Commit Graph

1043 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Conrad Ludgate
cd1d2d1996 fix(proxy): forward notifications from authentication (#9948)
Fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/20973. 

This refactors `connect_raw` in order to return direct access to the
delayed notices.

I cannot find a way to test this with psycopg2 unfortunately, although
testing it with psql does return the expected results.
2024-12-02 12:29:57 +00:00
Folke Behrens
4abc8e5282 Merge the consumption metric pushes (#9939)
#8564

## Problem

The main and backup consumption metric pushes are completely
independent,
resulting in different event time windows and different idempotency
keys.

## Summary of changes

* Merge the push tasks, but keep chunks the same size.
2024-11-30 10:11:37 +00:00
Christian Schwarz
aa4ec11af9 page_service: rewrite batching to work without a timeout (#9851)
# Problem

The timeout-based batching adds latency to unbatchable workloads.

We can choose a short batching timeout (e.g. 10us) but that requires
high-resolution timers, which tokio doesn't have.
I thoroughly explored options to use OS timers (see
[this](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9822) abandoned PR).
In short, it's not an attractive option because any timer implementation
adds non-trivial overheads.

# Solution

The insight is that, in the steady state of a batchable workload, the
time we spend in `get_vectored` will be hundreds of microseconds anyway.

If we prepare the next batch concurrently to `get_vectored`, we will
have a sizeable batch ready once `get_vectored` of the current batch is
done and do not need an explicit timeout.

This can be reasonably described as **pipelining of the protocol
handler**.

# Implementation

We model the sub-protocol handler for pagestream requests
(`handle_pagrequests`) as two futures that form a pipeline:

2. Batching: read requests from the connection and fill the current
batch
3. Execution: `take` the current batch, execute it using `get_vectored`,
and send the response.

The Reading and Batching stage are connected through a new type of
channel called `spsc_fold`.

See the long comment in the `handle_pagerequests_pipelined` for details.

# Changes

- Refactor `handle_pagerequests`
    - separate functions for
- reading one protocol message; produces a `BatchedFeMessage` with just
one page request in it
- batching; tried to merge an incoming `BatchedFeMessage` into an
existing `BatchedFeMessage`; returns `None` on success and returns back
the incoming message in case merging isn't possible
        - execution of a batched message
- unify the timeline handle acquisition & request span construction; it
now happen in the function that reads the protocol message
- Implement serial and pipelined model
    - serial: what we had before any of the batching changes
      - read one protocol message
      - execute protocol messages
    - pipelined: the design described above
- optionality for execution of the pipeline: either via concurrent
futures vs tokio tasks
- Pageserver config
  - remove batching timeout field
  - add ability to configure pipelining mode
- add ability to limit max batch size for pipelined configurations
(required for the rollout, cf
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/20620 )
  - ability to configure execution mode
- Tests
  - remove `batch_timeout` parametrization
  - rename `test_getpage_merge_smoke` to `test_throughput`
- add parametrization to test different max batch sizes and execution
moes
  - rename `test_timer_precision` to `test_latency`
  - rename the test case file to `test_page_service_batching.py`
  - better descriptions of what the tests actually do

## On the holding The `TimelineHandle` in the pending batch

While batching, we hold the `TimelineHandle` in the pending batch.
Therefore, the timeline will not finish shutting down while we're
batching.

This is not a problem in practice because the concurrently ongoing
`get_vectored` call will fail quickly with an error indicating that the
timeline is shutting down.
This results in the Execution stage returning a `QueryError::Shutdown`,
which causes the pipeline / entire page service connection to shut down.
This drops all references to the
`Arc<Mutex<Option<Box<BatchedFeMessage>>>>` object, thereby dropping the
contained `TimelineHandle`s.

- => fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9850

# Performance

Local run of the benchmarks, results in [this empty
commit](1cf5b1463f)
in the PR branch.

Key take-aways:
* `concurrent-futures` and `tasks` deliver identical `batching_factor`
* tail latency impact unknown, cf
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9837
* `concurrent-futures` has higher throughput than `tasks` in all
workloads (=lower `time` metric)
* In unbatchable workloads, `concurrent-futures` has 5% higher
`CPU-per-throughput` than that of `tasks`, and 15% higher than that of
`serial`.
* In batchable-32 workload, `concurrent-futures` has 8% lower
`CPU-per-throughput` than that of `tasks` (comparison to tput of
`serial` is irrelevant)
* in unbatchable workloads, mean and tail latencies of
`concurrent-futures` is practically identical to `serial`, whereas
`tasks` adds 20-30us of overhead

Overall, `concurrent-futures` seems like a slightly more attractive
choice.

# Rollout

This change is disabled-by-default.

Rollout plan:
- https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/20620

# Refs

- epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9376
- this sub-task: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9377
- the abandoned attempt to improve batching timeout resolution:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9820
- closes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9850
- fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9835
2024-11-30 00:16:24 +00:00
John Spray
d5624cc505 pageserver: download small objects using a smaller timeout (#9938)
## Problem

It appears that the Azure storage API tends to hang TCP connections more
than S3 does.

Currently we use a 2 minute timeout for all downloads. This is large
because sometimes the objects we download are large. However, waiting 2
minutes when doing something like downloading a manifest on tenant
attach is problematic, because when someone is doing a "create tenant,
create timeline" workflow, that 2 minutes is long enough for them
reasonably to give up creating that timeline.

Rather than propagate oversized timeouts further up the stack, we should
use a different timeout for objects that we expect to be small.

Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9836

## Summary of changes

- Add a `small_timeout` configuration attribute to remote storage,
defaulting to 30 seconds (still a very generous period to do something
like download an index)
- Add a DownloadKind parameter to DownloadOpts, so that callers can
indicate whether they expect the object to be small or large.
- In the azure client, use small timeout for HEAD requests, and for GET
requests if DownloadKind::Small is used.
- Use DownloadKind::Small for manifests, indices, and heatmap downloads.

This PR intentionally does not make the equivalent change to the S3
client, to reduce blast radius in case this has unexpected consequences
(we could accomplish the same thing by editing lots of configs, but just
skipping the code is simpler for right now)
2024-11-29 15:11:44 +00:00
Conrad Ludgate
1d642d6a57 chore(proxy): vendor a subset of rust-postgres (#9930)
Our rust-postgres fork is getting messy. Mostly because proxy wants more
control over the raw protocol than tokio-postgres provides. As such,
it's diverging more and more. Storage and compute also make use of
rust-postgres, but in more normal usage, thus they don't need our crazy
changes.

Idea: 
* proxy maintains their subset
* other teams use a minimal patch set against upstream rust-postgres

Reviewing this code will be difficult. To implement it, I
1. Copied tokio-postgres, postgres-protocol and postgres-types from
00940fcdb5
2. Updated their package names with the `2` suffix to make them compile
in the workspace.
3. Updated proxy to use those packages
4. Copied in the code from tokio-postgres-rustls 0.13 (with some patches
applied https://github.com/jbg/tokio-postgres-rustls/pull/32
https://github.com/jbg/tokio-postgres-rustls/pull/33)
5. Removed as much dead code as I could find in the vendored libraries
6. Updated the tokio-postgres-rustls code to use our existing channel
binding implementation
2024-11-29 11:08:01 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
e82f7f0dfc remote_storage/abs: count 404 and 304 for get as ok for metrics (#9912)
## Problem

We currently see elevated levels of errors for GetBlob requests. This is
because 404 and 304 are counted as errors for metric reporting.

## Summary of Changes

Bring the implementation in line with the S3 client and treat 404 and
304 responses as ok for metric purposes.

Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/20666
2024-11-28 10:11:08 +00:00
Erik Grinaker
da1daa2426 pageserver: only apply ClearVmBits on relevant shards (#9895)
# Problem

VM (visibility map) pages are stored and managed as any regular relation
page, in the VM fork of the main relation. They are also sharded like
other pages. Regular WAL writes to the VM pages (typically performed by
vacuum) are routed to the correct shard as usual. However, VM pages are
also updated via `ClearVmBits` metadata records emitted when main
relation pages are updated. These metadata records were sent to all
shards, like other metadata records. This had the following effects:

* On shards responsible for VM pages, the `ClearVmBits` applies as
expected.

* On shard 0, which knows about the VM relation and its size but doesn't
necessarily have any VM pages, the `ClearVmBits` writes may have been
applied without also having applied the explicit WAL writes to VM pages.

* If VM pages are spread across multiple shards (unlikely with 256MB
stripe size), all shards may have applied `ClearVmBits` if the pages
fall within their local view of the relation size, even for pages they
do not own.

* On other shards, this caused a relation size cache miss and a DbDir
and RelDir lookup before dropping the `ClearVmBits`. With many
relations, this could cause significant CPU overhead.

This is not believed to be a correctness problem, but this will be
verified in #9914.

Resolves #9855.

# Changes

Route `ClearVmBits` metadata records only to the shards responsible for
the VM pages.

Verification of the current VM handling and cleanup of incomplete VM
pages on shard 0 (and potentially elsewhere) is left as follow-up work.
2024-11-27 19:44:24 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
8fdf786217 pageserver: add tenant config override for wal receiver proto (#9888)
## Problem

Can't change protocol at tenant granularity.

## Summary of changes

Add tenant config level override for wal receiver protocol.

## Links

Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9336
Epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9329
2024-11-27 13:46:23 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
9e0148de11 safekeeper: use protobuf for sending compressed records to pageserver (#9821)
## Problem

https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9746 lifted decoding and
interpretation of WAL to the safekeeper.
This reduced the ingested amount on the pageservers by around 10x for a
tenant with 8 shards, but doubled
the ingested amount for single sharded tenants.

Also, https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9746 uses bincode which
doesn't support schema evolution.
Technically the schema can be evolved, but it's very cumbersome.

## Summary of changes

This patch set addresses both problems by adding protobuf support for
the interpreted wal records and adding compression support. Compressed
protobuf reduced the ingested amount by 100x on the 32 shards
`test_sharded_ingest` case (compared to non-interpreted proto). For the
1 shard case the reduction is 5x.

Sister change to `rust-postgres` is
[here](https://github.com/neondatabase/rust-postgres/pull/33).

## Links

Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9336
Epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9329
2024-11-27 12:12:21 +00:00
Peter Bendel
13feda0669 track how much time the flush loop is stalled waiting for uploads (#9885)
## Problem

We don't know how much time PS is losing during ingest when waiting for
remote storage uploads in the flush frozen layer loop.
Also we don't know how many remote storage requests get an permit
without waiting (not throttled by remote_storage concurrency_limit).

