## Problem
In control_plane, the local SSL certificate generation uses `ed25519`,
but the comment still remained `rsa:2048`, resulting in a mismatch.
This mismatch was introduced in #11542.
## Summary of changes
The comment has been corrected from `rsa:2048` to `ed25519` to ensure
consistency with the implementation.
## Problem
Control_plane shows incorrect file path when identity.toml file open
fails.
## Summary of changes
In the error context, when writing identity.toml, I changed it to use
identity_file_path instead of config_file_path.
## Problem
Neon's storage system currently has hard-coded 512-byte block size for
Direct IO operations, which causes I/O errors on systems with disks that
have 4096-byte block sizes.
This results in errors like "vec read failed" and "Invalid argument (os
error 22)" on certain hardware configurations.
See issue #12623 for details.
## Summary of changes
Make Direct IO alignment configurable at build time to support both
512-byte and 4096-byte block sizes:
- Add `io-align-512` and `io-align-4k` cargo features (default: 512-byte
for backward compatibility)
- Make `DEFAULT_IO_BUFFER_ALIGNMENT` configurable via cargo features in
`pageserver_api`
- Update `DIO_CHUNK_SIZE` in vectored_dio_read to use the configured
alignment value dynamically
- Add `IO_ALIGNMENT` build argument to Dockerfile to allow building
images with different alignment settings
- Add startup logging to display the configured IO buffer alignment for
operational visibility
- Fix validation logic in `virtual_file.rs` to use the configured
alignment instead of hard-coded 512
This change allows Neon to run on systems with different disk block
sizes by building with the appropriate feature flag, addressing the
compatibility issues described in the RFC on Direct IO implementation
## Performance Note
Benchmarks show 512-byte alignment performs significantly better than
4k:
- Write: 512-byte is 21-71% faster across percentiles (p99: 71% faster)
- Read: 512-byte is slightly faster (5-21% improvement)
This is why 512-byte remains the default.
However, some storage systems require 4k alignment and will fail with
EINVAL otherwise. This change adds build-time configuration to support
both environments.
## Problem
We are currently using GCS through the AWS API instead of directly to
the GCS API.
## Summary of changes
Draft implementation of a GCS provider. We run Neon on GCS with the AWS
provider via [this
patch](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/10277), but want to use
GCS API directly. This implementation attempts to do so without adding a
GCS library dependency or new SDK, except for `gcp_auth`.
## Problem
rest broker needs to respond with the correct cors headers for the api
to be usable from other domains
## Summary of changes
added a code path in rest broker to handle the OPTIONS requests
---------
Co-authored-by: Ruslan Talpa <ruslan.talpa@databricks.com>
## Problem
Right now if we commit a joint configuration to DB, there is no way
back. The only way to get the clean mconf is to continue the migration.
The RFC also described an abort mechanism, which allows to abort current
migration and revert mconf change. It might be needed if the migration
is stuck and cannot have any progress, e.g. if the sk we are migrating
to went down during the migration. This PR implements this abort
algorithm.
- Closes: https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-899
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12549
## Summary of changes
- Implement `safekeeper_migrate_abort` handler with the algorithm
described in RFC
- Add `timeline-safekeeper-migrate-abort` subcommand to `storcon_cli`
- Add test for the migration abort algorithm.
- Return sub-actions time spans for prewarm, prewarm offload, and
promotion in http handlers.
- Set `synchronous_standby_names=walproposer` for promoted endpoints.
Otherwise, walproposer on promoted standby ignores reply from safekeeper
and is stuck on lsn COMMIT eternally.
Commit 1dce2a9e74 changed how the `neon.pageserver_connstring` setting
is formed, but it messed up setting the `neon.stripe_size` setting so
that it was set twice. That got mixed up during development of the
patch, as commit 7fef4435c1 landed first and was merged incorrectly.
Clap automatically uses doc comments as help/about texts. Doc comments
are strictly better, since they're also used e.g. for IDE documentation,
and are better formatted.
This patch updates all `neon_local` commands to use doc comments
(courtesy of GPT-o3).
## Problem
I discovered two bugs corresponding to safekeeper migration, which
together might lead to a data loss during the migration. The second bug
is from a hadron patch and might lead to a data loss during the
safekeeper restore in hadron as well.
1. `switch_membership` returns the current `term` instead of
`last_log_term`. It is used to choose the `sync_position` in the
algorithm, so we might choose the wrong one and break the correctness
guarantees.
2. The current `term` is used to choose the most advanced SK in
`pull_timeline` with higher priority than `flush_lsn`. It is incorrect
because the most advanced safekeeper is the one with the highest
`(last_log_term, flush_lsn)` pair. The compute might bump term on the
least advanced sk, making it the best choice to pull from, and thus
making committed log entries "uncommitted" after `pull_timeline`
Part of https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-1017
## Summary of changes
- Return `last_log_term` in `switch_membership`
- Use `(last_log_term, flush_lsn)` as a primary key for choosing the
most advanced sk in `pull_timeline` and deny pulling if the `max_term`
is higher than on the most advanced sk (hadron only)
- Write tests for both cases
- Retry `sync_safekeepers` in `compute_ctl`
- Take into the account the quorum size when calculating `sync_position`
## Problem
The deletion logic had become difficult to understand and maintain.
## Summary of changes
- Added an RFC detailing proposed improvements to all deletion-related
APIs.
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
Add DELETE /lfc/prewarm route which handles ongoing prewarm
cancellation, update API spec, add prewarm Cancelled state
Add offload Cancelled state when LFC is not initialized
These lines are a significant fraction of the total log size of the
regression tests. And it seems very uninteresting, it's always
'localhost' in local tests.
## Problem
In #12268, we added Pageserver gRPC addresses to the storage controller.
However, we didn't actually persist these in the database.
## Summary of changes
Update the database with the new gRPC address on reattach.
Today we don't have any indications (other than spammy logs in PG that
nobody monitors) if the Walproposer in PG cannot connect to/get votes
from all Safekeepers. This means we don't have signals indicating that
the Safekeepers are operating at degraded redundancy. We need these
signals.
Added plumbing in PG extension so that the `neon_perf_counters` view
exports the following gauge metrics on safekeeper health:
- `num_configured_safekeepers`: The total number of safekeepers
configured in PG.
- `num_active_safekeepers`: The number of safekeepers that PG is
actively streaming WAL to.
An alert should be raised whenever `num_active_safekeepers` <
`num_configured_safekeepers`.
The metrics are implemented by adding additional state to the
Walproposer shared memory keeping track of the active statuses of
safekeepers using a simple array. The status of the safekeeper is set to
active (1) after the Walproposer acquires a quorum and starts streaming
data to the safekeeper, and is set to inactive (0) when the connection
with a safekeeper is shut down. We scan the safekeeper status array in
Walproposer shared memory when collecting the metrics to produce results
for the gauges.
Added coverage for the metrics to integration test
`test_wal_acceptor.py::test_timeline_disk_usage_limit`.
## Problem
## Summary of changes
---------
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
```
postgres=> select neon.prewarm_local_cache('\xfcfcfcfc01000000ffffffff070000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000ff', 1);
WARNING: terminating connection because of crash of another server process
DETAIL: The postmaster has commanded this server process to roll back the current transaction and exit, because another server process exited abnormally and possibly corrupted shared memory.
HINT: In a moment you should be able to reconnect to the database and repeat your command.
FATAL: server conn crashed?
```
The function takes a bytea argument and casts it to a C struct, without
validating the contents.
## Summary of changes
Added validation for number of pages to be prefetched and for the chunks
as well.
## Problem
when compiled with rest_broker feature and is_rest_broker=true (but
is_auth_broker=false) accept_jwts is set to false
## Summary of changes
set the config with
```
accept_jwts: args.is_auth_broker || args.is_rest_broker
```
Co-authored-by: Ruslan Talpa <ruslan.talpa@databricks.com>
Add a new 'pageserver_connection_info' field in the compute spec. It
replaces the old 'pageserver_connstring' field with a more complicated
struct that includes both libpq and grpc URLs, for each shard (or only
one of the the URLs, depending on the configuration). It also includes a
flag suggesting which one to use; compute_ctl now uses it to decide
which protocol to use for the basebackup.
This is backwards-compatible with everything that's in production. If
the control plane fills in `pageserver_connection_info`, compute_ctl
uses that. If it fills in the
`pageserver_connstring`/`shard_stripe_size` fields, it uses those. As
last resort, it uses the 'neon.pageserver_connstring' GUC from the list
of Postgres settings.
The 'grpc' flag in the endpoint config is now more of a suggestion, and
it's used to populate the 'prefer_protocol' flag in the compute spec.
Regardless of the flag, compute_ctl gets both URLs, so it can choose to
use libpq or grpc as it wishes. It currently always obeys the flag to
choose which method to use for getting the basebackup, but Postgres
itself will always use the libpq protocol. (That will be changed with
the new rust-based communicator project, which implements the gRPC
client in the compute).
After that, the `pageserver_connection_info.prefer_protocol` flag in the
spec file can be used to control whether compute_ctl uses grpc or libpq.
The actual compute's grpc usage will be controlled by the
`neon.enable_new_communicator` GUC (not yet; that will be introduced in
the future, with the new rust-base communicator project). It can be set
separately from 'prefer_protocol'.
Later:
- Once all old computes are gone, remove the code to pass
`neon.pageserver_connstring`
… walproposer (#895)
Data corruptions are typically detected on the pageserver side when it
replays WAL records. However, since PS doesn't synchronously replay WAL
records as they are being ingested through safekeepers, we need some
extra plumbing to feed information about pageserver-detected corruptions
during compaction (and/or WAL redo in general) back to SK and PG for
proper action.
We don't yet know what actions PG/SK should take upon receiving the
signal, but we should have the detection and feedback in place.
Add an extra `corruption_detected` field to the `PageserverFeedback`
message that is sent from PS -> SK -> PG. It's a boolean value that is
set to true when PS detects a "critical error" that signals data
corruption, and it's sent in all `PageserverFeedback` messages. Upon
receiving this signal, the safekeeper raises a
`safekeeper_ps_corruption_detected` gauge metric (value set to 1). The
safekeeper then forwards this signal to PG where a
`ps_corruption_detected` gauge metric (value also set to 1) is raised in
the `neon_perf_counters` view.
Added an integration test in
`test_compaction.py::test_ps_corruption_detection_feedback` that
confirms that the safekeeper and PG can receive the data corruption
signal in the `PageserverFeedback` message in a simulated data
corruption.
