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 99cdf16464a057ca44de2f747541dedf651bae9e 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 | 99cdf16464a057ca44de2f747541dedf651bae9e | Post PR | main readrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464a057ca44de2f747541dedf651bae9e | 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 | 99cdf16464a057ca44de2f747541dedf651bae9e | Post PR | main readrandom micros/op | 99cdf16464a057ca44de2f747541dedf651bae9e | 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
Summary:
Add a new Option "allow_data_in_errors". When it's set by users, it allows them to opt-in to get error messages containing corrupted keys/values. Corrupt keys, values will be logged in the messages, logs, status etc. that will help users with the useful information regarding affected data.
By default value is set false to prevent users data to be exposed in the messages.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7420
Test Plan:
1. make check -j64
2. Add a new test case
Reviewed By: ajkr
Differential Revision: D23835028
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: 8d2eba8fb898e79fcf1fccc07295065a75eb59b1
Summary:
A generic algorithm in progress depends on a templatized
version of fastrange, so this change generalizes it and renames
it to fit our style guidelines, FastRange32, FastRange64, and now
FastRangeGeneric.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7436
Test Plan: added a few more test cases
Reviewed By: jay-zhuang
Differential Revision: D23958153
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 8c3b76101653417804997e5f076623a25586f3e8
Summary:
IteratorIterator::IsOutOfBound() and IteratorIterator::MayBeOutOfUpperBound() are two functions that related to upper bound check. It is hard for users to reason about this complexity. Consolidate the two functions into one and assign an enum as results to improve readability.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7200
Test Plan: Run all existing test. Would run crash test with atomic for a while.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D22833181
fbshipit-source-id: a0c724267056adbd0476bde74650e6c7226077e6
Summary:
NextAndGetResult() is not implemented in memtable and is very simply implemented in level iterator. The result is that for a normal leveled iterator, performance regression will be observed for calling PrepareValue() for most iterator Next(). Mitigate the problem by implementing the function for both iterators. In level iterator, the implementation cannot be perfect as when calling file iterator's SeekToFirst() we don't have information about whether the value is prepared. Fortunately, the first key should not cause a big portion of the CPu.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7179
Test Plan: Run normal crash test for a while.
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D22783840
fbshipit-source-id: c19f45cdf21b756190adef97a3b66ccde3936e05
Summary:
During memtable lookup, an unrecognized value type should be reported as
Status::Corruption.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7121
Test Plan: make check
Reviewed By: cheng-chang
Differential Revision: D22512124
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 9b97be7d9b230c5aae9205f96054420e5ea09066
Summary:
We are still keeping unity build working. So it's a good idea to add to a pre-commit CI.
A latest GCC docker image just to get a little bit more coverage. Fix three small issues to make it pass.
Also make unity_test to run db_basic_test rather than db_test to cut the test time. There is no point to run expensive tests here. It was set to run db_test before db_basic_test was separated out.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/7026
Test Plan: watch tests to pass.
Reviewed By: zhichao-cao
Differential Revision: D22223197
fbshipit-source-id: baa3b6cbb623bf359829b63ce35715c75bcb0ed4
Summary:
Preliminary user-timestamp support for delete.
If ["a", ts=100] exists, you can delete it by calling `DB::Delete(write_options, key)` in which `write_options.timestamp` points to a `ts` higher than 100.
Implementation
A new ValueType, i.e. `kTypeDeletionWithTimestamp` is added for deletion marker with timestamp.
The reason for a separate `kTypeDeletionWithTimestamp`: RocksDB may drop tombstones (keys with kTypeDeletion) when compacting them to the bottom level. This is OK and useful if timestamp is disabled. When timestamp is enabled, should we still reuse `kTypeDeletion`, we may drop the tombstone with a more recent timestamp, causing deleted keys to re-appear.
Test plan (dev server)
```
make check
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6253
Reviewed By: ltamasi
Differential Revision: D20995328
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: a9e5c22968ad76f98e3dc6ee0151265a3f0df619
Summary:
1. Add a value_size in read options which limits the cumulative value size of keys read in batches. Once the size exceeds read_options.value_size, all the remaining keys are returned with status Abort without further fetching any key.
