Hi all,
I’m working on the implementation of this, and the solution noted in the JIRA does not
work for situations where you have to return a previous value that might have been
overriden due to partial operation application. Example (assuming 1 owner only):
1. remote client does a put(“key”, 1) in Node-A
2. remote client does a replace(“key”, 2) on Node-A but the operation fails to replicate
and gets partially applieed in Node-A only.
3. remote client, seeing the replace failed, retries the replace(“key”, 2) in Node-B.
replace underneath finds that the previous value of “key” is 2 (since it got partially
applied in Node-A), so it succeeds but the previous value returned is 2, which is wrong.
The previous value should have been 1, but this value is gone…
In my view, there is two ways to solve this issue:
1. Make Hot Rod caches transactional. By doign so, operations are not partially applied.
They’re done fully cluster wide or they’re rolled back. I’ve verified this and the test
passes once you make the cache transactional. The downside is of course performance. IOW,
anyone using conditional operations, or relying on previous values, would need
transactional caches. This should work well with the retry mechanism being implemented for
ISPN-2956, which is still needed. A big question here is whether Hot Rod caches should be
transactional by default or viceversa. If they’re transactional, our performance will go
down for sure but we won’t have this type of issues (with retry in place). If you’re not
transactional, you are faster but you’re exposed to these edge cases, and you need to
consider them when deploying your app, something people might miss, although we could
provide WARN messages when conditional operations or Flag.FORCE_RETURN_VALUE is used with
non-transactional caches.
2. Get rid of returning previous value in the Hot Rod protocol for modifying operations.
For conditional operations, returning true/false is at least enough to see if the
condition was applied. So, replaceIfUnmodified/replace/remove(conditional), they would
only return true/false. This would be complicated due to reliance on Map/ConcurrentMap
APIs. Maybe something to consider for when we stop relying on JDK APIs.
I also considered applying corrective actions but that’s very messy and prone to
concurrency issues, so I quickly discarded that.
Any other options? Thoughts on the options above?
Cheers,
On 26 May 2014, at 18:11, Galder Zamarreño <galder(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hi all,
I’ve been looking into ISPN-2956 last week and I think we have a solution for it which
requires a protocol change [1]
Since we’re in the middle of the Hot Rod 2.0 development, this is a good opportunity to
implement it.
Cheers,
[1]
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-2956?focusedCommentId=12970541&p...
On 14 May 2014, at 09:36, Dan Berindei <dan.berindei(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 6:40 PM, Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> On 05/13/2014 03:58 PM, Dan Berindei wrote:
>>
>>
>> On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 1:54 PM, Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>> @Dan: It's absolutely correct to do the further writes in order to make
>> the cache consistent, I am not arguing against that. You've fixed the
>> outcome (state of cache) well. My point was that we should let the user
>> know that the value he gets is not 100% correct when we already know
>> that - and given the API, the only option to do that seems to me as
>> throwing an exception.
>>
>> The problem, as I see it, is that users also expect methods that throw an
exception to *not* modify the cache.
>> So we would break some of the users' expectations anyway.
>
> When the response from primary owner does not arrive soon, we throw timeout exception
and the cache is modified anyway, isn't it?
> If we throw ~ReturnValueUnreliableException, the user has at least some chance to
react. Currently, for code requiring 100% reliable value, you can't do anything but
ignore the return value, even for CAS operations.
>
>
> Yes, but we don't expect the user to handle a TimeoutException in any meaningful
way. Instead, we expect the user to choose his hardware and configuration to avoid
timeouts, if he cares about consistency. How could you handle an exception that tells you
"I may have written the value you asked me to in the cache, or maybe not. Either way,
you will never know what the previous value was. Muahahaha!" in an application that
cares about consistency?
>
> But the proposed ReturnValueUnreliableException can't be avoided by the user, it
has to be handled every time the cluster membership changes. So it would be more like
WriteSkewException than TimeoutException. And when we throw a WriteSkewException, we
don't write anything to the cache.
>
> Remember, most users do not care about the previous value at all - that's the
reason why JCache and our HotRod client don't return the previous value by default.
Those that do care about the previous value, use the conditional write operations, and
those already work (well, except for the scenario below). So you would force everyone to
handle an exception that they don't care about.
>
> It would make sense to throw an exception if we didn't return the previous value
by default, and the user requested the return value explicitly. But we do return the value
by default, so I don't think it would be a good idea for us.
>
>>
>>
>> @Sanne: I was not suggesting that for now - sure, value versioning is (I
>> hope) on the roadmap. But that's more complicated, I though just about
>> making an adjustment to the current implementation.
>>
>>
>> Actually, just keeping a history of values would not fix the the return value in
all cases.
>>
>> When retrying a put on the new primary owner, the primary owner would still have
to compare our value with the latest value, and return the previous value if they are
equal. So we could have something like this:
>>
>> A is the originator, B is the primary owner, k = v0
>> A -> B: put(k, v1)
>> B dies before writing v, C is now primary owner
>> D -> C: put(k, v1) // another put operation from D, with the same value
>> C -> D: null
>> A -> C: retry_put(k, v1)
>> C -> A: v0 // C assumes A is overwriting its own value, so it's returning
the previous one
>>
>> To fix that, we'd need a unique version generated by the originator - kind of
like a transaction id ;)
>
> Is it such a problem to associate unique ID with each write? History implementation
seems to me like the more complicated part.
>
> I also think maintaining a version history would be quite complicated, and it also
would make it harder for users to estimate their cache's memory usage. That's why
I was trying to show that it's not a panacea.
>
>
>
>> And to fix the HotRod use case, the HotRod client would have to be the one
generating the version.
>
> I agree.
>
> Radim
>
>
>>
>> Cheers
>> Dan
>>
>>
>>
>> Radim
>>
>> On 05/12/2014 12:02 PM, Sanne Grinovero wrote:
>>> I don't think we are in a position to decide what is a reasonable
>>> compromise; we can do better.
>>> For example - as Radim suggested - it might seem reasonable to have
>>> the older value around for a little while. We'll need a little bit of
>>> history of values and tombstones anyway for many other reasons.
>>>
>>>
>>> Sanne
>>>
>>> On 12 May 2014 09:37, Dan Berindei <dan.berindei(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> Radim, I would contend that the first and foremost guarantee that put()
>>>> makes is to leave the cache in a consistent state. So we can't just
throw an
>>>> exception and give up, leaving k=v on one owner and k=null on another.
>>>>
>>>> Secondly, put(k, v) being atomic means that it either succeeds, it
writes
>>>> k=v in the cache, and it returns the previous value, or it doesn't
succeed,
>>>> and it doesn't write k=v in the cache. Returning the wrong previous
value is
>>>> bad, but leaving k=v in the cache is just as bad, even if the all the
owners
>>>> have the same value.
>>>>
>>>> And last, we can't have one node seeing k=null, then k=v, then k=null
again,
>>>> when the only write we did on the cache was a put(k, v). So trying to
undo
>>>> the write would not help.
>>>>
>>>> In the end, we have to make a compromise, and I think returning the
wrong
>>>> value in some of the cases is a reasonable compromise. Of course, we
should
>>>> document that :)
>>>>
>>>> I also believe ISPN-2956 could be fixed so that HotRod behaves just like
>>>> embedded mode after the ISPN-3422 fix, by adding a RETRY flag to the
HotRod
>>>> protocol and to the cache itself.
>>>>
>>>> Incidentally, transactional caches have a similar problem when the
>>>> originator leaves the cluster: ISPN-3421 [1]
>>>> And we can't handle transactional caches any better than
non-transactional
>>>> caches until we expose transactions to the HotRod client.
>>>>
>>>> [1]
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-2956
>>>>
>>>> Cheers
>>>> Dan
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, May 12, 2014 at 10:21 AM, Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> recently I've stumbled upon one already expected behaviour (one
instance
>>>>> is [1]), but which did not got much attention.
>>>>>
>>>>> In non-tx cache, when the primary owner fails after the request has
been
>>>>> replicated to backup owner, the request is retried in the new
topology.
>>>>> Then, the operation is executed on the new primary (the previous
>>>>> backup). The outcome has been already fixed in [2], but the return
value
>>>>> may be wrong. For example, when we do a put, the return value for
the
>>>>> second attempt will be the currently inserted value (although the
entry
>>>>> was just created). Same situation may happen for other operations.
>>>>>
>>>>> Currently, it's not possible to return the correct value (because
it has
>>>>> already been overwritten and we don't keep a history of values),
but
>>>>> shouldn't we rather throw an exception if we were not able to
fulfil the
>>>>> API contract?
>>>>>
>>>>> Radim
>>>>>
>>>>> [1]
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-2956
>>>>> [2]
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-3422
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com>
>>>>> JBoss DataGrid QA
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> infinispan-dev mailing list
>>>>> infinispan-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/infinispan-dev
>>>>
>>>>
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>>
>> --
>> Radim Vansa <rvansa(a)redhat.com>
>> JBoss DataGrid QA
>>
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>
>
> --
> Radim Vansa
> <rvansa(a)redhat.com>
>
> JBoss DataGrid QA
>
>
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>
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--
Galder Zamarreño
galder(a)redhat.com
twitter.com/galderz
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