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Posted to dev@zookeeper.apache.org by "Andor Molnar (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2019/01/23 13:04:00 UTC

[jira] [Assigned] (ZOOKEEPER-3242) Add server side connecting throttling

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-3242?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Andor Molnar reassigned ZOOKEEPER-3242:
---------------------------------------

    Assignee: Jie Huang

> Add server side connecting throttling
> -------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: ZOOKEEPER-3242
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-3242
>             Project: ZooKeeper
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: server
>            Reporter: Jie Huang
>            Assignee: Jie Huang
>            Priority: Minor
>              Labels: pull-request-available
>             Fix For: 3.6.0
>
>          Time Spent: 3h
>  Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> On-going performance investigation at Facebook has demonstrated that Zookeeper is easily overwhelmed by spikes in connection rates and/or write request rates. Zookeeper performance gets progressively worse, clients timeout and try to reconnect (exacerbating the problem) and things enter a death spiral. To solve this problem, we need to add load protection to Zookeeper via rate limiting and work shedding.
>  
> This Jira adds a new connection rate limiting mechanism to Zookeeper in hopes of preventing Zookeeper from becoming overwhelmed during connection spikes. 
> The new throttle is focused on limiting connections per second. The throttle is implemented as a token-bucket with optional probabilistic dropping based on the BLUE queue management algorithm.
>  
> This token-bucket design allows the throttle to allow short bursts to pass, while still capping the total number of requests per second. However, an issue with a token bucket approach is that the wall clock arrival time of requests affects the probability of a request being allowed to pass or not. Under constant load this can lead to request starvation for requests that constantly arrive later than the majority. The optional probabilistic dropping mechanism is designed to combat this, making rejections a random event with little skew based on arrival time.
>  
> A more verbose description can be found in the comments in org.apache.zookeeper.server.BlueThrottle.
>  
> By default, both the token-bucket and probabilistic dropping mechanism are disabled. Enabling and tuning the throttles can be done both via Java system properties as well as against a running node via JMX.
>  
> The throttle has been tested and benchmarked at Facebook.



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