## Summary of changes

- Add a metric that accumulates the time waited per shard/PS
- in [remote storage semaphore wait
seconds](https://neonprod.grafana.net/d/febd9732-9bcf-4992-a821-49b1f6b02724/remote-storage?orgId=1&var-datasource=HUNg6jvVk&var-instance=pageserver-26.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-27.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-28.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-29.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-30.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-31.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-36.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-37.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-38.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-39.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-40.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-instance=pageserver-41.us-east-2.aws.neon.build&var-request_type=put_object&from=1731961336340&to=1731964762933&viewPanel=3)
add a first bucket with 100 microseconds to count requests that do not
need to wait on semaphore

Update: created a new version that uses a Gauge (one increasing value
per PS/shard) instead of histogram as suggested by review
2024-11-26 11:46:58 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
7a2f0ed8d4 safekeeper: lift decoding and interpretation of WAL to the safekeeper (#9746)
## Problem

For any given tenant shard, pageservers receive all of the tenant's WAL
from the safekeeper.
This soft-blocks us from using larger shard counts due to bandwidth
concerns and CPU overhead of filtering
out the records.

## Summary of changes

This PR lifts the decoding and interpretation of WAL from the pageserver
into the safekeeper.

A customised PG replication protocol is used where instead of sending
raw WAL, the safekeeper sends
filtered, interpreted records. The receiver drives the protocol
selection, so, on the pageserver side, usage
of the new protocol is gated by a new pageserver config:
`wal_receiver_protocol`.

 More granularly the changes are:
1. Optionally inject the protocol and shard identity into the arguments
used for starting replication
2. On the safekeeper side, implement a new wal sending primitive which
decodes and interprets records
 before sending them over
3. On the pageserver side, implement the ingestion of this new
replication message type. It's very similar
 to what we already have for raw wal (minus decoding and interpreting).
 
 ## Notes
 
* This PR currently uses my [branch of
rust-postgres](https://github.com/neondatabase/rust-postgres/tree/vlad/interpreted-wal-record-replication-support)
which includes the deserialization logic for the new replication message
type. PR for that is open
[here](https://github.com/neondatabase/rust-postgres/pull/32).
* This PR contains changes for both pageservers and safekeepers. It's
safe to merge because the new protocol is disabled by default on the
pageserver side. We can gradually start enabling it in subsequent
releases.
* CI tests are running on https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9747
 
 ## Links
 
 Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9336
 Epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9329
2024-11-25 17:29:28 +00:00
Christian Schwarz
5c2356988e page_service: add benchmark for batching (#9820)
This PR adds two benchmark to demonstrate the effect of server-side
getpage request batching added in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9321.

For the CPU usage, I found the the `prometheus` crate's built-in CPU
usage accounts the seconds at integer granularity. That's not enough you
reduce the target benchmark runtime for local iteration. So, add a new
`libmetrics` metric and report that.

The benchmarks are disabled because [on our benchmark nodes, timer
resolution isn't high
enough](https://neondb.slack.com/archives/C059ZC138NR/p1732264223207449).
They work (no statement about quality) on my bare-metal devbox.

They will be refined and enabled once we find a fix. Candidates at time
of writing are:
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9822
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9851


Refs:

- Epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9376
- Extracted from https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9792
2024-11-25 15:52:39 +00:00
Arpad Müller
77630e5408 Address beta clippy lint needless_lifetimes (#9877)
The 1.82.0 version of Rust will be stable soon, let's get the clippy
lint fixes in before the compiler version upgrade.
2024-11-25 14:59:12 +00:00
Christian Schwarz
450be26bbb fast imports: initial Importer and Storage changes (#9218)
Co-authored-by: Heikki Linnakangas <heikki@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Stas Kelvic <stas@neon.tech>

# Context

This PR contains PoC-level changes for a product feature that allows
onboarding large databases into Neon without going through the regular
data path.

# Changes

This internal RFC provides all the context
* https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/pull/19799

In the language of the RFC, this PR covers

* the Importer code (`fast_import`) 
* all the Pageserver changes (mgmt API changes, flow implementation,
etc)
* a basic test for the Pageserver changes

# Reviewing

As acknowledged in the RFC, the code added in this PR is not ready for
general availability.
Also, the **architecture is not to be discussed in this PR**, but in the
RFC and associated Slack channel instead.

Reviewers of this PR should take that into consideration.
The quality bar to apply during review depends on what area of the code
is being reviewed:

* Importer code (`fast_import`): practically anything goes
* Core flow (`flow.rs`):
* Malicious input data must be expected and the existing threat models
apply.
* The code must not be safe to execute on *dedicated* Pageserver
instances:
* This means in particular that tenants *on other* Pageserver instances
must not be affected negatively wrt data confidentiality, integrity or
availability.
* Other code: the usual quality bar
* Pay special attention to correct use of gate guards, timeline
cancellation in all places during shutdown & migration, etc.
* Consider the broader system impact; if you find potentially
problematic interactions with Storage features that were not covered in
the RFC, bring that up during the review.

I recommend submitting three separate reviews, for the three high-level
areas with different quality bars.


# References

(Internal-only)

* refs https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/17507
* refs https://github.com/neondatabase/company_projects/issues/293
* refs https://github.com/neondatabase/company_projects/issues/309
* refs https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/20646

---------

Co-authored-by: Stas Kelvich <stas.kelvich@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Heikki Linnakangas <heikki@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: John Spray <john@neon.tech>
2024-11-22 22:47:06 +00:00
Alex Chi Z.
c1937d073f fix(pageserver): ensure upload happens after delete (#9844)
## Problem

Follow up of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9682, that patch
didn't fully address the problem: what if shutdown fails due to whatever
reason and then we reattach the tenant? Then we will still remove the
future layer. The underlying problem is that the fix for #5878 gets
voided because of the generation optimizations.

