Before Scylla 3.0, we used to send streaming mutations using
individual RPC requests and flush them together using dedicated
streaming memtables. This mechanism is no longer in use and all
versions that use it have long reached end-of-life.
Remove this code.
Current sender sends stream_mutation_fragments_cmd::end_of_stream to
receiver when an error is received from a peer node. To be safe, send
stream_mutation_fragments_cmd::error instead of
stream_mutation_fragments_cmd::end_of_stream to prevent end_of_stream to
be written into the sstable when a partition is not closed yet.
In addition, use mutation_fragment_stream_validator to valid the
mutation fragments emitted from the reader, e.g., check if
partition_start and partition_end are paired when the reader is done. If
not, fail the stream session and send
stream_mutation_fragments_cmd::error instead of
stream_mutation_fragments_cmd::end_of_stream to isolate the problematic
sstables on the sender node.
Refs: #6478
The class does not depend on partitioning logic but only uses
sharding logic. This means it is possible and desirable to limit its
dependency to only sharding_info.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jastrzebski <piotr@scylladb.com>
When has_relevant_range_on_this_shard() found a relevant range, it will unnecessarily
iterate through the end. Verified manually that this could be thousands of pointless
iterations when streaming data to a node just added. The relevant code could be
simplified by de-futurizing it but I think it remains so to allow task scheduler
to preempt it if necessary.
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <20200220224048.28804-2-raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
This requires a change in a repair that uses
selective_token_range_sharder.
Repair performs operation on a set of tables. We will have to
make sure that all of that tables use the same partitioner.
This is achieved by adding a check to a repair_info constructor.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jastrzebski <piotr@scylladb.com>
i_partitioner.hh is widely included while sharders are used
only in 6 places so there's no need to include them in
the whole codebase.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Jastrzebski <piotr@scylladb.com>
Keep local feature_service reference on database. This relaxes the
circular storage_service <-> database reference, but not removes it
completely.
This needs some args tossing in apply_to_builder, but it's
rather straightforward, so comes in the same patch.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@scylladb.com>
We can use the reader::peek() to check if the reader contains any data.
If not, do not open the rpc stream connection. It helps to reduce the
port usage.
Refs: #4943
This patch silences those future discard warnings where it is clear that
discarding the future was actually the intent of the original author,
*and* they did the necessary precautions (handling errors). The patch
also adds some trivial error handling (logging the error) in some
places, which were lacking this, but otherwise look ok. No functional
changes.
Avoid including the lengthy stream_session.hh in messaging_service.
More importantly, fix the build because currently messaging_service.cc
and messaging_service.hh does not include stream_mutation_fragments_cmd.
I am not sure why it builds on my machine. Spotted this when backporting
the "streaming: Send error code from the sender to receiver" to 3.0
branch.
Refs: #4789
The stream close() guarantees the data sent will be flushed. No need to
call the stream flush() since the stream is not reused.
Follow up fix for commit bac987e32a (streaming: Send error code from
the sender to receiver).
Refs #4789
In case of error on the sender side, the sender does not propagate the
error to the receiver. The sender will close the stream. As a result,
the receiver will get nullopt from the source in
get_next_mutation_fragment and pass mutation_fragment_opt with no value
to the generating_reader. In turn, the generating_reader generates end
of stream. However, the last element that the generating_reader has
generated can be any type of mutation_fragment. This makes the sstable
that consumes the generating_reader violates the mutation_fragment
stream rule.
To fix, we need to propagate the error. However RPC streaming does not
support propagate the error in the framework. User has to send an error
code explicitly.
Fixes: #4789
Given a list of ranges to stream, stream_transfer_task will create an
reader with the ranges and create a rpc stream connection on all the shards.
When user provides ranges to repair with -st -et options, e.g.,
using scylla-manger, such ranges can belong to only one shard, repair
will pass such ranges to streaming.
As a result, only one shard will have data to send while the rpc stream
connections are created on all the shards, which can cause the kernel
run out of ports in some systems.
To mitigate the problem, do not open the connection if the ranges do not
belong to the shard at all.
Refs: #4708
There is no guarantee that rpc streaming makes progress in some time
period. Remove the keep alive timer in streaming to avoid killing the
session when the rpc streaming is just slow.
The keep alive timer is used to close the session in the following case:
n2 (the rpc streaming sender) streams to n1 (the rpc streaming receiver)
kill -9 n2
We need this because we do not kill the session when gossip think a node
is down, because we think the node down might only be temporary
and it is a waste to drop the previous work that has done especially
when the stream session takes long time.
