Commit Graph

31 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Igor Sugak
aba3409740 Back out "[codemod] - comment out unused parameters"
Reviewed By: igorsugak

fbshipit-source-id: 4a93675cc1931089ddd574cacdb15d228b1e5f37
2018-02-22 12:43:17 -08:00
David Lai
f4a030ce81 - comment out unused parameters
Reviewed By: everiq, igorsugak

Differential Revision: D7046710

fbshipit-source-id: 8e10b1f1e2aecebbfb229c742e214db887e5a461
2018-02-22 09:44:23 -08:00
Siying Dong
21696ba502 Replace dynamic_cast<>
Summary:
Replace dynamic_cast<> so that users can choose to build with RTTI off, so that they can save several bytes per object, and get tiny more memory available.
Some nontrivial changes:
1. Add Comparator::GetRootComparator() to get around the internal comparator hack
2. Add the two experiemental functions to DB
3. Add TableFactory::GetOptionString() to avoid unnecessary casting to get the option string
4. Since 3 is done, move the parsing option functions for table factory to table factory files too, to be symmetric.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/2645

Differential Revision: D5502723

Pulled By: siying

fbshipit-source-id: fd13cec5601cf68a554d87bfcf056f2ffa5fbf7c
2017-07-28 16:27:16 -07:00
Sagar Vemuri
72502cf227 Revert "comment out unused parameters"
Summary:
This reverts the previous commit 1d7048c598, which broke the build.

Did a `git revert 1d7048c`.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/2627

Differential Revision: D5476473

Pulled By: sagar0

fbshipit-source-id: 4756ff5c0dfc88c17eceb00e02c36176de728d06
2017-07-21 18:26:26 -07:00
Victor Gao
1d7048c598 comment out unused parameters
Summary: This uses `clang-tidy` to comment out unused parameters (in functions, methods and lambdas) in fbcode. Cases that the tool failed to handle are fixed manually.

Reviewed By: igorsugak

Differential Revision: D5454343

fbshipit-source-id: 5dee339b4334e25e963891b519a5aa81fbf627b2
2017-07-21 14:57:44 -07:00
Siying Dong
3c327ac2d0 Change RocksDB License
Summary: Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/2589

Differential Revision: D5431502

Pulled By: siying

fbshipit-source-id: 8ebf8c87883daa9daa54b2303d11ce01ab1f6f75
2017-07-15 16:11:23 -07:00
Mike Kolupaev
138b87eae4 Fix interaction between CompactionFilter::Decision::kRemoveAndSkipUnt…
Summary:
Fixes the following scenario:
 1. Set prefix extractor. Enable bloom filters, with `whole_key_filtering = false`. Use compaction filter that sometimes returns `kRemoveAndSkipUntil`.
 2. Do a compaction.
 3. Compaction creates an iterator with `total_order_seek = false`, calls `SeekToFirst()` on it, then repeatedly calls `Next()`.
 4. At some point compaction filter returns `kRemoveAndSkipUntil`.
 5. Compaction calls `Seek(skip_until)` on the iterator. The key that it seeks to happens to have prefix that doesn't match the bloom filter. Since `total_order_seek = false`, iterator becomes invalid, and compaction thinks that it has reached the end. The rest of the compaction input is silently discarded.

The fix is to make compaction iterator use `total_order_seek = true`.

The implementation for PlainTable is quite awkward. I've made `kRemoveAndSkipUntil` officially incompatible with PlainTable. If you try to use them together, compaction will fail, and DB will enter read-only mode (`bg_error_`). That's not a very graceful way to communicate a misconfiguration, but the alternatives don't seem worth the implementation time and complexity. To be able to check in advance that `kRemoveAndSkipUntil` is not going to be used with PlainTable, we'd need to extend the interface of either `CompactionFilter` or `InternalIterator`. It seems unlikely that anyone will ever want to use `kRemoveAndSkipUntil` with PlainTable: PlainTable probably has very few users, and `kRemoveAndSkipUntil` has only one user so far: us (logdevice).
Closes https://github.com/facebook/rocksdb/pull/2349

Differential Revision: D5110388

Pulled By: lightmark

fbshipit-source-id: ec29101a99d9dcd97db33923b87f72bce56cc17a
2017-06-02 15:11:38 -07:00
omegaga
e70020e4f6 Only cache level 0 indexes and filter when opening table reader
Summary: In T8216281 we decided to disable prefetching the index and filter during opening table handlers during startup (max_open_files = -1).

Test Plan: Rely on `IndexAndFilterBlocksOfNewTableAddedToCache` to guarantee L0 indexes and filters are still cached and change `PinL0IndexAndFilterBlocksTest` to make sure other levels are not cached (maybe add one more test to test we don't cache other levels?)

Reviewers: sdong, andrewkr

Reviewed By: andrewkr

Subscribers: andrewkr, dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D59913
2016-07-20 11:23:31 -07:00
Baraa Hamodi
21e95811d1 Updated all copyright headers to the new format. 2016-02-09 15:12:00 -08:00
Yueh-Hsuan Chiang
e11f676e34 Add OptionsUtil::LoadOptionsFromFile() API
Summary:
This patch adds OptionsUtil::LoadOptionsFromFile() and
OptionsUtil::LoadLatestOptionsFromDB(), which allow developers
to construct DBOptions and ColumnFamilyOptions from a RocksDB
options file.  Note that most pointer-typed options such as
merge_operator will not be constructed.

With this API, developers no longer need to remember all the
options in order to reopen an existing rocksdb instance like
the following:

  DBOptions db_options;
  std::vector<std::string> cf_names;
  std::vector<ColumnFamilyOptions> cf_opts;

  // Load primitive-typed options from an existing DB
  OptionsUtil::LoadLatestOptionsFromDB(
      dbname, &db_options, &cf_names, &cf_opts);

  // Initialize necessary pointer-typed options
  cf_opts[0].merge_operator.reset(new MyMergeOperator());
  ...

  // Construct the vector of ColumnFamilyDescriptor
  std::vector<ColumnFamilyDescriptor> cf_descs;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < cf_opts.size(); ++i) {
    cf_descs.emplace_back(cf_names[i], cf_opts[i]);
  }

  // Open the DB
  DB* db = nullptr;
  std::vector<ColumnFamilyHandle*> cf_handles;
  auto s = DB::Open(db_options, dbname, cf_descs,
                    &handles, &db);

Test Plan:
Augment existing tests in column_family_test
options_test
db_test

Reviewers: igor, IslamAbdelRahman, sdong, anthony

Reviewed By: anthony

Subscribers: dhruba, leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D49095
2015-11-12 06:52:43 -08:00
sdong
776bd8d5eb Pass column family ID to table property collector
Summary: Pass column family ID through TablePropertiesCollectorFactory::CreateTablePropertiesCollector() so that users can identify which column family this file is for and handle it differently.

Test Plan: Add unit test scenarios in tests related to table properties collectors to verify the information passed in is correct.

Reviewers: rven, yhchiang, anthony, kradhakrishnan, igor, IslamAbdelRahman

Reviewed By: IslamAbdelRahman

Subscribers: yoshinorim, leveldb, dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D48411
2015-10-09 14:36:51 -07:00
Islam AbdelRahman
45e9e4f0bb Refactor NewTableReader to accept TableReaderOptions
Summary:
Refactoring NewTableReader to accept TableReaderOptions
This will make it easier to add new options in the future, for example in this diff https://reviews.facebook.net/D46071

Test Plan: run existing tests

Reviewers: igor, yhchiang, anthony, rven, sdong

Reviewed By: sdong

Subscribers: dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D46179
2015-09-11 11:36:33 -07:00
sdong
6e9fbeb27c Move rate_limiter, write buffering, most perf context instrumentation and most random kill out of Env
Summary: We want to keep Env a think layer for better portability. Less platform dependent codes should be moved out of Env. In this patch, I create a wrapper of file readers and writers, and put rate limiting, write buffering, as well as most perf context instrumentation and random kill out of Env. It will make it easier to maintain multiple Env in the future.

Test Plan: Run all existing unit tests.

Reviewers: anthony, kradhakrishnan, IslamAbdelRahman, yhchiang, igor

Reviewed By: igor

Subscribers: leveldb, dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D42321
2015-07-17 16:58:18 -07:00
sdong
f9728640f3 "make format" against last 10 commits
Summary: This helps Windows port to format their changes, as discussed. Might have formatted some other codes too becasue last 10 commits include more.

Test Plan: Build it.

Reviewers: anthony, IslamAbdelRahman, kradhakrishnan, yhchiang, igor

Reviewed By: igor

Subscribers: leveldb, dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D41961
2015-07-13 13:50:18 -07:00
Dmitri Smirnov
18285c1e2f Windows Port from Microsoft
Summary: Make RocksDb build and run on Windows to be functionally
 complete and performant. All existing test cases run with no
 regressions. Performance numbers are in the pull-request.

 Test plan: make all of the existing unit tests pass, obtain perf numbers.

 Co-authored-by: Praveen Rao praveensinghrao@outlook.com
 Co-authored-by: Sherlock Huang baihan.huang@gmail.com
 Co-authored-by: Alex Zinoviev alexander.zinoviev@me.com
 Co-authored-by: Dmitri Smirnov dmitrism@microsoft.com
2015-07-01 16:13:56 -07:00
sdong
953a885ebf A new call back to TablePropertiesCollector to allow users know the entry is add, delete or merge
Summary:
Currently users have no idea a key is add, delete or merge from TablePropertiesCollector call back. Add a new function to add it.

Also refactor the codes so that
(1) make table property collector and internal table property collector two separate data structures with the later one now exposed
(2) table builders only receive internal table properties

Test Plan: Add cases in table_properties_collector_test to cover both of old and new ways of using TablePropertiesCollector.

Reviewers: yhchiang, igor.sugak, rven, igor

Reviewed By: rven, igor

Subscribers: meyering, yoshinorim, maykov, leveldb, dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D35373
2015-04-06 10:27:21 -07:00
Sameet Agarwal
e7c434c364 Add columnfamily option optimize_filters_for_hits to optimize for key hits only
Summary:
    Summary:
    Added a new option to ColumnFamllyOptions  - optimize_filters_for_hits. This option can be used in the case where most
    accesses to the store are key hits and we dont need to optimize performance for key misses.
    This is useful when you have a very large database and most of your lookups succeed.  The option allows the store to
     not store and use filters in the last level (the largest level which contains data). These filters can take a large amount of
     space for large databases (in memory and on-disk). For the last level, these filters are only useful for key misses and not
     for key hits. If we are not optimizing for key misses, we can choose to not store these filters for that level.

    This option is only provided for BlockBasedTable. We skip the filters when we are compacting

Test Plan:
1. Modified db_test toalso run tests with an additonal option (skip_filters_on_last_level)
 2. Added another unit test to db_test which specifically tests that filters are being skipped

Reviewers: rven, igor, sdong

Reviewed By: sdong

Subscribers: lgalanis, yoshinorim, MarkCallaghan, rven, dhruba, leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D33717
2015-02-26 16:25:56 -08:00
Igor Canadi
767777c2bd Turn on -Wshorten-64-to-32 and fix all the errors
Summary:
We need to turn on -Wshorten-64-to-32 for mobile. See D1671432 (internal phabricator) for details.

This diff turns on the warning flag and fixes all the errors. There were also some interesting errors that I might call bugs, especially in plain table. Going forward, I think it makes sense to have this flag turned on and be very very careful when converting 64-bit to 32-bit variables.

