Hi, Yes if you have mixed workload in your pipeline, it is matter of finding a right balance. Situation will be better in Flink 1.5, but the underlying issue will remain as well - in 1.5.0 there also will be no way to change network buffers configuration between stages of the single job.
Currently such explosion of records (one small records producing huge bunch of new records) is kind of anti pattern in Flink. Besides the problem that we were discussing, the other problem is that you can not checkpoint in the middle of processing the big record. I hope that this will change in future Flink releases, but currently those are the limitations. For your case, with initial records being file paths, it might be better to embed this logic within a data source, so your data source is already producing parsed records. For example FlinkKafkaConsumer is discovering topics/partitions on the fly, and the smallest transport unit is still “parsed record” and not a “topic” (“file path” in your case). With proper offsets implementation this also handles the problem of checkpointing in the middle of processing large file. Piotrek > On 23 May 2018, at 15:10, Andrei Shumanski <and...@shumanski.com> wrote: > > Hi Piotr, > > Thank you very much for your response. > I will try the new feature of Flink 1.5 when it is released. > > But I am not sure minimising buffers sizes will work in all scenarios. > If I understand correctly these settings are affecting the whole Flink > instance. > > We might have a flow like this: > > Source: Read file paths --> Unpack and parse files --> Analyse parsed data -> > …. > > So it will be a very small amount of data at first step but quite a lot of > parsed data later. > Changing buffer sizes globally will probably affect throughput of later > steps, as you wrote. > > >> On 23 May 2018, at 14:48, Piotr Nowojski <pi...@data-artisans.com >> <mailto:pi...@data-artisans.com>> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> Yes, Flink 1.5.0 will come with better tools to handle this problem. Namely >> you will be able to limit the “in flight” data, by controlling the number of >> assigned credits per channel/input gate. Even without any configuring Flink >> 1.5.0 will out of the box buffer less data, thus mitigating the problem. >> >> There are some tweaks that you could use to make 1.4.x work better. With >> small records that require heavy processing, generally speaking you do not >> need huge buffers sizes to keep max throughput. You can try to both reduce >> the buffer pool and reduce the memory segment sizes: >> >> https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs-release-1.4/ops/config.html#configuring-the-network-buffers >> >> <https://ci.apache.org/projects/flink/flink-docs-release-1.4/ops/config.html#configuring-the-network-buffers> >> • taskmanager.network.memory.fraction: Fraction of JVM memory to use >> for network buffers (DEFAULT: 0.1), >> • taskmanager.network.memory.min: Minimum memory size for network >> buffers in bytes (DEFAULT: 64 MB), >> • taskmanager.network.memory.max: Maximum memory size for network >> buffers in bytes (DEFAULT: 1 GB), and >> • taskmanager.memory.segment-size: Size of memory buffers used by the >> memory manager and the network stack in bytes (DEFAULT: 32768 (= 32 >> KiBytes)). >> >> Reducing those values will reduce amount of in-flight data that will be >> caught between checkpoints. But keep in mind that smaller values can lead to >> smaller throughput, but as I said, with small number of heavy processing >> records this is not an issue. In an extreme example, if your records are >> lets say 8 bytes each and require 1 hour to process, there is almost no need >> for any buffering. >> >> Piotrek >> >>> On 23 May 2018, at 12:58, Fabian Hueske <fhue...@gmail.com >>> <mailto:fhue...@gmail.com>> wrote: >>> >>> Hi Andrei, >>> >>> With the current version of Flink, there is no general solution to this >>> problem. >>> The upcoming version 1.5.0 of Flink adds a feature called credit-based flow >>> control which might help here. >>> >>> I'm adding @Piotr to this thread who knows more about the details of this >>> new feature. >>> >>> Best, Fabian >>> >>> 2018-05-18 11:59 GMT+02:00 Andrei Shumanski <and...@shumanski.com >>> <mailto:and...@shumanski.com>>: >>> Hi, >>> >>> >>> Right now it is a Kafka source, but I had the same issue when reading data >>> from local FS. >>> >>> It looks like a common problem for many (all?) sources. >>> When incoming data is very small (paths to large archives) but each entry >>> requires a significant time to process (unpack, parse, etc.) Flink detects >>> the back pressure with delay and too much data becomes part of the first >>> transaction. >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Best regards, >>> Andrei Shumanski >>> >>> >>> >>> On Fri, May 18, 2018 at 11:44 AM, makeyang <riverbuild...@hotmail.com >>> <mailto:riverbuild...@hotmail.com>> wrote: >>> Andrei Shumanski: >>> which source are u using? >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Sent from: >>> http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/ >>> <http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/> >>> >>> >> >