2. Add a unit test case MultiGetBatchedValueSizeSimple the reads keys from memory and sst files.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6826
Test Plan:
1. make check -j64
2. Add a new unit test case
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D21471483
Pulled By: akankshamahajan15
fbshipit-source-id: dea51b8e76d5d1df38ece8cdb29933b1d798b900
Summary:
Based on https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/6648 (CLA Signed), but heavily modified / extended:
* Implicit capture of this via [=] deprecated in C++20, and [=,this] not standard before C++20 -> now using explicit capture lists
* Implicit copy operator deprecated in gcc 9 -> add explicit '= default' definition
* std::random_shuffle deprecated in C++17 and removed in C++20 -> migrated to a replacement in RocksDB random.h API
* Add the ability to build with different std version though -DCMAKE_CXX_STANDARD=11/14/17/20 on the cmake command line
* Minimal rebuild flag of MSVC is deprecated and is forbidden with /std:c++latest (C++20)
* Added MSVC 2019 C++11 & MSVC 2019 C++20 in AppVeyor
* Added GCC 9 C++11 & GCC9 C++20 in Travis
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6697
Test Plan: make check and CI
Reviewed By: cheng-chang
Differential Revision: D21020318
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 12311be5dbd8675a0e2c817f7ec50fa11c18ab91
Summary:
Add timestamp support for MultiGet().
timestamp from readoptions is honored, and timestamps can be returned along with values.
MultiReadRandom perf test (10 minutes) on the same development machine ram drive with the same DB data shows no regression (within marge of error). The test is adapted from https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/wiki/RocksDB-In-Memory-Workload-Performance-Benchmarks.
base line (commit 17bef7d3a):
multireadrandom : 104.173 micros/op 307167 ops/sec; (5462999 of 5462999 found)
This PR:
multireadrandom : 104.199 micros/op 307095 ops/sec; (5307999 of 5307999 found)
.\db_bench --db=r:\rocksdb.github --num_levels=6 --key_size=20 --prefix_size=20 --keys_per_prefix=0 --value_size=100 --cache_size=2147483648 --cache_numshardbits=6 --compression_type=none --compression_ratio=1 --min_level_to_compress=-1 --disable_seek_compaction=1 --hard_rate_limit=2 --write_buffer_size=134217728 --max_write_buffer_number=2 --level0_file_num_compaction_trigger=8 --target_file_size_base=134217728 --max_bytes_for_level_base=1073741824 --disable_wal=0 --wal_dir=r:\rocksdb.github\WAL_LOG --sync=0 --verify_checksum=1 --statistics=0 --stats_per_interval=0 --stats_interval=1048576 --histogram=0 --use_plain_table=1 --open_files=-1 --memtablerep=prefix_hash --bloom_bits=10 --bloom_locality=1 --duration=600 --benchmarks=multireadrandom --use_existing_db=1 --num=25000000 --threads=32 --allow_concurrent_memtable_write=0
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6483
Reviewed By: anand1976
Differential Revision: D20498373
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 8505f22bc40fd791bc7dd05e48d7e67c91edb627
Summary:
Added new Get() methods that return timestamp. Dummy implementation is given so that classes derived from DB don't need to be touched to provide their implementation. MultiGet is not included.
ReadRandom perf test (10 minutes) on the same development machine ram drive with the same DB data shows no regression (within marge of error). The test is adapted from https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/wiki/RocksDB-In-Memory-Workload-Performance-Benchmarks.