Since in range_streamer, we do not stream all data in a single stream
session, we stream 10% of the data per time, and we have retry logic.
I think it is fine to kill a stream session when gossip thinks a node is
down. This patch changes to close all stream session with the node that
gossip think it is down.
Message-Id: <bdbb9486a533eee25fcaf4a23a946629ba946537.1551773823.git.asias@scylladb.com>
Replace stdx::optional and stdx::string_view with the C++ std
counterparts.
Some instances of boost::variant were also replaced with std::variant,
namely those that called seastar::visit.
Scylla now requires GCC 8 to compile.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <20190108111141.5369-1-duarte@scylladb.com>
This header, which is easily replaced with a forward declaration,
introduces a dependency on database.hh everywhere. Remove it and scatter
includes of database.hh in source files that really need it.
rpc::source cannot be abandoned until EOS is reached, but current code
does not obey it if error code is received, it throws exception instead that
aborts the reading loop. Fix it by moving exception throwing out of the
loop.
Fixes: #4025
Message-Id: <20181227135051.GC29458@scylladb.com>
Currently if something throws while streaming in mutation sending loop
sink is not closed. Also when close() is running the code does not hold
onto sink object. close() is async, so sink should be kept alive until
it completes. The patch uses do_with() to hold onto sink while close is
running and run close() on error path too.
Fixes#4004.
Message-Id: <20181220155931.GL3075@scylladb.com>
sprint() recently became more strict, throwing on sprint("%s", 5). Replace
with the more modern format().
Mechanically converted with https://github.com/avikivity/unsprint.
On receiving a mutation_fragment or a mutation triggered by a streaming
operation, we pass an enum stream_reason to notify the receiver what
the streaming is used for. So the receiver can decide further operation,
e.g., send view updates, beyond applying the streaming data on disk.
Fixes#3276
Message-Id: <f15ebcdee25e87a033dcdd066770114a499881c0.1539498866.git.asias@scylladb.com>
Currently timeout is opt-in, that is, all methods that even have it
default it to `db::no_timeout`. This means that ensuring timeout is used
where it should be is completely up to the author and the reviewrs of
the code. As humans are notoriously prone to mistakes this has resulted
in a very inconsistent usage of timeout, many clients of
`flat_mutation_reader` passing the timeout only to some members and only
on certain call sites. This is small wonder considering that some core
operations like `operator()()` only recently received a timeout
parameter and others like `peek()` didn't even have one until this
patch. Both of these methods call `fill_buffer()` which potentially
talks to the lower layers and is supposed to propagate the timeout.
All this makes the `flat_mutation_reader`'s timeout effectively useless.
To make order in this chaos make the timeout parameter a mandatory one
on all `flat_mutation_reader` methods that need it. This ensures that
humans now get a reminder from the compiler when they forget to pass the
timeout. Clients can still opt-out from passing a timeout by passing
`db::no_timeout` (the previous default value) but this will be now
explicit and developers should think before typing it.
There were suprisingly few core call sites to fix up. Where a timeout
was available nearby I propagated it to be able to pass it to the
reader, where I couldn't I passed `db::no_timeout`. Authors of the
latter kind of code (view, streaming and repair are some of the notable
examples) should maybe consider propagating down a timeout if needed.
In the test code (the wast majority of the changes) I just used
`db::no_timeout` everywhere.
Tests: unit(release, debug)
Signed-off-by: Botond Dénes <bdenes@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <1edc10802d5eb23de8af28c9f48b8d3be0f1a468.1536744563.git.bdenes@scylladb.com>
This patch changes scylla streaming to use the recently added rpc
streaming feature provided by seastar to send mutation fragments for
scylla streaming instead of the rpc verbs.
It also changes the receiver to write to the sstable file directly,
skipping writing to memtable.
There is no need to call dht::split_ranges_to_shards to split the token
range into <shard> : <a lot of small ranges> mapping and create a flat
mutation reader with a lot of small ranges.
Because:
1) The flat mutation reader on each shard only returns data belongs to
this local shard, there is no correctness issue if we do not split and
feed the sub ranges only belongs to this local shard.
2) With murmur3_partitioner_ignore_msb_bits = 12, it is almost certain
that given a token range, all the shards will have data for the range
anyway. Even if we ask all the shards to work on the token range and
some of the shards have no data for it, it is fine. We simply send no
data from this shard.