Of course, we also need to ensure that delete happens after uploads, but
note that we only schedule deletes when there are no ongoing upload
tasks, so that's fine.

## Summary of changes

* Add a test case to reproduce the behavior (by changing the original
test case to attach the same generation).
* If layer upload happens after the deletion, drain the deletion queue
before uploading.
* If blocked_deletion is enabled, directly remove it from the
blocked_deletion queue.
* Local fs backend fix to avoid race between deletion and preload.
* test_emergency_mode does not need to wait for uploads (and it's
generally not possible to wait for uploads).
* ~~Optimize deletion executor to skip validation if there are no files
to delete.~~ this doesn't work

---------

Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
2024-11-22 18:30:53 +00:00
Alex Chi Z.
211e4174d2 fix(pageserver): preempt and retry azure list operation (#9840)
## Problem

close https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9836

Looking at Azure SDK, the only related issue I can find is
https://github.com/azure/azure-sdk-for-rust/issues/1549. Azure uses
reqwest as the backend, so I assume there's some underlying magic
unknown to us that might have caused the stuck in #9836.

The observation is:
* We didn't get an explicit out of resource HTTP error from Azure.
* The connection simply gets stuck and times out.
* But when we retry after we reach the timeout, it succeeds.

This issue is hard to identify -- maybe something went wrong at the ABS
side, or something wrong with our side. But we know that a retry will
usually succeed if we give up the stuck connection.

Therefore, I propose the fix that we preempt stuck HTTP operation and
actively retry. This would mitigate the problem, while in the long run,
we need to keep an eye on ABS usage and see if we can fully resolve this
problem.

The reasoning of such timeout mechanism: we use a much smaller timeout
than before to preempt, while it is possible that a normal listing
operation would take a longer time than the initial timeout if it
contains a lot of keys. Therefore, after we terminate the connection, we
should double the timeout, so that such requests would eventually
succeed.

## Summary of changes

* Use exponential growth for ABS list timeout.
* Rather than using a fixed timeout, use a timeout that starts small and
grows
* Rather than exposing timeouts to the list_streaming caller as soon as
we see them, only do so after we have retried a few times

Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
2024-11-22 17:50:00 +00:00
Heikki Linnakangas
7372312a73 Avoid unnecessary send_replace calls in seqwait (#9852)
The notifications need to be sent whenever the waiters heap changes, per
the comment in `update_status`. But if 'advance' is called when there
are no waiters, or the new LSN is lower than the waiters so that no one
needs to be woken up, there's no need to send notifications. This saves
some CPU cycles in the common case that there are no waiters.
2024-11-22 13:29:49 +00:00
Erik Grinaker
190e8cebac safekeeper,pageserver: add CPU profiling (#9764)
## Problem

We don't have a convenient way to gather CPU profiles from a running
binary, e.g. during production incidents or end-to-end benchmarks, nor
during microbenchmarks (particularly on macOS).

We would also like to have continuous profiling in production, likely
using [Grafana Cloud
Profiles](https://grafana.com/products/cloud/profiles-for-continuous-profiling/).
We may choose to use either eBPF profiles or pprof profiles for this
(pending testing and discussion with SREs), but pprof profiles appear
useful regardless for the reasons listed above. See
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/14888.

This PR is intended as a proof of concept, to try it out in staging and
drive further discussions about profiling more broadly.

Touches #9534.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/14888.

## Summary of changes

Adds a HTTP route `/profile/cpu` that takes a CPU profile and returns
it. Defaults to a 5-second pprof Protobuf profile for use with e.g.
`pprof` or Grafana Alloy, but can also emit an SVG flamegraph. Query
parameters:

* `format`: output format (`pprof` or `svg`)
* `frequency`: sampling frequency in microseconds (default 100)
* `seconds`: number of seconds to profile (default 5)

Also integrates pprof profiles into Criterion benchmarks, such that
flamegraph reports can be taken with `cargo bench ... --profile-duration
<seconds>`. Output under `target/criterion/*/profile/flamegraph.svg`.

Example profiles:

* pprof profile (use [`pprof`](https://github.com/google/pprof)):
[profile.pb.gz](https://github.com/user-attachments/files/17756788/profile.pb.gz)
  * Web interface: `pprof -http :6060 profile.pb.gz`
* Interactive flamegraph:
[profile.svg.gz](https://github.com/user-attachments/files/17756782/profile.svg.gz)
2024-11-21 18:59:46 +00:00
Conrad Ludgate
725a5ff003 fix(proxy): CancelKeyData display log masking (#9838)
Fixes the masking for the CancelKeyData display format. Due to negative
i32 cast to u64, the top-bits all had `0xffffffff` prefix. On the
bitwise-or that followed, these took priority.

This PR also compresses 3 logs during sql-over-http into 1 log with
durations as label fields, as prior discussed.
2024-11-21 16:46:30 +00:00
Arpad Müller
811fab136f scrubber: allow restricting find_garbage to a partial tenant id prefix (#9814)
Adds support to the `find_garbage` command to restrict itself to a
partial tenant ID prefix, say `a`, and then it only traverses tenants
with IDs starting with `a`. One can now pass the `--tenant-id-prefix`
parameter.

That way, one can shard the `find_garbage` command and make it run in
parallel.