base line (commit 72ee067b9):
101.712 micros/op 314602 ops/sec; 36.0 MB/s (5658999 of 5658999 found)
This PR:
100.288 micros/op 319071 ops/sec; 36.5 MB/s (5674999 of 5674999 found)
./db_bench --db=r:\rocksdb.github --num_levels=6 --key_size=20 --prefix_size=20 --keys_per_prefix=0 --value_size=100 --cache_size=2147483648 --cache_numshardbits=6 --compression_type=none --compression_ratio=1 --min_level_to_compress=-1 --disable_seek_compaction=1 --hard_rate_limit=2 --write_buffer_size=134217728 --max_write_buffer_number=2 --level0_file_num_compaction_trigger=8 --target_file_size_base=134217728 --max_bytes_for_level_base=1073741824 --disable_wal=0 --wal_dir=r:\rocksdb.github\WAL_LOG --sync=0 --verify_checksum=1 --delete_obsolete_files_period_micros=314572800 --max_background_compactions=4 --max_background_flushes=0 --level0_slowdown_writes_trigger=16 --level0_stop_writes_trigger=24 --statistics=0 --stats_per_interval=0 --stats_interval=1048576 --histogram=0 --use_plain_table=1 --open_files=-1 --mmap_read=1 --mmap_write=0 --memtablerep=prefix_hash --bloom_bits=10 --bloom_locality=1 --duration=600 --benchmarks=readrandom --use_existing_db=1 --num=25000000 --threads=32
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6409
Differential Revision: D20200086
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 490edd74d924f62bd8ae9c29c2a6bbbb8410ca50
Summary:
When dynamically linking two binaries together, different builds of RocksDB from two sources might cause errors. To provide a tool for user to solve the problem, the RocksDB namespace is changed to a flag which can be overridden in build time.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6433
Test Plan: Build release, all and jtest. Try to build with ROCKSDB_NAMESPACE with another flag.
Differential Revision: D19977691
fbshipit-source-id: aa7f2d0972e1c31d75339ac48478f34f6cfcfb3e
Summary:
Add a new option ReadOptions.auto_prefix_mode. When set to true, iterator should return the same result as total order seek, but may choose to do prefix seek internally, based on iterator upper bounds. Also fix two previous bugs when handling prefix extrator changes: (1) reverse iterator should not rely on upper bound to determine prefix. Fix it with skipping prefix check. (2) block-based filter is not handled properly.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/6314
Test Plan: (1) add a unit test; (2) add the check to stress test and run see whether it can pass at least one run.
Differential Revision: D19458717
fbshipit-source-id: 51c1bcc5cdd826c2469af201979a39600e779bce
Summary:
- Updated our included xxhash implementation to version 0.7.2 (== the latest dev version as of 2019-10-09).
- Using XXH_NAMESPACE (like other fb projects) to avoid potential name collisions.
- Added fastrange64, and unit tests for it and fastrange32. These are faster alternatives to hash % range.
- Use preview version of XXH3 instead of MurmurHash64A for NPHash64
-- Had to update cache_test to increase probability of passing for any given hash function.
- Use fastrange64 instead of % with uses of NPHash64
-- Had to fix WritePreparedTransactionTest.CommitOfDelayedPrepared to avoid deadlock apparently caused by new hash collision.
- Set default seed for NPHash64 because specifying a seed rarely makes sense for it.
- Removed unnecessary include xxhash.h in a popular .h file
- Rename preview version of XXH3 to XXH3p for clarity and to ease backward compatibility in case final version of XXH3 is integrated.
Relying on existing unit tests for NPHash64-related changes. Each new implementation of fastrange64 passed unit tests when manipulating my local build to select it. I haven't done any integration performance tests, but I consider the improved performance of the pieces being swapped in to be well established.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5909
Differential Revision: D18125196
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: f6bf83d49d20cbb2549926adf454fd035f0ecc0d
Summary:
RocksDB has a MultiGet() API that implements batched key lookup for higher performance (https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/blob/master/include/rocksdb/db.h#L468). Currently, batching is implemented in BlockBasedTableReader::MultiGet() for SST file lookups. One of the ways it improves performance is by pipelining bloom filter lookups (by prefetching required cachelines for all the keys in the batch, and then doing the probe) and thus hiding the cache miss latency. The same concept can be extended to the memtable as well. This PR involves implementing a pipelined bloom filter lookup in DynamicBloom, and implementing MemTable::MultiGet() that can leverage it.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5818
Test Plan:
Existing tests
Performance Test:
Ran the below command which fills up the memtable and makes sure there are no flushes and then call multiget. Ran it on master and on the new change and see atleast 1% performance improvement across all the test runs I did. Sometimes the improvement was upto 5%.
