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Ewen Cheslack-Postava commented on KAFKA-2168: ---------------------------------------------- Actually, now I realize another solution is to only remove synchronization from the one place it's a problem -- things that might call NetworkClient.poll() with long timeouts. Could we use synchronized(this) around everything *except* the NetworkClient.poll() calls, and then have anything using NetworkClient synchronize on it? This is finer grained locking still, but I think could end up having pretty minimal impact on the current code. The drawback is that since NetworkClient is used by all the classes, the requirement of locking gets spread across all of them. > New consumer poll() can block other calls like position(), commit(), and > close() indefinitely > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: KAFKA-2168 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-2168 > Project: Kafka > Issue Type: Bug > Components: clients, consumer > Reporter: Ewen Cheslack-Postava > Assignee: Jason Gustafson > > The new consumer is currently using very coarse-grained synchronization. For > most methods this isn't a problem since they finish quickly once the lock is > acquired, but poll() might run for a long time (and commonly will since > polling with long timeouts is a normal use case). This means any operations > invoked from another thread may block until the poll() call completes. > Some example use cases where this can be a problem: > * A shutdown hook is registered to trigger shutdown and invokes close(). It > gets invoked from another thread and blocks indefinitely. > * User wants to manage offset commit themselves in a background thread. If > the commit policy is not purely time based, it's not currently possibly to > make sure the call to commit() will be processed promptly. > Two possible solutions to this: > 1. Make sure a lock is not held during the actual select call. Since we have > multiple layers (KafkaConsumer -> NetworkClient -> Selector -> nio Selector) > this is probably hard to make work cleanly since locking is currently only > performed at the KafkaConsumer level and we'd want it unlocked around a > single line of code in Selector. > 2. Wake up the selector before synchronizing for certain operations. This > would require some additional coordination to make sure the caller of > wakeup() is able to acquire the lock promptly (instead of, e.g., the poll() > thread being woken up and then promptly reacquiring the lock with a > subsequent long poll() call). -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)