Test Plan: compiles

Reviewers: ljin, rven, yhchiang, sdong

Reviewed By: yhchiang

Subscribers: bobbaldwin, dhruba, leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D28689
2014-11-11 16:47:22 -05:00
Lei Jin
2dd9bfe3a8 Sanitize block-based table index type and check prefix_extractor
Summary:
Respond to issue reported
https://www.facebook.com/groups/rocksdb.dev/permalink/651090261656158/
Change the Sanitize signature to take both DBOptions and CFOptions

Test Plan: unit test

Reviewers: sdong, yhchiang, igor

Reviewed By: igor

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D25041
2014-10-17 21:18:36 -07:00
Lei Jin
581442d446 option to choose module when calculating CuckooTable hash
Summary:
Using module to calculate hash makes lookup ~8% slower. But it has its
benefit: file size is more predictable, more space enffient

Test Plan: db_bench

Reviewers: igor, yhchiang, sdong

Reviewed By: sdong

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D23691
2014-09-25 13:53:27 -07:00
Lei Jin
51af7c326c CuckooTable: add one option to allow identity function for the first hash function
Summary:
MurmurHash becomes expensive when we do millions Get() a second in one
thread. Add this option to allow the first hash function to use identity
function as hash function. It results in QPS increase from 3.7M/s to
~4.3M/s. I did not observe improvement for end to end RocksDB
performance. This may be caused by other bottlenecks that I will address
in a separate diff.

Test Plan:
```
[ljin@dev1964 rocksdb] ./cuckoo_table_reader_test --enable_perf --file_dir=/dev/shm --write --identity_as_first_hash=0
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.WhenKeyExists
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.WhenKeyExistsWithUint64Comparator
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.CheckIterator
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.CheckIteratorUint64
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.WhenKeyNotFound
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.TestReadPerformance
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.272us (3.7 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.138us (7.2 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.142us (7.1 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.142us (7.0 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.144us (6.9 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 125829120

With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.201us (5.0 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.121us (8.3 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.123us (8.1 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.121us (8.3 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.112us (8.9 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 104857600

With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.251us (4.0 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.107us (9.4 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.099us (10.1 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.100us (10.0 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.116us (8.6 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 83886080

With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.189us (5.3 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.095us (10.5 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.096us (10.4 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.098us (10.2 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.105us (9.5 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 73400320

[ljin@dev1964 rocksdb] ./cuckoo_table_reader_test --enable_perf --file_dir=/dev/shm --write --identity_as_first_hash=1
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.WhenKeyExists
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.WhenKeyExistsWithUint64Comparator
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.CheckIterator
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.CheckIteratorUint64
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.WhenKeyNotFound
==== Test CuckooReaderTest.TestReadPerformance
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.230us (4.3 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.086us (11.7 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.088us (11.3 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.083us (12.1 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 125829120
With 125829120 items, utilization is 93.75%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.083us (12.1 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 125829120

With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.159us (6.3 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.078us (12.8 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.080us (12.6 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.080us (12.5 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 104857600
With 104857600 items, utilization is 78.12%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.082us (12.2 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 104857600

With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.154us (6.5 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.077us (13.0 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.077us (12.9 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.078us (12.8 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 83886080
With 83886080 items, utilization is 62.50%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.079us (12.6 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 83886080

With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.218us (4.6 Mqps) with batch size of 0, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.083us (12.0 Mqps) with batch size of 10, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.085us (11.7 Mqps) with batch size of 25, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.086us (11.6 Mqps) with batch size of 50, # of found keys 73400320
With 73400320 items, utilization is 54.69%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.078us (12.8 Mqps) with batch size of 100, # of found keys 73400320
```

Reviewers: sdong, igor, yhchiang

Reviewed By: igor

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D23451
2014-09-18 11:00:48 -07:00
Lei Jin
5665e5e285 introduce ImmutableOptions
Summary:
As a preparation to support updating some options dynamically, I'd like
to first introduce ImmutableOptions, which is a subset of Options that
cannot be changed during the course of a DB lifetime without restart.

ColumnFamily will keep both Options and ImmutableOptions. Any component
below ColumnFamily should only take ImmutableOptions in their
constructor. Other options should be taken from APIs, which will be
allowed to adjust dynamically.

I am yet to make changes to memtable and other related classes to take
ImmutableOptions in their ctor. That can be done in a seprate diff as
this one is already pretty big.

