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7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
dgotlieb a991342f8d
docs: nomad eval delete typo fix (#15667)
Status instead of Stauts
2023-01-03 14:18:03 -05:00
Tim Gross 37134a4a37
eval delete: move batching of deletes into RPC handler and state (#15117)
During unusual outage recovery scenarios on large clusters, a backlog of
millions of evaluations can appear. In these cases, the `eval delete` command can
put excessive load on the cluster by listing large sets of evals to extract the
IDs and then sending larges batches of IDs. Although the command's batch size
was carefully tuned, we still need to be JSON deserialize, re-serialize to
MessagePack, send the log entries through raft, and get the FSM applied.

To improve performance of this recovery case, move the batching process into the
RPC handler and the state store. The design here is a little weird, so let's
look a the failed options first:

* A naive solution here would be to just send the filter as the raft request and
  let the FSM apply delete the whole set in a single operation. Benchmarking with
  1M evals on a 3 node cluster demonstrated this can block the FSM apply for
  several minutes, which puts the cluster at risk if there's a leadership
  failover (the barrier write can't be made while this apply is in-flight).

* A less naive but still bad solution would be to have the RPC handler filter
  and paginate, and then hand a list of IDs to the existing raft log
  entry. Benchmarks showed this blocked the FSM apply for 20-30s at a time and
  took roughly an hour to complete.

Instead, we're filtering and paginating in the RPC handler to find a page token,
and then passing both the filter and page token in the raft log. The FSM apply
recreates the paginator using the filter and page token to get roughly the same
page of evaluations, which it then deletes. The pagination process is fairly
cheap (only abut 5% of the total FSM apply time), so counter-intuitively this
rework ends up being much faster. A benchmark of 1M evaluations showed this
blocked the FSM apply for 20-30ms at a time (typical for normal operations) and
completes in less than 4 minutes.

Note that, as with the existing design, this delete is not consistent: a new
evaluation inserted "behind" the cursor of the pagination will fail to be
deleted.
2022-11-14 14:08:13 -05:00
Kevin Wang d66b2eba43
fix: website broken links (#14904)
* fix: website broken links

* fix up keyring-rotate link

Co-authored-by: Tim Gross <tgross@hashicorp.com>
2022-10-17 11:32:10 -04:00
Luiz Aoqui 03433dd8af
cli: improve output of eval commands (#13581)
Use the same output format when listing multiple evals in the `eval
list` command and when `eval status <prefix>` matches more than one
eval.

Include the eval namespace in all output formats and always include the
job ID in `eval status` since, even `node-update` evals are related to a
job.

Add Node ID to the evals table output to help differentiate
`node-update` evals.

Co-authored-by: James Rasell <jrasell@hashicorp.com>
2022-07-07 13:13:34 -04:00
James Rasell 0c0b028a59
core: allow deleting of evaluations (#13492)
* core: add eval delete RPC and core functionality.

* agent: add eval delete HTTP endpoint.

* api: add eval delete API functionality.

* cli: add eval delete command.

* docs: add eval delete website documentation.
2022-07-06 16:30:11 +02:00
Luiz Aoqui 110dbeeb9d
Add go-bexpr filters to evals and deployment list endpoints (#12034) 2022-02-16 11:40:30 -05:00
Tim Gross 536e3c5282
nomad eval list command (#11675)
Use the new filtering and pagination capabilities of the `Eval.List`
RPC to provide filtering and pagination at the command line.

Also includes note that `nomad eval status -json` is deprecated and
will be replaced with a single evaluation view in a future version of
Nomad.
2021-12-15 11:58:38 -05:00