On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 6:14 PM, William Burns <mudokonman@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 10:57 AM, Dan Berindei <dan.berindei@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 5:42 PM, William Burns <mudokonman@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> So it seems we would want to change this for 7.0 if possible since it
>> would be a bigger change for something like 7.1 and 8.0 would be even
>> further out.  I should be able to put this together for CR2.
>
>
> I'm not 100% convinced that we need it for 7.x. For 8.0 I would recommend
> removing the size() method altogether, and providing some looser
> "statistics" instead.

Yeah I guess I don't know enough about the demand for these methods or
what people wanted to use them for to know what kind of priority they
should be given.

It sounds like you are talking about decoupling from the
Map/ConcurrentMap interface completely then, right?  So we would also
eliminate the other bulk methods (keySet, values, entrySet)?

Yes, I would base the Cache interface on JSR-107's Cache, which doesn't have size() or the other methods.
 

>
>>
>>
>> It seems that we want to implement keySet, values and entrySet methods
>> using the entry iterator approach.
>>
>> It is however unclear for the size method if we want to use MR entry
>> counting and not worry about the rehash and passivation issues since
>> it is just an estimation anyways.  Or if we want to also use the entry
>> iterator which should be closer approximation but will require more
>> network overhead and memory usage.
>
>
> +1 to use the entry iterator from me, ignoring state transfer we can get
> some pretty wild fluctuations in the size of the cache.

That is personally my feeling as well, but I tend to err more on the
side of correctness to begin with.

> We could use a distributed task for Cache.isEmpty() instead of size() == 0,
> though.

Yes that should be a good optimization either way.

>
>>
>>
>> Also we didn't really talk about the fact that these methods would
>> ignore ongoing transactions and if that is a concern or not.
>>
>
> It might be a concern for the Hibernate 2LC impl, it was their TCK that
> prompted the last round of discussions about clear().

Although I wonder how much these methods are even used since they only
work for Local, Replication or Invalidation caches in their current
state (and didn't even use loaders until 6.0).

There is some more information about the test in the mailing list discussion [1]
There's also a JIRA for clear() [2]

I think 2LC almost never uses distribution, so size() being local-only didn't matter, but making it non-tx could cause problems - at least for that particular test.

[1] http://lists.jboss.org/pipermail/infinispan-dev/2013-October/013914.html
[2] https://issues.jboss.org/browse/ISPN-3656


>
> We haven't talked about what size(), keySet() and values() should return for
> an invalidation cache either... I forget, does the distributed entry
> iterator work with invalidation caches?

It works the same as a local cache so only the local node contents are
returned.  Replicated does the same thing, distributed is the only
special case.  This was the only thing that made sense to me, but if
you have any ideas that would  be great to hear for possibly enhancing
Invalidation iteration.

Sounds good to me. 

cache.get(k) will search on all the nodes via ClusterLoader, so there is a certain appeal in making the entry iterator do the same. But invalidation caches are used with an external (non-CacheLoader) source of data anyway, so we can never return "all the entries".


>
>
>>
>>  - Will
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 10:13 AM, Mircea Markus <mmarkus@redhat.com> wrote:
>> >
>> > On Oct 8, 2014, at 15:11, Dan Berindei <dan.berindei@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >>
>> >> On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 5:03 PM, Mircea Markus <mmarkus@redhat.com>
>> >> wrote:
>> >> On Oct 3, 2014, at 9:30, Radim Vansa <rvansa@redhat.com> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> > Hi,
>> >> >
>> >> > recently we had a discussion about what size() returns, but I've
>> >> > realized there are more things that users would like to know. My
>> >> > question is whether you think that they would really appreciate it,
>> >> > or
>> >> > whether it's just my QA point of view where I sometimes compute the
>> >> > 'checksums' of cache to see if I didn't lost anything.
>> >> >
>> >> > There are those sizes:
>> >> > A) number of owned entries
>> >> > B) number of entries stored locally in memory
>> >> > C) number of entries stored in each local cache store
>> >> > D) number of entries stored in each shared cache store
>> >> > E) total number of entries in cache
>> >> >
>> >> > So far, we can get
>> >> > B via withFlags(SKIP_CACHE_LOAD).size()
>> >> > (passivation ? B : 0) + firstNonZero(C, D) via size()
>> >> > E via distributed iterators / MR
>> >> > A via data container iteration + distribution manager query, but only
>> >> > without cache store
>> >> > C or D through
>> >> >
>> >> > getComponentRegistry().getLocalComponent(PersistenceManager.class).getStores()
>> >> >
>> >> > I think that it would go along with users' expectations if size()
>> >> > returned E and for the rest we should have special methods on
>> >> > AdvancedCache. That would of course change the meaning of size(), but
>> >> > I'd say that finally to something that has firm meaning.
>> >> >
>> >> > WDYT?
>> >>
>> >> There was a lot of arguments in past whether size() and other methods
>> >> that operate over all the elements (keySet, values) are useful because:
>> >> - they are approximate (data changes during iteration)
>> >> - they are very resource consuming and might be miss-used (this is the
>> >> reason we chosen to use size() with its current local semantic)
>> >>
>> >> These methods (size, keys, values) are useful for people and I think we
>> >> were not wise to implement them only on top of the local data: this is like
>> >> preferring efficiency over correctness. This also created a lot of confusion
>> >> with our users, question like size() doesn't return the correct value being
>> >> asked regularly. I totally agree that size() returns E (i.e. everything that
>> >> is stored within the grid, including persistence) and it's performance
>> >> implications to be documented accordingly. For keySet and values - we should
>> >> stop implementing them (throw exception) and point users to Will's
>> >> distributed iterator which is a nicer way to achieve the desired behavior.
>> >>
>> >> We can also implement keySet() and values() on top of the distributed
>> >> entry iterator and document that using the iterator directly is better.
>> >
>> > Yes, that's what I meant as well.
>> >
>> > Cheers,
>> > --
>> > Mircea Markus
>> > Infinispan lead (www.infinispan.org)
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > _______________________________________________
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>>
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