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:
Fixed some spots where converting size_t or uint_fast32_t to
uint32_t. Wrapped mt19937 in a new Random32 class to avoid future
such traps.
NB: I tried using Random32::Uniform (std::uniform_int_distribution) in
filter_bench instead of fastrange, but that more than doubled the dry
run time! So I added fastrange as Random32::Uniformish. ;)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5894
Test Plan: USE_CLANG=1 build, and manual re-run filter_bench
Differential Revision: D17825131
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 68feee333b5f8193c084ded760e3d6679b405ecd
Summary:
Example: using the tool before and after PR https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/5784 shows that
the refactoring, presumed performance-neutral, actually sped up SST
filters by about 3% to 8% (repeatable result):
Before:
- Dry run ns/op: 22.4725
- Single filter ns/op: 51.1078
- Random filter ns/op: 120.133
After:
+ Dry run ns/op: 22.2301
+ Single filter run ns/op: 47.4313
+ Random filter ns/op: 115.9
Only tests filters for the block-based table (full filters and
partitioned filters - same implementation; not block-based filters),
which seems to be the recommended format/implementation.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5825
Differential Revision: D17804987
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 0f18a9c254c57f7866030d03e7fa4ba503bac3c5
Summary:
Broken type for shift in PR#5834. Fixing code means fixing
expected values in test.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5882
Test Plan: thisisthetest
Differential Revision: D17746136
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: d3c456ed30b433d55fcab6fc7d836940fe3b46b8
Summary:
There was significant untested logic in FullFilterBitsReader in
the handling of serialized Bloom filter bits that cannot be generated by
FullFilterBitsBuilder in the current compilation. These now test many of
those corner-case behaviors, including bad metadata or filters created
with different cache line size than the current compiled-in value.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5834
Test Plan: thisisthetest
Differential Revision: D17726372
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: fb7b8003b5a8e6fb4666fe95206128f3d5835fc7
Summary:
Further apply formatter to more recent commits.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5830
Test Plan: Run all existing tests.
Differential Revision: D17488031
fbshipit-source-id: 137458fd94d56dd271b8b40c522b03036943a2ab
Summary:
Some recent commits might not have passed through the formatter. I formatted recent 45 commits. The script hangs for more commits so I stopped there.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5827
Test Plan: Run all existing tests.
Differential Revision: D17483727
fbshipit-source-id: af23113ee63015d8a43d89a3bc2c1056189afe8f
Summary:
clang-analyzer has uncovered a bunch of places where the code is relying
on pointers being valid and one case (in VectorIterator) where a moved-from
object is being used:
In file included from db/range_tombstone_fragmenter.cc:17:
./util/vector_iterator.h:23:18: warning: Method called on moved-from object 'keys' of type 'std::vector'
current_(keys.size()) {
^~~~~~~~~~~
1 warning generated.
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:39:14: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
Status s = env->NewRandomAccessFile(filepath, file, opt);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:47:19: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
Status status = env_->GetFileSize(Path(), size);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:290:14: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
Status s = env_->FileExists(Path());
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:363:35: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
CacheWriteBuffer* const buf = alloc_->Allocate();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:399:41: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
const uint64_t file_off = buf_doff_ * alloc_->BufferSize();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:463:33: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
size_t start_idx = lba.off_ / alloc_->BufferSize();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
utilities/persistent_cache/block_cache_tier_file.cc:515:5: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
alloc_->Deallocate(bufs_[i]);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
7 warnings generated.
ar: creating librocksdb_debug.a
utilities/memory/memory_test.cc:68:25: warning: Called C++ object pointer is null
cache_set->insert(db->GetDBOptions().row_cache.get());
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 warning generated.
The patch fixes these by adding assertions and explicitly passing in zero
when initializing VectorIterator::current_ (which preserves the existing
behavior).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5821
Test Plan: Ran make check and make analyze to make sure the warnings have disappeared.
Differential Revision: D17455949
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 363619618ea649a0674287f9f3b3393e390571ee
Summary:
Manual compaction may bring in very high load because sometime the amount of data involved in a compaction could be large, which may affect online service. So it would be good if the running compaction making the server busy can be stopped immediately. In this implementation, stopping manual compaction condition is only checked in slow process. We let deletion compaction and trivial move go through.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/3971
Test Plan: add tests at more spots.
Differential Revision: D17369043
fbshipit-source-id: 575a624fb992ce0bb07d9443eb209e547740043c
Summary:
Refactoring to consolidate implementation details of legacy
Bloom filters. This helps to organize and document some related,
obscure code.
