Added methods needed to retain data based on a byte limitation rather than time. Limitation is only applied if the flag is set (defaults to 0). Both blocks that are older than the retention period and the blocks that make the size of the storage too large are removed.
2 new metrics for keeping track of the size of the local storage folder and the amount of times data has been deleted because the size restriction was exceeded.
Signed-off-by: Mark Knapp <mknapp@hudson-trading.com>
This change also uses the latest staticcheck version which comes with
new verifications, hence some clean up in the code.
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
Blocks are half-open intervals [a, b), while all other intervals
(chunks, head, ...) are closed intervals [a, b].
Make that distinction explicit by defining `OverlapsClosedInterval()`
methods for blocks and chunks, and using them in place of the more
generic `intervalOverlap()` function.
This change also fixes `db.Querier()` and `db.Delete()`, which could
previously return one extraneous block at the end of the specified
interval.
Signed-off-by: Benoît Knecht <benoit.knecht@fsfe.org>
Change index persistence for series to not be accumulated in memory
before being written as one large batch. `Labels` and `ChunkMeta`
objects are reused.
This cuts down memory spikes during compaction of multiple blocks
significantly.
As part of the the Index{Reader,Writer} now have an explicit notion of
symbols and series must be inserted in order.
This adds a basic compactor that will merge two persisted blocks into
one. It simply fully rewrites the index and concatenates the chunk
lists.
It just writes into the current working dir and doesn't properly handle
which blocks to compact for now.
This replaces mutation of underlying bytes in the iterated slice
with a shift counter, which is used when reading the head byte.
This is avoids having to copy the entire slice for every new iterator.
xor encoding is fast enough for our purposes and provides
very good compression.
We remove all other ones that partially don't support floats
for the sake of simplicity.