## Problem
## Summary of changes
---------
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
Add a `SplitError` for `GetPageSplitter`, with an `Into<tonic::Status>`
implementation. This avoids a bunch of boilerplate to convert
`GetPageSplitter` errors into `tonic::Status`.
Requires #12702.
Touches [LKB-191](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-191).
## Problem
We don't have visibility into data/index corruption.
## Summary of changes
Add data/index corruptions metrics.
PG calls elog ERROR errcode to emit these corruption errors.
PG Changes: https://github.com/neondatabase/postgres/pull/698
## Problem
During shard splits, each parent shard is split and removed
incrementally. Only when all parent shards have split is the split
committed and the compute notified. This can take several minutes for
large tenants. In the meanwhile, the compute will be sending requests to
the (now-removed) parent shards.
This was (mostly) not a problem for the libpq protocol, because it does
shard routing on the server-side. The compute just sends requests to
some Pageserver, and the server will figure out which local shard should
serve it.
It is a problem for the gRPC protocol, where the client explicitly says
which shard it's talking to.
Touches [LKB-191](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-191).
Requires #12772.
## Summary of changes
* Add server-side routing of gRPC requests to any local child shards if
the parent does not exist.
* Add server-side splitting of GetPage batch requests straddling
multiple child shards.
* Move the `GetPageSplitter` into `pageserver_page_api`.
I really don't like this approach, but it avoids making changes to the
split protocol. I could be convinced we should change the split protocol
instead, e.g. to keep the parent shard alive until the split commits and
the compute has been notified, but we can also do that as a later change
without blocking the communicator on it.
## Problem
Sometimes, the regression test of `pg_repack` fails due to an extra line
in the output.
The most probable cause of this is autovacuum.
https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-2637
## Summary of changes
Autovacuum is disabled during the test.
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
## Problem
If a user provides a wrong database name in the connection string, it
should be logged as a user error, not postgres error.
I found 4 different places where we log such errors:
1. `proxy/src/stream.rs:193`, e.g.:
```
{"timestamp":"2025-07-15T11:33:35.660026Z","level":"INFO","message":"forwarding error to user","fields":{"kind":"postgres","msg":"database \"[redacted]\" does not exist"},"spans":{"connect_request#9":{"protocol":"tcp","session_id":"ce1f2c90-dfb5-44f7-b9e9-8b8535e8b9b8","conn_info":"[redacted]","ep":"[redacted]","role":"[redacted]"}},"thread_id":22,"task_id":"370407867","target":"proxy::stream","src":"proxy/src/stream.rs:193","extract":{"ep":"[redacted]","session_id":"ce1f2c90-dfb5-44f7-b9e9-8b8535e8b9b8"}}
```
2. `proxy/src/pglb/mod.rs:137`, e.g.:
```
{"timestamp":"2025-07-15T11:37:44.340497Z","level":"WARN","message":"per-client task finished with an error: Couldn't connect to compute node: db error: FATAL: database \"[redacted]\" does not exist","spans":{"connect_request#8":{"protocol":"tcp","session_id":"763baaac-d039-4f4d-9446-c149e32660eb","conn_info":"[redacted]","ep":"[redacted]","role":"[redacted]"}},"thread_id":14,"task_id":"866658139","target":"proxy::pglb","src":"proxy/src/pglb/mod.rs:137","extract":{"ep":"[redacted]","session_id":"763baaac-d039-4f4d-9446-c149e32660eb"}}
```
3. `proxy/src/serverless/mod.rs:451`, e.g. (note that the error is
repeated 4 times — retries?):
```
{"timestamp":"2025-07-15T11:37:54.515891Z","level":"WARN","message":"error in websocket connection: Couldn't connect to compute node: db error: FATAL: database \"[redacted]\" does not exist: Couldn't connect to compute node: db error: FATAL: database \"[redacted]\" does not exist: db error: FATAL: database \"[redacted]\" does not exist: FATAL: database \"[redacted]\" does not exist","spans":{"http_conn#8":{"conn_id":"ec7780db-a145-4f0e-90df-0ba35f41b828"},"connect_request#9":{"protocol":"ws","session_id":"1eaaeeec-b671-4153-b1f4-247839e4b1c7","conn_info":"[redacted]","ep":"[redacted]","role":"[redacted]"}},"thread_id":10,"task_id":"366331699","target":"proxy::serverless","src":"proxy/src/serverless/mod.rs:451","extract":{"conn_id":"ec7780db-a145-4f0e-90df-0ba35f41b828","ep":"[redacted]","session_id":"1eaaeeec-b671-4153-b1f4-247839e4b1c7"}}
```
4. `proxy/src/serverless/sql_over_http.rs:219`, e.g.
```
{"timestamp":"2025-07-15T10:32:34.866603Z","level":"INFO","message":"forwarding error to user","fields":{"kind":"postgres","error":"could not connect to postgres in compute","msg":"database \"[redacted]\" does not exist"},"spans":{"http_conn#19":{"conn_id":"7da08203-5dab-45e8-809f-503c9019ec6b"},"connect_request#5":{"protocol":"http","session_id":"68387f1c-cbc8-45b3-a7db-8bb1c55ca809","conn_info":"[redacted]","ep":"[redacted]","role":"[redacted]"}},"thread_id":17,"task_id":"16432250","target":"proxy::serverless::sql_over_http","src":"proxy/src/serverless/sql_over_http.rs:219","extract":{"conn_id":"7da08203-5dab-45e8-809f-503c9019ec6b","ep":"[redacted]","session_id":"68387f1c-cbc8-45b3-a7db-8bb1c55ca809"}}
```
This PR directly addresses 1 and 4. I _think_ it _should_ also help with
2 and 3, although in those places we don't seem to log `kind`, so I'm
not quite sure. I'm also confused why in 3 the error is repeated
multiple times.
## Summary of changes
Resolves https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9440
## Problem
Part of LKB-2368. Compute fails to obtain LSN lease in this test case.
There're many assumptions around how compute obtains the leases, and in
this particular test case, as the LSN lease length is only 8s (which is
shorter than the amount of time where pageserver can restart and compute
can reconnect in terms of force stop), it sometimes cause issues.
## Summary of changes
Add more sleeps around the test case to ensure it's stable at least. We
need to find a more reliable way to test this in the future.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Fix LKB-2632.
The safekeeper wal read path does not seem to retry at all. This would
cause client read errors on the customer side.
## Summary of changes
- Retry on `safekeeper::wal_backup::read_object`.
- Note that this only retries on S3 HTTP connection errors. Subsequent
reads could fail, and that needs more refactors to make the retry
mechanism work across the path.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
Split the functions into two parts: an internal function in file_cache.c
which returns an array of structs representing the result set, and
another function in neon.c with the glue code to expose it as a SQL
function. This is in preparation for the new communicator, which needs
to implement the same SQL functions, but getting the information from a
different place.
In the glue code, use the more modern Postgres way of building a result
set using a tuplestore.
## Problem
In https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12467, timeouts and retries
were added to `Cache::get` tenant shard resolution to paper over an
issue with read unavailability during shard splits. However, this
retries _all_ errors, including irrecoverable errors like `NotFound`.
This causes problems with gRPC child shard routing in #12702, which
targets specific shards with `ShardSelector::Known` and relies on prompt
`NotFound` errors to reroute requests to child shards. These retries
introduce a 1s delay for all reads during child routing.
The broader problem of read unavailability during shard splits is left
as future work, see https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-672.
Touches #12702.
Touches [LKB-191](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-191).
## Summary of changes
* Change `TenantManager` to always return a concrete
`GetActiveTimelineError`.
* Only retry `WaitForActiveTimeout` errors.
* Lots of code unindentation due to the simplified error handling.
Out of caution, we do not gate the retries on `ShardSelector`, since
this can trigger other races. Improvements here are left as future work.
## Problem
Given a container image it is difficult to figure out dependencies and
doesn't work automatically.
## Summary of changes
- Build all rust binaries with `cargo auditable`, to allow sbom scanners
to find it's dependencies.
- Adjust `attests` for `docker/build-push-action`, so that buildkit
creates sbom and provenance attestations.
- Dropping `--locked` for `rustfilt`, because `rustfilt` can't build
with locked dependencies[^5]
## Further details
Building with `cargo auditable`[^1] embeds a dependency list into Linux,
Windows, MacOS and WebAssembly artifacts. A bunch of tools support
discovering dependencies from this, among them `syft`[^2], which is used
by the BuildKit Syft scanner[^3] plugin. This BuildKit plugin is the
default[^4] used in docker for generating sbom attestations, but we're
making that default explicit by referencing the container image.
[^1]: https://github.com/rust-secure-code/cargo-auditable
[^2]: https://github.com/anchore/syft
[^3]: https://github.com/docker/buildkit-syft-scanner
[^4]:
https://docs.docker.com/build/metadata/attestations/sbom/#sbom-generator
[^5]: https://github.com/luser/rustfilt/issues/23
## Problem
We have seen some errors in staging when the shard migration was
triggered by optimizations, and it was ongoing during draining the node
it was migrating from. It happens because the node draining loop only
waits for the migrations started by the drain loop itself. The ongoing
migrations are ignored.
Closes: https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-1625
## Summary of changes
- Wait for the shard reconciliation during the drain if it is being
migrated from the drained node.
## Problem
We used ClickHouse v. 24.8, which is outdated, for logical replication
testing. We could miss some problems.
## Summary of changes
The version was updated to 25.6, with a workaround using the environment
variable `PGSSLCERT`.
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
## Problem
`test_lsn_lease_storcon` might fail in debug builds due to slow
ShardSplit
## Summary of changes
- Make `test_lsn_lease_storcon ` test to ignore `.*Exclusive lock by
ShardSplit was held.*` warning in debug builds
Ref: https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1753777051481029
The `std::mem::offset_of` macro was introduced in Rust 1.77.0.
In the passing, mark the function as `const`, as suggested in the
comment. Not sure which compiler version that requires, but it works
with what have currently.
## Problem
Password hashing for sql-over-http takes up a lot of CPU. Perhaps we can
get away with temporarily caching some steps so we only need fewer
rounds, which will save some CPU time.
## Summary of changes
The output of pbkdf2 is the XOR of the outputs of each iteration round,
eg `U1 ^ U2 ^ ... U15 ^ U16 ^ U17 ^ ... ^ Un`. We cache the suffix of
the expression `U16 ^ U17 ^ ... ^ Un`. To compute the result from the
cached suffix, we only need to compute the prefix `U1 ^ U2 ^ ... U15`.
The suffix by itself is useless, which prevent's its use in brute-force
attacks should this cached memory leak.
