Thank for the help,
How does the compaction run? Does it clean old compaction files while
running or only at the end, I want to manage the free space so not run
out while its running?
*From:* Jim Shaw <jxys...@gmail.com>
*Sent:* Wednesday, September 15, 2021 3:49 PM
*To:* user@cassandra.apache.org
*Subject:* Re: TWCS on Non TTL Data
You may try roll up the data, i.e. a table only 1 month data, old
data roll up to a table keep a year data.
Thanks,
Jim
On Wed, Sep 15, 2021 at 1:26 AM Isaeed Mohanna <isa...@xsense.co
<mailto:isa...@xsense.co>> wrote:
My cluster column is the time series timestamp, so basically
sourceId, metric type for partition key and timestamp for the
clustering key the rest of the fields are just values outside of
the primary key. Our reads request are simply give me values for a
time range of a specific sourceId,Metric combination. So I am
guess that during read the sstables that contain the partition key
will be found and out of those the ones that are out of the range
will be excluded, correct?
In practice our queries are up to a month by default, only rarely
we fetch more when someone is exporting the data or so.
In reality also we get old data, that is a source will send its
information late instead of sending it in realtime it will send
all last month\week\day data at once, in that case I guess the
data will end up in current bucket, will that affect performance?
Assuming I start with a 1 week bucket, I could later change the
time window right?
Thanks
*From:* Jeff Jirsa <jji...@gmail.com <mailto:jji...@gmail.com>>
*Sent:* Tuesday, September 14, 2021 10:35 PM
*To:* cassandra <user@cassandra.apache.org
<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>
*Subject:* Re: TWCS on Non TTL Data
Inline
On Tue, Sep 14, 2021 at 11:47 AM Isaeed Mohanna <isa...@xsense.co
<mailto:isa...@xsense.co>> wrote:
Hi Jeff
My data is partitioned by a sourceId and metric, a source is
usually active up to a year after which there is no additional
writes for the partition, and reads become scarce, so although
this is not an explicit time component, its time based, will
that suffice?
I guess it means that a single read may touch a year of sstables.
Not great, but perhaps not fatal. Hopefully your reads avoid that
in practice. We'd need the full schema to be very sure (does
clustering column include month/day? if so, there are cases where
that can help exclude sstables)
If I use a week bucket we will be able to serve last few days
reads from one file and last month from ~5 which is the most
common queries, do u think doing a months bucket a good idea?
That will allow reading from one file most of the time but the
size of each SSTable will be ~5 times bigger
It'll be 1-4 for most common (up to 4 for same bucket reads
because STCS in the first bucket is triggered at min_threshold=4),
and 5 max, seems reasonable. Way better than the 200 or so you're
doing now.
When changing the compaction strategy via JMX, do I need to
issue the alter table command at the end so it will be
reflected in the schema or is it taking care of automatically?
(I am using cassandra 3.11.11)
At the end, yes.
Thanks a lot for your help.
*From:* Jeff Jirsa <jji...@gmail.com <mailto:jji...@gmail.com>>
*Sent:* Tuesday, September 14, 2021 4:51 PM
*To:* cassandra <user@cassandra.apache.org
<mailto:user@cassandra.apache.org>>
*Subject:* Re: TWCS on Non TTL Data
On Tue, Sep 14, 2021 at 5:42 AM Isaeed Mohanna
<isa...@xsense.co <mailto:isa...@xsense.co>> wrote:
Hi
I have a table that stores time series data, the data is
not TTLed since we want to retain the data for the
foreseeable future, and there are no updates or deletes.
(deletes could happens rarely in case some scrambled data
reached the table, but its extremely rare).
Usually we do constant write of incoming data to the table
~ 5 milion a day, mostly newly generated data in the past
week, but we also get old data that got stuck somewhere
but not that often. Usually our reads are for the most
recent data last month – three. But we do fetch old data
as well in a specific time period in the past.
Lately we have been facing performance trouble with this
table see histogram below, When compaction is working on
the table the performance even drops to 10-20 seconds!!
Percentile SSTables Write Latency Read Latency
Partition Size Cell Count
(micros) (micros) (bytes)
50% 215.00 17.08 89970.66 1916 149
75% 446.00 24.60 223875.79 2759 215
95% 535.00 35.43 464228.84 8239 642
98% 642.00 51.01 668489.53 24601 1916
99% 642.00 73.46 962624.93 42510 3311
Min 0.00 2.30 10090.81 43 0
Max 770.00 1358.10 2395318.86 5839588
454826
As u can see we are scaning hundreds of sstables, turns
out we are using DTCS (min:4,max32) , the table folder
contains ~33K files of ~130GB per node (cleanup pending
after increasing the cluster), And compaction takes a very
long time to complete.
As I understood DTCS is deprecated so my questions
1. should we switch to TWCS even though our data is not
TTLed since we do not do delete at all can we still
use it? Will it improve performance?
It will probably be better than DTCS here, but you'll still
have potentially lots of sstables over time.
Lots of sstables in itself isn't a big deal, the problem comes
from scanning more than a handful on each read. Does your
table have some form of date bucketing to avoid touching old
data files?
1. If we should switch I am thinking of using a time
window of a week, this way the read will scan 10s of
sstables instead of hundreds today. Does it sound
reasonable?
10s is better than hundreds, but it's still a lot.
1. Is there a recommended size of a window bucket in
terms of disk space?
When I wrote it, I wrote it for a use case that had 30 windows
over the whole set of data. Since then, I've seen it used with
anywhere from 5 to 60 buckets.
With no TTL, you're effectively doing infinite buckets. So the
only way to ensure you're not touching too many sstables is to
put the date (in some form) into the partition key and let the
database use that (+bloom filters) to avoid reading too many
sstables.
1. If TWCS is not a good idea should I switch to STCS
instead could that yield in better performance than
current situation?
LCS will give you better read performance. STCS will probably
be better than DTCS given the 215 sstable p50 you're seeing
(which is crazy btw, I'm surprised you're not just OOMing)
1. What are the risk of changing compaction strategy on a
production system, can it be done on the fly? Or its
better to go through a full test, backup cycle?
The risk is you trigger a ton of compactions which drops the
performance of the whole system all at once and your front
door queries all time out.
You can approach this a few ways:
- Use the JMX endpoint to change compaction on one instance at
a time (rather than doing it in the schema), which lets you
control how many nodes are re-writing all their data at any
given point in time
- You can make an entirely new table, and then populate it by
reading from the old one and writing ot the new one, and then
you dont have the massive compaction kick off
- You can use user defined compaction to force compact some of
those 33k sstables into fewer sstables in advance, hopefully
taking away some of the pain you're seeing, before you fire
off the big compaction
The 3rd hint above - user defined compaction - will make TWCS
less effective, because TWCS uses the max timestamp per
sstable for bucketing, and you'd be merging sstables and
losing granularity.
Really though, the main thing you need to do is get a time
component in your partition key so you avoid scanning every
sstable looking for data, either that or bite the bullet and
use LCS so the compaction system keeps it at a manageable
level for reads.
1.
All input will be appreciated,
Thank you