Also added make/cpp var TEST_CACHE_LINE_SIZE so that it's easy to
compile and run unit tests for non-native cache line size. (Fixed a
related test failure in db_properties_test.)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5784
Test Plan:
make check, including Recently added Bloom schema unit tests
(in ./plain_table_db_test && ./bloom_test), and including with
TEST_CACHE_LINE_SIZE=128U and TEST_CACHE_LINE_SIZE=256U. Tested the
schema tests with temporary fault injection into new implementations.
Some performance testing with modified unit tests suggest a small to moderate
improvement in speed.
Differential Revision: D17381384
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: ee42586da996798910fc45ac0b6289147f16d8df
Summary:
This will allow us to fix history by having the code changes for PR#5784 properly attributed to it.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5810
Differential Revision: D17400231
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 2da8b1cdf2533cfedb35b5526eadefb38c291f09
Summary:
file_reader_writer.h and .cc contain several files and helper function, and it's hard to navigate. Separate it to multiple files and put them under file/
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5803
Test Plan: Build whole project using make and cmake.
Differential Revision: D17374550
fbshipit-source-id: 10efca907721e7a78ed25bbf74dc5410dea05987
Summary:
DynamicBloom unit test now tests non-sequential as well as
sequential keys in testing FP rates. Also now verifies larger structures.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5805
Test Plan: thisisthetest
Differential Revision: D17398109
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 374074206c76d242efa378afc27830448a0e892a
Summary:
prefetch data for following block,avoid cache miss when doing crc caculate
I do performance test at kunpeng-920 server(arm-v8, 64core@2.6GHz)
./db_bench --benchmarks=crc32c --block_size=500000000
before optimise : 587313.500 micros/op 1 ops/sec; 811.9 MB/s (500000000 per op)
after optimise : 289248.500 micros/op 3 ops/sec; 1648.5 MB/s (500000000 per op)
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5773
Differential Revision: D17347339
fbshipit-source-id: bfcd74f0f0eb4b322b959be68019ddcaae1e3341
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:
Bug found by valgrind. New DynamicBloom wasn't allocating in
block sizes. New assertion added that probes starting in final word
would be in bounds.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5783
Test Plan: ROCKSDB_VALGRIND_RUN=1 DISABLE_JEMALLOC=1 valgrind --leak-check=full ./dynamic_bloom_test
Differential Revision: D17270623
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 1e0407504b875133a771383cd488c70f91be2b87
Summary:
Check that we don't accidentally change the on-disk format of
existing Bloom filter implementations, including for various
CACHE_LINE_SIZE (by changing temporarily).
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5778
Test Plan: thisisthetest
Differential Revision: D17269630
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: c77017662f010a77603b7d475892b1f0d5563d8b
Summary:
FullFilterBitsBuilder::CalculateSpace use CACHE_LINE_SIZE which is 64@X86 but 128@ARM64
when it run bloom_test.FullVaryingLengths it failed on ARM64 server,
the assert can be fixed by change 128->CACHE_LINE_SIZE*2 as merged
ASSERT_LE(FilterSize(), (size_t)((length * 10 / 8) + CACHE_LINE_SIZE * 2 + 5)) << length;
run bloom_test
before fix:
/root/rocksdb-master/util/bloom_test.cc:281: Failure
Expected: (FilterSize()) <= ((size_t)((length * 10 / 8) + 128 + 5)), actual: 389 vs 383
200
[ FAILED ] FullBloomTest.FullVaryingLengths (32 ms)
[----------] 4 tests from FullBloomTest (32 ms total)
[----------] Global test environment tear-down
[==========] 7 tests from 2 test cases ran. (116 ms total)
[ PASSED ] 6 tests.
[ FAILED ] 1 test, listed below:
[ FAILED ] FullBloomTest.FullVaryingLengths
after fix:
Filters: 37 good, 0 mediocre
[ OK ] FullBloomTest.FullVaryingLengths (90 ms)
[----------] 4 tests from FullBloomTest (90 ms total)
[----------] Global test environment tear-down
[==========] 7 tests from 2 test cases ran. (174 ms total)
[ PASSED ] 7 tests.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5745
Differential Revision: D17076047
fbshipit-source-id: e7beb5d55d4855fceb2b84bc8119a6b0759de635
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:
DynamicBloom was being used both for memory-only and for on-disk filters, as part of the PlainTable format. To set up enhancements to the memtable Bloom filter, this splits the code into two copies and removes unused features from each copy. Adds test PlainTableDBTest.BloomSchema to ensure no accidental change to that format.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5767
Differential Revision: D17206963
Pulled By: pdillinger
fbshipit-source-id: 6cce8d55305ed0df051b4c58bdc98c8ad81d0553
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:
Crc32c Parallel computation coding optimization:
Macro unfolding removes the "for" loop and is good to decrease branch-miss in arm64 micro architecture
1024 Bytes is divided into 8(head) + 1008( 6 * 7 * 3 * 8 ) + 8(tail) three parts
Macro unfolding 42 loops to 6 CRC32C7X24BYTESs
1 CRC32C7X24BYTES containing 7 CRC32C24BYTESs
1, crc32c_test
[==========] Running 4 tests from 1 test case.
[----------] Global test environment set-up.
[----------] 4 tests from CRC
[ RUN ] CRC.StandardResults
[ OK ] CRC.StandardResults (1 ms)
[ RUN ] CRC.Values
[ OK ] CRC.Values (0 ms)
[ RUN ] CRC.Extend
[ OK ] CRC.Extend (0 ms)
[ RUN ] CRC.Mask
[ OK ] CRC.Mask (0 ms)
[----------] 4 tests from CRC (1 ms total)
[----------] Global test environment tear-down
[==========] 4 tests from 1 test case ran. (1 ms total)
[ PASSED ] 4 tests.
2, db_bench --benchmarks="crc32c"
crc32c : 0.218 micros/op 4595390 ops/sec; 17950.7 MB/s (4096 per op)
3, repeated crc32c_test case 60000 times
perf stat -e branch-miss -- ./crc32c_test
before optimization:
739,426,504 branch-miss
after optimization:
1,128,572 branch-miss
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5675
Differential Revision: D16989210
fbshipit-source-id: 7204e6069bb6ed066d49c2d1b3ac385065a98557
Summary:
PR https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/5584 decoupled the uncompression dictionary object from the underlying block data; however, this defeats the purpose of the digested ZSTD dictionary, since the whole point
of the digest is to create it once and reuse it over and over again. This patch goes back to
storing the uncompression dictionary itself in the cache (which should be now safe to do,
since it no longer includes a Statistics pointer), while preserving the rest of the refactoring.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5645
Test Plan: make asan_check
Differential Revision: D16551864
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 2a7e2d34bb16e70e3c816506d5afe1d842057800
Summary:
there is no need to return void*, as
std:🧵:thread(Func&& f, Args&&... args ) only requires `Func` to
be callable.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <tchaikov@gmail.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5709
Differential Revision: D16832894
fbshipit-source-id: a1e1b876fa8d55589ef5feb5b27f3a435068b747
Summary:
In previous https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/5079, we added user-specified timestamp to `DB::Get()` and `DB::Put()`. Limitation is that these two functions may cause extra memory allocation and key copy. The reason is that `WriteBatch` does not allocate extra memory for timestamps because it is not aware of timestamp size, and we did not provide an API to assign/update timestamp of each key within a `WriteBatch`.
We address these issues in this PR by doing the following.
1. Add a `timestamp_size_` to `WriteBatch` so that `WriteBatch` can take timestamps into account when calling `WriteBatch::Put`, `WriteBatch::Delete`, etc.
2. Add APIs `WriteBatch::AssignTimestamp` and `WriteBatch::AssignTimestamps` so that application can assign/update timestamps for each key in a `WriteBatch`.
3. Avoid key copy in `GetImpl` by adding new constructor to `LookupKey`.
Test plan (on devserver):
```
$make clean && COMPILE_WITH_ASAN=1 make -j32 all
$./db_basic_test --gtest_filter=Timestamp/DBBasicTestWithTimestampWithParam.PutAndGet/*
$make check
```
If the API extension looks good, I will add more unit tests.
Some simple benchmark using db_bench.
```
$rm -rf /dev/shm/dbbench/* && TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillseq,readrandom -num=1000000
$rm -rf /dev/shm/dbbench/* && TEST_TMPDIR=/dev/shm ./db_bench -benchmarks=fillrandom -num=1000000 -disable_wal=true
```
Master is at a78503bd6c.
```
| | readrandom | fillrandom |
| master | 15.53 MB/s | 25.97 MB/s |
| PR5502 | 16.70 MB/s | 25.80 MB/s |
```
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5502
Differential Revision: D16340894
Pulled By: riversand963
fbshipit-source-id: 51132cf792be07d1efc3ac33f5768c4ee2608bb8
Summary:
RocksDB has historically stored uncompression dictionary objects in the block
cache as opposed to storing just the block contents. This neccesitated
evicting the object upon table close. With the new code, only the raw blocks
are stored in the cache, eliminating the need for eviction.
