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Posted to dev@directory.apache.org by "Alex Karasulu (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2006/09/12 16:53:24 UTC

[jira] Closed: (DIRSERVER-733) More efficient handling of duplicate keys in indices

     [ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DIRSERVER-733?page=all ]

Alex Karasulu closed DIRSERVER-733.
-----------------------------------

    Resolution: Fixed
      Assignee: Alex Karasulu

This has been fixed already.  Just adding it to JIRA for tracking.

> More efficient handling of duplicate keys in indices
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: DIRSERVER-733
>                 URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DIRSERVER-733
>             Project: Directory ApacheDS
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: core
>    Affects Versions: pre-1.0, 1.0-RC1, 1.0-RC2, 1.0-RC3, 1.1.0, 1.0
>            Reporter: Alex Karasulu
>         Assigned To: Alex Karasulu
>             Fix For: 1.1.0, 1.0
>
>
> Here's the description of the problem and the solution that I posted to the mailing list:
> Hi again,
> I've completed my optimization on indices under high partition capacities.  The results are in line and side by side to the old results.  For those not interested in the exact optimization that took place skip down to the results.
> The problem:
> ------------
> Up to now duplicate keys (keys with many values) were stored using a TreeSet within the B+Trees of indices.  Indices usually map some attribute value to an ID into the master table for an entry.  The ID is a sequentially unique value assigned to the entry.
> So if 100 people have initials AA then there would be 100 values in the TreeSet for the key 'AA' in the intials index.  This would be serialized and deserialized to and from disk.  At these low numbers there's really very little impact.  However certain indices were seriously impacted like the objectClass index or the hierarchy based system index.  Just imagine having 1 million entries of inetOrgPersons.  The objectClass index would then have 1 million values in the TreeSet for the key 'inetOrgPerson'.  This would seriously hurt performance from both a space and time perspective.  It would essentially obfuscate the benefits of using BTree's in the first place with large numbers of entries.
> Solution:
> ---------
> What I did was add a configurable threshold parameter when instead of using a TreeSet to store duplicates another B+Tree was created and used within the same index database file.  Right now the default value for this which these tests were conducted with is 1000.  So after having 1000 duplicate values the server switches from using in memory TreeSets to on disk B+Trees for only storing values for that key.

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