Tests: update_cluster_layout_tests.py
Message-Id: <ac00cd21d6156c47b74451dd415d627481e48212.1526864222.git.asias@scylladb.com>
In the case there are large number of column families, the sender will
send all the column families in parallel. We allow 20% of shard memory
for streaming on the receiver, so each column family will have 1/N, N is
the number of in-flight column families, memory for memtable. Large N
causes a lot of small sstables to be generated.
It is possible there are multiple senders to a single receiver, e.g.,
when a new node joins the cluster, the maximum in-flight column families
is number of peer node. The column families are sent in the order of
cf_id. It is not guaranteed that all peers has the same speed so they
are sending the same cf_id at the same time, though. We still have
chance some of the peers are sending the same cf_id.
Fixes#3065
Message-Id: <46961463c2a5e4f1faff232294dc485ac4f1a04e.1513159678.git.asias@scylladb.com>
There is a user of fragment_and_freeze() (streaming) that will need
to be able to break the loop Right now, it does that between
streamed_mutation, but that won't be possible after we switch to flat
readers.
- introcduced "seastarx.hh" header, which does a "using namespace seastar";
- 'net' namespace conflicts with seastar::net, renamed to 'netw'.
- 'transport' namespace conflicts with seastar::transport, renamed to
cql_transport.
- "logger" global variables now conflict with logger global type, renamed
to xlogger.
- other minor changes
Now that we have the new interface to make readers with ranges, we can
simplify the code a lot.
1) Less readers are needed
before: number of ranges of readers
after: smp::count readers at most
2) No foreign_ptr is needed
There is no need to forward to a shard to make the foreign_ptr for
send_info in the first phase and forward to that shard to execute the
send_info in the second phase.
3) No do_with is needed in send_mutations since si now is a
lw_shared_ptr
4) Fix possible user after free of 'si' in do_send_mutations
We need to take a reference of 'si' when sending the mutation with
send_stream_mutation rpc call, otherwise:
msg1 got exception
si->mutations_done.broken()
si is freed
msg2 got exception
si is used again
The issue is introduced in dc50ce0ce5 (streaming: Make the mutation
readers when streaming starts) which is master only, branch 1.5 is not
affected.
Currenlty we make the mutation readers for streaming at different
time point, i.e.,
do_for_each(_ranges.begin(), _ranges.end(), [] (auto range) {
make a mutation reader for this range
read mutations from the reader and send
})
If there are write workload in the background, we will stream extra
data, since the later the reader is made the more data we need to send.
Fix it by making all the readers before starting to stream.
Fixes#1815
Message-Id: <1479341474-1364-2-git-send-email-asias@scylladb.com>
There are places in which we need to use the column family object many
times, with deferring points in between. Because the column family may
have been destroyed in the deferring point, we need to go and find it
again.
If we use lw_shared_ptr, however, we'll be able to at least guarantee
that the object will be alive. Some users will still need to check, if
they want to guarantee that the column family wasn't removed. But others
that only need to make sure we don't access an invalid object will be
able to avoid the cost of re-finding it just fine.
Signed-off-by: Glauber Costa <glauber@scylladb.com>
Message-Id: <722bf49e158da77ff509372c2034e5707706e5bf.1478111467.git.glauber@scylladb.com>
Wrapping ranges are a pain, so we are moving wrap handling to the edges.
Since cql can't generate wrapping ranges, this means thrift and the ring
maintenance code; also range->ring transformations need to merge the first
and last ranges.
Message-Id: <1478105905-31613-1-git-send-email-avi@scylladb.com>
"This series improves repair by
1) using less streaming sessions
2) reducing unnecessary streaming traffic
3) fixing a hang during shutdown
See commit log for "repair: Reduce stream_plan usage", "repair: Reduce
unnecessary streaming traffic" and "streaming: Fail streaming sessions
during shutdown" for details.
Tested with repair_additional_test.py."
Using make_streaming_reader for streaming on the sender side, it has
the following advantages:
- streaming, repair will not pollute the row cache on the sender side
any more. Currently, we are risking evicting all the frequently-queried
partitions from the cache when an operation like repair reads entire
sstables and floods the row cache with swathes of cold data from they
read from disk.
- less data will be sent becasue the reader will only return existing
data before the point of the reader is created, plus bounded amount
of writes which arrive later. This helps reducing the streaming time
in the case new data is being inserted all the time while streaming is
in progress. E.g., adding a new node while there is a lot of cql write
workload.
Fixes#382Fixes#1682