Test Plan: make all check

Reviewers: yhchiang, igor, sdong

Reviewed By: sdong

Subscribers: leveldb, dhruba

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D22545
2014-09-04 16:18:36 -07:00
Lei Jin
9b58c73c7c call SanitizeDBOptionsByCFOptions() in the right place
Summary: It only covers Open() with default column family right now

Test Plan: make release

Reviewers: igor, yhchiang, sdong

Reviewed By: sdong

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D22467
2014-09-02 14:42:23 -07:00
Radheshyam Balasundaram
d20b8cfaa1 Improve Cuckoo Table Reader performance. Inlined hash function and number of buckets a power of two.
Summary:
Use inlined hash functions instead of function pointer. Make number of buckets a power of two and use bitwise and instead of mod.
After these changes, we get almost 50% improvement in performance.

Results:
With 120000000 items, utilization is 89.41%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.231us (4.3 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.229us (4.4 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.185us (5.4 Mqps) with batch size of 0
With 120000000 items, utilization is 89.41%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.108us (9.3 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.100us (10.0 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.103us (9.7 Mqps) with batch size of 10
With 120000000 items, utilization is 89.41%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.101us (9.9 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.098us (10.2 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.097us (10.3 Mqps) with batch size of 25
With 120000000 items, utilization is 89.41%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.100us (10.0 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.097us (10.3 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.097us (10.3 Mqps) with batch size of 50
With 120000000 items, utilization is 89.41%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.102us (9.8 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.098us (10.2 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.115us (8.7 Mqps) with batch size of 100

With 100000000 items, utilization is 74.51%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.201us (5.0 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.155us (6.5 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.152us (6.6 Mqps) with batch size of 0
With 100000000 items, utilization is 74.51%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.089us (11.3 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.084us (11.9 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.086us (11.6 Mqps) with batch size of 10
With 100000000 items, utilization is 74.51%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.087us (11.5 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.085us (11.7 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.093us (10.8 Mqps) with batch size of 25
With 100000000 items, utilization is 74.51%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.094us (10.6 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.094us (10.7 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.093us (10.8 Mqps) with batch size of 50
With 100000000 items, utilization is 74.51%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.092us (10.9 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.089us (11.2 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.088us (11.3 Mqps) with batch size of 100

With 80000000 items, utilization is 59.60%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.154us (6.5 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.168us (6.0 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.190us (5.3 Mqps) with batch size of 0
With 80000000 items, utilization is 59.60%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.081us (12.4 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.077us (13.0 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.083us (12.1 Mqps) with batch size of 10
With 80000000 items, utilization is 59.60%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.077us (13.0 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.073us (13.7 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.073us (13.7 Mqps) with batch size of 25
With 80000000 items, utilization is 59.60%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.076us (13.1 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.072us (13.8 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.072us (13.8 Mqps) with batch size of 50
With 80000000 items, utilization is 59.60%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.077us (13.0 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.074us (13.6 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.073us (13.6 Mqps) with batch size of 100

With 70000000 items, utilization is 52.15%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.190us (5.3 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.186us (5.4 Mqps) with batch size of 0
Time taken per op is 0.184us (5.4 Mqps) with batch size of 0
With 70000000 items, utilization is 52.15%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.079us (12.7 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.070us (14.2 Mqps) with batch size of 10
Time taken per op is 0.072us (14.0 Mqps) with batch size of 10
With 70000000 items, utilization is 52.15%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.080us (12.5 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.072us (14.0 Mqps) with batch size of 25
Time taken per op is 0.071us (14.1 Mqps) with batch size of 25
With 70000000 items, utilization is 52.15%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.082us (12.1 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.071us (14.1 Mqps) with batch size of 50
Time taken per op is 0.073us (13.6 Mqps) with batch size of 50
With 70000000 items, utilization is 52.15%, number of hash functions: 2.
Time taken per op is 0.080us (12.5 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.077us (13.0 Mqps) with batch size of 100
Time taken per op is 0.078us (12.8 Mqps) with batch size of 100

Test Plan:
make check all
make valgrind_check
make asan_check

Reviewers: sdong, ljin

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D22539
2014-08-29 19:06:15 -07:00
Radheshyam Balasundaram
7f71448388 Implementing a cache friendly version of Cuckoo Hash
Summary: This implements a cache friendly version of Cuckoo Hash in which, in case of collission, we try to insert in next few locations. The size of the neighborhood to check is taken as an input parameter in builder and stored in the table.

