Hi Erik
I've evolved the api a small bit from the JIRA. The group generator now behaves more
like an interceptor than described in the jira (you can chain them with the initial value
being provided by the annotation).
No, you don't need to know the group name to access the cache. The group is simply
used as a hint to Infinispan.
On 17 May 2011, at 22:04, Erik Salter wrote:
Hi Manik,
I think we are in agreement that playing with hash codes was only a temporary measure.
In my case, having < 200 entries with the same hash code was worth it for knowing that
I could handle transactions locally and reap the benefits of increased throughput. So I
can now replace the hash code with @Group. Cool.
The group generator interface looks interesting, since it closest reflects my situation.
I now have requirements where an immutable key class will need to be saved within the same
transaction as the scenario above (obviously, hashing to the same node is a plus)
One thing isn’t clear from the JIRA. If I wanted to get Employee “SteveVai” from the
cache, do I need to know the group context is “com.ibanez.SteveVai”? My calling
application only knows the key value, not the value with the key context.
Erik
From: infinispan-dev-bounces(a)lists.jboss.org
[mailto:infinispan-dev-bounces@lists.jboss.org] On Behalf Of Manik Surtani
Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2011 1:34 PM
To: infinispan -Dev List
Subject: [infinispan-dev] Grouping API (ISPN-312) WAS: Generated keys affected by rehash
Was:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-977
Erik,
Dan is correct that playing with hash codes is not the correct solution. ISPN-312 is the
correct approach. Pete has been working on a first-cut of this and it should make
5.0.0.CR3. (Understood that release candidates aren't the place to add new features,
but we're adding it as a "preview", just to get feedback on the API and
impl.)
Have a look at the proposed API on
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-312 and let us
know if it works for you.
Cheers
Manik
On 13 May 2011, at 18:28, Erik Salter wrote:
Hi Dan,
I don't necessarily care about which server it's on, as long as the keys for my
set of caches all remain collocated. I understand they will all end up in the same
bucket, but for one hash code, that's at most 200 keys. I must acquire a lock for a
subset of them during a transaction -- so I make liberal use of the
"eagerLockSingleNode" option and redirecting my calling application to execute a
transaction on the local node. Acquiring cluster-wide locks is an absolute throughput
killer.
I took a look at the KeyAffinityService a while ago (when it came out) and quickly
realized it would not be suitable for my purposes. I was wondering if ISPN-977 would
allow me to use it. But you're right. What I ultimately want is ISPN-312.
Erik
-----Original Message-----
From: infinispan-dev-bounces(a)lists.jboss.org
[mailto:infinispan-dev-bounces@lists.jboss.org] On Behalf Of Dan Berindei
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 12:58 PM
To: infinispan -Dev List
Subject: Re: [infinispan-dev] Generated keys affected by rehash Was:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-977
On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 6:38 PM, Erik Salter <esalter(a)bnivideo.com> wrote:
Yes, collocation of all keys is a large concern of my application(s).
Currently, I can handle keys I'm in control of (like database-generated keys), where
I can play around with the hash code. What I would love to do is collocate that data
with keys I can't control (like UUIDs) so that all cache operations can be done in the
same transaction on the data owner's node.
By playing around with the hash code do you mean you set the hashcode for all the keys
you want on a certain server to the same value? I imagine that would degrade performance
quite a bit, because we have HashMaps everywhere and your keys will always end up in the
same hash bucket.
ISPN-312 seems to me like a much better fit for your use case than the
KeyAffinityService. Even if you added a listener to change your keys when the topology
changes, that would mean on a rehash the keys could get moved to the new server and then
back to the old server, whereas with ISPN-312 they will either all stay on the old node or
they will all move to the new node.
Cheers
Dan
Erik
-----Original Message-----
From: infinispan-dev-bounces(a)lists.jboss.org
[mailto:infinispan-dev-bounces@lists.jboss.org] On Behalf Of Manik
Surtani
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 5:25 AM
To: infinispan -Dev List
Subject: [infinispan-dev] Generated keys affected by rehash Was:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-977
On 11 May 2011, at 18:47, Erik Salter wrote:
Wouldn't any rehash affect the locality of these generated keys, or am I missing
something?
It would. And hence ISPN-977, to address that. Or is your concern keys already
generated before the rehash? The latter would certainly be a problem. Perhaps, if this
was important to the application, on detecting a change in topology, re-generate keys and
move data around? For other apps, move the "session" to the appropriate node?
Cheers
Manik
--
Manik Surtani
manik(a)jboss.org
twitter.com/maniksurtani
Lead, Infinispan
http://www.infinispan.org
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