We are also caching the full 4096 round hash in memory, which can be
used for brute-force attacks, where this suffix could be used to speed
it up. My hope/expectation is that since these will be in different
allocations, it makes any such memory exploitation much much harder.
Since the full hash cache might be invalidated while the suffix is
cached, I'm storing the timestamp of the computation as a way to
identity the match.
I also added `zeroize()` to clear the sensitive state from the
stack/heap.
For the most security conscious customers, we hope to roll out OIDC
soon, so they can disable passwords entirely.
---
The numbers for the threadpool were pretty random, but according to our
busiest region for sql-over-http, we only see about 150 unique endpoints
every minute. So storing ~100 of the most common endpoints for that
minute should be the vast majority of requests.
1 minute was chosen so we don't keep data in memory for too long.
- Remove some unused code
- Use `is_multiple_of()` instead of '%'
- Collapse consecuative "if let" statements
- Elided lifetime fixes
It is enough just to review the code of your team
## Problem
close LKB-753. `test_pageserver_metrics_removed_after_offload` is
unstable and it sometimes leave the metrics behind after tenant
offloading. It turns out that we triggered an image compaction before
the offload and the job was stopped after the offload request was
completed.
## Summary of changes
Wait all background tasks to finish before checking the metrics.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
There were a few uses of these already, so collect them to the
compatibility header to avoid the repetition and scattered #ifdefs.
The definition of MyProcNumber is a little different from what was used
before, but the end result is the same. (PGPROC->pgprocno values were
just assigned sequentially to all PGPROC array members, see
InitProcGlobal(). That's a bit silly, which is why it was removed in
v17.)
## Problem
When tenants have a lot of timelines, the number of tenants that a
pageserver can comfortably handle goes down. Branching is much more
widely used in practice now than it was when this code was written, and
we generally run pageservers with a few thousand tenants (where each
tenant has many timelines), rather than the 10k-20k we might have done
historically.
This should really be something configurable, or a more direct proxy for
resource utilization (such as non-archived timeline count), but this
change should be a low effort improvement.
## Summary of changes
* Change the target shard count (MAX_SHARDS) to 2500 from 5000 when
calculating pageserver utilization (i.e. a 200% overcommit now
corresponds to 5000 shards, not 10000 shards)
Co-authored-by: John Spray <john.spray@databricks.com>
## Problem
The test for logical replication used the year-old versions of
ClickHouse and Debezium so that we may miss problems related to
up-to-date versions.
## Summary of changes
The ClickHouse version has been updated to 24.8.
The Debezium version has been updated to the latest stable one,
3.1.3Final.
Some problems with locally running the Debezium test have been fixed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Bayandin <alexander@neon.tech>
Exposes metrics for caches. LKB-2594
This exposes a high level namespace, `cache`, that all cache metrics can
be added to - this makes it easier to make library panels for the caches
as I understand it.
To calculate the current cache fill ratio, you could use the following
query:
```
(
cache_inserted_total{cache="node_info"}
- sum (cache_evicted_total{cache="node_info"}) without (cause)
)
/ cache_capacity{cache="node_info"}
```
To calculate the cache hit ratio, you could use the following query:
```
cache_request_total{cache="node_info", outcome="hit"}
/ sum (cache_request_total{cache="node_info"}) without (outcome)
```
## Problem
For certificate auth, we need to configure pg_hba and pg_ident for it to
work.
HCC needs to mount this config map to all pg compute pod.
## Summary of changes
Create `databricks_pg_hba` and `databricks_pg_ident` to configure where
the files are located on the pod. These configs are pass down to
`compute_ctl`. Compute_ctl uses these config to update `pg_hba.conf` and
`pg_ident.conf` file.
We append `include_if_exists {databricks_pg_hba}` to `pg_hba.conf` and
similarly to `pg_ident.conf`. So that it will refer to databricks config
file without much change to existing pg default config file.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jarupat Jisarojito <jarupat.jisarojito@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: HaoyuHuang <haoyu.huang.68@gmail.com>
Before this PR, getpage requests wouldn't hold the
`applied_gc_cutoff_lsn` guard until they were done.
Theoretical impact: if we’re not holding the `RcuReadGuard`, gc can
theoretically concurrently delete reconstruct data that we need to
reconstruct the page.
I don't think this practically occurs in production because the odds of
it happening are quite low, especially for primary read_write computes.
But RO replicas / standby_horizon relies on correct
`applied_gc_cutofff_lsn`, so, I'm fixing this as part of the work ok
replacing standby_horizon propagation mechanism with leases (LKB-88).
The change is feature-gated with a feature flag, and evaluated once when
entering `handle_pagestream` to avoid performance impact.
For observability, we add a field to the `handle_pagestream` span, and a
slow-log to the place in `gc_loop` where it waits for the in-flight
RcuReadGuard's to drain.
refs
- fixes https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-2572
- standby_horizon leases epic:
https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-2572
---------
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <Christian Schwarz>
## Problem
Monitoring dashboards show aggregates of all proxy instances, including
terminating ones. This can skew the results or make graphs less
readable. Also, alerts must be tuned to ignore certain signals from
terminating proxies.
## Summary of changes
Add a `service_info` metric currently with one label, `state`, showing
if an instance is in state `init`, `running`, or `terminating`. The
metric can be joined with other metrics to filter the presented time
series.
## Problem
test_ps_unavailable_after_delete is flaky. All test failures I've looked
at are because of ERROR log messages in pageserver, which happen because
storage controller tries runs a reconciliations during the graceful
shutdown of the pageserver.
I wasn't able to reproduce it locally, but I think stopping PS
immediately instead of gracefully should help. If not, we might just
silence those errors.
- Closes: https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-745
## Problem
We need the set the following Postgres GUCs to the correct value before
starting Postgres in the compute instance:
```
databricks.workspace_url
databricks.enable_databricks_identity_login
databricks.enable_sql_restrictions
```
## Summary of changes
Plumbed through `workspace_url` and other GUC settings via
`DatabricksSettings` in `ComputeSpec`. The spec is sent to the compute
instance when it starts up and the GUCs are written to `postgresql.conf`
before the postgres process is launched.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jarupat Jisarojito <jarupat.jisarojito@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
Copy certificate and key from secret mount directory to `pgdata`
directory where `postgres` is the owner and we can set the key
permission to 0600.
## Summary of changes
- Added new pgparam `pg_compute_tls_settings` to specify where k8s
secret for certificate and key are mounted.
- Added a new field to `ComputeSpec` called `databricks_settings`. This
is a struct that will be used to store any other settings that needs to
be propagate to Compute but should not be persisted to `ComputeSpec` in
the database.
- Then when the compute container start up, as part of `prepare_pgdata`
function, it will copied `server.key` and `server.crt` from k8s mounted
directory to `pgdata` directory.
## How is this tested?
Add unit tests.
Manual test via KIND
Co-authored-by: Jarupat Jisarojito <jarupat.jisarojito@databricks.com>
## Problem
We saw the following in the field:
Context and observations:
* The storage controller keeps track of the latest generations and the
pageserver that issued the latest generation in the database
* When the storage controller needs to proxy a request (e.g. timeline
creation) to the pageservers, it will find use the pageserver that
issued the latest generation from the db (generation_pageserver).
* pageserver-2.cell-2 got into a bad state and wasn't able to apply
location_config (e.g. detach a shard)
What happened:
1. pageserver-2.cell-2 was a secondary for our shard since we were not
able to detach it
2. control plane asked to detach a tenant (presumably because it was
idle)
a. In response storcon clears the generation_pageserver from the db and
attempts to detach all locations
b. it tries to detach pageserver-2.cell-2 first, but fails, which fails
the entire reconciliation leaving the good attached location still there
c. return success to cplane
3. control plane asks to re-attach the tenant
a. In response storcon performs a reconciliation
b. it finds that the observed state matches the intent (remember we did
not detach the primary at step(2))
c. skips incrementing the genration and setting the
generation_pageserver column
Now any requests that need to be proxied to pageservers and rely on the
generation_pageserver db column fail because that's not set
## Summary of changes
1. We do all non-essential location config calls (setting up
secondaries,
detaches) at the end of the reconciliation. Previously, we bailed out
of the reconciliation on the first failure. With this patch we attempt
all of the RPCs.
This allows the observed state to update even if another RPC failed for
unrelated reasons.
2. If the overall reconciliation failed, we don't want to remove nodes
from the
observed state as a safe-guard. With the previous patch, we'll get a
deletion delta to process, which would be ignored. Ignoring it is not
the right thing to do since it's out of sync with the db state.
Hence, on reconciliation failures map deletion from the observed state
to the uncertain state. Future reconciliation will query the node to
refresh their observed state.
Closes LKB-204
Verify that gRPC `GetPageRequest` has been sent to the shard that owns
the pages. This avoid spurious `NotFound` errors if a compute misroutes
a request, which can appear scarier (e.g. data loss).
Touches [LKB-191](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-191).
## Problem
The Dockerfile for build tools has some small issues that are easy to
fix to make it follow some of docker best practices
## Summary of changes
Apply some small quick wins on the Dockerfile for build tools
- Usage of apt-get over apt
- usage of --no-cache-dir for pip install
## Problem
LKB-2502 The garbage collection of the project info cache is garbage.
What we observed: If we get unlucky, we might throw away a very hot
entry if the cache is full. The GC loop is dependent on getting a lucky
shard of the projects2ep table that clears a lot of cold entries. The GC
does not take into account active use, and the interval it runs at is
too sparse to do any good.
Can we switch to a proper cache implementation?
Complications:
1. We need to invalidate by project/account.
2. We need to expire based on `retry_delay_ms`.
## Summary of changes
1. Replace `retry_delay_ms: Duration` with `retry_at: Instant` when
deserializing.
2. Split the EndpointControls from the RoleControls into two different
caches.
3. Introduce an expiry policy based on error retry info.
4. Introduce `moka` as a dependency, replacing our `TimedLru`.
See the follow up PR for changing all TimedLru instances to use moka:
#12726.
Follow up to #12701, which introduced a new regression. When profiling
locally I noticed that writes have the tendency to always reallocate. On
investigation I found that even if the `Connection`'s write buffer is
empty, if it still shares the same data pointer as the `Client`'s write
buffer then the client cannot reclaim it.
The best way I found to fix this is to just drop the `Connection`'s
write buffer each time we fully flush it.
Additionally, I remembered that `BytesMut` has an `unsplit` method which
is allows even better sharing over the previous optimisation I had when
'encoding'.
## Problem
While configuring or reconfiguring PG due to PageServer movements, it's
possible PG may get stuck if PageServer is moved around after fetching
the spec from StorageController.
## Summary of changes
To fix this issue, this PR introduces two changes:
1. Fail the PG query directly if the query cannot request configuration
for certain number of times.
2. Introduce a new state `RefreshConfiguration` in compute tools to
differentiate it from `RefreshConfigurationPending`. If compute tool is
already in `RefreshConfiguration` state, then it will not accept new
request configuration requests.
## How is this tested?
Chaos testing.
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
## Problem
In our experience running the system so far, almost all of the "hang
compute" situations are due to the compute (postgres) pointing at the
wrong pageservers. We currently mainly rely on the promethesus exporter
(PGExporter) running on PG to detect and report any down time, but these
can be unreliable because the read and write probes the PGExporter runs
do not always generate pageserver requests due to caching, even though
the real user might be experiencing down time when touching uncached
pages.
We are also about to start disk-wiping node pool rotation operations in
prod clusters for our pageservers, and it is critical to have a
convenient way to monitor the impact of these node pool rotations so
that we can quickly respond to any issues. These metrics should provide
very clear signals to address this operational need.
## Summary of changes
Added a pair of metrics to detect issues between postgres' PageStream
protocol (e.g. get_page_at_lsn, get_base_backup, etc.) communications
with pageservers:
* On the compute node (compute_ctl), exports a counter metric that is
incremented every time postgres requests a configuration refresh.
Postgres today only requests these configuration refreshes when it
cannot connect to a pageserver or if the pageserver rejects its request
by disconnecting.
* On the pageserver, exports a counter metric that is incremented every
time it receives a PageStream request that cannot be handled because the
tenant is not known or if the request was routed to the wrong shard
(e.g. secondary).
### How I plan to use metrics
I plan to use the metrics added here to create alerts. The alerts can
fire, for example, if these counters have been continuously increasing
for over a certain period of time. During rollouts, misrouted requests
may occasionally happen, but they should soon die down as
reconfigurations make progress. We can start with something like raising
the alert if the counters have been increasing continuously for over 5
minutes.
## How is this tested?
New integration tests in
`test_runner/regress/test_hadron_ps_connectivity_metrics.py`
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
Currently PG backpressure parameters are enforced globally. With tenant
splitting, this makes it hard to balance small tenants and large
tenants. For large tenants with more shards, we need to increase the
lagging because each shard receives total/shard_count amount of data,
while doing so could be suboptimal to small tenants with fewer shards.
## Summary of changes
This PR makes these parameters to be enforced at the shard level, i.e.,
PG will compute the actual lag limit by multiply the shard count.
## How is this tested?
Added regression test.
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
## Problem
This is a follow-up to TODO, as part
of the effort to rewire the compute reconfiguration/notification
mechanism to make it more robust. Please refer to that commit or ticket
BRC-1778 for full context of the problem.
## Summary of changes
The previous change added mechanism in `compute_ctl` that makes it
possible to refresh the configuration of PG on-demand by having
`compute_ctl` go out to download a new config from the control
plane/HCC. This change wired this mechanism up with PG so that PG will
signal `compute_ctl` to refresh its configuration when it suspects that
it could be talking to incorrect pageservers due to a stale
configuration.
PG will become suspicious that it is talking to the wrong pageservers in
the following situations:
1. It cannot connect to a pageserver (e.g., getting a network-level
connection refused error)
2. It can connect to a pageserver, but the pageserver does not return
any data for the GetPage request
3. It can connect to a pageserver, but the pageserver returns a
malformed response
4. It can connect to a pageserver, but there is an error receiving the
GetPage request response for any other reason
This change also includes a minor tweak to `compute_ctl`'s config
refresh behavior. Upon receiving a request to refresh PG configuration,
`compute_ctl` will reach out to download a config, but it will not
attempt to apply the configuration if the config is the same as the old
config is it replacing. This optimization is added because the act of
reconfiguring itself requires working pageserver connections. In many
failure situations it is likely that PG detects an issue with a
pageserver before the control plane can detect the issue, migrate
tenants, and update the compute config. In this case even the latest
compute config won't point PG to working pageservers, causing the
configuration attempt to hang and negatively impact PG's
time-to-recovery. With this change, `compute_ctl` only attempts
reconfiguration if the refreshed config points PG to different
pageservers.
## How is this tested?
The new code paths are exercised in all existing tests because this
mechanism is on by default.
Explicitly tested in `test_runner/regress/test_change_pageserver.py`.
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
We don't have a well-documented, periodic benchmark for TPC-C like OLTP
workload.
## Summary of changes
# Benchbase TPC-C-like Performance Results
Runs TPC-C-like benchmarks on Neon databases using
[Benchbase](https://github.com/cmu-db/benchbase).
Docker images are built
[here](https://github.com/neondatabase-labs/benchbase-docker-images)
We run the benchmarks at different scale factors aligned with different
compute sizes we offer to customers.
For each scale factor, we determine a max rate (see Throughput in warmup
phase) and then run the benchmark at a target rate of approx. 70 % of
the max rate.
We use different warehouse sizes which determine the working set size -
it is optimized for LFC size of the respected pricing tier.
Usually we should get LFC hit rates above 70 % for this setup and quite
good, consistent (non-flaky) latencies.
## Expected performance as of first testing this
| Tier | CU | Warehouses | Terminals | Max TPS | LFC size | Working set
size | LFC hit rate | Median latency | p95 latency |
|------------|------------|---------------|-----------|---------|----------|------------------|--------------|----------------|-------------|
| free | 0.25-2 | 50 - 5 GB | 150 | 800 | 5 GB | 6.3 GB | 95 % | 170 ms
| 600 ms |
| serverless | 2-8 | 500 - 50 GB | 230 | 2000 | 26 GB | ?? GB | 91 % |
50 ms | 200 ms |
| business | 2-16 | 1000 - 100 GB | 330 | 2900 | 51 GB | 50 GB | 72 % |
40 ms | 180 ms |
Each run
- first loads the database (not shown in the dashboard).
- Then we run a warmup phase for 20 minutes to warm up the database and
the LFC at unlimited target rate (max rate) (highest throughput but
flaky latencies).
The warmup phase can be used to determine the max rate and adjust it in
the github workflow in case Neon is faster in the future.
- Then we run the benchmark at a target rate of approx. 70 % of the max
rate for 1 hour (expecting consistent latencies and throughput).
## Important notes on implementation:
- we want to eventually publish the process how to reproduce these
benchmarks
- thus we want to reduce all dependencies necessary to run the
benchmark, the only thing needed are
- docker
- the docker images referenced above for benchbase
- python >= 3.9 to run some config generation steps and create diagrams
- to reduce dependencies we deliberatly do NOT use some of our python
fixture test infrastructure to make the dependency chain really small -
so pls don't add a review comment "should reuse fixture xy"
- we also upload all generator python scripts, generated bash shell
scripts and configs as well as raw results to S3 bucket that we later
want to publish once this benchmark is reviewed and approved.
## Problem
* Fixes LKB-743
We get regular assertion failures on staging caused by a race with chaos
injector. If chaos injector decides to migrate a tenant shard between
the background optimisation planning and applying optimisations then we
attempt to migrate and already migrated shard and hit an assertion
failure.
## Summary of changes
@VladLazar fixed a variant of this issue by
adding`validate_optimization` recently, however it didn't validate the
specific property this other assertion requires. Fix is just to update
it to cover all the expected properties.
## Problem
Compiling `neon-pg-ext-v17` results in these linker warnings for
`libcommunicator.a`:
```
$ make -j`nproc` -s neon-pg-ext-v17
Installing PostgreSQL v17 headers
Compiling PostgreSQL v17
Compiling neon-specific Postgres extensions for v17
ld: warning: object file (/Users/erik.grinaker/Projects/neon/target/debug/libcommunicator.a[1159](25ac62e5b3c53843-curve25519.o)) was built for newer 'macOS' version (15.5) than being linked (15.0)
ld: warning: object file (/Users/erik.grinaker/Projects/neon/target/debug/libcommunicator.a[1160](0bbbd18bda93c05b-aes_nohw.o)) was built for newer 'macOS' version (15.5) than being linked (15.0)
ld: warning: object file (/Users/erik.grinaker/Projects/neon/target/debug/libcommunicator.a[1161](00c879ee3285a50d-montgomery.o)) was built for newer 'macOS' version (15.5) than being linked (15.0)
[...]
```
## Summary of changes
Set `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET` to the current local SDK version (15.5 in
this case), which links against object files for that version.
## Problem
Compute retries are finite (e.g. 5x in a basebackup) -- with a 50%
failure rate we have pretty good chance of exceeding that and the test
failing.
Fixes: https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-2278
## Summary of changes
- Turn connection error rate down to 20%
Co-authored-by: John Spray <john.spray@databricks.com>
## Problem
We have been dealing with a number of issues with the SC compute
notification mechanism. Various race conditions exist in the
PG/HCC/cplane/PS distributed system, and relying on the SC to send
notifications to the compute node to notify it of PS changes is not
robust. We decided to pursue a more robust option where the compute node
itself discovers whether it may be pointing to the incorrect PSs and
proactively reconfigure itself if issues are suspected.
## Summary of changes
To support this self-healing reconfiguration mechanism several pieces
are needed. This PR adds a mechanism to `compute_ctl` called "refresh
configuration", where the compute node reaches out to the control plane
to pull a new config and reconfigure PG using the new config, instead of
listening for a notification message containing a config to arrive from
the control plane. Main changes to compute_ctl:
1. The `compute_ctl` state machine now has a new State,
`RefreshConfigurationPending`. The compute node may enter this state
upon receiving a signal that it may be using the incorrect page servers.
2. Upon entering the `RefreshConfigurationPending` state, the background
configurator thread in `compute_ctl` wakes up, pulls a new config from
the control plane, and reconfigures PG (with `pg_ctl reload`) according
to the new config.
3. The compute node may enter the new `RefreshConfigurationPending`
state from `Running` or `Failed` states. If the configurator managed to
configure the compute node successfully, it will enter the `Running`
state, otherwise, it stays in `RefreshConfigurationPending` and the
configurator thread will wait for the next notification if an incorrect
config is still suspected.
4. Added various plumbing in `compute_ctl` data structures to allow the
configurator thread to perform the config fetch.
The "incorrect config suspected" notification is delivered using a HTTP
endpoint, `/refresh_configuration`, on `compute_ctl`. This endpoint is
currently not called by anyone other than the tests. In a follow up PR I
will set up some code in the PG extension/libpagestore to call this HTTP
endpoint whenever PG suspects that it is pointing to the wrong page
servers.
