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Posted to common-issues@hadoop.apache.org by "Konstantin Shvachko (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2018/01/19 00:38:00 UTC

[jira] [Updated] (HADOOP-13263) Reload cached groups in background after expiry

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-13263?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Konstantin Shvachko updated HADOOP-13263:
-----------------------------------------
    Fix Version/s: 2.7.6

Just committed this to branch-2.7. Thanks.

> Reload cached groups in background after expiry
> -----------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HADOOP-13263
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-13263
>             Project: Hadoop Common
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: Stephen O'Donnell
>            Assignee: Stephen O'Donnell
>            Priority: Major
>             Fix For: 2.8.0, 3.0.0-alpha1, 2.7.6
>
>         Attachments: HADOOP-13263.001.patch, HADOOP-13263.002.patch, HADOOP-13263.003.patch, HADOOP-13263.004.patch, HADOOP-13263.005.patch, HADOOP-13263.006.patch, HADOOP-13263.007.patch
>
>
> In HADOOP-11238 the Guava cache was introduced to allow refreshes on the Namenode group cache to run in the background, avoiding many slow group lookups. Even with this change, I have seen quite a few clusters with issues due to slow group lookups. The problem is most prevalent in HA clusters, where a slow group lookup on the hdfs user can fail to return for over 45 seconds causing the Failover Controller to kill it.
> The way the current Guava cache implementation works is approximately:
> 1) On initial load, the first thread to request groups for a given user blocks until it returns. Any subsequent threads requesting that user block until that first thread populates the cache.
> 2) When the key expires, the first thread to hit the cache after expiry blocks. While it is blocked, other threads will return the old value.
> I feel it is this blocking thread that still gives the Namenode issues on slow group lookups. If the call from the FC is the one that blocks and lookups are slow, if can cause the NN to be killed.
> Guava has the ability to refresh expired keys completely in the background, where the first thread that hits an expired key schedules a background cache reload, but still returns the old value. Then the cache is eventually updated. This patch introduces this background reload feature. There are two new parameters:
> 1) hadoop.security.groups.cache.background.reload - default false to keep the current behaviour. Set to true to enable a small thread pool and background refresh for expired keys
> 2) hadoop.security.groups.cache.background.reload.threads - only relevant if the above is set to true. Controls how many threads are in the background refresh pool. Default is 1, which is likely to be enough.



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