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123 lines
7.4 KiB
123 lines
7.4 KiB
---
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title: "Verifying crash-recovery with lost buffered writes"
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layout: post
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author:
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- ajkr
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category: blog
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---
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## Introduction
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Writes to a RocksDB instance go through multiple layers before they are fully persisted.
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Those layers may buffer writes, delaying their persistence.
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Depending on the layer, buffered writes may be lost in a process or system crash.
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A process crash loses writes buffered in process memory only.
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A system crash additionally loses writes buffered in OS memory.
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The new test coverage introduced in this post verifies there is no hole in the recovered data in either type of crash.
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A hole would exist if any recovered write were newer than any lost write, as illustrated below.
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This guarantee is important for many applications, such as those that use the newest recovered write to determine the starting point for replication.
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![](/static/images/lost-buffered-write-recovery/happy-cat.png)
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{: style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%"}
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*Valid (no hole) recovery: all recovered writes (1 and 2) are older than all lost writes (3 and 4)*
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{: style="text-align: center"}
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![](/static/images/lost-buffered-write-recovery/angry-cat.png)
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{: style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%"}
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*Invalid (hole) recovery: a recovered write (4) is newer than a lost write (3)*
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{: style="text-align: center"}
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The new test coverage assumes all writes use the same options related to buffering/persistence.
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For example, we do not cover the case of alternating writes with WAL disabled and WAL enabled (`WriteOptions::disableWAL`).
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It also assumes the crash does not have any unexpected consequences like corrupting persisted data.
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Testing for holes in the recovery is challenging because there are many valid recovery outcomes.
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Our solution involves tracing all the writes and then verifying the recovery matches a prefix of the trace.
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This proves there are no holes in the recovery.
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See "Extensions for lost buffered writes" subsection below for more details.
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Testing actual system crashes would be operationally difficult.
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Our solution simulates system crash by buffering written but unsynced data in process memory such that it is lost in a process crash.
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See "Simulating system crash" subsection below for more details.
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## Scenarios covered
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We began testing recovery has no hole in the following new scenarios.
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This coverage is included in our internal CI that periodically runs against the latest commit on the main branch.
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1. **Process crash with WAL disabled** (`WriteOptions::disableWAL=1`), which loses writes since the last memtable flush.
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2. **System crash with WAL enabled** (`WriteOptions::disableWAL=0`), which loses writes since the last memtable flush or WAL sync (`WriteOptions::sync=1`, `SyncWAL()`, or `FlushWAL(true /* sync */)`).
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3. **Process crash with manual WAL flush** (`DBOptions::manual_wal_flush=1`), which loses writes since the last memtable flush or manual WAL flush (`FlushWAL()`).
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4. **System crash with manual WAL flush** (`DBOptions::manual_wal_flush=1`), which loses writes since the last memtable flush or synced manual WAL flush (`FlushWAL(true /* sync */)`, or `FlushWAL(false /* sync */)` followed by WAL sync).
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## Issues found
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* [False detection of corruption after system crash due to race condition with WAL sync and `track_and_verify_wals_in_manifest](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10185)
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* [Undetected hole in recovery after system crash due to race condition in WAL sync](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10560)
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* [Recovery failure after system crash due to missing directory sync for critical metadata file](https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/10573)
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## Solution details
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### Basic setup
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![](/static/images/lost-buffered-write-recovery/basic-setup.png)
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{: style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%"}
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Our correctness testing framework consists of a stress test program (`db_stress`) and a wrapper script (`db_crashtest.py`).
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`db_crashtest.py` manages instances of `db_stress`, starting them and injecting crashes.
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`db_stress` operates a DB and test oracle ("Latest values file").
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At startup, `db_stress` verifies the DB using the test oracle, skipping keys that had pending writes when the last crash happened.
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`db_stress` then stresses the DB with random operations, keeping the test oracle up-to-date.
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As the name "Latest values file" implies, this test oracle only tracks the latest value for each key.
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As a result, this setup is unable to verify recoveries involving lost buffered writes, where recovering older values is tolerated as long as there is no hole.
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### Extensions for lost buffered writes
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To accommodate lost buffered writes, we extended the test oracle to include two new files: "`verifiedSeqno`.state" and "`verifiedSeqno`.trace".
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`verifiedSeqno` is the sequence number of the last successful verification.
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"`verifiedSeqno`.state" is the expected values file at that sequence number, and "`verifiedSeqno`.trace" is the trace file of all operations that happened after that sequence number.
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![](/static/images/lost-buffered-write-recovery/replay-extension.png)
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{: style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%"}
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When buffered writes may have been lost by the previous `db_stress` instance, the current `db_stress` instance must reconstruct the latest values file before startup verification.
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M is the recovery sequence number of the current `db_stress` instance and N is the recovery sequence number of the previous `db_stress` instance.
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M is learned from the DB, while N is learned from the filesystem by parsing the "*.{trace,state}" filenames.
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Then, the latest values file ("LATEST.state") can be reconstructed by replaying the first M-N traced operations (in "N.trace") on top of the last instance's starting point ("N.state").
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![](/static/images/lost-buffered-write-recovery/trace-extension.png)
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{: style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%"}
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When buffered writes may be lost by the current `db_stress` instance, we save the current expected values into "M.state" and begin tracing newer operations in "M.trace".
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### Simulating system crash
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When simulating system crash, we send file writes to a `TestFSWritableFile`, which buffers unsynced writes in process memory.
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That way, the existing `db_stress` process crash mechanism will lose unsynced writes.
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![](/static/images/lost-buffered-write-recovery/test-fs-writable-file.png)
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{: style="display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 80%"}
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`TestFSWritableFile` is implemented as follows.
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* `Append()` buffers the write in a local `std::string` rather than calling `write()`.
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* `Sync()` transfers the local `std::string`s content to `PosixWritableFile::Append()`, which will then `write()` it to the OS page cache.
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## Next steps
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An untested guarantee is that RocksDB recovers all writes that the user explicitly flushed out of the buffers lost in the crash.
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We may recover more writes than these due to internal flushing of buffers, but never less.
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Our test oracle needs to be further extended to track the lower bound on the sequence number that is expected to survive a crash.
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We would also like to make our system crash simulation more realistic.
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Currently we only drop unsynced regular file data, but we should drop unsynced directory entries as well.
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## Acknowledgements
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Hui Xiao added the manual WAL flush coverage and compatibility with `TransactionDB`.
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Zhichao Cao added the system crash simulation.
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Several RocksDB team members contributed to this feature's dependencies.
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