## How is this tested?
Modified `test_runner/regress/test_change_pageserver.py` to add a
scenario where we use the new `/refresh_configuration` mechanism instead
of the existing `/configure` mechanism (which requires us sending a full
config to compute_ctl) to have the compute node reload and reconfigure
its pageservers.
I took one shortcut to reduce the scope of this change when it comes to
testing: the compute node uses a local config file instead of pulling a
config over the network from the HCC. This simplifies the test setup in
the following ways:
* The existing test framework is set up to use local config files for
compute nodes only, so it's convenient if I just stick with it.
* The HCC today generates a compute config with production settings
(e.g., assuming 4 CPUs, 16GB RAM, with local file caches), which is
probably not suitable in tests. We may need to add another test-only
endpoint config to the control plane to make this work.
The config-fetch part of the code is relatively straightforward (and
well-covered in both production and the KIND test) so it is probably
fine to replace it with loading from the local config file for these
integration tests.
In addition to making sure that the tests pass, I also manually
inspected the logs to make sure that the compute node is indeed
reloading the config using the new mechanism instead of going down the
old `/configure` path (it turns out the test has bugs which causes
compute `/configure` messages to be sent despite the test intending to
disable/blackhole them).
```test
2024-09-24T18:53:29.573650Z INFO http request{otel.name=/refresh_configuration http.method=POST}: serving /refresh_configuration POST request
2024-09-24T18:53:29.573689Z INFO configurator_main_loop: compute node suspects its configuration is out of date, now refreshing configuration
2024-09-24T18:53:29.573706Z INFO configurator_main_loop: reloading config.json from path: /workspaces/hadron/test_output/test_change_pageserver_using_refresh[release-pg16]/repo/endpoints/ep-1/spec.json
PG:2024-09-24 18:53:29.574 GMT [52799] LOG: received SIGHUP, reloading configuration files
PG:2024-09-24 18:53:29.575 GMT [52799] LOG: parameter "neon.extension_server_port" cannot be changed without restarting the server
PG:2024-09-24 18:53:29.575 GMT [52799] LOG: parameter "neon.pageserver_connstring" changed to "postgresql://no_user@localhost:15008"
...
```
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
PR #12431 set initial lease deadline = 0s for tests.
This turned test_hot_standby_gc flaky because it now runs GC: it started
failing with `tried to request a page version that was garbage
collected`
because the replica reads below applied gc cutoff.
The leading theory is that, we run the timeline_gc() before the first
standby_horizon push arrives at PS. That is definitively a thing that
can happen with the current standby_horizon mechanism, and it's now
tracked as such in https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-2499.
We don't have logs to confirm this theory though, but regardless,
try the fix in this PR and see if it stabilizes things.
Refs
- flaky test issue: https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-2465
## Problem
## Summary of changes
Another go at #12341. LKB-2497
We now only need 1 connect mechanism (and 1 more for testing) which
saves us some code and complexity. We should be able to remove the final
connect mechanism when we create a separate worker task for
pglb->compute connections - either via QUIC streams or via in-memory
channels.
This also now ensures that connect_once always returns a ConnectionError
type - something simple enough we can probably define a serialisation
for in pglb.
* I've abstracted connect_to_compute to always use TcpMechanism and the
ProxyConfig.
* I've abstracted connect_to_compute_and_auth to perform authentication,
managing any retries for stale computes
* I had to introduce a separate `managed` function for taking ownership
of the compute connection into the Client/Connection pair
## Problem
`postgres_exporter` has database collector enabled by default and it
doesn't filter out invalid databases, see
06a553c816/collector/pg_database.go (L67)
so if it hits one, it starts spamming logs
```
ERROR: [NEON_SMGR] [reqid d9700000018] could not read db size of db 705302 from page server at lsn 5/A2457EB0
```
## Summary of changes
We don't use `pg_database_size_bytes` metric anyway, see
5e19b3fd89/apps/base/compute-metrics/scrape-compute-pg-exporter-neon.yaml (L29)
so just turn it off by passing `--no-collector.database`.
## Problem
A large insert or a large row will cause the codec to allocate a large
buffer. The codec never shrinks the buffer however. LKB-2496
## Summary of changes
1. Introduce a naive GC system for codec buffers
2. Try and reduce copies as much as possible
## Problem
Tenant split test revealed another bug with PG backpressure throttling
that under some cases PS may never report its progress back to SK (e.g.,
observed when aborting tenant shard where the old shard needs to
re-establish SK connection and re-ingest WALs from a much older LSN). In
this case, PG may get stuck forever.
## Summary of changes
As a general precaution that PS feedback mechanism may not always be
reliable, this PR uses the previously introduced WAL write rate limit
mechanism to slow down write rates instead of completely pausing it. The
idea is to introduce a new
`databricks_effective_max_wal_bytes_per_second`, which is set to
`databricks_max_wal_mb_per_second` when no PS back pressure and is set
to `10KB` when there is back pressure. This way, PG can still write to
SK, though at a very low speed.
The PR also fixes the problem that the current WAL rate limiting
mechanism is too coarse grained and cannot enforce limits < 1MB. This is
because it always resets the rate limiter after 1 second, even if PG
could have written more data in the past second. The fix is to introduce
a `batch_end_time_us` which records the expected end time of the current
batch. For example, if PG writes 10MB of data in a single batch, and max
WAL write rate is set as `1MB/s`, then `batch_end_time_us` will be set
as 10 seconds later.
## How is this tested?
Tweaked the existing test, and also did manual testing on dev. I set
`max_replication_flush_lag` as 1GB, and loaded 500GB pgbench tables.
It's expected to see PG gets throttled periodically because PS will
accumulate 4GB of data before flushing.
Results:
when PG is throttled:
```
9500000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 10.36 s, remaining 3587.62 s)
9600000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 124.07 s, remaining 42523.59 s)
9700000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 255.79 s, remaining 86763.97 s)
9800000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 315.89 s, remaining 106056.52 s)
9900000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 412.75 s, remaining 137170.58 s)
```
when PS just flushed:
```
18100000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 433.80 s, remaining 78655.96 s)
18200000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 433.85 s, remaining 78231.71 s)
18300000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 433.90 s, remaining 77810.62 s)
18400000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 433.96 s, remaining 77395.86 s)
18500000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.03 s, remaining 76987.27 s)
18600000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.08 s, remaining 76579.59 s)
18700000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.13 s, remaining 76177.12 s)
18800000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.19 s, remaining 75779.45 s)
18900000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.84 s, remaining 75489.40 s)
19000000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.89 s, remaining 75097.90 s)
19100000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 434.94 s, remaining 74712.56 s)
19200000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 498.93 s, remaining 85254.20 s)
19300000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 498.97 s, remaining 84817.95 s)
19400000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 623.80 s, remaining 105486.76 s)
19500000 of 3300000000 tuples (0%) done (elapsed 745.86 s, remaining 125476.51 s)
```
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
This GUC will become useful for temporarily disabling Lakebase-specific
features during the code merge.
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan.partin@databricks.com>
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/19011
- Accept `ComputeSpec` in `/promote` instead of just passing safekeepers
and LSN. Update API spec
- Add corner case tests for promotion when promotion or perwarm fails
(using failpoints)
- Print root error for prewarm and promotion in status handlers
## Problem
There has been some inconsistencies of providing tenant config via
`tenant_create` and via other tenant config APIs due to how the
properties are processed: in `tenant_create`, the test framework calls
neon-cli and therefore puts those properties in the cmdline. In other
cases, it's done via the HTTP API by directly serializing to a JSON.
When using the cmdline, the program only accepts serde bool that is
true/false.
## Summary of changes
Convert Python bool into `true`/`false` when using neon-cli.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
OTel 0.28+ by default uses blocking operations in a dedicated thread and
doesn't start a tokio runtime. Reqwest as currently configured wants to
spawn tokio tasks.
## Summary of changes
Use blocking reqwest.
This PR just mitigates the current issue.
Session variables can be set during one sql-over-http query and observed
on another when that pooled connection is re-used. To address this we
can use `RESET ALL;` before re-using the connection. LKB-2495
To be on the safe side, we can opt for a full `DISCARD ALL;`, but that
might have performance regressions since it also clears any query plans.
See pgbouncer docs
https://www.pgbouncer.org/config.html#server_reset_query.
`DISCARD ALL` is currently defined as:
```
CLOSE ALL;
SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION DEFAULT;
RESET ALL;
DEALLOCATE ALL;
UNLISTEN *;
SELECT pg_advisory_unlock_all();
DISCARD PLANS;
DISCARD TEMP;
DISCARD SEQUENCES;
```
I've opted to keep everything here except the `DISCARD PLANS`. I've
modified the code so that this query is executed in the background when
a connection is returned to the pool, rather than when taken from the
pool.
This should marginally improve performance for Neon RLS by removing 1
(localhost) round trip. I don't believe that keeping query plans could
be a security concern. It's a potential side channel, but I can't
imagine what you could extract from it.
---
Thanks to
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12659#discussion_r2219016205
for probing the idea in my head.
## Problem
LKB-197, #9516
To make sure the migration path is smooth.
The previous plan is to store new relations in new keyspace and old ones
in old keyspace until it gets dropped. This makes the migration path
hard as we can't validate v2 writes and can't rollback. This patch gives
us a more smooth migration path:
- The first time we enable reldirv2 for a tenant, we copy over
everything in the old keyspace to the new one. This might create a short
spike of latency for the create relation operation, but it's oneoff.
- After that, we have identical v1/v2 keyspace and read/write both of
them. We validate reads every time we list the reldirs.
- If we are in `migrating` mode, use v1 as source of truth and log a
warning for failed v2 operations. If we are in `migrated` mode, use v2
as source of truth and error when writes fail.
- One compatibility test uses dataset from the time where we enabled
reldirv2 (of the original rollout plan), which only has relations
written to the v2 keyspace instead of the v1 keyspace. We had to adjust
it accordingly.
- Add `migrated_at` in index_part to indicate the LSN where we did the
initialize.
TODOs:
- Test if relv1 can be read below the migrated_at LSN.
- Move the initialization process to L0 compaction instead of doing it
on the write path.
- Disable relcache in the relv2 test case so that all code path gets
fully tested.
## Summary of changes
- New behavior of reldirv2 migration flags as described above.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
> bullseye-backports has reached end-of-life and is no longer supported
or updated
From: https://backports.debian.org/Instructions/
This causes the compute-node image build to fail with the following
error:
```
0.099 Err:5 http://deb.debian.org/debian bullseye-backports Release
0.099 404 Not Found [IP: 146.75.122.132 80]
...
