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Posted to commits@cassandra.apache.org by "Stu Hood (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2011/02/12 00:49:57 UTC

[jira] Updated: (CASSANDRA-2156) Compaction Throttling

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-2156?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Stu Hood updated CASSANDRA-2156:
--------------------------------

    Attachment: for-0.6-0002-Make-compaction-throttling-configurable.txt
                for-0.6-0001-Throttle-compaction-to-a-fixed-throughput.txt

Attaching a patch for 0.6 that implements compaction throttling for a fixed value.

Since it is relatively easy to automatically figure out the proper throughput, we might want to make throttling automatic rather than exposing a config option.

> Compaction Throttling
> ---------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-2156
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-2156
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>            Reporter: Stu Hood
>             Fix For: 0.8
>
>         Attachments: for-0.6-0001-Throttle-compaction-to-a-fixed-throughput.txt, for-0.6-0002-Make-compaction-throttling-configurable.txt
>
>
> Compaction is currently relatively bursty: we compact as fast as we can, and then we wait for the next compaction to be possible ("hurry up and wait").
> Instead, to properly amortize compaction, you'd like to compact exactly as fast as you need to to keep the sstable count under control.
> For every new level of compaction, you need to increase the rate that you compact at: a rule of thumb that we're testing on our clusters is to determine the maximum number of buckets a node can support (aka, if the 15th bucket holds 750 GB, we're not going to have more than 15 buckets), and then multiply the flush throughput by the number of buckets to get a minimum compaction throughput to maintain your sstable count.
> Full explanation: for a min compaction threshold of {{T}}, the bucket at level {{N}} can contain {{SsubN = T^N}} 'units' (unit == memtable's worth of data on disk). Every time a new unit is added, it has a {{1/SsubN}} chance of causing the bucket at level N to fill. If the bucket at level N fills, it causes {{SsubN}} units to be compacted. So, for each active level in your system you have {{SubN * 1 / SsubN}}, or {{1}} amortized unit to compact any time a new unit is added.

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