Test Plan:
make check all
cuckoo_table_{db,reader,builder}_test

Reviewers: sdong, ljin

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D22455
2014-08-28 10:42:23 -07:00
Radheshyam Balasundaram
4142a3e783 Adding a user comparator for comparing Uint64 slices.
Summary:
- New Uint64 comparator
- Modify Reader and Builder to take custom user comparators instead of bytewise comparator
- Modify logic for choosing unused user key in builder
- Modify iterator logic in reader
- test changes

Test Plan:
cuckoo_table_{builder,reader,db}_test
make check all

Reviewers: ljin, sdong

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: dhruba, leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D22377
2014-08-27 10:39:31 -07:00
Lei Jin
a98badff16 print table options
Summary: Add a virtual function in table factory that will print table options

Test Plan: make release

Reviewers: igor, yhchiang, sdong

Reviewed By: sdong

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D22149
2014-08-25 14:24:09 -07:00
Yueh-Hsuan Chiang
63a2215c63 Improve Options sanitization and add MmapReadRequired() to TableFactory
Summary:
Currently, PlainTable must use mmap_reads.  When PlainTable is used but
allow_mmap_reads is not set, rocksdb will fail in flush.

This diff improve Options sanitization and add MmapReadRequired() to
TableFactory.

Test Plan:
export ROCKSDB_TESTS=PlainTableOptionsSanitizeTest
make db_test -j32
./db_test

Reviewers: sdong, ljin

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: you, leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D21939
2014-08-20 15:53:39 -07:00
Radheshyam Balasundaram
9674c11d01 Integrating Cuckoo Hash SST Table format into RocksDB
Summary:
Contains the following changes:
- Implementation of cuckoo_table_factory
- Adding cuckoo table into AdaptiveTableFactory
- Adding cuckoo_table_db_test, similar to lines of plain_table_db_test
- Minor fixes to Reader: When a key is found in the table, return the key found instead of the search key.
- Minor fixes to Builder: Add table properties that are required by Version::UpdateTemporaryStats() during Get operation. Don't define curr_node as a reference variable as the memory locations may get reassigned during tree.push_back operation, leading to invalid memory access.

Test Plan:
cuckoo_table_reader_test --enable_perf
cuckoo_table_builder_test
cuckoo_table_db_test
make check all
make valgrind_check
make asan_check

Reviewers: sdong, igor, yhchiang, ljin

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D21219
2014-08-11 20:21:07 -07:00
Radheshyam Balasundaram
07a7d870b8 Addressing TODOs in CuckooTableBuilder
Summary:
Contains the following changes in CuckooTableBuilder:
- Take an extra parameter in constructor to identify last level file.
- Implement a better way to identify if a bucket has been inserted into the tree already during BFS search.
- Minor typos

Test Plan:
make cuckoo_table_builder
./cuckoo_table_builder
make valgrind_check

Reviewers: sdong, igor, yhchiang, ljin

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D20445
2014-07-24 10:07:41 -07:00
Radheshyam Balasundaram
cf3da899b0 Adding a new SST table builder based on Cuckoo Hashing
Summary:
Cuckoo Hashing based SST table builder. Contains:
- Cuckoo Hashing logic and file storage logic.
- Unit tests for logic

Test Plan:
make cuckoo_table_builder_test
./cuckoo_table_builder_test
make check all

Reviewers: yhchiang, igor, sdong, ljin

Reviewed By: ljin

Subscribers: dhruba, leveldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D19545
2014-07-21 13:26:09 -07:00