Commit Graph

22 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ryan Gonzalez 19a705f80d Split reflists to share their contents across snapshots
In current aptly, each repository and snapshot has its own reflist in
the database. This brings a few problems with it:

- Given a sufficiently large repositories and snapshots, these lists can
  get enormous, reaching >1MB. This is a problem for LevelDB's overall
  performance, as it tends to prefer values around the confiruged block
  size (defaults to just 4KiB).
- When you take these large repositories and snapshot them, you have a
  full, new copy of the reflist, even if only a few packages changed.
  This means that having a lot of snapshots with a few changes causes
  the database to basically be full of largely duplicate reflists.
- All the duplication also means that many of the same refs are being
  loaded repeatedly, which can cause some slowdown but, more notably,
  eats up huge amounts of memory.
- Adding on more and more new repositories and snapshots will cause the
  time and memory spent on things like cleanup and publishing to grow
  roughly linearly.

At the core, there are two problems here:

- Reflists get very big because there are just a lot of packages.
- Different reflists can tend to duplicate much of the same contents.

*Split reflists* aim at solving this by separating reflists into 64
*buckets*. Package refs are sorted into individual buckets according to
the following system:

- Take the first 3 letters of the package name, after dropping a `lib`
  prefix. (Using only the first 3 letters will cause packages with
  similar prefixes to end up in the same bucket, under the assumption
  that packages with similar names tend to be updated together.)
- Take the 64-bit xxhash of these letters. (xxhash was chosen because it
  relatively good distribution across the individual bits, which is
  important for the next step.)
- Use the first 6 bits of the hash (range [0:63]) as an index into the
  buckets.

Once refs are placed in buckets, a sha256 digest of all the refs in the
bucket is taken. These buckets are then stored in the database, split
into roughly block-sized segments, and all the repositories and
snapshots simply store an array of bucket digests.

This approach means that *repositories and snapshots can share their
reflist buckets*. If a snapshot is taken of a repository, it will have
the same contents, so its split reflist will point to the same buckets
as the base repository, and only one copy of each bucket is stored in
the database. When some packages in the repository change, only the
buckets containing those packages will be modified; all the other
buckets will remain unchanged, and thus their contents will still be
shared. Later on, when these reflists are loaded, each bucket is only
loaded once, short-cutting loaded many megabytes of data. In effect,
split reflists are essentially copy-on-write, with only the changed
buckets stored individually.

Changing the disk format means that a migration needs to take place, so
that task is moved into the database cleanup step, which will migrate
reflists over to split reflists, as well as delete any unused reflist
buckets.

All the reflist tests are also changed to additionally test out split
reflists; although the internal logic is all shared (since buckets are,
themselves, just normal reflists), some special additions are needed to
have native versions of the various reflist helper methods.

In our tests, we've observed the following improvements:

- Memory usage during publish and database cleanup, with
  `GOMEMLIMIT=2GiB`, goes down from ~3.2GiB (larger than the memory
  limit!) to ~0.7GiB, a decrease of ~4.5x.
- Database size decreases from 1.3GB to 367MB.

*In my local tests*, publish times had also decreased down to mere
seconds but the same effect wasn't observed on the server, with the
times staying around the same. My suspicions are that this is due to I/O
performance: my local system is an M1 MBP, which almost certainly has
much faster disk speeds than our DigitalOcean block volumes. Split
reflists include a side effect of requiring more random accesses from
reading all the buckets by their keys, so if your random I/O
performance is slower, it might cancel out the benefits. That being
said, even in that case, the memory usage and database size advantages
still persist.

Signed-off-by: Ryan Gonzalez <ryan.gonzalez@collabora.com>
2025-02-15 23:49:21 +01:00
André Roth 75ca51b23b improve error message 2024-10-10 12:03:13 +02:00
Ryan Gonzalez 79975bf2b6 Fix reflist diffs failing to compact when one of the inputs ends
The previous reflist logic would early-exit the loop body if one of the
lists was empty, but that skips the compacting logic entirely.

Instead of doing the early-exit, we can leave a list's ref as nil when
the list end is reached and then flip the comparison result, which will
essentially treat it as being greater than all others. This should
preserve the general behavior without omitting the compaction.

Signed-off-by: Ryan Gonzalez <ryan.gonzalez@collabora.com>
2024-04-24 17:36:36 +02:00
Andrey Smirnov 67e38955ae Refactor database code to support standalone batches, transactions.
This is spin-off of changes from #459.

Transactions are not being used yet, but batches are updated to work
with the new API.

`database/` package was refactored to split abstract interfaces and
implementation via goleveldb. This should make it easier to implement
new database types.
2019-08-09 00:46:40 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov b8c5303fdb Fix paths after repository transfer to aptly-dev 2018-04-18 21:19:43 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov 211ac0501f Rework the way database is open/re-open in aptly
Allow database to be initialized without opening, unify all the
open paths to retry on failure.

In API router make sure open requests are matched with acks in explicit
way.

This also enables re-open attempts in all the aptly commands, so it
should make running aptly CLI much easier now hopefully.

Fix up system tests for oldoldstable ;)
2017-07-05 00:17:48 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov 516dd7b044 Switch to gometalinter
Only small amount of required checks is enabled,
plan is to enable more linters as issues are fixed in the code.
2017-03-23 01:51:08 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov e63adffdf5 Introduce back reflist merging without conflict removal. aptly db cleanup requires
full reference list collection. #217

Fixes bug with aptly db cleanup removing conflicting packages.
2015-03-06 14:54:29 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov 903d4cefba gofmt -s 2015-02-22 14:29:09 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov dcf5798229 Merge remote-tracking branch 'cread/gocheck' 2015-01-05 14:23:38 +03:00
Andrey Smirnov 0e552eda55 When merging reflists, never allow duplicate (name, version, arch) tuples. #154
Even for conficting packages.
2014-12-11 21:56:50 +03:00
Chris Read daf887e54f Upgrade gocheck 2014-11-05 13:27:15 -06:00
Andrey Smirnov dd7b7b5f20 Refactor RefList.FilterLatestRefs to be method instead of standalone func. 2014-10-07 19:29:01 +04:00
Andrey Smirnov c56ecab06f Method PackageRefList.Has(). #80 2014-08-28 22:25:19 +04:00
Andrey Smirnov f007465d18 Change the way package key works: now it includes FilesHash. #60
Now duplicate packages (the same name/version/arch) but with different set of files
would be handled as separate entities.
2014-05-29 16:49:05 +04:00
Andrey Smirnov 59647fe6d0 Fix subtle bug in .Merge: if there are duplicate name-arch on the left, override them all. #42 2014-04-24 00:57:17 +04:00
Andrey Smirnov 37a6fb336a PackageList doesn't allow duplicates and PackageRefList does sorting on keys. #42 2014-04-23 23:47:32 +04:00
Ryan Uber 6c3b2f686e snapshot: FilterLatestRefs returns nothing as it deals with a pointer. 2014-04-22 23:33:30 -07:00
Ryan Uber 708fd800df snapshot: separate test for FilterLatestRefs 2014-04-22 23:04:45 -07:00
Ryan Uber 89eafd1b21 Initial pass at testing merged snapshotting with -latest flag 2014-04-22 17:44:03 -07:00
Andrey Smirnov ff045f9a48 Fixups after renaming debian -> deb. #21 2014-04-07 21:22:58 +04:00
Andrey Smirnov fd662c9275 Rename debian -> deb. #21 2014-04-07 21:15:13 +04:00