rocksdb/include/rocksdb/memtablerep.h
sdong df9069d23f In DB::NewIterator(), try to allocate the whole iterator tree in an arena
Summary:
In this patch, try to allocate the whole iterator tree starting from DBIter from an arena
1. ArenaWrappedDBIter is created when serves as the entry point of an iterator tree, with an arena in it.
2. Add an option to create iterator from arena for following iterators: DBIter, MergingIterator, MemtableIterator, all mem table's iterators, all table reader's iterators and two level iterator.
3. MergeIteratorBuilder is created to incrementally build the tree of internal iterators. It is passed to mem table list and version set and add iterators to it.

Limitations:
(1) Only DB::NewIterator() without tailing uses the arena. Other cases, including readonly DB and compactions are still from malloc
(2) Two level iterator itself is allocated in arena, but not iterators inside it.

Test Plan: make all check

Reviewers: ljin, haobo

Reviewed By: haobo

Subscribers: leveldb, dhruba, yhchiang, igor

Differential Revision: https://reviews.facebook.net/D18513
2014-06-02 17:44:57 -07:00

285 lines
12 KiB
C++

// Copyright (c) 2013, Facebook, Inc. All rights reserved.
// This source code is licensed under the BSD-style license found in the
// LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. An additional grant
// of patent rights can be found in the PATENTS file in the same directory.
//
// This file contains the interface that must be implemented by any collection
// to be used as the backing store for a MemTable. Such a collection must
// satisfy the following properties:
// (1) It does not store duplicate items.
// (2) It uses MemTableRep::KeyComparator to compare items for iteration and
// equality.
// (3) It can be accessed concurrently by multiple readers and can support
// during reads. However, it needn't support multiple concurrent writes.
// (4) Items are never deleted.
// The liberal use of assertions is encouraged to enforce (1).
//
// The factory will be passed an Arena object when a new MemTableRep is
// requested. The API for this object is in rocksdb/arena.h.
//
// Users can implement their own memtable representations. We include three
// types built in:
// - SkipListRep: This is the default; it is backed by a skip list.
// - HashSkipListRep: The memtable rep that is best used for keys that are
// structured like "prefix:suffix" where iteration within a prefix is
// common and iteration across different prefixes is rare. It is backed by
// a hash map where each bucket is a skip list.
// - VectorRep: This is backed by an unordered std::vector. On iteration, the
// vector is sorted. It is intelligent about sorting; once the MarkReadOnly()
// has been called, the vector will only be sorted once. It is optimized for
// random-write-heavy workloads.
//
// The last four implementations are designed for situations in which
// iteration over the entire collection is rare since doing so requires all the
// keys to be copied into a sorted data structure.
#pragma once
#include <memory>
#include <stdint.h>
namespace rocksdb {
class Arena;
class LookupKey;
class Slice;
class SliceTransform;
class Logger;
typedef void* KeyHandle;
class MemTableRep {
public:
// KeyComparator provides a means to compare keys, which are internal keys
// concatenated with values.
class KeyComparator {
public:
// Compare a and b. Return a negative value if a is less than b, 0 if they
// are equal, and a positive value if a is greater than b
virtual int operator()(const char* prefix_len_key1,
const char* prefix_len_key2) const = 0;
virtual int operator()(const char* prefix_len_key,
const Slice& key) const = 0;
virtual ~KeyComparator() { }
};
explicit MemTableRep(Arena* arena) : arena_(arena) {}
// Allocate a buf of len size for storing key. The idea is that a specific
// memtable representation knows its underlying data structure better. By
// allowing it to allocate memory, it can possibly put correlated stuff
// in consecutive memory area to make processor prefetching more efficient.
virtual KeyHandle Allocate(const size_t len, char** buf);
// Insert key into the collection. (The caller will pack key and value into a
// single buffer and pass that in as the parameter to Insert).
// REQUIRES: nothing that compares equal to key is currently in the
// collection.
virtual void Insert(KeyHandle handle) = 0;
// Returns true iff an entry that compares equal to key is in the collection.
virtual bool Contains(const char* key) const = 0;
// Notify this table rep that it will no longer be added to. By default, does
// nothing.
virtual void MarkReadOnly() { }
// Look up key from the mem table, since the first key in the mem table whose
// user_key matches the one given k, call the function callback_func(), with
// callback_args directly forwarded as the first parameter, and the mem table
// key as the second parameter. If the return value is false, then terminates.
// Otherwise, go through the next key.
// It's safe for Get() to terminate after having finished all the potential
// key for the k.user_key(), or not.
//
// Default:
// Get() function with a default value of dynamically construct an iterator,
// seek and call the call back function.
virtual void Get(const LookupKey& k, void* callback_args,
bool (*callback_func)(void* arg, const char* entry));
// Report an approximation of how much memory has been used other than memory
// that was allocated through the arena.
virtual size_t ApproximateMemoryUsage() = 0;
virtual ~MemTableRep() { }
// Iteration over the contents of a skip collection
class Iterator {
public:
// Initialize an iterator over the specified collection.
// The returned iterator is not valid.
// explicit Iterator(const MemTableRep* collection);
virtual ~Iterator() {}
// Returns true iff the iterator is positioned at a valid node.
virtual bool Valid() const = 0;
// Returns the key at the current position.
// REQUIRES: Valid()
virtual const char* key() const = 0;
// Advances to the next position.
// REQUIRES: Valid()
virtual void Next() = 0;
// Advances to the previous position.
// REQUIRES: Valid()
virtual void Prev() = 0;
// Advance to the first entry with a key >= target
virtual void Seek(const Slice& internal_key, const char* memtable_key) = 0;
// Position at the first entry in collection.
// Final state of iterator is Valid() iff collection is not empty.
virtual void SeekToFirst() = 0;
// Position at the last entry in collection.
// Final state of iterator is Valid() iff collection is not empty.
virtual void SeekToLast() = 0;
};
// Return an iterator over the keys in this representation.
// arena: If not null, the arena needs to be used to allocate the Iterator.
// When destroying the iterator, the caller will not call "delete"
// but Iterator::~Iterator() directly. The destructor needs to destroy
// all the states but those allocated in arena.
virtual Iterator* GetIterator(Arena* arena = nullptr) = 0;
// Return an iterator over at least the keys with the specified user key. The
// iterator may also allow access to other keys, but doesn't have to. Default:
// GetIterator().
virtual Iterator* GetIterator(const Slice& user_key) {
return GetIterator(nullptr);
}
// Return an iterator that has a special Seek semantics. The result of
// a Seek might only include keys with the same prefix as the target key.
// arena: If not null, the arena needs to be used to allocate the Iterator.
// When destroying the iterator, the caller will not call "delete"
// but Iterator::~Iterator() directly. The destructor needs to destroy
// all the states but those allocated in arena.
virtual Iterator* GetDynamicPrefixIterator(Arena* arena = nullptr) {
return GetIterator(arena);
}
// Return true if the current MemTableRep supports merge operator.
// Default: true
virtual bool IsMergeOperatorSupported() const { return true; }
// Return true if the current MemTableRep supports snapshot
// Default: true
virtual bool IsSnapshotSupported() const { return true; }
protected:
// When *key is an internal key concatenated with the value, returns the
// user key.
virtual Slice UserKey(const char* key) const;
Arena* arena_;
};
// This is the base class for all factories that are used by RocksDB to create
// new MemTableRep objects
class MemTableRepFactory {
public:
virtual ~MemTableRepFactory() {}
virtual MemTableRep* CreateMemTableRep(const MemTableRep::KeyComparator&,
Arena*, const SliceTransform*,
