Hi Becket, The current user quota doesn't solve the problem. But I was thinking that if we could ensure we don't read more from the network than the quota allows, we may be able to fix the issue in a different way (throttling all connections, each for a limited time prior to reading large requests). But it would be more complex (and even more messy for client-id quotas), so I can understand why the solution you proposed in the KIP makes sense for the scenario that you described.
Regards, Rajini On Tue, Nov 14, 2017 at 11:30 PM, Becket Qin <becket....@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Rajini, > > We are using SSL so we could use user quota. But I am not sure if that > would solve the problem. The key issue in our case is that each broker can > only handle ~300 MB/s of incoming bytes, but the MapReduce job is trying to > push 1-2 GB/s, unless we can throttle the clients to 300 MB/s, the broker > cannot sustain. In order to do that, we need to be able to throttle > requests for more than request timeout, potentially a few minutes. It seems > neither user quota nor limited throttle time can achieve this. > > Thanks, > > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > On Tue, Nov 14, 2017 at 7:44 AM, Rajini Sivaram <rajinisiva...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > Hi Becket, > > > > For the specific scenario that you described, would it be possible to use > > user quotas rather than client-id quotas? With user quotas, perhaps we > can > > throttle more easily before reading requests as well (as you mentioned, > the > > difficulty with client-id quota is that we have to read partial requests > > and handle client-ids at network layer making that a much bigger change). > > If your clients are using SASL/SSL, I was wondering whether a solution > that > > improves user quotas and limits throttle time would work for you. > > > > Regards, > > > > Rajini > > > > > > > > On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 12:59 AM, Becket Qin <becket....@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > Since we will bump up the wire request version, another option is for > > > clients that are sending old request versions the broker can just keep > > the > > > current behavior. For clients sending the new request versions, the > > broker > > > can respond then mute the channel as described in the KIP wiki. In this > > > case, muting the channel is mostly for protection purpose. A correctly > > > implemented client should back off for throttle time before sending the > > > next request. The downside is that the broker needs to keep both logic > > and > > > it seems not gaining much benefit. So personally I prefer to just mute > > the > > > channel. But I am open to different opinions. > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > > > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > > > > > On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 7:28 PM, Becket Qin <becket....@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > > Hi Jun, > > > > > > > > Hmm, even if a connection is closed by the client when the channel is > > > > muted. After the channel is unmuted, it seems Selector.select() will > > > detect > > > > this and close the socket. > > > > It is true that before the channel is unmuted the socket will be in a > > > > CLOSE_WAIT state though. So having an arbitrarily long muted duration > > may > > > > indeed cause problem. > > > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > > > > > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > > > > > > > On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 7:22 PM, Becket Qin <becket....@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > > > > > > >> Hi Rajini, > > > >> > > > >> Thanks for the detail explanation. Please see the reply below: > > > >> > > > >> 2. Limiting the throttle time to connection.max.idle.ms on the > broker > > > >> side is probably fine. However, clients may have a different > > > configuration > > > >> of connection.max.idle.ms and still reconnect before the throttle > > time > > > >> (which is the server side connection.max.idle.ms). It seems another > > > back > > > >> door for quota. > > > >> > > > >> 3. I agree we could just mute the server socket until > > > >> connection.max.idle.ms if the massive CLOSE_WAIT is a big issue. > This > > > >> helps guarantee only connection_rate * connection.max.idle.ms > sockets > > > >> will be in CLOSE_WAIT state. For cooperative clients, unmuting the > > > socket > > > >> will not have negative impact. > > > >> > > > >> 4. My concern for capping the throttle time to metrics.window.ms is > > > that > > > >> we will not be able to enforce quota effectively. It might be useful > > to > > > >> explain this with a real example we are trying to solve. We have a > > > >> MapReduce job pushing data to a Kafka cluster. The MapReduce job has > > > >> hundreds of producers and each of them sends a normal sized > > > ProduceRequest > > > >> (~2 MB) to each of the brokers in the cluster. Apparently the client > > id > > > >> will ran out of bytes quota pretty quickly, and the broker started > to > > > >> throttle the producers. The throttle time could actually be pretty > > long > > > >> (e.g. a few minute). At that point, request queue time on the > brokers > > > was > > > >> around 30 seconds. After that, a bunch of producer hit > > > request.timeout.ms > > > >> and reconnected and sent the next request again, which causes > another > > > spike > > > >> and a longer queue. > > > >> > > > >> In the above case, unless we set the quota window to be pretty big, > we > > > >> will not be able to enforce the quota. And if we set the window size > > to > > > a > > > >> large value, the request might be throttled for longer than > > > >> connection.max.idle.ms. > > > >> > > > >> > We need a solution