Catalin Alexandru Zamfir created HADOOP-8396: ------------------------------------------------
Summary: DataStreamer, OutOfMemoryError, unable to create new native thread Key: HADOOP-8396 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-8396 Project: Hadoop Common Issue Type: Bug Components: io Affects Versions: 1.0.2 Environment: Ubuntu 64bit, 4GB of RAM, Core Duo processors, commodity hardware. Reporter: Catalin Alexandru Zamfir Priority: Blocker We're trying to write about 1 few billion records, via "Avro". When we got this error, that's unrelated to our code: 10725984 [Main] INFO net.gameloft.RnD.Hadoop.App - ## At: 2:58:43.290 # Written: 521000000 records Exception in thread "DataStreamer for file /Streams/Cubed/Stuff/objGame/aRandomGame/objType/aRandomType/2012/05/11/20/29/Shard.avro block blk_3254486396346586049_75838" java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread at java.lang.Thread.start0(Native Method) at java.lang.Thread.start(Thread.java:657) at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Client$Connection.setupIOstreams(Client.java:612) at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Client$Connection.access$2000(Client.java:184) at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Client.getConnection(Client.java:1202) at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.Client.call(Client.java:1046) at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.RPC$Invoker.invoke(RPC.java:225) at $Proxy8.getProtocolVersion(Unknown Source) at org.apache.hadoop.ipc.RPC.getProxy(RPC.java:396) at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSClient.createClientDatanodeProtocolProxy(DFSClient.java:160) at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream.processDatanodeError(DFSClient.java:3117) at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream.access$2200(DFSClient.java:2586) at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.run(DFSClient.java:2790) 10746169 [Main] INFO net.gameloft.RnD.Hadoop.App - ## At: 2:59:03.474 # Written: 522000000 records Exception in thread "ResponseProcessor for block blk_4201760269657070412_73948" java.lang.OutOfMemoryError at sun.misc.Unsafe.allocateMemory(Native Method) at java.nio.DirectByteBuffer.<init>(DirectByteBuffer.java:117) at java.nio.ByteBuffer.allocateDirect(ByteBuffer.java:305) at sun.nio.ch.Util.getTemporaryDirectBuffer(Util.java:75) at sun.nio.ch.IOUtil.read(IOUtil.java:223) at sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.read(SocketChannelImpl.java:254) at org.apache.hadoop.net.SocketInputStream$Reader.performIO(SocketInputStream.java:55) at org.apache.hadoop.net.SocketIOWithTimeout.doIO(SocketIOWithTimeout.java:142) at org.apache.hadoop.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:155) at org.apache.hadoop.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:128) at java.io.DataInputStream.readFully(DataInputStream.java:195) at java.io.DataInputStream.readLong(DataInputStream.java:416) at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.protocol.DataTransferProtocol$PipelineAck.readFields(DataTransferProtocol.java:124) at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream$ResponseProcessor.run(DFSClient.java:2964) # # There is insufficient memory for the Java Runtime Environment to continue. # Native memory allocation (malloc) failed to allocate 32 bytes for intptr_t in /build/buildd/openjdk-6-6b23~pre11/build/openjdk/hotspot/src/share/vm/runtime/deoptimization.cpp [thread 1587264368 also had an error] [thread 1111309168 also had an error] [thread 1820371824 also had an error] [thread 1343454064 also had an error] [thread 1345444720 also had an error] # An error report file with more information is saved as: # [thread 1345444720 also had an error] [thread -1091290256 also had an error] [thread 678165360 also had an error] [thread 678497136 also had an error] [thread 675511152 also had an error] [thread 1385937776 also had an error] [thread 911969136 also had an error] [thread -1086207120 also had an error] [thread -1088251024 also had an error] [thread -1088914576 also had an error] [thread -1086870672 also had an error] [thread 441797488 also had an error][thread 445778800 also had an error] [thread 440400752 also had an error] [thread 444119920 also had an error][thread 1151298416 also had an error] [thread 443124592 also had an error] [thread 1152625520 also had an error] [thread 913628016 also had an error] [thread -1095345296 also had an error][thread 1390799728 also had an error] [thread 443788144 also had an error] [thread 676506480 also had an error] [thread 1630595952 also had an error] pure virtual method called terminate called without an active exception pure virtual method called Aborted It seems to be a memory leak. We were opening 5 - 10 buffers to different paths when writing and closing them. We've tested that those buffers do not overrun. And they don't. But watching the application continue writing, we saw that over a period of 5 to 6 hours, it kept constantly increasing in memory, not by the average of 8MB buffer that we've set, but my small values. I'm reading the code and it seems there's a memory leak somewhere, in the way Hadoop does buffer allocation. While we specifically close the buffers if the count of open buffers is above 5 (meaning 5 * 8MB per buffer) this bug still happens. Can it be fixed? As you can see from the strack trace, it writes a "fan-out" path of the type you see in the strack trace. We've let it execute till about 500M records, when this error blew. It's a blocker as these writers need to be production-grade ready, while they're not due to this native buffer allocation that when executing large amounts of writes, seems to generate a memory leak. -- This message is automatically generated by JIRA. If you think it was sent incorrectly, please contact your JIRA administrators: https://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/ContactAdministrators!default.jspa For more information on JIRA, see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira