Glauber Costa 10c8ca6ace priority manager: separate streaming reads from writes
Streaming has currently one class, that can be used to contain the read
operations being generated by the streaming process. Those reads come from two
places:

- checksums (if doing repair)
- reading mutations to be sent over the wire.

Depending on the amount of data we're dealing with, that can generate a
significant chunk of data, with seconds worth of backlog, and if we need to
have the incoming writes intertwined with those reads, those can take a long
time.

Even if one node is only acting as a receiver, it may still read a lot for the
checksums - if we're talking about repairs, those are coming from the
checksums.

However, in more complicated failure scenarios, it is not hard to imagine a
node that will be both sending and receiving a lot of data.

The best way to guarantee progress on both fronts, is to put both kinds of
operations into different classes.

This patch introduces a new write class, and rename the old read class so it
can have a more meaningful name.

Signed-off-by: Glauber Costa <glauber@scylladb.com>
2016-03-23 09:12:59 -04:00
2015-09-20 10:43:39 +03:00
2016-03-23 14:39:31 +02:00
2016-03-23 10:21:58 +02:00
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2016-03-15 12:51:12 +02:00
2015-09-20 10:43:39 +03:00
2016-01-08 21:10:25 +01:00
2015-09-20 10:43:39 +03:00
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2016-02-17 13:12:11 +01:00
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2016-01-08 21:10:25 +01:00
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#Scylla

##Building Scylla

In addition to required packages by Seastar, the following packages are required by Scylla.

Submodules

Scylla uses submodules, so make sure you pull the submodules first by doing:

git submodule init
git submodule update --recursive

Building and Running Scylla on Fedora

  • Installing required packages:
sudo yum install yaml-cpp-devel lz4-devel zlib-devel snappy-devel jsoncpp-devel thrift-devel antlr3-tool antlr3-C++-devel libasan libubsan gcc-c++ gnutls-devel ninja-build ragel libaio-devel cryptopp-devel xfsprogs-devel numactl-devel hwloc-devel libpciaccess-devel libxml2-devel python3-pyparsing
  • Build Scylla
./configure.py --mode=release --with=scylla --disable-xen
ninja-build build/release/scylla -j2 # you can use more cpus if you have tons of RAM

  • Run Scylla
./build/release/scylla

  • run Scylla with one CPU and ./tmp as data directory
./build/release/scylla --datadir tmp --commitlog-directory tmp --smp 1
  • For more run options:
./build/release/scylla --help

Building Fedora RPM

As a pre-requisite, you need to install Mock on your machine:

# Install mock:
sudo yum install mock

# Add user to the "mock" group:
usermod -a -G mock $USER && newgrp mock

Then, to build an RPM, run:

./dist/redhat/build_rpm.sh

The built RPM is stored in /var/lib/mock/<configuration>/result directory. For example, on Fedora 21 mock reports the following:

INFO: Done(scylla-server-0.00-1.fc21.src.rpm) Config(default) 20 minutes 7 seconds
INFO: Results and/or logs in: /var/lib/mock/fedora-21-x86_64/result

Building Fedora-based Docker image

Build a Docker image with:

cd dist/docker
docker build -t <image-name> .

Run the image with:

docker run -p $(hostname -i):9042:9042 -i -t <image name>

Contributing to Scylla

Do not send pull requests.

Send patches to the mailing list address scylladb-dev@googlegroups.com. Be sure to subscribe.

In order for your patches to be merged, you must sign the Contributor's License Agreement, protecting your rights and ours. See http://www.scylladb.com/opensource/cla/.

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