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Posted to commits@cassandra.apache.org by "Jonathan Ellis (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2016/06/23 02:46:16 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (CASSANDRA-12071) Regression in flushing throughput under load after CASSANDRA-6696

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-12071?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15345605#comment-15345605 ] 

Jonathan Ellis commented on CASSANDRA-12071:
--------------------------------------------

You're seeing this against a single table, right?  So ingest parallelism across multiple tables would make it even worse?

> Regression in flushing throughput under load after CASSANDRA-6696
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-12071
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-12071
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Local Write-Read Paths
>            Reporter: Ariel Weisberg
>            Assignee: Marcus Eriksson
>
> The way flushing used to work is that a ColumnFamilyStore could have multiple Memtables flushing at once and multiple ColumnFamilyStores could flush at the same time. The way it works now there can be only a single flush of any ColumnFamilyStore & Memtable running in the C* process, and the number of threads applied to that flush is bounded by the number of disks in JBOD.
> This works ok most of the time but occasionally flushing will be a little slower and ingest will outstrip it and then block on available memory. At this point you see several second stalls that cause timeouts.
> This is a problem for reasonable configurations that don't use JBOD but have access to a fast disk that can handle some IO queuing (RAID, SSD).
> You can reproduce on beefy hardware (12 cores 24 threads, 64 gigs of RAM, SSD) if you unthrottle compaction or set it to something like 64 megabytes/second and run with 8 compaction threads and stress with the default write workload and a reasonable number of threads. I tested with 96.
> It started happening after about 60 gigabytes of data was loaded.



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