves the blob values as the blob indexes
are encountered; that is, reads from blob files are currently not batched. (This
will be optimized in a separate phase.) In addition, the patch removes some dead
code related to BlobDB from the batched `MultiGet` implementation, namely the
`is_blob` / `is_blob_index` flags that are passed around in `DBImpl` and `MemTable` /
`MemTableListVersion`. These were never hooked up to anything and wouldn't
work anyways, since a single flag is not sufficient to communicate the "blobness"
of multiple key-values.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7766
Test Plan: `make check`
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D25479290
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 7aba2d290e31876ee592bcf1adfd1018713a8000
Summary:
This PR updates `MemTable::Add()`, `MemTable::Update()`, and
`MemTable::UpdateCallback()` to return `Status` objects, and adapts the
client code in `MemTableInserter`. The goal is to prepare these
functions for key-value checksum, where we want to verify key-value
integrity while adding to memtable. After this PR, the memtable mutation
functions can report a failed integrity check by returning `Status::Corruption`.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7656
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D24900497
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 1a7e80581e3774676f2bbba2f0a0b04890f40009
Summary:
The filter query key should not contain timestamp. The timestamp is
stripped for Get(), but not MultiGet().
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7589
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D24494661
Pulled By: jay-zhuang
fbshipit-source-id: fc5ff40f9d683a89a760c6ff0ab3aed05a70c317
Summary:
Introduce an new option options.check_flush_compaction_key_order, by default set to true, which checks key order of flush and compaction, and fail the operation if the order is violated.
Also did minor refactor hash checking code, which consolidates the hashing logic to a vlidation class, where the key ordering logic is added.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7467
Test Plan: Add unit tests to validate the check can catch reordering in flush and compaction, and can be properly disabled.
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D24010683
fbshipit-source-id: 8dd6292d2cda8006054e9ded7cfa4bf405f0527c