1.293 E: The repository 'http://deb.debian.org/debian bullseye-backports Release' does not have a Release file.
```
## Summary of changes
- Use archive version of `bullseye-backports`
Second attempt at #12130, now with a smaller diff.
This allows us to skip allocating for things like parameter status and
notices that we will either just forward untouched, or discard.
LKB-2494
## Problem
With safekeeper migration in mind, we can now pull/exclude the timeline
multiple times within the same safekeeper. To avoid races between out of
order requests, we need to ignore the pull/exclude requests if we have
already seen a higher generation.
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12186
- Closes: [LKB-949](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-949)
## Summary of changes
- Annotate timeline tombstones in safekeeper with request generation.
- Replace `ignore_tombstone` option with `mconf` in
`PullTimelineRequest`
- Switch membership in `pull_timeline` if the existing/pulled timeline
has an older generation.
- Refuse to switch membership if the timeline is being deleted
(`is_canceled`).
- Refuse to switch membership in compute greeting request if the
safekeeper is not a member of `mconf`.
- Pass `mconf` in `PullTimelineRequest` in safekeeper_service
---------
Co-authored-by: Arpad Müller <arpad-m@users.noreply.github.com>
## Problem
When testing tenant splits, I found that PG can get backpressure
throttled indefinitely if the split is aborted afterwards. It turns out
that each PageServer activates new shard separately even before the
split is committed and they may start sending PageserverFeedback to PG
directly. As a result, if the split is aborted, no one resets the
pageserver feedback in PG, and thus PG will be backpressure throttled
forever unless it's restarted manually.
## Summary of changes
This PR fixes this problem by having
`walprop_pg_process_safekeeper_feedback` simply ignore all pageserver
feedback from unknown shards. The source of truth here is defined by the
shard map, which is guaranteed to be reloaded only after the split is
committed.
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
## Problem
As part of the reldirv2 rollout: LKB-197.
We will use number of db/rels as a criteria whether to rollout reldirv2
directly on the write path (simplest and easiest way of rollout). If the
number of rel/db is small then it shouldn't take too long time on the
write path.
## Summary of changes
* Compute db/rel count during basebackup.
* Also compute it during logical size computation.
* Collect maximum number of db/rel across all timelines in the feature
flag propeties.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We did not test some Public API calls, such as using a timestamp to
create a branch, reset_to_parent.
## Summary of changes
Tests now include some other operations: reset_to_parent, a branch
creation from any time in the past, etc.
Currently, the API calls are only exposed; the semantics are not
verified.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
## Problem
We drive the get page requests that have started processing to
completion. So in the case when the compute received a reconfiguration
request and the old connection has a request procesing on the
pageserver, we are going to issue the warning.
I spot checked a few instances of the warning and in all cases the
compute was already connected to the correct pageserver.
## Summary of Changes
Downgrade to INFO. It would be nice to somehow figure out if the
connection has been terminated in the meantime, but the terminate libpq
message is still in the pipe while we're doing the shard resolution.
Closes LKB-2381
The argument to BufTagInit was called 'spcOid', and it was also setting
a field called 'spcOid'. The field name would erroneously also be
expanded with the macro arg. It happened to work so far, because all the
users of the macro pass a variable called 'spcOid' for the 'spcOid'
argument, but as soon as you try to pass anything else, it fails. And
same story for 'dbOid' and 'relNumber'. Rename the arguments to avoid
the name collision.
Also while we're at it, add parens around the arguments in a few macros,
to make them safer if you pass something non-trivial as the argument.
## Problem
We don't detect if safekeeper migration fails after the the commiting
the membership configuration to the database. As a result, we might
leave stale timelines on excluded safekeepers and do not notify
cplane/safekepeers about new configuration.
- Implements solution proposed in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12432
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12192
- Closes: [LKB-944](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-944)
## Summary of changes
- Add `sk_set_notified_generation` column to `timelines` database
- Update `*_notified_generation` in database during the finish state.
- Commit reconciliation requests to database atomically with membership
configuration.
- Reload pending ops and retry "finish" step if we detect
`*_notified_generation` mismatch.
- Add failpoints and test that we handle failures well
## Problem
Post LKB-198 rollout. We added a new strategy to generate image layers
at the L0-L1 boundary instead of the latest LSN to ensure too many L0
layers do not trigger image layer creation.
## Summary of changes
We already rolled it out to all users so we can remove the feature flag
now.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
Currently, the exporter exposes the same LFC metrics that are exposed by
the "autoscaling" sql_exporter in the docker image. With this, we can
remove the dedicated sql_exporter instance. (Actually doing the removal
is left as a TODO until this is rolled out to production and we have
changed autoscaling-agent to fetch the metrics from this new endpoint.)
The exporter runs as a Postgres background worker process. This is
extracted from the Rust communicator rewrite project, which will use the
same worker process for much more, to handle the communications with the
pageservers. For now, though, it merely handles the metrics requests.
In the future, we will add more metrics, and perhaps even APIs to
control the running Postgres instance.
The exporter listens on a Unix Domain socket within the Postgres data
directory. A Unix Domain socket is a bit unconventional, but it has some
advantages:
- Permissions are taken care of. Only processes that can access the data
directory, and therefore already have full access to the running
Postgres instance, can connect to it.
- No need to allocate and manage a new port number for the listener
It has some downsides too: it's not immediately accessible from the
outside world, and the functions to work with Unix Domain sockets are
more low-level than TCP sockets (see the symlink hack in
`postgres_metrics_client.rs`, for example).
To expose the metrics from the local Unix Domain Socket to the
autoscaling agent, introduce a new '/autoscaling_metrics' endpoint in
the compute_ctl's HTTP server. Currently it merely forwards the request
to the Postgres instance, but we could add rate limiting and access
control there in the future.
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Ludgate <conrad@neon.tech>
It's helpful to correlate requests and responses in local investigations
where the issue is reproducible. Hence, log the rel, fork and block of
the get page response.
NB: effectively a no-op in the neon env since the handling is config
gated
in storcon
## Problem
When a pageserver suffers from a local disk/node failure and restarts,
the storage controller will receive a re-attach call and return all the
tenants the pageserver is suppose to attach, but the pageserver will not
act on any tenants that it doesn't know about locally. As a result, the
pageserver will not rehydrate any tenants from remote storage if it
restarted following a local disk loss, while the storage controller
still thinks that the pageserver have all the tenants attached. This
leaves the system in a bad state, and the symptom is that PG's
pageserver connections will fail with "tenant not found" errors.
## Summary of changes
Made a slight change to the storage controller's `re_attach` API:
* The pageserver will set an additional bit `empty_local_disk` in the
reattach request, indicating whether it has started with an empty disk
or does not know about any tenants.
* Upon receiving the reattach request, if this `empty_local_disk` bit is
set, the storage controller will go ahead and clear all observed
locations referencing the pageserver. The reconciler will then discover
the discrepancy between the intended state and observed state of the
tenant and take care of the situation.
To facilitate rollouts this extra behavior in the `re_attach` API is
guarded by the `handle_ps_local_disk_loss` command line flag of the
storage controller.
---------
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
See https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C092W8NBXC0/p1752924508578339
In case of larger number of databases and large `max_connections` we can
open too many connection for parallel apply config which may cause `Too
many open files` error.
## Summary of changes
Limit maximal number of parallel config apply connections by 100.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kosntantin Knizhnik <konstantin.knizhnik@databricks.com>
## Problem
While running tenant split tests I ran into a situation where PG got
stuck completely. This seems to be a general problem that was not found
in the previous chaos testing fixes.
What happened is that if PG gets throttled by PS, and SC decided to move
some tenant away, then PG reconfiguration could be blocked forever
because it cannot talk to the old PS anymore to refresh the throttling
stats, and reconfiguration cannot proceed because it's being throttled.
Neon has considered the case that configuration could be blocked if the
PG storage is full, but forgot the backpressure case.
## Summary of changes
The PR fixes this problem by simply skipping throttling while PS is
being configured, i.e., `max_cluster_size < 0`. An alternative fix is to
set those throttle knobs to -1 (e.g., max_replication_apply_lag),
however these knobs were labeled with PGC_POSTMASTER so their values
cannot be changed unless we restart PG.
## How is this tested?
Tested manually.
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
## Problem
We want to have the data-api served by the proxy directly instead of
relying on a 3rd party to run a deployment for each project/endpoint.
## Summary of changes
With the changes below, the proxy (auth-broker) becomes also a
"rest-broker", that can be thought of as a "Multi-tenant" data-api which
provides an automated REST api for all the databases in the region.
The core of the implementation (that leverages the subzero library) is
in proxy/src/serverless/rest.rs and this is the only place that has "new
logic".
---------
Co-authored-by: Ruslan Talpa <ruslan.talpa@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Bayandin <alexander@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Conrad Ludgate <conrad@neon.tech>
## Problem
Add a test for max_wal_rate
## Summary of changes
Test max_wal_rate
## How is this tested?
python test
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
Include the ip address (optionally read from an env var) in the
pageserver's registration request.
Note that the ip address is ignored by the storage controller at the
moment, which makes it a no-op
in the neon env.
A replacement for #10254 which allows us to introduce notice messages
for sql-over-http in the future if we want to. This also removes the
`ParameterStatus` and `Notification` handling as there's nothing we
could/should do for those.
## Problem
We've had bugs where the compute would use the stale default stripe size
from an unsharded tenant after the tenant split with a new stripe size.
## Summary of changes
Never specify a stripe size for unsharded tenants, to guard against
misuse. Only specify it once tenants are sharded and the stripe size
can't change.
Also opportunistically changes `GetPageSplitter` to return
`anyhow::Result`, since we'll be using this in other code paths as well
(specifically during server-side shard splits).
## Problem
Postgres will often immediately follow a relation existence check with a
relation size query. This incurs two roundtrips, and may prevent
effective caching.
See [Slack
thread](https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C091SDX74SC/p1751951732136139).
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
For the gRPC API:
* Add an `allow_missing` parameter to `GetRelSize`, which returns
`missing=true` instead of a `NotFound` error.
* Remove `CheckRelExists`.
There are no changes to libpq behavior.
## Problem
`ShardStripeSize` will be used in the compute spec and internally in the
communicator. It shouldn't require pulling in all of `pageserver_api`.
## Summary of changes
Move `ShardStripeSize` into `utils::shard`, along with other basic shard
types. Also remove the `Default` implementation, to discourage clients
from falling back to a default (it's generally a footgun).
The type is still re-exported from `pageserver_api::shard`, along with
all the other shard types.
## Problem
The gRPC page service does not properly react to shutdown cancellation.
