Hi Gordon, Thanks for your prompt reply. So do you mean when we are about to checkpoint the state of an operator, we first copy its state and then checkpoint the copied state while the operator continues processing?
Thanks, Li > On Oct 17, 2016, at 11:10 AM, Tzu-Li (Gordon) Tai <tzuli...@apache.org> wrote: > > Hi! > > No, the operator does not need to pause processing input records while the > checkpointing of its state is in progress. > The checkpointing of operator state is asynchronous. The operator state does > not need to be immutable, since its a copy of the snapshot state that’s > checkpointed. > > Regards, > Gordon > > > On October 17, 2016 at 10:28:34 AM, Li Wang (wangli1...@gmail.com > <mailto:wangli1...@gmail.com>) wrote: > >> Hi All, >> >> Any feedback is highly appreciated. >> >> Thanks. >> Li >> >> > On Oct 15, 2016, at 11:17 AM, Li Wang <wangli1...@gmail.com >> > <mailto:wangli1...@gmail.com>> wrote: >> > >> > Hi all, >> > >> > As far as I know, a stateful operator will checkpoint its current state to >> > a persistent storage when it receives all the barrier from all of its >> > upstream operators. My question is that does the operator doing the >> > checkpoint need to pause processing the input tuples for the next batch >> > until the checkpoint is done? If yes, will it introduce significant >> > processing latency when the state is large. If no, does this need the >> > operator state to be immutable? >> > >> > Thanks, >> > Li