In addition, the patch makes the following improvements:
1) Compression dictionary blocks are now prefetched/pinned similarly to
index/filter blocks.
2) A copy operation got eliminated when the uncompression dictionary is
retrieved.
3) Errors related to retrieving the uncompression dictionary are propagated as
opposed to silently ignored.
Note: the patch temporarily breaks the compression dictionary evicition stats.
They will be fixed in a separate phase.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5584
Test Plan: make asan_check
Differential Revision: D16344151
Pulled By: ltamasi
fbshipit-source-id: 2962b295f5b19628f9da88a3fcebbce5a5017a7b
Summary:
Fixing a corner case crash when there was no data read from file, but status is still OK
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5586
Differential Revision: D16348117
Pulled By: elipoz
fbshipit-source-id: f97973308024f020d8be79ca3c56466b84d80656
Summary:
Crc32c Parallel computation optimization:
Algorithm comes from Intel whitepaper: [crc-iscsi-polynomial-crc32-instruction-paper](https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/crc-iscsi-polynomial-crc32-instruction-paper.pdf)
Input data is divided into three equal-sized blocks
Three parallel blocks (crc0, crc1, crc2) for 1024 Bytes
One Block: 42(BLK_LENGTH) * 8(step length: crc32c_u64) bytes
1. crc32c_test:
```
[==========] Running 4 tests from 1 test case.
[----------] Global test environment set-up.
[----------] 4 tests from CRC
[ RUN ] CRC.StandardResults
[ OK ] CRC.StandardResults (1 ms)
[ RUN ] CRC.Values
[ OK ] CRC.Values (0 ms)
[ RUN ] CRC.Extend
[ OK ] CRC.Extend (0 ms)
[ RUN ] CRC.Mask
[ OK ] CRC.Mask (0 ms)
[----------] 4 tests from CRC (1 ms total)
[----------] Global test environment tear-down
[==========] 4 tests from 1 test case ran. (1 ms total)
[ PASSED ] 4 tests.
```
2. RocksDB benchmark: db_bench --benchmarks="crc32c"
```
Linear Arm crc32c:
crc32c: 1.005 micros/op 995133 ops/sec; 3887.2 MB/s (4096 per op)
```
```
Parallel optimization with Armv8 crypto extension:
crc32c: 0.419 micros/op 2385078 ops/sec; 9316.7 MB/s (4096 per op)
```
It gets ~2.4x speedup compared to linear Arm crc32c instructions.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5494
Differential Revision: D16340806
fbshipit-source-id: 95dae9a5b646fd20a8303671d82f17b2e162e945
Summary:
Added support for sequential read-ahead file that can prefetch the read data and later serve it from internal cache buffer.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5580
Differential Revision: D16287082
Pulled By: elipoz
fbshipit-source-id: a3e7ad9643d377d39352ff63058ce050ec31dcf3
Summary:
RandomAccessFileReader.for_compaction_ doesn't seem to be used anymore. Remove it.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5572
Test Plan: USE_CLANG=1 make all check -j
Differential Revision: D16286178
fbshipit-source-id: aa338049761033dfbe5e8b1707bbb0be2df5be7e
Summary:
When 'HAVE_ARM64_CRC' is set, the blew methods:
- bool rocksdb::crc32c::isSSE42()
- bool rocksdb::crc32c::isPCLMULQDQ()
are defined but not used, the unused-function is raised
when do rocksdb build.
This patch try to cleanup these warnings by add ifndef,
if it build under the HAVE_ARM64_CRC, we will not define
`isSSE42` and `isPCLMULQDQ`.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5565
Differential Revision: D16233654
fbshipit-source-id: c32a9dda7465dbf65f9ccafef159124db92cdffd
Summary:
Current PosixLogger performs IO operations using posix calls. Thus the
current implementation will not work for non-posix env. Created a new
logger class EnvLogger that uses env specific WritableFileWriter for IO operations.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5491
Test Plan: make check
Differential Revision: D15909002
Pulled By: ggaurav28
fbshipit-source-id: 13a8105176e8e42db0c59798d48cb6a0dbccc965
Summary:
Sometimes it is helpful to fetch the whole history of stats after benchmark runs. Add such an option
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5532
Test Plan: Run the benchmark manually and observe the output is as expected.