In particular, Tonic considers an open GetPage stream to be an in-flight
request, so it will wait for it to complete before shutting down.
Touches [LKB-191](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-191).
## Summary of changes
Properly react to the server's cancellation token and take out gate
guards in gRPC request handlers.
Also document cancellation handling. In particular, that Tonic will drop
futures when clients go away (e.g. on timeout or shutdown), so the read
path must be cancellation-safe. It is believed to be (modulo possible
logging noise), but this will be verified later.
## Problem
As reported in #10441 the `control_plane/README/md` incorrectly
specified that `--pg-version` should be specified in the `cargo neon
init` command. This is not the case and causes an invalid argument
error.
## Summary of changes
Fix the README
## Test Plan
I verified that the steps in the README now work locally. I connected to
the started postgres endpoint and executed some basic metadata queries.
## Problem
Close LKB-270. This is part of our series of efforts to make sure
lsn_lease API prompts clients to retry. Follow up of
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12631.
Slack thread w/ Vlad:
https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1752677940697529
## Summary of changes
- Use `tenant_remote_mutation` API for LSN leases. Makes it consistent
with new APIs added to storcon.
- For 404, we now always retry because we know the tenant is
to-be-attached and will eventually reach a point that we can find that
tenant on the intent pageserver.
- Using the `tenant_remote_mutation` API also prevents us from the case
where the intent pageserver changes within the lease request. The
wrapper function will error with 503 if such things happen.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
A high rate of short-lived connections means that there a lot of cancel
keys in Redis with TTL=10min that could be avoided by having a much
shorter initial TTL.
## Summary of changes
* Introduce an initial TTL of 1min used with the SET command.
* Fix: don't delay repushing cancel data when expired.
* Prepare for exponentially increasing TTLs.
## Alternatives
A best-effort UNLINK command on connection termination would clean up
cancel keys right away. This needs a bigger refactor due to how batching
is handled.
## Problem
We currently offload LFC state unconditionally, which can cause
problems. Imagine a situation:
1. Endpoint started with `autoprewarm: true`.
2. While prewarming is not completed, we upload the new incomplete
state.
3. Compute gets interrupted and restarts.
4. We start again and try to prewarm with the state from 2. instead of
the previous complete state.
During the orchestrated prewarming, it's probably not a big issue, but
it's still better to do not interfere with the prewarm process.
## Summary of changes
Do not offload LFC state if we are currently prewarming or any issue
occurred. While on it, also introduce `Skipped` LFC prewarm status,
which is used when the corresponding LFC state is not present in the
endpoint storage. It's primarily needed to distinguish the first compute
start for particular endpoint, as it's completely valid to do not have
LFC state yet.
## Problem
Previously, if a get page failure was cause by timeline shutdown, the
pageserver would attempt to tear down the connection gracefully:
`shutdown(SHUT_WR)` followed by `close()`.
This triggers a code path on the compute where it has to tell apart
between an idle connection and a closed one. That code is bug prone, so
we can just side-step the issue by shutting down the connection via a
libpq error message.
This surfaced as instability in test_shard_resolve_during_split_abort.
It's a new test, but the issue existed for ages.
## Summary of Changes
Send a libpq error message instead of doing graceful TCP connection
shutdown.
Closes LKB-648
## Problem
See https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1752004515032899
stripe_size GUC update may be delayed at different backends and so cause
inconsistency with connection strings (shard map).
## Summary of changes
Postmaster should store stripe_size in shared memory as well as
connection strings.
It should be also enforced that stripe size is defined prior to
connection strings in postgresql.conf
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Kosntantin Knizhnik <konstantin.knizhnik@databricks.com>
## Problem
Initializing of shared memory in extension is complex and non-portable.
In neon extension this boilerplate code is duplicated in several files.
## Summary of changes
Perform all initialization in one place - neon.c
All other module procvide *ShmemRequest() and *ShmemInit() fuinction
which are called from neon.c
---------
Co-authored-by: Kosntantin Knizhnik <konstantin.knizhnik@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Heikki Linnakangas <heikki@neon.tech>
## Problem
Follow up of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12620
Discussions:
https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1752677940697529
The original code and after the patch above we converts 404s to 503s
regardless of the type of 404. We should only do that for tenant not
found errors. For other 404s like timeline not found, we should not
prompt clients to retry.
## Summary of changes
- Inspect the response body to figure out the type of 404. If it's a
tenant not found error, return 503.
- Otherwise, fallthrough and return 404 as-is.
- Add `tenant_shard_remote_mutation` that manipulates a single shard.
- Use `Service::tenant_shard_remote_mutation` for tenant shard
passthrough requests. This prevents us from another race that the attach
state changes within the request. (This patch mainly addresses the case
that the tenant is "not yet attached").
- TODO: lease API is still using the old code path. We should refactor
it to use `tenant_remote_mutation`.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
Putting this in the neon codebase for now, to experiment. Can be lifted
into measured at a later date.
This metric family is like a MetricVec, but it only supports 1 label
being set at a time. It is useful for reporting info, rather than
reporting metrics.
https://www.robustperception.io/exposing-the-software-version-to-prometheus/
Second PR for the hashmap behind the updated LFC implementation ([see
first here](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12595)). This only
adds the raw code for the hashmap/lock implementations and doesn't plug
it into the crate (that's dependent on the previous PR and should
probably be done when the full integration into the new communicator is
merged alongside `communicator-rewrite` changes?).
Some high level details: the communicator codebase expects to be able to
store references to entries within this hashmap for arbitrary periods of
time and so the hashmap cannot be allowed to move them during a rehash.
As a result, this implementation has a slightly unusual structure where
key-value pairs (and hash chains) are allocated in a separate region
with a freelist. The core hashmap structure is then an array of
"dictionary entries" that are just indexes into this region of key-value
pairs.
Concurrency support is very naive at the moment with the entire map
guarded by one big `RwLock` (which is implemented on top of a
`pthread_rwlock_t` since Rust doesn't guarantee that a
`std::sync::RwLock` is safe to use in shared memory). This (along with a
lot of other things) is being changed on the
`quantumish/lfc-resizable-map` branch.
## Problem
The `keep_failing_reconciles` counter was introduced in #12391, but
there is a special case:
> if a reconciliation loop claims to have succeeded, but maybe_reconcile
still thinks the tenant is in need of reconciliation, then that's a
probable bug and we should activate a similar backoff to prevent
flapping.
This PR redefines "flapping" to include not just repeated failures, but
also consecutive reconciliations of any kind (success or failure).
## Summary of Changes
- Replace `keep_failing_reconciles` with a new `stuck_reconciles` metric
- Replace `MAX_CONSECUTIVE_RECONCILIATION_ERRORS` with
`MAX_CONSECUTIVE_RECONCILES`, and increasing that from 5 to 10
- Increment the consecutive reconciles counter for all reconciles, not
just failures
- Reset the counter in `reconcile_all` when no reconcile is needed for a
shard
- Improve and fix the related test
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
## Problem
The forward compatibility test is erroneously
using the downloaded (old) compatibility data. This test is meant to
test that old binaries can work with **new** data. Using the old
compatibility data renders this test useless.
## Summary of changes
Use new snapshot in test_forward_compat
Closes LKB-666
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
The force deletion API should behave like the graceful deletion API - it
needs to support cancellation, persistence, and be non-blocking.
## Summary of Changes
- Added a `force` flag to the `NodeStartDelete` command.
- Passed the `force` flag through the `start_node_delete` handler in the
storage controller.
- Handled the `force` flag in the `delete_node` function.
- Set the tombstone after removing the node from memory.
- Minor cleanup, like adding a `get_error_on_cancel` closure.
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
## Problem
part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11318 ; it is not
entirely safe to run gc-compaction over the metadata key range due to
tombstones and implications of image layers (missing key in image layer
== key not exist). The auto gc-compaction trigger already skips metadata
key ranges (see `schedule_auto_compaction` call in
`trigger_auto_compaction`). In this patch we enforce it directly in
gc_compact_inner so that compactions triggered via HTTP API will also be
subject to this restriction.
## Summary of changes
Ensure gc-compaction only runs on rel key ranges.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
`make neon-pgindent` doesn't work:
- there's no `$(BUILD_DIR)/neon-v17` dir
- `make -C ...` along with relative `BUILD_DIR` resolves to a path that
doesn't exist
## Summary of changes
- Fix path for to neon extension for `make neon-pgindent`
- Make `BUILD_DIR` absolute
- Remove trailing slash from `POSTGRES_INSTALL_DIR` to avoid duplicated
slashed in commands (doesn't break anything, it make it look nicer)
This PR simplifies our node info cache. Now we'll store entries for at
most the TTL duration, even if Redis notifications are available. This
will allow us to cache intermittent errors later (e.g. due to rate
limits) with more predictable behavior.
Related to https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/19353
## Problem
We were only resetting the limit in the wal proposer. If backends are
back pressured, it might take a while for the wal proposer to receive a
new WAL to reset the limit.
## Summary of changes
Backend also checks the time and resets the limit.
## How is this tested?
pgbench has more smooth tps
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan.partin@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
close LKB-270, close LKB-253
We periodically saw pageserver returns 404 -> storcon converts it to 500
to cplane, and causing branch operations fail. This is due to storcon is
migrating tenants across pageservers and the request was forwarded from
the storcon to pageservers while the tenant was not attached yet. Such
operations should be retried from cplane and storcon should return 503
in such cases.
## Summary of changes
- Refactor `tenant_timeline_lsn_lease` to have a single function process
and passthrough such requests: `collect_tenant_shards` for collecting
all shards and checking if they're consistent with the observed state,
`process_result_and_passthrough_errors` to convert 404 into 503 if
necessary.
- `tenant_shard_node` also checks observed state now.
Note that for passthrough shard0, we originally had a check to convert
404 to 503:
```
// Transform 404 into 503 if we raced with a migration
if resp.status() == reqwest::StatusCode::NOT_FOUND {
// Look up node again: if we migrated it will be different
let new_node = service.tenant_shard_node(tenant_shard_id).await?;
if new_node.get_id() != node.get_id() {
// Rather than retry here, send the client a 503 to prompt a retry: this matches
// the pageserver's use of 503, and all clients calling this API should retry on 503.
return Err(ApiError::ResourceUnavailable(
format!("Pageserver {node} returned 404, was migrated to {new_node}").into(),
));
}
}
```
However, this only checks the intent state. It is possible that the
migration is in progress before/after the request is processed and
intent state is always the same throughout the API call, therefore 404
not being processed by this branch.
Also, not sure about if this new code is correct or not, need second
eyes on that:
```
// As a reconciliation is in flight, we do not have the observed state yet, and therefore we assume it is always inconsistent.