The PR also does a change of how `remote_storage` first removes trailing
`/`s, only to then add them in the listing function. It turns out that
this isn't neccessary and it prevents the prefix functionality from
working. S3 doesn't do this either.
2024-11-20 19:31:02 +00:00
Conrad Ludgate
f36f0068b8 chore(proxy): demote more logs during successful connection attempts (#9828)
Follow up to #9803 

See https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/14378

In collaboration with @cloneable and @awarus, we sifted through logs and
simply demoted some logs to debug. This is not at all finished and there
are more logs to review, but we ran out of time in the session we
organised. In any slightly more nuanced cases, we didn't touch the log,
instead leaving a TODO comment.

I've also slightly refactored the sql-over-http body read/length reject
code. I can split that into a separate PR. It just felt natural after I
switched to `read_body_with_limit` as we discussed during the meet.
2024-11-20 17:50:39 +00:00
John Spray
33dce25af8 safekeeper: block deletion on protocol handler shutdown (#9364)
## Problem

Two recently observed log errors indicate safekeeper tasks for a
timeline running after that timeline's deletion has started.
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/8972
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/8974

These code paths do not have a mechanism that coordinates task shutdown
with the overall shutdown of the timeline.

## Summary of changes

- Add a `Gate` to `Timeline`
- Take the gate as part of resident timeline guard: any code that holds
a guard over a timeline staying resident should also hold a guard over
the timeline's total lifetime.
- Take the gate from the wal removal task
- Respect Timeline::cancel in WAL send/recv code, so that we do not
block shutdown indefinitely.
- Add a test that deletes timelines with open pageserver+compute
connections, to check these get torn down as expected.

There is some risk to introducing gates: if there is code holding a gate
which does not properly respect a cancellation token, it can cause
shutdown hangs. The risk of this for safekeepers is lower in practice
than it is for other services, because in a healthy timeline deletion,
the compute is shutdown first, then the timeline is deleted on the
pageserver, and finally it is deleted on the safekeepers -- that makes
it much less likely that some protocol handler will still be running.

Closes: #8972
Closes: #8974
2024-11-20 11:07:45 +00:00
Alex Chi Z.
b22a84a7bf feat(pageserver): support key range for manual compaction trigger (#9723)
part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9114, we want to be
able to run partial gc-compaction in tests. In the future, we can also
expand this functionality to legacy compaction, so that we can trigger
compaction for a specific key range.

## Summary of changes

* Support passing compaction key range through pageserver routes.
* Refactor input parameters of compact related function to take the new
`CompactOptions`.
* Add tests for partial compaction. Note that the test may or may not
trigger compaction based on GC horizon. We need to improve the test case
to ensure things always get below the gc_horizon and the gc-compaction
can be triggered.

---------

Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
2024-11-19 19:38:41 +00:00
Arpad Müller
9b6af2bcad Add the ability to configure GenericRemoteStorage for the scrubber (#9652)
Earlier work (#7547) has made the scrubber internally generic, but one
could only configure it to use S3 storage.

This is the final piece to make (most of, snapshotting still requires
S3) the scrubber be able to be configured via GenericRemoteStorage.

I.e. you can now set an env var like:

```
REMOTE_STORAGE_CONFIG='remote_storage = { bucket_name = "neon-dev-safekeeper-us-east-2d", bucket_region = "us-east-2" }
```

and the scrubber will read it instead.
2024-11-18 21:01:48 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
d7662fdc7b feat(page_service): timeout-based batching of requests (#9321)
## Problem

We don't take advantage of queue depth generated by the compute
on the pageserver. We can process getpage requests more efficiently
by batching them. 

## Summary of changes

Batch up incoming getpage requests that arrive within a configurable
time window (`server_side_batch_timeout`).
Then process the entire batch via one `get_vectored` timeline operation.
By default, no merging takes place.

## Testing

* **Functional**: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9792
* **Performance**: will be done in staging/pre-prod

# Refs

* https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9377
* https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9376

Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <christian@neon.tech>
2024-11-18 20:24:03 +00:00
Konstantin Knizhnik
6fa9b0cd8c Use DATA_DIR instead of current workign directory in restore_from_wal script (#9729)
## Problem

See https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/7750

test_wal_restore.sh is copying file to current working directory which
can cause interfere of test_wa_restore.py tests spawned of different
configurations.

## Summary of changes

Copy file to $DATA_DIR

Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
2024-11-18 11:55:38 +02:00
Vlad Lazar
ac689ab014 wal_decoder: rename end_lsn to next_record_lsn (#9776)
## Problem

It turns out that `WalStreamDecoder::poll_decode` returns the start LSN
of the next record and not the end LSN of the current record. They are
not always equal. For example, they're not equal when the record in
question is an XLOG SWITCH record.

## Summary of changes

Rename things to reflect that.
2024-11-15 21:53:11 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
2af791ba83 wal_decoder: make InterpretedWalRecord serde (#9775)
## Problem

We want to serialize interpreted records to send them over the wire from
safekeeper to pageserver.

## Summary of changes

Make `InterpretedWalRecord` ser/de. This is a temporary change to get
the bulk of the lift merged in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9746. For going to prod, we
don't want to use bincode since we can't evolve the schema.
Questions on serialization will be tackled separately.
2024-11-15 20:34:48 +00:00
Konstantin Knizhnik
f70611c8df Correctly truncate VM (#9342)
## Problem

https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9240

## Summary of changes

Correctly truncate VM page instead just replacing it with zero page.

