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: 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:
Migrate derived classes from EnvWrapper to FileSystemWrapper so we can eventually deprecate the storage methods in Env.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11125
Test Plan: CircleCI jobs
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D42732241
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: c89a70a79fcfb13e158bf8919b1a87a9de133222
Summary:
PR https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11020 fixed a case where it was easy to deadlock the DB with LockWAL() but introduced a bug showing up as a rare assertion failure in the stress test. Specifically, `assert(w->state == STATE_INIT)` in `WriteThread::LinkOne()` called from `BeginWriteStall()`, `DelayWrite()`, `WriteImplWALOnly()`. I haven't been about to generate a unit test that reproduces this failure but I believe the root cause is that DelayWrite() was never meant to be re-entrant, only called from the DB's write_thread_ leader. https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11020 introduced a call to DelayWrite() from the nonmem_write_thread_ group leader.
This fix is to make DelayWrite() apply to the specific write queue that it is being called from (inject a dummy write stall entry to the head of the appropriate write queue). WriteController is re-entrant, based on polling and state changes signalled with bg_cv_, so can manage stalling two queues. The only anticipated complication (called out by Andrew in previous PR) is that we don't want timed write delays being injected in parallel for the two queues, because that dimishes the intended throttling effect. Thus, we only allow timed delays for the primary write queue.
HISTORY not updated because this is intended for the same release where the bug was introduced.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11130
Test Plan:
Although I was not able to reproduce the assertion failure, I was able to reproduce a distinct flaw with what I believe is the same root cause: a kind of deadlock if both write queues need to wake up from stopped writes. Only one will be waiting on bg_cv_ (the other waiting in `LinkOne()` for the write queue to open up), so a single SignalAll() will only unblock one of the queues, with the other re-instating the stop until another signal on bg_cv_. A simple unit test is added for this case.
Will also run crash_test_with_multiops_wc_txn for a while looking for issues.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42749330
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 4317dd899a93d57c26fd5af7143038f82d4d4d1b
Summary:
Migrate ErrorEnv from EnvWrapper to FileSystemWrapper so we can eventually deprecate the storage methods in Env.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11124
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D42727791
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: e8362ad624dc28e55c99fc35eda12866755f62c6
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:
Capture more of the original intent at a high level, without getting bogged down in low-level details.
The old text made some weak promises about handling of LOCK files. There should be no specific concern for LOCK files, because we already rely on LockFile() to create the file if it's not present already. And the lock file is generally size 0, so don't have to worry about truncation. Added a unit test.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11085
Test Plan: existing tests, and a new one.
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D42713233
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 2fce7c974d35fac065037c9c4c7326a59c9fe340
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:
the `last_tombstone_start_user_key` variable in `BuildTable()` and in `CompactionOutputs::AddRangeDels()` may point to a start key that is freed if user-defined timestamp is enabled. This was causing ASAN failure and this PR fixes this issue.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11106
Test Plan: Added UT for repro.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42590862
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: c493265ececdf89636d801d55ae929806c4d4b2c
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:
in `CompactionOutputs::AddRangeDels()`, range tombstones with the same start and end key but different sequence numbers all contribute to compensated range tombstone size. This PR removes this redundancy. This PR also includes a fix from https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/11067 where a range tombstone that is not within a file's range was being added to the file. This fixes an assertion failure for `icmp.Compare(start, end) <= 0` in VersionSet::ApproximateSize() when calculating compensated range tombstone size. Assertions and a comment/essay was added to reason that no such range tombstone will be added after this fix.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11091
Test Plan:
- Added unit tests
- Stress test with 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`
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42521588
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 5bda3fe38997995314e1f7592319af12b69bc4f8
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:
valgrind build for `ExternalSSTFileBasicTest/ExternalSSTFileBasicTest.IngestFileWithMixedValueType` and `ExternalSSTFileBasicTest/ExternalSSTFileBasicTest.IngestFileWithGlobalSeqnoPickedSeqno` started failing (see error message in T141554665). I could not repro but I suspect it is due to file ingestion range overlapping with ongoing compaction, which caused a new global seqno being assigned after https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/10988.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11070
Test Plan: monitor future valgrind tests result.
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D42319056
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: acbcd841a2a15e36b278f39ba514f4b9a6ee43ca
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:
compensate file sizes in compaction picking so files with range tombstones are preferred, such that they get compacted down earlier as they tend to delete a lot of data. This PR adds a `compensated_range_deletion_size` field in FileMeta that is computed during Flush/Compaction and persisted in MANIFEST. This value is added to `compensated_file_size` which will be used for compaction picking. Currently, for a file in level L, `compensated_range_deletion_size` is set to the estimated bytes deleted by range tombstone of this file in all levels > L. This helps to reduce space amp when data in older levels are covered by range tombstones in level L.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10734
Test Plan:
- Added unit tests.