TEST_TMPDIR=/data/users/$USER/benchmarks/feature/ numactl -C 10 ./db_bench -benchmarks="fillseq,multireadrandom" -num=600000 -compression_type="none" -level_compaction_dynamic_level_bytes -write_buffer_size=200000000 -target_file_size_base=200000000 -max_bytes_for_level_base=16777216 -reads=90000 -threads=1 -compression_type=none -cache_size=4194304000 -batch_size=32 -disable_auto_compactions=true -bloom_bits=10 -cache_index_and_filter_blocks=true -pin_l0_filter_and_index_blocks_in_cache=true -multiread_batched=true -multiread_stride=4 -statistics -memtable_whole_key_filtering=true -memtable_bloom_size_ratio=10
Differential Revision: D17578869
Pulled By: vjnadimpalli
fbshipit-source-id: 23dc651d9bf49db11d22375bf435708875a1f192
Summary:
Use delete to disable automatic generated methods instead of private, and put the constructor together for more clear.This modification cause the unused field warning, so add unused attribute to disable this warning.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5009
Differential Revision: D17288733
fbshipit-source-id: 8a767ce096f185f1db01bd28fc88fef1cdd921f3
Summary:
Since DynamicBloom is now only used in-memory, we're free to
change it without schema compatibility issues. The new implementation
is drawn from (with manifest permission)
303542a767/bloom_simulation_tests/foo.cc (L613)
This has several speed advantages over the prior implementation:
* Uses fastrange instead of %
* Minimum logic to determine first (and all) probed memory addresses
* (Major) Two probes per 64-bit memory fetch/write.
* Very fast and effective (murmur-like) hash expansion/re-mixing. (At
least on recent CPUs, integer multiplication is very cheap.)
While a Bloom filter with 512-bit cache locality has about a 1.15x FP
rate penalty (e.g. 0.84% to 0.97%), further restricting to two probes
per 64 bits incurs an additional 1.12x FP rate penalty (e.g. 0.97% to
1.09%). Nevertheless, the unit tests show no "mediocre" FP rate samples,
unlike the old implementation with more erratic FP rates.
Especially for the memtable, we expect speed to outweigh somewhat higher
FP rates. For example, a negative table query would have to be 1000x
slower than a BF query to justify doubling BF query time to shave 10% off
FP rate (working assumption around 1% FP rate). While that seems likely
for SSTs, my data suggests a speed factor of roughly 50x for the memtable
(vs. BF; ~1.5% lower write throughput when enabling memtable Bloom
filter, after this change). Thus, it's probably not worth even 5% more
time in the Bloom filter to shave off 1/10th of the Bloom FP rate, or 0.1%
in absolute terms, and it's probably at least 20% slower to recoup that
much FP rate from this new implementation. Because of this, we do not see
a need for a 'locality' option that affects the MemTable Bloom filter
and have decoupled the MemTable Bloom filter from Options::bloom_locality.
Note that just 3% more memory to the Bloom filter (10.3 bits per key vs.
just 10) is able to make up for the ~12% FP rate drop in the new
implementation:
[] # Nearly "ideal" FP-wise but reasonably fast cache-local implementation
[~/wormhashing/bloom_simulation_tests] ./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_WORM64_FROM32_any.out 10000000 6 10 $RANDOM 100000000
./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_WORM64_FROM32_any.out time: 3.29372 sampled_fp_rate: 0.00985956 ...
[] # Close match to this new implementation
[~/wormhashing/bloom_simulation_tests] ./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_MUL64_BLOCK_FROM32_any.out 10000000 6 10.3 $RANDOM 100000000
./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_MUL64_BLOCK_FROM32_any.out time: 2.10072 sampled_fp_rate: 0.00985655 ...
[] # Old locality=1 implementation
[~/wormhashing/bloom_simulation_tests] ./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_ROCKSDB_DYNAMIC_any.out 10000000 6 10 $RANDOM 100000000
./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_ROCKSDB_DYNAMIC_any.out time: 3.95472 sampled_fp_rate: 0.00988943 ...
Also note the dramatic speed improvement vs. alternatives.
--
Performance unit test: DynamicBloomTest.concurrent_with_perf is updated
to report more precise timing data. (Measure running time of each
thread, not just longest running thread, etc.) Results averaged over
various sizes enabled with --enable_perf and 20 runs each; old dynamic
bloom refers to locality=1, the faster of the old:
old dynamic bloom, avg add latency = 65.6468
new dynamic bloom, avg add latency = 44.3809
old dynamic bloom, avg query latency = 50.6485
new dynamic bloom, avg query latency = 43.2186
old avg parallel add latency = 41.678
new avg parallel add latency = 24.5238
old avg parallel hit latency = 14.6322
new avg parallel hit latency = 12.3939
old avg parallel miss latency = 16.7289
new avg parallel miss latency = 12.2134
Tested on a dedicated 64-bit production machine at Facebook. Significant
improvement all around.
