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Posted to issues@lucene.apache.org by "Erick Erickson (Jira)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2020/02/24 20:33:00 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (SOLR-14137) Boosting by date (and perhaps others) shows a steady decline 6.6->8.3

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-14137?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17043840#comment-17043840 ] 

Erick Erickson commented on SOLR-14137:
---------------------------------------

The programs I use to generate docs and run Jmeter are here: [https://github.com/ErickErickson/index_doc_generator.] It's a bit of a mess, I was trying several different things. But if people want to work with it I can help untangle it.

> Boosting by date (and perhaps others) shows a steady decline 6.6->8.3
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: SOLR-14137
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-14137
>             Project: Solr
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: Erick Erickson
>            Priority: Major
>         Attachments: Screen Shot 2019-12-19 at 2.35.41 PM.png, Screen Shot 2019-12-19 at 3.09.37 PM.png, Screen Shot 2019-12-19 at 3.31.16 PM.png, second_run.png
>
>
> Moving a user's list discussion over here.
> {color:#000000}The very short form is that from Solr 6.6.1 to Solr 8.3.1, the throughput for date boosting in my tests dropped by 40+%{color}
> {color:#000000}I’ve been hearing about slowdowns in successive Solr releases with boost functions, so I dug into it a bit. The test setup is just a boost-by-date with an additional big OR clause of 100 random words so I’d be sure to hit a bunch of docs. I figured that if there were few hits, the signal would be lost in the noise, but I didn’t look at the actual hit counts.{color}
> {color:#000000}I saw several Solr JIRAs about this subject, but they were slightly different, although quite possibly the same underlying issue. So I tried to get this down to a very specific form of a query.{color}
> {color:#000000}I’ve also seen some cases in the wild where the response was proportional to the number of segments, thus my optimize experiments.{color}
> {color:#000000}Here are the results, explanation below. O stands for optimized to one segment. I spot checked pdate against 6.6, 7.1 and 8.3 and they weren’t significantly different performance wise from tdate. All have docValues enabled. I ran these against a multiValued=“false” field. All the tests pegged all my CPUs. Jmeter is being run on a different machine than Solr. Only one Solr was running for any test.{color}
> {color:#000000}Solr version   queries/min   {color}
> {color:#000000}6.6.1              3,400          {color}
> {color:#000000}6.6.1 O           4,800          {color}
> {color:#000000}7.1                 2,800           {color}
> {color:#000000}7.1 O             4,200           {color}
> {color:#000000}7.7.1              2,400           {color}
> {color:#000000}7.7.1 O          3,500            {color}
> {color:#000000}8.3.1             2,000            {color}
> {color:#000000}8.3.1 O          2,600            {color}
> {color:#000000}The tests I’ve been running just index 20M docs into a single core, then run the exact same 10,000 queries against them from jmeter with 24 threads. Spot checks showed no hits on the queryResultCache.{color}
> {color:#000000}A query looks like this: {color}
> {color:#000000}rows=0&\{!boost b=recip(ms(NOW, INSERT_FIELD_HERE),3.16e-11,1,1)}text_txt:(campaigners OR adjourned OR anyplace…97 more random words){color}
> {color:#000000}There is no faceting. No grouping. No sorting.{color}
> {color:#000000}I fill in INSERT_FIELD_HERE through jmeter magic. I’m running the exact same queries for every test.{color}
> {color:#000000}One wildcard is that I did regenerate the index for each major revision, and the chose random words from the same list of words, as well as random times (bounded in the same range though) so the docs are not completely identical. The index was in the native format for that major version even if slightly different between versions. I ran the test once, then ran it again after optimizing the index.{color}
> {color:#000000}I haven’t dug any farther, if anyone’s interested I can throw a profiler at, say, 8.3 and see what I can see, although I’m not going to have time to dive into this any time soon. I’d be glad to run some tests though. I saved the queries and the indexes so running a test would  only take a few minutes.{color}
> {color:#000000}While I concentrated on date fields, the docs have date, int, and long fields, both docValues=true and docValues=false, each variant with multiValued=true and multiValued=false and both Trie and Point (where possible) variants as well as a pretty simple text field.{color}



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