Please find histogram attached. On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 12:20 PM, Ryan Svihla <r...@foundev.pro> wrote:
> if everything is in ram there could be a number of issues unrelated to > Cassandra and there could be hardware limitations or contention problems. > Otherwise cell count can really deeply impact reads, all ram or not, and > some of this is because of the nature of GC and some of it is the age of > the sstable format (which is due to be revamped in 3.0). Also partition > size can matter just because of physics, if one of those is a 1gb > partition, the network interface can only move that back across the wire so > quickly not to mention the GC issues you’d run into. > > Anyway this is why I asked for the histograms, I wanted to get cell count > and partition size. I’ve seen otherwise very stout hardware get slow on > reads of large results because either a bottleneck was hit somewhere, or > the CPU got slammed with GC, or other processes running on the machine were > contending with Cassandra. > > > On Sep 25, 2015, at 12:45 PM, Jaydeep Chovatia <chovatia.jayd...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > I understand that but everything is in RAM (my data dir is tmpfs) and my > row is not that wide approx. less than 5MB in size. So my question is if > everything is in RAM then why does it take 43ms latency? > > On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 7:54 AM, Ryan Svihla <r...@foundev.pro> wrote: > >> if you run: >> >> nodetool cfhistograms <keyspace> <table name> >> >> On the given table and that will tell you how wide your rows are getting. >> At some point you can get wide enough rows that just the physics of >> retrieving them all take some time. >> >> >> On Sep 25, 2015, at 9:21 AM, sai krishnam raju potturi < >> pskraj...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> Jaydeep; since your primary key involves a clustering column, you may be >> having pretty wide rows. The read would be sequential. The latency could be >> acceptable, if the read were to involve really wide rows. >> >> If your primary key was like ((a,b)) without the clustering column, it's >> like reading a key value pair, and 40ms latency may have been a concern. >> >> Bottom Line : The latency depends on how wide the row is. >> >> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 1:27 PM, sai krishnam raju potturi < >> pskraj...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> thanks for the information. Posting the query too would be of help. >>> >>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 11:56 AM, Jaydeep Chovatia < >>> chovatia.jayd...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Please find required details here: >>>> >>>> - Number of req/s >>>> >>>> 2k reads/s >>>> >>>> - Schema details >>>> >>>> create table test { >>>> >>>> a timeuuid, >>>> >>>> b bigint, >>>> >>>> c int, >>>> >>>> d int static, >>>> >>>> e int static, >>>> >>>> f int static, >>>> >>>> g int static, >>>> >>>> h int, >>>> >>>> i text, >>>> >>>> j text, >>>> >>>> k text, >>>> >>>> l text, >>>> >>>> m set<text> >>>> >>>> n bigint >>>> >>>> o bigint >>>> >>>> p bigint >>>> >>>> q bigint >>>> >>>> r int >>>> >>>> s text >>>> >>>> t bigint >>>> >>>> u text >>>> >>>> v text >>>> >>>> w text >>>> >>>> x bigint >>>> >>>> y bigint >>>> >>>> z bigint, >>>> >>>> primary key ((a, b), c) >>>> >>>> }; >>>> >>>> - JVM settings about the heap >>>> >>>> Default settings >>>> >>>> - Execution time of the GC >>>> >>>> Avg. 400ms. I do not see long pauses of GC anywhere in the log file. >>>> >>>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 5:34 AM, Leleu Eric <eric.le...@worldline.com> >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Before speaking about tuning, can you provide some additional >>>>> information ? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> - Number of req/s >>>>> >>>>> - Schema details >>>>> >>>>> - JVM settings about the heap >>>>> >>>>> - Execution time of the GC >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> 43ms for a read latency may be acceptable according to the number of >>>>> request per second. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Eric >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> *De :* Jaydeep Chovatia [mailto:chovatia.jayd...@gmail.com] >>>>> *Envoyé :* mardi 22 septembre 2015 00:07 >>>>> *À :* user@cassandra.apache.org >>>>> *Objet :* High read latency >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> My application issues more read requests than write, I do see that >>>>> under load cfstats for one of the table is quite high around 43ms >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Local read count: 114479357 >>>>> >>>>> Local read latency: 43.442 ms >>>>> >>>>> Local write count: 22288868 >>>>> >>>>> Local write latency: 0.609 ms >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Here is my node configuration: >>>>> >>>>> RF=3, Read/Write with QUORUM, 64GB RAM, 48 CPU core. I have only 5 GB >>>>> of data on each node (and for experiment purpose I stored data in tmpfs) >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I've tried increasing concurrent_read count upto 512 but no help in >>>>> read latency. CPU/Memory/IO looks fine on system. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Any idea what should I tune? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Jaydeep >>>>> >>>>> ------------------------------ >>>>> >>>>> Ce message et les pièces jointes sont confidentiels et réservés à >>>>> l'usage exclusif de ses destinataires. Il peut également être protégé par >>>>> le secret professionnel. Si vous recevez ce message par erreur, merci d'en >>>>> avertir immédiatement l'expéditeur et de le détruire. L'intégrité du >>>>> message ne pouvant être assurée sur Internet, la responsabilité de >>>>> Worldline ne pourra être recherchée quant au contenu de ce message. Bien >>>>> que les meilleurs efforts soient faits pour maintenir cette transmission >>>>> exempte de tout virus, l'expéditeur ne donne aucune garantie à cet égard >>>>> et >>>>> sa responsabilité ne saurait être recherchée pour tout dommage résultant >>>>> d'un virus transmis. >>>>> >>>>> This e-mail and the documents attached are confidential and intended >>>>> solely for the addressee; it may also be privileged. If you receive this >>>>> e-mail in error, please notify the sender immediately and destroy it. As >>>>> its integrity cannot be secured on the Internet, the Worldline liability >>>>> cannot be triggered for the message content. Although the sender >>>>> endeavours >>>>> to maintain a computer virus-free network, the sender does not warrant >>>>> that >>>>> this transmission is virus-free and will not be liable for any damages >>>>> resulting from any virus transmitted. >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>> >> >> Regards, >> >> Ryan Svihla >> >> > >
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