The single-threaded copytree to create the snasphot was by far the
costliest part of creating the snapshot in my 20k tenants example.
As part of this change, also fix when we do overlayfs teardown.
We want to do it after the log-checking has happened.
Actually, we want it to happen even if `not self.env`.
However, that means the local storage cleanups would do a lot of
useless work if we mounted a large snapshot via overlayfs.
So, make the local storage cleanup skip files on overlayfs mounts.
All storage used by the changes in the overlayfs will be cleared
by overlayfs teardown.
Also shuts down `Broker`, which, before this PR, we did start in
`start()` but relied on the fixture to stop. Do it a bit earlier so
that, after `NeonEnv.stop()` returns, there are no child processes using
`repo_dir`.
I need this property in the next commit which adds support for creating
a repo_dir snapshot using overlayfs (Dockerfile `FROM scratch` style).
Conflicts:
pageserver/src/tenant.rs
test_runner/fixtures/neon_fixtures.py
test_runner/fixtures/overlayfs.py
test_runner/regress/test_tenant_detach.py
In neon_fixtures.py, retain some of our version of things, I have something in
git stash that won't apply otherwise.
## Problem
The code for tenant create and tenant attach was just a special case of
what upsert_location does.
## Summary of changes
- Use `upsert_location` for create and attach APIs
- Clean up error handling in upsert_location so that it can generate
appropriate HTTP response codes
- Update tests that asserted the old non-idempotent behavior of attach
- Rework the `test_ignore_while_attaching` test, and fix tenant shutdown
during activation, which this test was supposed to cover, but it was
actually just waiting for activation to complete.
This uses the [newly stable](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2023/12/21/async-fn-rpit-in-traits.html)
async trait feature for three internal traits. One requires `Send`
bounds to be present so uses `impl Future<...> + Send` instead.
Advantages:
* less macro usage
* no extra boxing
Disadvantages:
* impl syntax needed for `Send` bounds is a bit more verbose (but only
required in one place)
Part of #5771
Extracted from https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/6214
This PR makes the test suite sensitive to the new env var
`NEON_ENV_BUILDER_FROM_REPO_DIR_USE_OVERLAYFS`.
If it is set, `NeonEnvBuilder.from_repo_dir` uses overlayfs
to duplicate the the snapshot repo dir contents.
Since mounting requires root privileges, we use sudo to perform
the mounts. That, and macOS support, is also why copytree remains
the default.
If we ever run on a filesystem with copy reflink support, we should
consider that as an alternative.
This PR can be tried on a Linux machine on the
`test_backward_compatiblity` test, which uses `from_repo_dir`.
During a previous incident, we noticed that this particular line can be
repeatedly logged every 100ms if the memory usage continues is
persistently high enough to warrant upscaling.
Per the added comment: Ideally we'd still like to include this log line,
because it's useful information, but the simple way to include it
produces far too many log lines, and the more complex ways to
deduplicate the log lines while still including the information are
probably not worth the effort right now.
This fixes the clippy lint firing on macOS on the conversion which
needed for portability. For some reason, the logic in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/11669 to avoid an overlap
is not working.
PR #6266 broke the getpage_latest_lsn benchmark.
Before this patch, we'd fail with
```
not implemented: split up range
```
because `r.start = rel size key` and `r.end = rel size key + 1`.
## Summary of changes
### RequestMonitoring
We want to add an event stream with information on each request for
easier analysis than what we can do with diagnostic logs alone
(https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/8807). This
RequestMonitoring will keep a record of the final state of a request. On
drop it will be pushed into a queue to be uploaded.
Because this context is a bag of data, I don't want this information to
impact logic of request handling. I personally think that weakly typed
data (such as all these options) makes for spaghetti code. I will
however allow for this data to impact rate-limiting and blocking of
requests, as this does not _really_ change how a request is handled.
### Parquet
Each `RequestMonitoring` is flushed into a channel where it is converted
into `RequestData`, which is accumulated into parquet files. Each file
will have a certain number of rows per row group, and several row groups
will eventually fill up the file, which we then upload to S3.
We will also upload smaller files if they take too long to construct.
This is a lightweight change to keep the scrubber providing sensible
output when using sharding.
- The timeline count was wrong when using sharding
- When checking for tenant existence, we didn't re-use results between
different shards in the same tenant
Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/5929
These functions don't need updating for sharding: it's fine for them to
remain shard-naive, as they're only used in the context of dumping a
layer file. The sharding metadata doesn't live in the layer file, it
lives in the index.
