You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to dev@kafka.apache.org by "Sriram Subramanian (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2013/02/22 08:52:12 UTC
[jira] [Resolved] (KAFKA-706) broker appears to be encoding
ProduceResponse, but never sending it
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-706?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Sriram Subramanian resolved KAFKA-706.
--------------------------------------
Resolution: Fixed
> broker appears to be encoding ProduceResponse, but never sending it
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: KAFKA-706
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-706
> Project: Kafka
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: core
> Affects Versions: 0.8
> Environment: reproduced on both Mac OS and RH linux, via private node.js client
> Reporter: ben fleis
> Assignee: Sriram Subramanian
>
> By all appearances, I seem to be able to convince a broker to periodically encode, but never transmit, a ProduceResponse. Unfortunately my client is proprietary, but I will share it with Neha via LI channels. But I will describe what's going on in the hopes that there's another trivial way to reproduce it. (I did search through JIRA, and haven't found anything that looks like this.)
> I am running a single instance zookeeper and single broker. I have a client that generates configurable amounts of data, tracking what is produced (both sent and ACK'd), and what is consumed. I was noticing that when using high transfer rates via high frequency single messages, my unack'd queue appeared to be getting continuously larger. So, I outfitted my client to log more information about correlation ids at various stages, and modified the kafka ProducerRequest/ProducerResponse to log (de)serialization of the same. I then used tcpdump to intercept all communications between my client and the broker. Finally, I configured my client to generate 1 message per ~10ms, each payload being approximately 33 bytes; requestAckTimeout was set to 2000ms, and requestAcksRequired was set to 1. I used 10ms as I found that 5ms or less caused my unacked queue to build up due to system speed -- it simply couldn't keep up. 10ms keeps the load high, but just manageable. YMMV with that param. All of this is done on a single host, over loopback. I ran it on both my airbook, and a well setup RH linux box, and found the same problem.
> At startup, my system logged "expired" requests - meaning reqs that were sent, but for which no ACK, positive or negative, was seen from the broker, within 1.25x the requestAckTimeout (ie, 2500ms). I would let it settle until the unacked queue was stable at or around 0.
> What I found is this: ACKs are normally generated within milliseconds. This was demonstrated by my logging added to the scala ProducerRe* classes, and they are normally seen quickly by my client. But when the actual error occurs, namely that a request is ignored, the ProducerResponse class *does* encode the correct correlationId; however, a response containing that ID is never sent over the network, as evidenced by my tcpdump traces. In my experience this would take anywhere from 3-15 seconds to occur after the system was warm, meaning that it's 1 out of several hundred on average that shows the condition.
> While I can't attach my client code, I could attach logs; but since my intention is to share the code with LI people, I will wait to see if that's useful here.
--
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
If you think it was sent incorrectly, please contact your JIRA administrators
For more information on JIRA, see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira