More specifically, here is my reasoning of failure cases, and would like to
get your feedbacks:

*StreamTask*

For stream-task, the committing order is 1) flush state (may send more
records to changelog in producer), 2) flush producer, 3) commit upstream
offsets. My understanding is that the writing of the checkpoint file will
between 2) and 3). So thatt he new order will be 1) flush state, 2) flush
producer, 3) write checkpoint file (when necessary), 4) commit upstream
offsets.

And we have a bunch of "changelog offsets" regarding the state: a) offset
corresponding to the image of the persistent file, name it point A, b) log
end offset, name it offset B, c) checkpoint file recorded offset, name it
offset C, d) offset corresponding to the current committed upstream offset,
name it offset D.

Now let's talk about the failure cases:

If there is a crash between 1) and 2), then A > B = C = D. In this case, if
we restore, we will replay no logs at all since B = C while the persistent
state file is actually "ahead of time", and we will start reprocessing
since from the input offset corresponding to D = B < A and hence have some
duplicated, *which will be incorrect* if the update logic involve reading
the state store values as well (i.e. not a blind write), e.g. aggregations.

If there is a crash between 2) and 3), then A = B > C = D. When we restore,
we will replay from C -> B = A, and then start reprocessing from input
offset corresponding to D < A, and same issue applies as above.

If there is a crash between 3) and 4), then A = B = C > D. When we restore,
we will not replay, and then start reprocessing from input offset
corresponding to D < A, and same issue applies as above.


*StandbyTask*

We only do one operation today, which is 1) flush state, I think we will
add the writing of the checkpoint file after it as step 2).

Failure cases again: offset A -> correspond to the image of the file,
offset B -> changelog end offset, offset C -> written as in the checkpoint
file.

If there is a crash between 1) and 2), then B >= A > C (B >= A because we
are reading from changelog topic so A will never be greater than B),

1) and if this task resumes as a standby task, we will resume restoration
from offset C, and a few duplicates from C -> A will be applied again to
local state files, then continue from A -> B, *this is OK* since they do
not incur any computations hence no side effects and are all idempotent.

2) and if this task resumes as a stream task, we will replay changelogs
from C -> A, with duplicated updates, and then from A -> B. This is also OK
for the same reason as above.



So it seems to me that this is not safe for a StreamTask, or maybe the
writing of the checkpoint file in your mind is different?


Guozhang



On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 11:02 AM, Guozhang Wang <wangg...@gmail.com> wrote:

> A quick question re: `We will add the above config parameter to
> *StreamsConfig*. During *StreamTask#commit()*, *StandbyTask#commit()*,
> and *GlobalUpdateStateTask#flushState()* we will check if the checkpoint
> interval has elapsed and write the checkpoint file.`
>
> Will the writing of the checkpoint file happen before the flushing of the
> state manager?
>
> Guozhang
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 10:48 AM, Matthias J. Sax <matth...@confluent.io>
> wrote:
>
>> But 5 min means, that we (in the worst case) need to reply data from the
>> last 5 minutes to get the store ready.
>>
>> So why not go with the min possible value of 30 seconds to speed up this
>> process if the impact is negligible anyway?
>>
>> What do you gain by being conservative?
>>
>>
>> -Matthias
>>
>> On 2/9/17 2:54 AM, Damian Guy wrote:
>> > Why shouldn't it be 5 minutes? ;-)
>> > It is a finger in the air number. Based on the testing i did it shows
>> that
>> > there isn't much, if any, overhead when checkpointing a single store on
>> the
>> > commit interval. The default commit interval is 30 seconds, so it could
>> > possibly be set to that. However, i'd prefer to be a little
>> conservative so
>> > 5 minutes seemed reasonable.
>> >
>> >
>> > On Thu, 9 Feb 2017 at 10:25 Michael Noll <mich...@confluent.io> wrote:
>> >
>> >> Damian,
>> >>
>> >> could you elaborate briefly why the default value should be 5 minutes?
>> >> What are the considerations, assumptions, etc. that go into picking
>> this
>> >> value?
>> >>
>> >> Right now, in the KIP and in this discussion, "5 mins" looks like a
>> magic
>> >> number to me. :-)
>> >>
>> >> -Michael
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 11:03 AM, Damian Guy <damian....@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> I've ran the SimpleBenchmark with checkpoint on and off to see what
>> the
>> >>> impact is. It appears that there is very little impact, if any. The
>> >> numbers
>> >>> with checkpointing on actually look better, but that is likely largely
>> >> due
>> >>> to external influences.
>> >>>
>> >>> In any case, i'm going to suggest we go with a default checkpoint
>> >> interval
>> >>> of 5 minutes. I've update the KIP with this.
>> >>>
>> >>> commit every 10 seconds (no checkpoint)
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/34798/287372.83751939767/29.570664980746017
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/35942/278226.0308274442/28.62945857214401
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/34677/288375.58035585546/29.673847218617528
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/34677/288375.58035585546/29.673847218617528
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/31192/320595.02436522185/32.98922800718133
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> checkpoint every 10 seconds (same as commit interval)
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/36997/270292.185852907/27.81306592426413
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/32087/311652.69423754164/32.069062237043035
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/32895/303997.5680194558/31.281349749202004
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/33476/298721.4720994145/30.738439479029754
>> >>> Streams Performance [records/latency/rec-sec/MB-sec source+store]:
>> >>> 10000000/33196/301241.1133871551/30.99771056753826
>> >>>
>> >>> On Wed, 8 Feb 2017 at 09:02 Damian Guy <damian....@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>>> Matthias,
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Fair point. I'll update it the KIP.
>> >>>> Thanks
>> >>>>
>> >>>> On Wed, 8 Feb 2017 at 05:49 Matthias J. Sax <matth...@confluent.io>
>> >>> wrote:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Damian,
>> >>>>
>> >>>> I am not strict about it either. However, if there is no advantage in
>> >>>> disabling it, we might not want to allow it. This would have the
>> >>>> advantage to guard users to accidentally switch it off.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> -Matthias
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>> On 2/3/17 2:03 AM, Damian Guy wrote:
>> >>>>> Hi Matthias,
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> It possibly doesn't make sense to disable it, but then i'm sure
>> >> someone
>> >>>>> will come up with a reason they don't want it!
>> >>>>> I'm happy to change it such that the checkpoint interval must be >
>> 0.
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> Cheers,
>> >>>>> Damian
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>> On Fri, 3 Feb 2017 at 01:29 Matthias J. Sax <matth...@confluent.io>
>> >>>> wrote:
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>>> Thanks Damian.
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> One more question: "Checkpointing is disabled if the checkpoint
>> >>> interval
>> >>>>>> is set to a value <=0."
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> Does it make sense to disable check pointing? What's the tradeoff
>> >>> here?
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> -Matthias
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>> On 2/2/17 1:51 AM, Damian Guy wrote:
>> >>>>>>> Hi Matthias,
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>> Thanks for the comments.
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>> 1. TBD - i need to do some performance tests and try and work out
>> a
>> >>>>>>> sensible default.
>> >>>>>>> 2. Yes, you are correct. It could be a multiple of the
>> >>>>>> commit.interval.ms.
>> >>>>>>> But, that would also mean if you change the commit interval - say
>> >> you
>> >>>>>> lower
>> >>>>>>> it, then you might also need to change the checkpoint setting
>> (i.e,
>> >>> you
>> >>>>>>> still only want to checkpoint every n minutes).
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>> On Wed, 1 Feb 2017 at 23:46 Matthias J. Sax <
>> matth...@confluent.io
>> >>>
>> >>>>>> wrote:
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> Thanks for the KIP Damian.
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> I am wondering about two things:
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> 1. what should be the default value for the new parameter?
>> >>>>>>>> 2. why is the new parameter provided in ms?
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> About (2): because
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> "the minimum checkpoint interval will be the value of
>> >>>>>>>> commit.interval.ms. In effect the actual checkpoint interval
>> will
>> >>> be
>> >>>> a
>> >>>>>>>> multiple of the commit interval"
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> it might be easier to just use an parameter that is
>> >>> "number-or-commit
>> >>>>>>>> intervals".
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> -Matthias
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>> On 2/1/17 7:29 AM, Damian Guy wrote:
>> >>>>>>>>> Thanks for the comments Eno.
>> >>>>>>>>> As for exactly once, i don't believe this matters as we are just
>> >>>>>>>> restoring
>> >>>>>>>>> the change-log, i.e, the result of the aggregations that
>> >> previously
>> >>>> ran
>> >>>>>>>>> etc. So once initialized the state store will be in the same
>> >> state
>> >>> as
>> >>>>>> it
>> >>>>>>>>> was before.
>> >>>>>>>>> Having the checkpoint in a kafka topic is not ideal as the state
>> >> is
>> >>>> per
>> >>>>>>>>> kafka streams instance. So each instance would need to start
>> >> with a
>> >>>>>>>> unique
>> >>>>>>>>> id that is persistent.
>> >>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>> Cheers,
>> >>>>>>>>> Damian
>> >>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>> On Wed, 1 Feb 2017 at 13:20 Eno Thereska <
>> eno.there...@gmail.com
>> >>>
>> >>>>>> wrote:
>> >>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>> As a follow up to my previous comment, have you thought about
>> >>>> writing
>> >>>>>>>> the
>> >>>>>>>>>> checkpoint to a topic instead of a local file? That would have
>> >> the
>> >>>>>>>>>> advantage that all metadata continues to be managed by Kafka,
>> as
>> >>>> well
>> >>>>>> as
>> >>>>>>>>>> fit with EoS. The potential disadvantage would be a slower
>> >>> latency,
>> >>>>>>>> however
>> >>>>>>>>>> if it is periodic as you mention, I'm not sure that would be a
>> >>> show
>> >>>>>>>> stopper.
>> >>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>> Thanks
>> >>>>>>>>>> Eno
>> >>>>>>>>>>> On 1 Feb 2017, at 12:58, Eno Thereska <eno.there...@gmail.com
>> >
>> >>>>>> wrote:
>> >>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>> Thanks Damian, this is a good idea and will reduce the restore
>> >>>> time.
>> >>>>>>>>>> Looking forward, with exactly once and support for transactions
>> >> in
>> >>>>>>>> Kafka, I
>> >>>>>>>>>> believe we'll have to add some support for rolling back
>> >>> checkpoints,
>> >>>>>>>> e.g.,
>> >>>>>>>>>> when a transaction is aborted. We need to be aware of that and
>> >>>> ideally
>> >>>>>>>>>> anticipate a bit those needs in the KIP.
>> >>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>> Thanks
>> >>>>>>>>>>> Eno
>> >>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>>> On 1 Feb 2017, at 10:18, Damian Guy <damian....@gmail.com>
>> >>> wrote:
>> >>>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>>> Hi all,
>> >>>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>>> I would like to start the discussion on KIP-116:
>> >>>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/KIP-
>> >>> 116+-+Add+State+Store+Checkpoint+Interval+Configuration
>> >>>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks,
>> >>>>>>>>>>>> Damian
>> >>>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>>
>> >>>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>>
>> >>>
>> >>
>> >
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> -- Guozhang
>



-- 
-- Guozhang

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