## Checklist before requesting a review

- [ ] I have performed a self-review of my code.
- [ ] If it is a core feature, I have added thorough tests.
- [ ] Do we need to implement analytics? if so did you add the relevant
metrics to the dashboard?
- [ ] If this PR requires public announcement, mark it with
/release-notes label and add several sentences in this section.

## Checklist before merging

- [ ] Do not forget to reformat commit message to not include the above
checklist

---------

Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Heikki Linnakangas <heikki@neon.tech>
2024-11-14 17:19:13 +02:00
John Spray
b4e00b8b22 pageserver: refuse to load tenants with suspiciously old indices in old generations (#9719)
## Problem

Historically, if a control component passed a pageserver "generation: 1"
this could be a quick way to corrupt a tenant by loading a historic
index.

Follows https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9383
Closes #6951 

## Summary of changes

- Introduce a Fatal variant to DownloadError, to enable index downloads
to signal when they have encountered a scary enough situation that we
shouldn't proceed to load the tenant.
- Handle this variant by putting the tenant into a broken state (no
matter which timeline within the tenant reported it)
- Add a test for this case

In the event that this behavior fires when we don't want it to, we have
ways to intervene:
- "Touch" an affected index to update its mtime (download+upload S3
object)
- If this behavior is triggered, it indicates we're attaching in some
old generation, so we should be able to fix that by manually bumping
generation numbers in the storage controller database (this should never
happen, but it's an option if it does)
2024-11-13 18:07:39 +00:00
Erik Grinaker
05381a48f0 utils: remove unnecessary fsync in durable_rename() (#9686)
## Problem

WAL segment fsyncs significantly affect WAL ingestion throughput.
`durable_rename()` is used when initializing every 16 MB segment, and
issues 3 fsyncs of which 1 was unnecessary.

## Summary of changes

Remove an fsync in `durable_rename` which is unnecessary with Linux and
ext4 (which we currently use). This improves WAL ingestion throughput by
up to 23% with large appends on my MacBook.
2024-11-12 18:57:31 +01:00
Alex Chi Z.
cef165818c test(pageserver): add gc-compaction tests with delta will_init (#9724)
I had an impression that gc-compaction didn't test the case where the
first record of the key history is will_init because of there are some
code path that will panic in this case. Luckily it got fixed in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9026 so we can now implement
such tests.

Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9114

## Summary of changes

* Randomly changed some images into will_init neon wal record
* Split `test_simple_bottom_most_compaction_deltas` into two test cases,
one of them has the bottom layer as delta layer with will_init flags,
while the other is the original one with image layers.

---------

Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
2024-11-12 10:37:31 -05:00
Erik Grinaker
6b19867410 safekeeper: don't flush control file on WAL ingest path (#9698)
## Problem

The control file is flushed on the WAL ingest path when the commit LSN
advances by one segment, to bound the amount of recovery work in case of
a crash. This involves 3 additional fsyncs, which can have a significant
impact on WAL ingest throughput. This is to some extent mitigated by
`AppendResponse` not being emitted on segment bound flushes, since this
will prevent commit LSN advancement, which will be addressed separately.

## Summary of changes

Don't flush the control file on the WAL ingest path at all. Instead,
leave that responsibility to the timeline manager, but ask it to flush
eagerly if the control file lags the in-memory commit LSN by more than
one segment. This should not cause more than `REFRESH_INTERVAL` (300 ms)
additional latency before flushing the control file, which is
negligible.
2024-11-12 15:17:03 +00:00
Tristan Partin
2d9652c434 Clean up C.UTF-8 locale changes
Removes some unnecessary initdb arguments, and fixes Neon for MacOS
since it doesn't seem to ship a C.UTF-8 locale.

Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
2024-11-11 13:53:12 -06:00
Vlad Lazar
ceaa80ffeb storcon: add peer token for peer to peer communication (#9695)
## Problem

We wish to stop using admin tokens in the infra repo, but step down
requests use the admin token.

## Summary of Changes

Introduce a new "ControllerPeer" scope and use it for step-down requests.
2024-11-11 09:58:41 +00:00
Tristan Partin
34a4eb6f2a Switch compute-related locales to C.UTF-8 by default
Right now, our environments create databases with the C locale, which is
really unfortunate for users who have data stored in other languages
that they want to analyze. For instance, show_trgm on Hebrew text
currently doesn't work in staging or production.

I don't envision this being the final solution. I think this is just a
way to set a known value so the pageserver doesn't use its parent
environment. The final solution to me is exposing initdb parameters to
users in the console. Then they could use a different locale or encoding
if they so chose.

Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
2024-11-08 12:19:18 -06:00
John Spray
aa9112efce pageserver: add no_sync for use in regression tests (1/2) (#9677)
## Problem

In test environments, the `syncfs` that the pageserver does on startup
can take a long time, as other tests running concurrently might have
many gigabytes of dirty pages.

## Summary of changes

- Add a `no_sync` option to the pageserver's config.
- Skip syncfs on startup if this is set
- A subsequent PR (https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9678) will
enable this by default in tests. We need to wait until after the next
release to avoid breaking compat tests, which would fail if we set
no_sync & use an old pageserver binary.

Q: Why is this a different mechanism than safekeeper, which as a
--no-sync CLI?
A: Because the way we manage pageservers in neon_local depends on the
pageserver.toml containing the full configuration, whereas safekeepers
have a config file which is neon-local-specific and can drive a CLI
flag.