to improve flow control for well-behaved > clients > > > >> > which currently rely entirely on broker's throttling. The KIP > > > addresses > > > >> > this using co-operative clients that sleep for an unbounded > throttle > > > >> time. > > > >> > I feel this is not ideal since the result is traffic with a lot of > > > >> spikes. > > > >> > Feedback from brokers to enable flow control in the client is a > good > > > >> idea, > > > >> > but clients with excessive throttle times should really have been > > > >> > configured with smaller batch sizes. > > > >> > > > >> This is not really about a single producer with large size, it is a > > lot > > > >> of small producers talking to the client at the same time. Reducing > > the > > > >> batch size does not help much here. Also note that after the spike > > > >> traffic at the very beginning, the throttle time of the > > ProduceRequests > > > >> processed later are actually going to be increasing (for example, > the > > > first > > > >> throttled request will be throttled for 1 second, the second > throttled > > > >> request will be throttled for 10 sec, etc.). Due to the throttle > time > > > >> variation, if every producer honors the throttle time, there will > not > > > be a > > > >> next spike after the first produce. > > > >> > > > >> > We need a solution to enforce smaller quotas to protect the broker > > > >> > from misbehaving clients. The KIP addresses this by muting > channels > > > for > > > >> an > > > >> > unbounded time. This introduces problems of channels in > CLOSE_WAIT. > > > And > > > >> > doesn't really solve all issues with misbehaving clients since new > > > >> > connections can be created to bypass quotas. > > > >> > > > >> Our current quota only protects cooperating clients because our > quota > > is > > > >> really throttling the NEXT request after process a request even if > > this > > > >> request itself has already violated quota. The misbehaving client > are > > > not > > > >> protected at all with the current quota mechanism. Like you > > mentioned, a > > > >> connection quota is required. We have been discussing about this at > > > >> LinkedIn for some time. Doing it right requires some major changes > > such > > > as > > > >> partially reading a request to identify the client id at network > level > > > and > > > >> disconnect misbehaving clients. > > > >> > > > >> While handling misbehaving clients is important, we are not trying > to > > > >> address that in this KIP. This KIP is trying to improve the > > > communication > > > >> with good clients. Muting the channel is more of a migration plan so > > > that > > > >> we don't have regression on the old innocent (but good) clients. > > > >> > > > >> Thanks, > > > >> > > > >> Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > > >> > > > >> > > > >> On Mon, Nov 6, 2017 at 1:33 PM, Jun Rao <j...@confluent.io> wrote: > > > >> > > > >>> Hi, Jiangjie, > > > >>> > > > >>> 3. If a client closes a socket connection, typically the server > only > > > >>> finds > > > >>> this out by reading from the channel and getting a negative size > > during > > > >>> the > > > >>> read. So, if a channel is muted by the server, the server won't be > > able > > > >>> to > > > >>> detect the closing of the connection by the client after the socket > > is > > > >>> unmuted. That's probably what Rajini wants to convey. > > > >>> > > > >>> Thanks, > > > >>> > > > >>> Jun > > > >>> > > > >>> On Fri, Nov 3, 2017 at 8:11 PM, Becket Qin <becket....@gmail.com> > > > wrote: > > > >>> > > > >>> > Thanks Rajini. > > > >>> > > > > >>> > 1. Good point. We do need to bump up the protocol version so that > > the > > > >>> new > > > >>> > clients do not wait for another throttle time when they are > talking > > > to > > > >>> old > > > >>> > brokers. I'll update the KIP. > > > >>> > > > > >>> > 2. That is true. But the client was not supposed to send request > to > > > the > > > >>> > broker during that period anyways. So detecting the broker > failure > > > >>> later > > > >>> > seems fine? > > > >>> > > > > >>> > 3. Wouldn't the CLOSE_WAIT handler number be the same as the > > current > > > >>> state? > > > >>> > Currently the broker will still mute the socket until it sends > the > > > >>> response > > > >>> > back. If the clients disconnect while they are being throttled, > the > > > >>> closed > > > >>> > socket will not be detected until the throttle time has passed. > > > >>> > > > > >>> > Jun also suggested to bound the time by metric.sample.window.ms > in > > > the > > > >>> > ticket. I am not sure about the bound on throttle time. It seems > a > > > >>> little > > > >>> > difficult to come up with a good bound. If the bound is too > large, > > it > > > >>> does > > > >>> > not really help solve the various timeout issue we may face. If > the > > > >>> bound > > > >>> > is too low, the quota is essentially not honored. We may > > potentially > > > >>> treat > > > >>> > different requests differently, but that seems too complicated > and > > > >>> error > > > >>> > prone. > > > >>> > > > > >>> > IMO, the key improvement we want to make is to tell the clients > how > > > >>> long > > > >>> > they will be throttled so the clients knows what happened so they > > can > > > >>> act > > > >>> > accordingly instead of waiting naively. Muting the socket on the > > > broker > > > >>> > side is just in case of non-cooperating clients. For the existing > > > >>> clients, > > > >>> > it seems this does not have much impact compare with what we have > > > now. > > > >>> > > > > >>> > Thanks, > > > >>> > > > > >>> > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > > >>> > > > > >>> > > > > >>> > > > > >>> > On Fri, Nov 3, 2017 at 3:09 PM, Rajini Sivaram < > > > >>> rajinisiva...