Logger* logger) = 0;
virtual const char* Name() const = 0;
};
// This uses a skip list to store keys. It is the default.
class SkipListFactory : public MemTableRepFactory {
public:
virtual MemTableRep* CreateMemTableRep(const MemTableRep::KeyComparator&,
Arena*, const SliceTransform*,
Logger* logger) override;
virtual const char* Name() const override { return "SkipListFactory"; }
};
#ifndef ROCKSDB_LITE
// This creates MemTableReps that are backed by an std::vector. On iteration,
// the vector is sorted. This is useful for workloads where iteration is very
// rare and writes are generally not issued after reads begin.
//
// Parameters:
// count: Passed to the constructor of the underlying std::vector of each
// VectorRep. On initialization, the underlying array will be at least count
// bytes reserved for usage.
class VectorRepFactory : public MemTableRepFactory {
const size_t count_;
public:
explicit VectorRepFactory(size_t count = 0) : count_(count) { }
virtual MemTableRep* CreateMemTableRep(const MemTableRep::KeyComparator&,
Arena*, const SliceTransform*,
Logger* logger) override;
virtual const char* Name() const override {
return "VectorRepFactory";
}
};
// This class contains a fixed array of buckets, each
// pointing to a skiplist (null if the bucket is empty).
// bucket_count: number of fixed array buckets
// skiplist_height: the max height of the skiplist
// skiplist_branching_factor: probabilistic size ratio between adjacent
// link lists in the skiplist
extern MemTableRepFactory* NewHashSkipListRepFactory(
size_t bucket_count = 1000000, int32_t skiplist_height = 4,
int32_t skiplist_branching_factor = 4
);
// The factory is to create memtables with a hashed linked list:
// it contains a fixed array of buckets, each pointing to a sorted single
// linked list (null if the bucket is empty).
// @bucket_count: number of fixed array buckets
// @huge_page_tlb_size: if <=0, allocate the hash table bytes from malloc.
// Otherwise from huge page TLB. The user needs to reserve
// huge pages for it to be allocated, like:
// sysctl -w vm.nr_hugepages=20
// See linux doc Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt
extern MemTableRepFactory* NewHashLinkListRepFactory(
size_t bucket_count = 50000, size_t huge_page_tlb_size = 0);
// This factory creates a cuckoo-hashing based mem-table representation.
// Cuckoo-hash is a closed-hash strategy, in which all key/value pairs
// are stored in the bucket array itself intead of in some data structures
// external to the bucket array. In addition, each key in cuckoo hash
// has a constant number of possible buckets in the bucket array. These
// two properties together makes cuckoo hash more memory efficient and
// a constant worst-case read time. Cuckoo hash is best suitable for
// point-lookup workload.
//
// When inserting a key / value, it first checks whether one of its possible
// buckets is empty. If so, the key / value will be inserted to that vacant
// bucket. Otherwise, one of the keys originally stored in one of these
// possible buckets will be "kicked out" and move to one of its possible
// buckets (and possibly kicks out another victim.) In the current
// implementation, such "kick-out" path is bounded. If it cannot find a
// "kick-out" path for a specific key, this key will be stored in a backup
// structure, and the current memtable to be forced to immutable.
//
// Note that currently this mem-table representation does not support
// snapshot (i.e., it only queries latest state) and iterators. In addition,
// MultiGet operation might also lose its atomicity due to the lack of
// snapshot support.
//
// Parameters:
// write_buffer_size: the write buffer size in bytes.
// average_data_size: the average size of key + value in bytes. This value
// together with write_buffer_size will be used to compute the number
// of buckets.
// hash_function_count: the number of hash functions that will be used by
// the cuckoo-hash. The number also equals to the number of possible
// buckets each key will have.
extern MemTableRepFactory* NewHashCuckooRepFactory(
size_t write_buffer_size, size_t average_data_size = 64,
unsigned int hash_function_count = 4);
#endif // ROCKSDB_LITE
} // namespace rocksdb