Despite now using std::atomic<uint64_t>, quick before-and-after test on
a 32-bit machine (Intel Atom N270, released 2008) shows no regression in
performance, in some cases modest improvement.
--
Performance integration test (synthetic): with DEBUG_LEVEL=0, used
TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench --benchmarks=fillrandom,readmissing,readrandom,stats --num=2000000
and optionally with -memtable_whole_key_filtering -memtable_bloom_size_ratio=0.01
300 runs each configuration.
Write throughput change by enabling memtable bloom:
Old locality=0: -3.06%
Old locality=1: -2.37%
New: -1.50%
conclusion -> seems to substantially close the gap
Readmissing throughput change by enabling memtable bloom:
Old locality=0: +34.47%
Old locality=1: +34.80%
New: +33.25%
conclusion -> maybe a small new penalty from FP rate
Readrandom throughput change by enabling memtable bloom:
Old locality=0: +31.54%
Old locality=1: +31.13%
New: +30.60%
conclusion -> maybe also from FP rate (after memtable flush)
--
Another conclusion we can draw from this new implementation is that the
existing 32-bit hash function is not inherently crippling the Bloom
filter speed or accuracy, below about 5 million keys. For speed, the
implementation is essentially the same whether starting with 32-bits or
64-bits of hash; it just determines whether the first multiplication
after fastrange is a pseudorandom expansion or needed re-mix. Note that
this multiplication can occur while memory is fetching.
For accuracy, in a standard configuration, you need about 5 million
keys before you have about a 1.1x FP penalty due to using a
32-bit hash vs. 64-bit:
[~/wormhashing/bloom_simulation_tests] ./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_MUL64_BLOCK_FROM32_any.out $((5 * 1000 * 1000 * 10)) 6 10 $RANDOM 100000000
./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_MUL64_BLOCK_FROM32_any.out time: 2.52069 sampled_fp_rate: 0.0118267 ...
[~/wormhashing/bloom_simulation_tests] ./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_MUL64_BLOCK_any.out $((5 * 1000 * 1000 * 10)) 6 10 $RANDOM 100000000
./foo_gcc_IMPL_CACHE_MUL64_BLOCK_any.out time: 2.43871 sampled_fp_rate: 0.0109059
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5762
Differential Revision: D17214194
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: ad9da031772e985fd6b62a0e1db8e81892520595
Summary:
MyRocks currently sets `max_write_buffer_number_to_maintain` in order to maintain enough history for transaction conflict checking. The effectiveness of this approach depends on the size of memtables. When memtables are small, it may not keep enough history; when memtables are large, this may consume too much memory.
We are proposing a new way to configure memtable list history: by limiting the memory usage of immutable memtables. The new option is `max_write_buffer_size_to_maintain` and it will take precedence over the old `max_write_buffer_number_to_maintain` if they are both set to non-zero values. The new option accounts for the total memory usage of flushed immutable memtables and mutable memtable. When the total usage exceeds the limit, RocksDB may start dropping immutable memtables (which is also called trimming history), starting from the oldest one.
The semantics of the old option actually works both as an upper bound and lower bound. History trimming will start if number of immutable memtables exceeds the limit, but it will never go below (limit-1) due to history trimming.
In order the mimic the behavior with the new option, history trimming will stop if dropping the next immutable memtable causes the total memory usage go below the size limit. For example, assuming the size limit is set to 64MB, and there are 3 immutable memtables with sizes of 20, 30, 30. Although the total memory usage is 80MB > 64MB, dropping the oldest memtable will reduce the memory usage to 60MB < 64MB, so in this case no memtable will be dropped.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5022
Differential Revision: D14394062
Pulled By: miasantreble
fbshipit-source-id: 60457a509c6af89d0993f988c9b5c2aa9e45f5c5
Summary:
This is a new API added to db.h to allow for fetching all merge operands associated with a Key. The main motivation for this API is to support use cases where doing a full online merge is not necessary as it is performance sensitive. Example use-cases:
1. Update subset of columns and read subset of columns -
Imagine a SQL Table, a row is encoded as a K/V pair (as it is done in MyRocks). If there are many columns and users only updated one of them, we can use merge operator to reduce write amplification. While users only read one or two columns in the read query, this feature can avoid a full merging of the whole row, and save some CPU.