@gmail.com> > > > >>> > wrote: > > > >>> > > > > >>> > > Hi Becket, > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > Thank you for the KIP. A few comments: > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > 1.KIP says: "*No public interface changes are needed. We only > > > >>> propose > > > >>> > > behavior change on the broker side.*" > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > But from the proposed changes, it sounds like clients will be > > > >>> updated to > > > >>> > > wait for throttle-time before sending next response, and also > not > > > >>> handle > > > >>> > > idle disconnections during that time. Doesn't that mean that > > > clients > > > >>> need > > > >>> > > to know that the broker has sent the response before > throttling, > > > >>> > requiring > > > >>> > > protocol/version change? > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > 2. At the moment, broker failures are detected by clients (and > > vice > > > >>> > versa) > > > >>> > > within connections.max.idle.ms. By removing this check for an > > > >>> unlimited > > > >>> > > throttle time, failure detection could be delayed. > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > 3. KIP says "*Since this subsequent request is not actually > > > handled > > > >>> > until > > > >>> > > the broker unmutes the channel, the client can hit > > > >>> request.timeout.ms > > > >>> > > <http://request.timeout.ms> and reconnect. However, this is no > > > worse > > > >>> > than > > > >>> > > the current state.*" > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > I think this could be worse than the current state because > broker > > > >>> doesn't > > > >>> > > detect and close the channel for an unlimited throttle time, > > while > > > >>> new > > > >>> > > connections will get accepted. As a result, lot of connections > > > could > > > >>> be > > > >>> > in > > > >>> > > CLOSE_WAIT state when throttle time is high. > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > Perhaps it is better to combine this KIP with a bound on > throttle > > > >>> time? > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > Regards, > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > Rajini > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > On Fri, Nov 3, 2017 at 8:09 PM, Becket Qin < > becket....@gmail.com > > > > > > >>> wrote: > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > Thanks for the comment, Jun, > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > 1. Yes, you are right. This could also happen with the > current > > > >>> quota > > > >>> > > > mechanism because we are essentially muting the socket during > > > >>> throttle > > > >>> > > > time. There might be two ways to solve this. > > > >>> > > > A) use another socket to send heartbeat. > > > >>> > > > B) let the GroupCoordinator know that the client will not > > > >>> heartbeat for > > > >>> > > > some time. > > > >>> > > > It seems the first solution is cleaner. > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > 2. For consumer it seems returning an empty response is a > > better > > > >>> > option. > > > >>> > > In > > > >>> > > > the producer case, if there is a spike in traffic. The > brokers > > > >>> will see > > > >>> > > > queued up requests, but that is hard to avoid unless we have > > > >>> connection > > > >>> > > > level quota, which is a bigger change and may be easier to > > > discuss > > > >>> it > > > >>> > in > > > >>> > > a > > > >>> > > > separate KIP. > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > Thanks, > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > On Fri, Nov 3, 2017 at 10:28 AM, Jun Rao <j...@confluent.io> > > > wrote: > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > > Hi, Jiangjie, > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > Thanks for bringing this up. A couple of quick thoughts. > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > 1. If the throttle time is large, what can happen is that a > > > >>> consumer > > > >>> > > > won't > > > >>> > > > > be able to heart beat to the group coordinator frequent > > enough. > > > >>> In > > > >>> > that > > > >>> > > > > case, even with this KIP, it seems there could be frequent > > > >>> consumer > > > >>> > > group > > > >>> > > > > rebalances. > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > 2. If we return a response immediately, for the consumer, > do > > we > > > >>> > return > > > >>> > > > the > > > >>> > > > > requested data or an empty response? If we do the former, > it > > > may > > > >>> not > > > >>> > > > > protect against the case when there are multiple consumer > > > >>> instances > > > >>> > > > > associated with the same user/clientid. > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > Jun > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > On Wed, Nov 1, 2017 at 9:53 AM, Becket Qin < > > > becket....@gmail.com > > > >>> > > > > >>> > > wrote: > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > Hi, > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > We would like to start the discussion on KIP-219. > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > The KIP tries to improve quota throttling time > > communication > > > >>> > between > > > >>> > > > > > brokers and clients to avoid clients timeout in case of > > long > > > >>> > > throttling > > > >>> > > > > > time. > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > The KIP link is following: > > > >>> > > > > > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/KIP- > > > >>> > > > > 219+-+Improve+quota+ > > > >>> > > > > > communication > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > Comments are welcome. > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > Thanks, > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin > > > >>> > > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > > > >>> > > > > > > >>> > > > > > >>> > > > > >>> > > > >> > > > >> > > > > > > > > > >