Commit graph

27 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
beorn7 32f280a3cd Slim down the chunkIterator interface
For one, remove unneeded methods.

Then, instead of using a channel for all values, use a
bufio.Scanner-like interface. This removes the need for creating a
goroutine and avoids the (unnecessary) locking performed by channel
sending and receiving.

This will make it much easier to write new chunk implementations (like
Gorilla-style encoding).
2016-03-07 19:50:13 +01:00
beorn7 0ea5801e47 Handle errors caused by data corruption more gracefully
This requires all the panic calls upon unexpected data to be converted
into errors returned. This pollute the function signatures quite
lot. Well, this is Go...

The ideas behind this are the following:

- panic only if it's a programming error. Data corruptions happen, and
  they are not programming errors.

- If we detect a data corruption, we "quarantine" the series,
  essentially removing it from the database and putting its data into
  a separate directory for forensics.

- Failure during writing to a series file is not considered corruption
  automatically. It will call setDirty, though, so that a
  crashrecovery upon the next restart will commence and check for
  that.

- Series quarantining and setDirty calls are logged and counted in
  metrics, but are hidden from the user of the interfaces in
  interface.go, whith the notable exception of Append(). The reasoning
  is that we treat corruption by removing the corrupted series, i.e. a
  query for it will return no results on its next call anyway, so
  return no results right now. In the case of Append(), we want to
  tell the user that no data has been appended, though.

Minor side effects:

- Now consistently using filepath.* instead of path.*.

- Introduced structured logging where I touched it. This makes things
  less consistent, but a complete change to structured logging would
  be out of scope for this PR.
2016-03-02 23:02:34 +01:00
beorn7 1e13f89039 Return SamplePair istead of *SamplePair consistently
Formalize ZeroSamplePair as return value for non-existing samples.

Change LastSamplePairForFingerprint to return a SamplePair (and not a
pointer to it), which saves allocations in a potentially extremely
frequent call.
2016-02-19 17:00:40 +01:00
beorn7 0e202dacb4 Streamline series iterator creation
This will fix issue #1035 and will also help to make issue #1264 less
bad.

The fundamental problem in the current code:

In the preload phase, we quite accurately determine which chunks will
be used for the query being executed. However, in the subsequent step
of creating series iterators, the created iterators are referencing
_all_ in-memory chunks in their series, even the un-pinned ones. In
iterator creation, we copy a pointer to each in-memory chunk of a
series into the iterator. While this creates a certain amount of
allocation churn, the worst thing about it is that copying the chunk
pointer out of the chunkDesc requires a mutex acquisition. (Remember
that the iterator will also reference un-pinned chunks, so we need to
acquire the mutex to protect against concurrent eviction.) The worst
case happens if a series doesn't even contain any relevant samples for
the query time range. We notice that during preloading but then we
will still create a series iterator for it. But even for series that
do contain relevant samples, the overhead is quite bad for instant
queries that retrieve a single sample from each series, but still go
through all the effort of series iterator creation. All of that is
particularly bad if a series has many in-memory chunks.

This commit addresses the problem from two sides:

First, it merges preloading and iterator creation into one step,
i.e. the preload call returns an iterator for exactly the preloaded
chunks.

Second, the required mutex acquisition in chunkDesc has been greatly
reduced. That was enabled by a side effect of the first step, which is
that the iterator is only referencing pinned chunks, so there is no
risk of concurrent eviction anymore, and chunks can be accessed
without mutex acquisition.

To simplify the code changes for the above, the long-planned change of
ValueAtTime to ValueAtOrBefore time was performed at the same
time. (It should have been done first, but it kind of accidentally
happened while I was in the middle of writing the series iterator
changes. Sorry for that.) So far, we actively filtered the up to two
values that were returned by ValueAtTime, i.e. we invested work to
retrieve up to two values, and then we invested more work to throw one
of them away.

The SeriesIterator.BoundaryValues method can be removed once #1401 is
fixed. But I really didn't want to load even more changes into this
PR.

Benchmarks:

The BenchmarkFuzz.* benchmarks run 83% faster (i.e. about six times
faster) and allocate 95% fewer bytes. The reason for that is that the
benchmark reads one sample after another from the time series and
creates a new series iterator for each sample read.