- benchmark to check if the above definition `compensated_range_deletion_size` is reducing space amp as intended, without affecting write amp too much. The experiment set up favorable for this optimization: large range tombstone issued infrequently. Command used:
```
./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom,waitforcompaction,stats,levelstats -use_existing_db=false -avoid_flush_during_recovery=true -write_buffer_size=33554432 -level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes=true -max_background_jobs=8 -max_bytes_for_level_base=134217728 -target_file_size_base=33554432 -writes_per_range_tombstone=500000 -range_tombstone_width=5000000 -num=50000000 -benchmark_write_rate_limit=8388608 -threads=16 -duration=1800 --max_num_range_tombstones=1000000000
```
In this experiment, each thread wrote 16 range tombstones over the duration of 30 minutes, each range tombstone has width 5M that is the 10% of the key space width. Results shows this PR generates a smaller DB size.
Compaction stats from this PR:
```
Level Files Size Score Read(GB) Rn(GB) Rnp1(GB) Write(GB) Wnew(GB) Moved(GB) W-Amp Rd(MB/s) Wr(MB/s) Comp(sec) CompMergeCPU(sec) Comp(cnt) Avg(sec) KeyIn KeyDrop Rblob(GB) Wblob(GB)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
L0 2/0 31.54 MB 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 8.4 8.4 0.0 1.0 0.0 63.4 135.56 110.94 544 0.249 0 0 0.0 0.0
L4 3/0 96.55 MB 0.8 18.5 6.7 11.8 18.4 6.6 0.0 2.7 65.3 64.9 290.08 284.03 108 2.686 284M 1957K 0.0 0.0
L5 15/0 404.41 MB 1.0 19.1 7.7 11.4 18.8 7.4 0.3 2.5 66.6 65.7 292.93 285.34 220 1.332 293M 3808K 0.0 0.0
L6 143/0 4.12 GB 0.0 45.0 7.5 37.5 41.6 4.1 0.0 5.5 71.2 65.9 647.00 632.66 251 2.578 739M 47M 0.0 0.0
Sum 163/0 4.64 GB 0.0 82.6 21.9 60.7 87.2 26.5 0.3 10.4 61.9 65.4 1365.58 1312.97 1123 1.216 1318M 52M 0.0 0.0
```
Compaction stats from main:
```
Level Files Size Score Read(GB) Rn(GB) Rnp1(GB) Write(GB) Wnew(GB) Moved(GB) W-Amp Rd(MB/s) Wr(MB/s) Comp(sec) CompMergeCPU(sec) Comp(cnt) Avg(sec) KeyIn KeyDrop Rblob(GB) Wblob(GB)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
L0 0/0 0.00 KB 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 8.4 8.4 0.0 1.0 0.0 60.5 142.12 115.89 569 0.250 0 0 0.0 0.0
L4 3/0 85.68 MB 1.0 17.7 6.8 10.9 17.6 6.7 0.0 2.6 62.7 62.3 289.05 281.79 112 2.581 272M 2309K 0.0 0.0
L5 11/0 293.73 MB 1.0 18.8 7.5 11.2 18.5 7.2 0.5 2.5 64.9 63.9 296.07 288.50 220 1.346 288M 4365K 0.0 0.0
L6 130/0 3.94 GB 0.0 51.5 7.6 43.9 47.9 3.9 0.0 6.3 67.2 62.4 784.95 765.92 258 3.042 848M 51M 0.0 0.0
Sum 144/0 4.31 GB 0.0 88.0 21.9 66.0 92.3 26.3 0.5 11.0 59.6 62.5 1512.19 1452.09 1159 1.305 1409M 58M 0.0 0.0```
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D39834713
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: fe9341040b8704a8fbb10cad5cf5c43e962c7e6b
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:
the [assertion](c3f720c60d/db/compaction/compaction_outputs.cc (L643)) in `CompactionOutputs::AddRangeDels()` can fail after https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10802. The assertion fails when `lower_bound_from_range_tombstone` is true during `AddRangeDels()` for a new compaction output file, while the lower bound range tombstone key has seqno 0 and op_type kTypeRangeDeletion. It can have seqno 0 when it was truncated at a point key whose seqno was zeroed out during compaction, the seqno and op_type could be set [here](c3f720c60d/db/compaction/compaction_outputs.cc (L594)). This PR fixes the assertion excluding the case when `lower_bound_from_range_tombstone` is true.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11040
Test Plan: CI
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D42119914
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 0897e71b5304cb02aac30f71667b590c37b72baf
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:
Add a tiered storage migration test which would conflict with
an ongoing penultimate level compaction.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10908
Test Plan: Test only change
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D40864509
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: e316e849a01a6c71a41be130101f909b6c0498cb
Summary:
Besides the existing ordering and validation, more is coming to VersionBuilder/VersionStorageInfo, like migration of epoch_numbers from older RocksDB versions. We should start using those common classes for importing CFs, instead of duplicating their ordering, validation, and migration logic.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11028
Test Plan: rely on existing tests
Reviewed By: hx235
Differential Revision: D41865427
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 873f5cd87b8902a2380c3b71373ce0b0db3a0c50
Summary:
Previously, you could get a format_version error if SST file size was too small in manifest, or a weird "too short" error if too big in manifest. Now we ensure:
* Magic number error is reported first if we attempt to open an SST file and the footer is completely bad.