2. Updating very few attributes in a value which is a JSON-like document -
Updating one attribute can be done efficiently using merge operator, while reading back one attribute can be done more efficiently if we don't need to do a full merge.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
API :
Status GetMergeOperands(
const ReadOptions& options, ColumnFamilyHandle* column_family,
const Slice& key, PinnableSlice* merge_operands,
GetMergeOperandsOptions* get_merge_operands_options,
int* number_of_operands)
Example usage :
int size = 100;
int number_of_operands = 0;
std::vector<PinnableSlice> values(size);
GetMergeOperandsOptions merge_operands_info;
db_->GetMergeOperands(ReadOptions(), db_->DefaultColumnFamily(), "k1", values.data(), merge_operands_info, &number_of_operands);
Description :
Returns all the merge operands corresponding to the key. If the number of merge operands in DB is greater than merge_operands_options.expected_max_number_of_operands no merge operands are returned and status is Incomplete. Merge operands returned are in the order of insertion.
merge_operands-> Points to an array of at-least merge_operands_options.expected_max_number_of_operands and the caller is responsible for allocating it. If the status returned is Incomplete then number_of_operands will contain the total number of merge operands found in DB for key.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5604
Test Plan:
Added unit test and perf test in db_bench that can be run using the command:
./db_bench -benchmarks=getmergeoperands --merge_operator=sortlist
Differential Revision: D16657366
Pulled By: vjnadimpalli
fbshipit-source-id: 0faadd752351745224ee12d4ae9ef3cb529951bf
Summary:
It's useful to be able to (optionally) associate key-value pairs with user-provided timestamps. This PR is an early effort towards this goal and continues the work of facebook#4942. A suite of new unit tests exist in DBBasicTestWithTimestampWithParam. Support for timestamp requires the user to provide timestamp as a slice in `ReadOptions` and `WriteOptions`. All timestamps of the same database must share the same length, format, etc. The format of the timestamp is the same throughout the same database, and the user is responsible for providing a comparator function (Comparator) to order the <key, timestamp> tuples. Once created, the format and length of the timestamp cannot change (at least for now).
Test plan (on devserver):
```
$COMPILE_WITH_ASAN=1 make -j32 all
$./db_basic_test --gtest_filter=Timestamp/DBBasicTestWithTimestampWithParam.PutAndGet/*
$make check
```
All tests must pass.
We also run the following db_bench tests to verify whether there is regression on Get/Put while timestamp is not enabled.
```
$TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq,readrandom -num=1000000
$TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=1000000
```
Repeat for 6 times for both versions.
Results are as follows:
```
| | readrandom | fillrandom |
| master | 16.77 MB/s | 47.05 MB/s |
| PR5079 | 16.44 MB/s | 47.03 MB/s |
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5079
Differential Revision: D15132946
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 833a0d657eac21182f0f206c910a6438154c742c
Summary:
this PR fixes the following compile warning:
```
db/memtable.cc: In member function ‘virtual void rocksdb::MemTableIterator::Seek(const rocksdb::Slice&)’:
db/memtable.cc:321:22: error: declaration of ‘user_key’ shadows a member of 'this' [-Werror=shadow]
Slice user_key(ExtractUserKey(k));
^
db/memtable.cc: In member function ‘virtual void rocksdb::MemTableIterator::SeekForPrev(const rocksdb::Slice&)’:
db/memtable.cc:338:22: error: declaration of ‘user_key’ shadows a member of 'this' [-Werror=shadow]
Slice user_key(ExtractUserKey(k));
^
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5204
Differential Revision: D14970160
Pulled By: miasantreble
fbshipit-source-id: 388eb089f90c4528cc6d615dd4607fb53ceac705
Summary:
Before using prefix extractor `InDomain()` should be check. All uses in memtable.cc didn't check `InDomain()`.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5190
Differential Revision: D14923773
Pulled By: miasantreble
fbshipit-source-id: b3ad60bcca5f3a1a2b929a6eb34b0b7ba6326f04