To find out how much these improvements matter in practice, I have
mirrored a beefy Prometheus server at SoundCloud that suffers from
both issues #1035 and #1264. To reach steady state that would be
comparable, the server needs to run for 15d. So far, it has run for
1d. The test server currently has only half as many memory time series
and 60% of the memory chunks the main server has. The 90th percentile
rule evaluation cycle time is ~11s on the main server and only ~3s on
the test server. However, these numbers might get much closer over
time.

In addition to performance improvements, this commit removes about 150
LOC.
2016-02-19 16:24:38 +01:00
beorn7 582af1618c Streamline chunk writing
This helps to avoid allocations in the same way we were already doing
it during reading.
2016-01-25 16:36:36 +01:00
Fabian Reinartz 1535ef1457 Replace metric.SamplePair with model.SamplePair 2015-08-22 14:52:35 +02:00
Fabian Reinartz 306e8468a0 Switch from client_golang/model to common/model 2015-08-21 13:33:38 +02:00
beorn7 ff08f0b6fe storage: ensure timestamp monotonicity within series.
Fixes https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/481

While doing so, clean up and fix a few other things:

- Fix `go vet` warnings (@fabxc to blame ;).

- Fix a racey problem with unarchiving: Whenever we unarchive a
  series, we essentially want to do something with it. However, until
  we have done something with it, it appears like a series that is
  ready to be archived or even purged. So e.g. it would be ignored
  during checkpointing. With this fix, we always load the chunkDescs
  upon unarchiving. This is wasteful if we only want to add a new
  sample to an archived time series, but the (presumably more common)
  case where we access an archived time series in a query doesn't
  become more expensive.

- The change above streamlined the getOrCreateSeries ond
  newMemorySeries flow. Also, the modTime is now always set correctly.

- Fix the leveldb-backed implementation of KeyValueStore.Delete. It
  had the wrong behavior of still returning true, nil if a
  non-existing key has been passed in.
2015-07-15 18:56:53 +02:00
Julius Volz acbc2b8cb6 storage: Fix float->uint conversions on some compilers.
See https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/887, which will at
least be partially fixed by this.

From the spec https://golang.org/ref/spec#Conversions:

"In all non-constant conversions involving floating-point or complex
values, if the result type cannot represent the value the conversion
succeeds but the result value is implementation-dependent."

This ended up setting the converted values to 0 on Debian's Go 1.4.2
compiler, at least on 32-bit Debians.
2015-07-13 11:19:11 +02:00
beorn7 3b9c421a69 Weed out all the [Gg]et* method names.
The only exception is getNumChunksToPersist to avoid naming the struct
member numChunksToPersist in a weird way.
2015-05-20 19:13:06 +02:00
beorn7 cd5574bf8a Make chunk and series iterators more efficient. 2015-05-20 16:19:34 +02:00
beorn7 b02d900e61 Improve chunk and chunkDesc loading.
Also, clean up some things in the code (especially introduction of the
chunkLenWithHeader constant to avoid the same expression all over the place).

Benchmark results:

BEFORE
BenchmarkLoadChunksSequentially     5000            283580 ns/op          152143 B/op        312 allocs/op
BenchmarkLoadChunksRandomly        20000             82936 ns/op           39310 B/op         99 allocs/op
BenchmarkLoadChunkDescs            10000            110833 ns/op           15092 B/op        345 allocs/op

AFTER
BenchmarkLoadChunksSequentially    10000            146785 ns/op          152285 B/op        315 allocs/op
BenchmarkLoadChunksRandomly        20000             67598 ns/op           39438 B/op        103 allocs/op
BenchmarkLoadChunkDescs            20000             99631 ns/op           12636 B/op        192 allocs/op

Note that everything is obviously loaded from the page cache (as the
benchmark runs thousands of times with very small series files). In a
real-world scenario, I expect a larger impact, as the disk operations
will more often actually hit the disk. To load ~50 sequential chunks,
this reduces the iops from 100 seeks and 100 reads to 1 seek and 1
read.
2015-04-13 21:06:04 +02:00
beorn7 5bea942d8e Improve various things around chunk encoding.
A number of mostly minor things:

- Rename chunk type -> chunk encoding.

- After all, do not carry around the chunk encoding to all parts of
  the system, but just have one place where the encoding for new
  chunks is set based on the flag. The new approach has caveats as
  well, but the polution of so many method signatures is worse.

- Use the default chunk encoding for new chunks of existing
  series. (Previously, only new _series_ would get chunks with the
  default encoding.)

- Use an enum for chunk encoding. (But keep the version number for the
  flag, for reasons discussed previously.)

- Add encoding() to the chunk interface (so that a chunk knows its own
  encoding - no need to have that in a different top-level function).

- Got rid of newFollowUpChunk (which would keep the existing encoding
  for all chunks of a time series). Now only use newChunk(), which
  will create a chunk encoding according to the flag.

- Simplified transcodeAndAdd.

- Reordered methods of deltaEncodedChunk and doubleDeltaEncoded chunk
  to match the order in the chunk interface.

- Only transcode if the chunk is not yet half full. If more than half
  full, add a new chunk instead.
2015-03-14 19:03:20 +01:00
beorn7 23ba8a5516 Make floats exact again.
This should do the right thing for the old delta chunks, too.
2015-03-06 17:03:56 +01:00
beorn7 a8d4f8af9a Improve minor things after review.
The problem of float precision will be addressed in the next commit.
2015-03-06 12:53:00 +01:00
beorn7 13fcf1ddbc Implement double-delta encoded chunks. 2015-03-05 20:33:26 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein 5859b74f1b Clean up license issues.
- Move CONTRIBUTORS.md to the more common AUTHORS.
- Added the required NOTICE file.
- Changed "Prometheus Team" to "The Prometheus Authors".
- Reverted the erroneous changes to the Apache License.
2015-01-21 20:07:45 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein 14bda4180c Changes after pair code review.
Change-Id: Ib72d40f8e9027818cfbbd32a7a7201eebda07455
2014-11-25 17:12:59 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein 096fa0f8b2 Squash a number of TODOs.
- Staleness delta is no a proper function parameter and not replicated
  from package ast.

- Named type 'chunks' replaced by explicit '[]chunk' to avoid confusion.

- For the same reason, replaced 'chunkDescs' by '[]*chunkDescs'.

- Verified that math.Modf is not a speed enhancement over conversion
  (actually 5x slower).

- Renamed firstTimeField, lastTimeField into chunkFirstTime and
  chunkLastTime.

- Verified unpin() is sufficiently goroutine-safe.

- Decided not to update archivedFingerprintToTimeRange upon series
  truncation and added a rationale why.

Change-Id: I863b8d785e5ad9f71eb63e229845eacf1bed8534
2014-11-25 17:09:04 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein 71206dbc06 More code cleanups.
Add license text everywhere.
And others....

Change-Id: I11ccde267a2ef7eb366c4788ba7aeae14ba7545c
2014-11-25 17:07:44 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein f5f9f3514a Major code cleanup.
- Make it go-vet and golint clean.
- Add comments, TODOs, etc.

Change-Id: If1392d96f3d5b4cdde597b10c8dff1769fcfabe2
2014-11-25 17:02:53 +01:00
Julius Volz 8dfaa5ecd2 Remove use of freelists for chunk bufs.
Change-Id: Ib887fdb61e1d96da0cd32545817b925ba88831c1
2014-11-25 17:02:00 +01:00
Julius Volz 7b35e0f0b8 Use constants from math package instead of literals.
Change-Id: I55427ba32c2cbb32ee42ec1e3153160965ab8b3c
2014-11-25 17:02:00 +01:00
Julius Volz fd01d07589 Check that chunk buffer length fits in 16 bit.
Change-Id: Id086a54aa8a1990c1979e747c1c02e53bed6d447
2014-11-25 17:02:00 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein d742edfe0d Fix precision loss.
Large delta values often imply a difference between a large base value
and the large delta value, potentially resulting in small numbers with
a huge precision error. Since large delta values need 8 bytes anyway,
we are not even saving memory.

As a solution, always save the absoluto value rather than a delta once
8 bytes would be needed for the delta. Timestamps are then saved as 8
byte integers, while values are always saved as float64 in that case.

Change-Id: I01100d600515e16df58ce508b50982ffd762cc49
2014-11-25 17:02:00 +01:00
Bjoern Rabenstein ecdf5ab14f Index-persistence switched from gob to a hand-coded solution.
Change-Id: Ib4ec42535bd08df16d34d4774bb638e35c5a1841
2014-11-25 17:02:00 +01:00
Julius Volz e7ed39c9a6 Initial experimental snapshot of next-gen storage.
Change-Id: Ifb8709960dbedd1d9f5efd88cdd359ee9fa9d26d
2014-11-25 17:02:00 +01:00