Q: Why is the option no_sync rather than sync?
A: For boolean configs with a dangerous value, it's preferable to make
"false" the safe option, so that any downstream future config tooling
that might have a "booleans are false by default" behavior (e.g. golang
structs) is safe by default.

Q: Why only skip the syncfs, and not all fsyncs?
A: Skipping all fsyncs would require more code changes, and the most
acute problem isn't fsyncs themselves (these just slow down a running
test), it's the syncfs (which makes a pageserver startup slow as a
result of _other_ tests)
2024-11-08 10:16:04 +00:00
Erik Grinaker
d6aa26a533 postgres_ffi: make WalGenerator generic over record generator (#9614)
## Problem

Benchmarks need more control over the WAL generated by `WalGenerator`.
In particular, they need to vary the size of logical messages.

## Summary of changes

* Make `WalGenerator` generic over `RecordGenerator`, which constructs
WAL records.
* Add `LogicalMessageGenerator` which emits logical messages, with a
configurable payload.
* Minor tweaks and code reorganization.

There are no changes to the core logic or emitted WAL.
2024-11-07 10:38:39 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
4dfa0c221b pageserver: ingest pre-serialized batches of values (#9579)
## Problem

https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9524 split the decoding and
interpretation step from ingestion.
The output of the first phase is a `wal_decoder::models::InterpretedWalRecord`. 
Before this patch set that struct contained a list of `Value` instances.

We wish to lift the decoding and interpretation step to the safekeeper,
but it would be nice if the safekeeper gave us a batch containing the raw data instead of actual values.

## Summary of changes

Main goal here is to make `InterpretedWalRecord` hold a raw buffer which
contains pre-serialized Values.
For this we do:
1. Add a `SerializedValueBatch` type. This is `inmemory_layer::SerializedBatch` with some 
extra functionality for extension, observing values for shard 0 and tests.
2. Replace `inmemory_layer::SerializedBatch` with `SerializedValueBatch`
3. Make `DatadirModification` maintain a `SerializedValueBatch`.


### `DatadirModification` changes

`DatadirModification` now maintains a `SerializedValueBatch` and extends
it as new WAL records come in (to avoid flushing to disk on every
record).
In turn, this cascaded into a number of modifications to
`DatadirModification`:
1. Replace `pending_data_pages` and `pending_zero_data_pages` with `pending_data_batch`.
2. Removal of `pending_zero_data_pages` and its cousin `on_wal_record_end`
3. Rename `pending_bytes` to `pending_metadata_bytes` since this is what it tracks now.
4. Adapting of various utility methods like `len`, `approx_pending_bytes` and `has_dirty_data_pages`.

Removal of `pending_zero_data_pages` and the optimisation associated
with it ((1) and (2)) deserves more detail.

Previously all zero data pages went through `pending_zero_data_pages`.
We wrote zero data pages when filling gaps caused by relation extension
(case A) and when handling special wal records (case B). If it happened
that the same WAL record contained a non zero write for an entry in
`pending_zero_data_pages` we skipped the zero write.

Case A: We handle this differently now. When ingesting the
`SerialiezdValueBatch` associated with one PG WAL record, we identify the gaps and fill the
them in one go. Essentially, we move from a per key process (gaps were filled after each
new key), and replace it with a per record process. Hence, the optimisation is not
required anymore.

Case B: When the handling of a special record needs to zero out a key,
it just adds that to the current batch. I inspected the code, and I
don't think the optimisation kicked in here.
2024-11-06 14:10:32 +00:00
Arpad Müller
ee68bbf6f5 Add tenant config option to allow timeline_offloading (#9598)
Allow us to enable timeline offloading for single tenants without having
to enable it for the entire pageserver.

Part of #8088.
2024-11-04 21:01:18 +01:00
Erik Grinaker
0d5a512825 safekeeper: add walreceiver metrics (#9450)
## Problem

We don't have any observability for Safekeeper WAL receiver queues.

## Summary of changes

Adds a few WAL receiver metrics:

* `safekeeper_wal_receivers`: gauge of currently connected WAL
receivers.
* `safekeeper_wal_receiver_queue_depth`: histogram of queue depths per
receiver, sampled every 5 seconds.
* `safekeeper_wal_receiver_queue_depth_total`: gauge of total queued
messages across all receivers.
* `safekeeper_wal_receiver_queue_size_total`: gauge of total queued
message sizes across all receivers.

There are already metrics for ingested WAL volume: `written_wal_bytes`
counter per timeline, and `safekeeper_write_wal_bytes` per-request
histogram.
2024-11-04 15:22:46 +00:00
Conrad Ludgate
3dcdbcc34d remove aws-lc-rs dep and fix storage_broker tls (#9613)
It seems the ecosystem is not so keen on moving to aws-lc-rs as it's
build setup is more complicated than ring (requiring cmake).

Eventually I expect the ecosystem should pivot to
https://github.com/ctz/graviola/tree/main/rustls-graviola as it
stabilises (it has a very simply build step and license), but for now
let's try not have a headache of juggling two crypto libs.

I also noticed that tonic will just fail with tls without a default
provider, so I added some defensive code for that.
2024-11-04 13:29:13 +00:00
Vlad Lazar
411c3aa0d6 pageserver: lift decoding and interpreting of wal into wal_decoder (#9524)
## Problem

Decoding and ingestion are still coupled in `pageserver::WalIngest`.