* Footer errors are reported with affected file.
* If manifest file size doesn't match actual, then the error includes expected and actual sizes (if an error is reported; in some cases we allow the file to be too big)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11009
Test Plan:
unit tests added, some manual
Previously, the code for "file too short" in footer processing was only covered by some tests attempting to verify SST checksums on non-SST files (fixed).
Reviewed By: siying
Differential Revision: D41656272
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 3da32702eb5aaedbea0e5e74742ad57edd7ad3df
Summary:
**Context/Summary:**
Credit to ajkr's https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11016#pullrequestreview-1205020134,
flaky test https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/facebook/rocksdb/21985/workflows/5f6cc355-78c1-46d8-89ee-0fd679725a8a/jobs/540878 is due to `Flush()` called in the test returned earlier than obsoleted WAL being found in background flush and SyncWAL() was called (i.e, "sync_point_called" sets to true). Fix this by making checking `sync_point_called == true` after obsoleted WAL is found and `SyncWAL()` is called. Also rename the "sync_point_called" to be something more specific.
Also, fix a potential flakiness due to manually setting a log threshold to force new manifest creation. This is unreliable so I decided to use sync point to force new manifest creation.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11016
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: pdillinger
Differential Revision: D41717786
Pulled By: hx235
fbshipit-source-id: ad1e4701a987285bbe6c8e7d9b05c4db06b4edf4
Summary:
when the compaction output file is empty, the assertion in `TimestampTablePropertiesCollector::Finish()` breaks. This PR fixes this assert and added unit test.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/11015
Test Plan: added UT.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D41716719
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: d891d46be4c4805e3d49be6b80c9d75f1bd51080
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:
In MergingIterator, if a range tombstone's start or end key is added to minHeap/maxHeap, the key is copied. This PR removes the copying of range tombstone keys by adding InternalKey comparator that compares `Slice` for internal key and `ParsedInternalKey` directly.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10878
Test Plan:
- existing UT
- ran all flavors of stress test through sandcastle
- benchmarks: I did not get improvement when compiling with DEBUG_LEVEL=0, and saw many noise. With `OPTIMIZE_LEVEL="-O3" USE_LTO=1` I do see improvement.
```
# Favorable set up: half of the writes are DeleteRange.
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=1000000 --max_bytes_for_level_base=4194304 --disable_auto_compactions --write_buffer_size=33554432 --key_size=50
# benchmark command
TEST_TMPDIR=/tmp/rocksdb-rangedel-test-all-tombstone ./db_bench --benchmarks=readseq[-W1][-X5],levelstats --use_existing_db=true --cache_size=3221225472 --disable_auto_compactions=true --avoid_flush_during_recovery=true --seek_nexts=100 --reads=1000000 --num=1000000 --threads=25
# main
readseq [AVG 5 runs] : 26017977 (± 371077) ops/sec; 3721.9 (± 53.1) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 5 runs] : 26096905 ops/sec; 3733.2 MB/sec
# this PR
readseq [AVG 5 runs] : 27481724 (± 568758) ops/sec; 3931.3 (± 81.4) MB/sec
readseq [MEDIAN 5 runs] : 27323957 ops/sec; 3908.7 MB/sec
```
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D40711170
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 708cb584e2bd085a9ce0d2ef6a420489f721717f
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:
Enabled output to penultimate level when file endpoints overlap. This is probably only possible when range tombstones span files. Otherwise the overlapping files would all be included in the penultimate level inputs thanks to our atomic compaction unit logic.
Also, corrected `penultimate_output_range_type_`, which is a minor fix as it appears only used for logging.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10961
Test Plan: updated unit test
Reviewed By: cbi42
Differential Revision: D41370615
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 7e75ec369a3b41b8382b336446c81825a4c4f572
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:
Since the latency measurement uses real time it is possible for the operation to complete in zero microseconds and then fail these checks. We saw this with the operation that invokes Get() on an invalid CF. This PR relaxes the assertions to allow for operations completing in zero microseconds.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10979
Reviewed By: riversand963
Differential Revision: D41478300
Pulled By: ajkr
fbshipit-source-id: 50ef096bd8f0162b31adb46f54ae6ddc337d0a5e
Summary:
before this PR, if there is a range tombstone-only file generated in penultimate level, it is marked the `last_level_temperature`. This PR fixes this issue.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10972
Test Plan: added unit test for this scenario.
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D41449215
Pulled By: cbi42
fbshipit-source-id: 1e06b5ae3bc0183db2991a45965a9807a7e8be0c
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:
This was just a stepping stone to what eventually became HyperClockCache, and is now just more code to maintain.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10954
Test Plan: tests updated
Reviewed By: akankshamahajan15
Differential Revision: D41310123
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 618ee148a1a0a29ee756ba8fe28359617b7cd67c