## Problem
Noticed while making other changes that there were `pub` items that were
unused.
## Summary of changes
- Make everything `pub(crate)` in metrics.rs, apart from items used from
`bin/`
- Fix the timelines eviction metric: it was never being incremented
- Remove an unused ephemeral_bytes counter.
## Problem
`black` is slow sometimes, we can replace it with `ruff format` (a new
feature in 0.1.2 [0]), which produces pretty similar to black style [1].
On my local machine (MacBook M1 Pro 16GB):
```
# `black` on main
$ hyperfine "BLACK_CACHE_DIR=/dev/null poetry run black ."
Benchmark 1: BLACK_CACHE_DIR=/dev/null poetry run black .
Time (mean ± σ): 3.131 s ± 0.090 s [User: 5.194 s, System: 0.859 s]
Range (min … max): 3.047 s … 3.354 s 10 runs
```
```
# `ruff format` on the current PR
$ hyperfine "RUFF_NO_CACHE=true poetry run ruff format"
Benchmark 1: RUFF_NO_CACHE=true poetry run ruff format
Time (mean ± σ): 300.7 ms ± 50.2 ms [User: 259.5 ms, System: 76.1 ms]
Range (min … max): 267.5 ms … 420.2 ms 10 runs
```
## Summary of changes
- Replace `black` with `ruff format` everywhere
- [0] https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/formatter/
- [1] https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/formatter/#black-compatibility
Before this PR, `is_rel_block_key` returns true for the blknum
`0xffffffff`,
which is a blknum that's actually never written by Postgres, but used by
Neon Pageserver to store the relsize.
Quoting @MMeent:
> PostgreSQL can't extend the relation beyond size of 0xFFFFFFFF blocks,
> so block number 0xFFFFFFFE is the last valid block number.
This PR changes the definition of the function to exclude blknum
0xffffffff.
My motivation for doing this change is to fix the `pagebench` getpage
benchmark, which uses `is_rel_block_key` to filter the keyspace for
valid pages to request from page_service.
fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/6210
I checked other users of the function.
The first one is `key_is_shard0`, which already had added an exemption
for 0xffffffff. So, there's no functional change with this PR.
The second one is `DatadirModification::flush`[^1]. With this PR,
`.flush()` will skip the relsize key, whereas it didn't
before. This means we will pile up all the relsize key-value pairs
`(Key,u32)`
in `DatadirModification::pending_updates` until `.commit()` is called.
The only place I can think of where that would be a problem is if we
import from a full basebackup, and don't `.commit()` regularly,
like we currently don't do in `import_basebackup_from_tar`.
It exposes us to input-controlled allocations.
However, that was already the case for the other keys that are skipped,
so, one can argue that this change is not making the situation much
worse.
[^1]: That type's `flush()` and `commit()` methods are terribly named,
but,
that's for another time
Implement API for cloning a single timeline inside a safekeeper. Also
add API for calculating a sha256 hash of WAL, which is used in tests.
`/copy` API works by copying objects inside S3 for all but the last
segments, and the last segments are copied on-disk. A special temporary
directory is created for a timeline, because copy can take a lot of
time, especially for large timelines. After all files segments have been
prepared, this directory is mounted to the main tree and timeline is
loaded to memory.
Some caveats:
- large timelines can take a lot of time to copy, because we need to
copy many S3 segments
- caller should wait for HTTP call to finish indefinetely and don't
close the HTTP connection, because it will stop the process, which is
not continued in the background
- `until_lsn` must be a valid LSN, otherwise bad things can happen
- API will return 200 if specified `timeline_id` already exists, even if
it's not a copy
- each safekeeper will try to copy S3 segments, so it's better to not
call this API in-parallel on different safekeepers
## Problem
- When a client requests a key that isn't found in any shard on the node
(edge case that only happens if a compute's config is out of date), we
should prompt them to reconnect (as this includes a backoff), since they
will not be able to complete the request until they eventually get a
correct pageserver connection string.
- QueryError::Other is used excessively: this contains a type-ambiguous
anyhow::Error and is logged very verbosely (including backtrace).
## Summary of changes
- Introduce PageStreamError to replace use of anyhow::Error in request
handlers for getpage, etc.
- Introduce Reconnect and NotFound variants to QueryError
- Map the "shard routing error" case to PageStreamError::Reconnect ->
QueryError::Reconnect
- Update type conversions for LSN timeouts and tenant/timeline not found
errors to use PageStreamError::NotFound->QueryError::NotFound