Differential Revision: D16097764
fbshipit-source-id: 10b5b735a22a18be198b8f348be11f11f8806904
Summary:
Enhancement to MultiGet batching to read data blocks required for keys in a batch in parallel from disk. It uses Env::MultiRead() API to read multiple blocks and reduce latency.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5464
Test Plan:
1. make check
2. make asan_check
3. make asan_crash
Differential Revision: D15911771
Pulled By: anand1976
fbshipit-source-id: 605036b9af0f90ca0020dc87c3a86b4da6e83394
Summary:
The first key is used to defer reading the data block until this file gets to the top of merging iterator's heap. For short range scans, most files never make it to the top of the heap, so this change can reduce read amplification by a lot sometimes.
Consider the following workload. There are a few data streams (we'll be calling them "logs"), each stream consisting of a sequence of blobs (we'll be calling them "records"). Each record is identified by log ID and a sequence number within the log. RocksDB key is concatenation of log ID and sequence number (big endian). Reads are mostly relatively short range scans, each within a single log. Writes are mostly sequential for each log, but writes to different logs are randomly interleaved. Compactions are disabled; instead, when we accumulate a few tens of sst files, we create a new column family and start writing to it.
So, a typical sst file consists of a few ranges of blocks, each range corresponding to one log ID (we use FlushBlockPolicy to cut blocks at log boundaries). A typical read would go like this. First, iterator Seek() reads one block from each sst file. Then a series of Next()s move through one sst file (since writes to each log are mostly sequential) until the subiterator reaches the end of this log in this sst file; then Next() switches to the next sst file and reads sequentially from that, and so on. Often a range scan will only return records from a small number of blocks in small number of sst files; in this case, the cost of initial Seek() reading one block from each file may be bigger than the cost of reading the actually useful blocks.
Neither iterate_upper_bound nor bloom filters can prevent reading one block from each file in Seek(). But this PR can: if the index contains first key from each block, we don't have to read the block until this block actually makes it to the top of merging iterator's heap, so for short range scans we won't read any blocks from most of the sst files.
This PR does the deferred block loading inside value() call. This is not ideal: there's no good way to report an IO error from inside value(). As discussed with siying offline, it would probably be better to change InternalIterator's interface to explicitly fetch deferred value and get status. I'll do it in a separate PR.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5289
Differential Revision: D15256423
Pulled By: al13n321
fbshipit-source-id: 750e4c39ce88e8d41662f701cf6275d9388ba46a
Summary:
Currently the read-ahead logic for user reads and compaction reads go through different code paths where compaction reads create new table readers and use `ReadaheadRandomAccessFile`. This change is to unify read-ahead logic to use read-ahead in BlockBasedTableReader::InitDataBlock(). As a result of the change `ReadAheadRandomAccessFile` class and `new_table_reader_for_compaction_inputs` option will no longer be used.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5431
Test Plan:
make check
Here is the benchmarking - https://gist.github.com/vjnadimpalli/083cf423f7b6aa12dcdb14c858bc18a5
Differential Revision: D15772533
Pulled By: vjnadimpalli
fbshipit-source-id: b71dca710590471ede6fb37553388654e2e479b9
Summary:
When using `PRIu64` type of printf specifier, current code base does the following:
```
#ifndef __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS
#define __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS
#endif
#include <inttypes.h>
```
However, this can be simplified to
```
#include <cinttypes>
```
as long as flag `-std=c++11` is used.
This should solve issues like https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/issues/5159
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5402
Differential Revision: D15701195
Pulled By: miasantreble
fbshipit-source-id: 6dac0a05f52aadb55e9728038599d3d2e4b59d03
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:
util/ means for lower level libraries. trace_replay is highly integrated to DB and sometimes call DB. Move it out to a separate directory.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5376
Differential Revision: D15550938
Pulled By: siying
fbshipit-source-id: f46dce5ceffdc05a73f26379c7bb1b79ebe6c207
Summary:
Many logging related source files are under util/. It will be more structured if they are together.
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5387
Differential Revision: D15579036
Pulled By: siying
fbshipit-source-id: 3850134ed50b8c0bb40a0c8ae1f184fa4081303f
Summary:
log_write_bench doesn't compile due to some recent API changes.
This patch fixes the compile by adding the missing params for
OptimizeForLogWrite() and WritableFileWriter().
Signed-off-by: Yuan Zhou <yuan.zhou@intel.com>
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/5335
Differential Revision: D15588875
Pulled By: miasantreble
fbshipit-source-id: 726ff4dc227733e915c3b796df25bd3ab0b431ac