## Summary of changes

A new type is added to `wal_decoder::models`, InterpretedWalRecord. This
type contains everything that the pageserver requires in order to ingest
a WAL record. The highlights are the `metadata_record` which is an
optional special record type to be handled and `blocks` which stores
key, value pairs to be persisted to storage.

This type is produced by
`wal_decoder::models::InterpretedWalRecord::from_bytes` from a raw PG
wal record.

The rest of this commit separates decoding and interpretation of the PG
WAL record from its application in `WalIngest::ingest_record`.

Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9335
Epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9329
2024-10-31 10:47:43 +00:00
Erik Grinaker
96e35e11a6 postgres_ffi: add WAL generator for tests/benchmarks (#9503)
## Problem

We don't have a convenient way to generate WAL records for benchmarks
and tests.

## Summary of changes

Adds a WAL generator, exposed as an iterator. It currently only
generates logical messages (noops), but will be extended to write actual
table rows later.

Some existing code for WAL generation has been replaced with this
generator, to reduce duplication.
2024-10-30 14:46:39 +03:00
Vlad Lazar
07b974480c pageserver: move things around to prepare for decoding logic (#9504)
## Problem

We wish to have high level WAL decoding logic in `wal_decoder::decoder`
module.

## Summary of Changes

For this we need the `Value` and `NeonWalRecord` types accessible there, so:
1. Move `Value` and `NeonWalRecord` to `pageserver::value` and
`pageserver::record` respectively.
2. Get rid of `pageserver::repository` (follow up from (1))
3. Move PG specific WAL record types to `postgres_ffi::walrecord`. In
theory they could live in `wal_decoder`, but it would create a circular
dependency between `wal_decoder` and `postgres_ffi`. Long term it makes
sense for those types to be PG version specific, so that will work out nicely.
4. Move higher level WAL record types (to be ingested by pageserver)
into `wal_decoder::models`

Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9335
Epic: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9329
2024-10-29 10:00:34 +00:00
Alex Chi Z.
57c21aff9f refactor(pageserver): remove aux v1 configs (#9494)
## Problem

Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/8623

## Summary of changes

Removed all aux-v1 config processing code. Note that we persisted it
into the index part file, so we cannot really remove the field from
index part. I also kept the config item within the tenant config, but we
will not read it any more.

---------

Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
2024-10-28 19:51:14 +00:00
Yuchen Liang
85b954f449 pageserver: add tokio-epoll-uring slots waiters queue depth metrics (#9482)
In complement to
https://github.com/neondatabase/tokio-epoll-uring/pull/56.

## Problem

We want to make tokio-epoll-uring slots waiters queue depth observable
via Prometheus.

## Summary of changes

- Add `pageserver_tokio_epoll_uring_slots_submission_queue_depth`
metrics as a `Histogram`.
- Each thread-local tokio-epoll-uring system is given a `LocalHistogram`
to observe the metrics.
- Keep a list of `Arc<ThreadLocalMetrics>` used on-demand to flush data
to the shared histogram.
- Extend `Collector::collect` to report
`pageserver_tokio_epoll_uring_slots_submission_queue_depth`.

Signed-off-by: Yuchen Liang <yuchen@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <christian@neon.tech>
2024-10-25 21:30:57 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
e0c7f1ce15 remote_storage(local_fs): return correct file sizes (#9511)
## Problem

`local_fs` doesn't return file sizes, which I need in PGDATA import
(#9218)

## Solution

Include file sizes in the result.

I would have liked to add a unit test, and started doing that in 

* https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9510

by extending the common object storage tests
(`libs/remote_storage/tests/common/tests.rs`) to check for sizes as
well.

But it turns out that localfs is not even covered by the common object
storage tests and upon closer inspection, it seems that this area needs
more attention.
=> punt the effort into https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9510
2024-10-25 12:20:53 +00:00
Christian Schwarz
6f5c262684 pageserver: add testing API to scan layers for disposable keys (#9393)
This PR adds a pageserver mgmt API to scan a layer file for disposable
keys.

It hooks it up to the sharding compaction test, demonstrating that we're
not filtering out all disposable keys.

This is extracted from PGDATA import
(https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9218)
where I do the filtering of layer files based on `is_key_disposable`.
2024-10-25 14:16:45 +02:00
Christian Schwarz
b782b11b33 refactor(timeline creation): represent bootstrap vs branch using enum (#9366)
# Problem

Timeline creation can either be bootstrap or branch.
The distinction is made based on whether the `ancestor_*` fields are
present or not.

In the PGDATA import code
(https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9218), I add a third variant
to timeline creation.

# Solution

The above pushed me to refactor the code in Pageserver to distinguish
the different creation requests through enum variants.

There is no externally observable effect from this change.

On the implementation level, a notable change is that the acquisition of
the `TimelineCreationGuard` happens later than before. This is necessary
so that we have everything in place to construct the
`CreateTimelineIdempotency`. Notably, this moves the acquisition of the
creation guard _after_ the acquisition of the `gc_cs` lock in the case
of branching. This might appear as if we're at risk of holding `gc_cs`
longer than before this PR, but, even before this PR, we were holding
`gc_cs` until after the `wait_completion()` that makes the timeline
creation durable in S3 returns. I don't see any deadlock risk with
reversing the lock acquisition order.

As a drive-by change, I found that the `create_timeline()` function in
`neon_local` is unused, so I removed it.

# Refs

* platform context: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9218
* product context: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/17507
* next PR stacked atop this one:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9501
2024-10-25 10:04:27 +00:00