Ok((node.clone(), false))
```
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
The warning message was seen during deployment, but it's actually OK.
## Summary of changes
- Treat `"No broker updates received for a while ..."` as an info
message.
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
N.B: No-op for the neon-env.
## Problem
We added a per-timeline disk utilization protection circuit breaker,
which will stop the safekeeper from accepting more WAL writes if the
disk utilization by the timeline has exceeded a configured limit. We
mainly designed the mechanism as a guard against WAL upload/backup bugs,
and we assumed that as long as WAL uploads are proceeding as normal we
will not run into disk pressure. This turned out to be not true. In one
of our load tests where we have 500 PGs ingesting data at the same time,
safekeeper disk utilization started to creep up even though WAL uploads
were completely normal (we likely just maxed out our S3 upload bandwidth
from the single SK). This means the per-timeline disk utilization
protection won't be enough if too many timelines are ingesting data at
the same time.
## Summary of changes
Added a global disk utilization protection circuit breaker which will
stop a safekeeper from accepting more WAL writes if the total disk usage
on the safekeeper (across all tenants) exceeds a limit. We implemented
this circuit breaker through two parts:
1. A "global disk usage watcher" background task that runs at a
configured interval (default every minute) to see how much disk space is
being used in the safekeeper's filesystem. This background task also
performs the check against the limit and publishes the result to a
global atomic boolean flag.
2. The `hadron_check_disk_usage()` routine (in `timeline.rs`) now also
checks this global boolean flag published in the step above, and fails
the `WalAcceptor` (triggers the circuit breaker) if the flag was raised.
The disk usage limit is disabled by default.
It can be tuned with the `--max-global-disk-usage-ratio` CLI arg.
## How is this tested?
Added integration test
`test_wal_acceptor.py::test_global_disk_usage_limit`.
Also noticed that I haven't been using the `wait_until(f)` test function
correctly (the `f` passed in is supposed to raise an exception if the
condition is not met, instead of returning `False`...). Fixed it in both
circuit breaker tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
In the gap between picking an optimization and applying it, something
might insert a change to the intent state that makes it incompatible.
If the change is done via the `schedule()` method, we are covered by the
increased sequence number, but otherwise we can panic if we violate the
intent state invariants.
## Summary of Changes
Validate the optimization right before applying it. Since we hold the
service lock at that point, nothing else can sneak in.
Closes LKB-65
## Problem
We run multiple proxies, we get logs like
```
... spans={"http_conn#22":{"conn_id": ...
... spans={"http_conn#24":{"conn_id": ...
```
these are the same span, and the difference is confusing.
## Summary of changes
Introduce a counter per span name, rather than a global counter. If the
counter is 0, no change to the span name is made.
To follow up: see which span names are duplicated within the codebase in
different callsites
## Problem
We have several linters that use Node.js, but they are currently set up
differently, both locally and on CI.
## Summary of changes
- Add Node.js to `build-tools` image
- Move `compute/package.json` -> `build-tools/package.json` and add
`redocly` to it `@redocly/cli`
- Unify and merge into one job `lint-openapi-spec` and
`validate-compute-manifest`
## Problem
neondatabase/neon#12601 did't compleatly disable writing `*.profraw`
files, but instead of `/tmp/coverage` it started to write into the
current directory
## Summary of changes
- Set `LLVM_PROFILE_FILE=/dev/null` to avoing writing `*.profraw` at all
Initial PR for the hashmap behind the updated LFC implementation. This
refactors `neon-shmem` so that the actual shared memory utilities are in
a separate module within the crate. Beyond that, it slightly changes
some of the docstrings so that they play nicer with `cargo doc`.
We don't want to depend on postgres_ffi in an API crate. If there is no
such dependency, we can compile stuff like `storcon_cli` without needing
a full working postgres build. Fixes regression of #12548 (before we
could compile it).
- Remove a few obsolete "allowed error messages" from tests. The
pageserver doesn't emit those messages anymore.
- Remove misplaced and outdated docstring comment from
`test_tenants.py`. A docstring is supposed to be the first thing in a
function, but we had added some code before it. And it was outdated, as
we haven't supported running without safekeepers for a long time.
- Fix misc typos in comments
- Remove obsolete comment about backwards compatibility with safekeepers
without `TIMELINE_STATUS` API. All safekeepers have it by now.
## Problem
We don't use code coverage produced by `regress-tests`
(neondatabase/neon#6798), so there's no need to collect it. Potentially,
disabling it should reduce the load on disks and improve the stability
of debug builds.
## Summary of changes
- Disable code coverage collection for regression tests
## Problem
This is a prerequisite for neondatabase/neon#12575 to keep all things
relevant to `build-tools` image in a single directory
## Summary of changes
- Rename `build_tools/` to `build-tools/`
- Move `build-tools.Dockerfile` to `build-tools/Dockerfile`
## Problem
Not all cplane errors are properly recognized and cached/retried.
## Summary of changes
Add more cplane error reasons. Also, use retry_delay_ms as cache TTL if
present.
Related to https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/19353
All Errors that can occur during get_installed_extensions() come from
tokio-postgres functions, e.g. if the database is being shut down
("FATAL: terminating connection due to administrator command"). I'm
seeing a lot of such errors in the logs with the regression tests, with
very verbose stack traces. The compute_ctl stack trace is pretty useless
for errors originating from the Postgres connection, the error message
has all the information, so stop printing the stack trace.
I changed the result type of the functions to return the originating
tokio_postgres Error rather than anyhow::Error, so that if we introduce
other error sources to the functions where the stack trace might be
useful, we'll be forced to revisit this, probably by introducing a new
Error type that separates postgres errors from other errors. But this
will do for now.
We didn't consistently apply these, and it wasn't consistently solved.
With this patch we should have a more consistent approach to this, and
have less issues porting changes to newer versions.
This also removes some potentially buggy casts to `long` from `uint64` -
they could've truncated the value in systems where `long` only has 32
bits.
Include records and image in the debug get page handler.
This endpoint does not update the metrics and does not support tracing.
Note that this now returns individual bytes which need to be encoded
properly for debugging.
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
# TLDR
This PR is a no-op.
## Problem
When a SK loses a disk, it must recover all WALs from the very
beginning. This may take days/weeks to catch up to the latest WALs for
all timelines it owns.
## Summary of changes
When SK starts up,
if it finds that it has 0 timelines,
- it will ask SC for the timeline it owns.
- Then, pulls the timeline from its peer safekeepers to restore the WAL
redundancy right away.
After pulling timeline is complete, it will become active and accepts
new WALs.
The current impl is a prototype. We can optimize the impl further, e.g.,
parallel pull timelines.
---------
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/19011
Measure relative performance for prewarmed and non-prewarmed endpoints.
Add test that runs on every commit, and one performance test with a
remote cluster.
## Problem
In https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12513, the new code was
implemented to retry 404 errors caused by the replication lag. However,
this implemented the new logic, making the script more complicated,
while we have an existing one in `neon_api.py`.
## Summary of changes
The existing mechanism is used to retry 404 errors.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
## Problem
The communicator gRPC client currently uses bounded client/stream pools.
This can artificially constrain clients, especially after we remove
pipelining in #12584.
[Benchmarks](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12583) show that
the cost of an idle server-side GetPage worker task is about 26 KB (2.5
GB for 100,000), so we can afford to scale out.
In the worst case, we'll degenerate to the current libpq state with one
stream per backend, but without the TCP connection overhead. In the
common case we expect significantly lower stream counts due to stream
sharing, driven e.g. by idle backends, LFC hits, read coalescing,
sharding (backends typically only talk to one shard at a time), etc.
Currently, Pageservers rarely serve more than 4000 backend connections,
so we have at least 2 orders of magnitude of headroom.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12584.
## Summary of changes
Remove the pool limits, and restructure the pools.
We still keep a separate bulk pool for Getpage batches of >4 pages (>32
KB), with fewer streams per connection. This reduces TCP-level
congestion and head-of-line blocking for non-bulk requests, and
concentrates larger window sizes on a smaller set of
streams/connections, presumably reducing memory usage. Apart from this,
bulk requests don't have any latency penalty compared to other requests.
## Problem
We don't log the timeline ID when rolling ephemeral layers during
housekeeping.
Resolves [LKB-179](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-179)
## Summary of changes
Add a span with timeline ID when calling `maybe_freeze_ephemeral_layer`
from the housekeeping loop.
We don't instrument the function itself, since future callers may not
have a span including the tenant_id already, but we don't want to
duplicate the tenant_id for these spans.
## Problem
The communicator gRPC client currently attempts to pipeline GetPage
requests from multiple callers onto the same gRPC stream. This has a
number of issues:
* Head-of-line blocking: the request may block on e.g. layer download or
LSN wait, delaying the next request.
* Cancellation: we can't easily cancel in-progress requests (e.g. due to
timeout or backend termination), so it may keep blocking the next
request (even its own retry).
* Complex stream scheduling: picking a stream becomes harder/slower, and
additional Tokio tasks and synchronization is needed for stream
management.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12579.
## Summary of changes
This patch removes pipelining of gRPC stream requests, and instead
prefers to scale out the number of streams to achieve the same
throughput. Stream scheduling has been rewritten, and mostly follows the
same pattern as the client pool with exclusive acquisition by a single
caller.
[Benchmarks](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12583) show that
the cost of an idle server-side GetPage worker task is about 26 KB (2.5
GB for 100,000), so we can afford to scale out.
This has a number of advantages:
* It (mostly) eliminates head-of-line blocking (except at the TCP
level).
* Cancellation becomes trivial, by closing the stream.
* Stream scheduling becomes significantly simpler and cheaper.
* Individual callers can still use client-side batching for pipelining.
## Problem
The new communicator gRPC client has significantly worse Pagebench
performance than a basic gRPC client. We need to find out why.
## Summary of changes
Add a `pagebench --profile` flag which takes a client CPU profile of the
benchmark and writes a flamegraph to `profile.svg`.
## Problem
It can take 3x the idle timeout to reap a channel. We have to wait for
the idle timeout to trigger first for the stream, then the client, then
the channel.
Touches #11735.
## Summary of changes
Reap empty channels immediately, and rely indirectly on the
channel/stream timeouts.
This can still lead to 2x the idle timeout for streams (first stream
then client), but that's okay -- if the stream closes abruptly (e.g. due
to timeout or error) we want to keep the client around in the pool for a
while.
## Problem
gRPC client retries currently include pool acquisition under the
per-attempt timeout. If pool acquisition is slow (e.g. full pool), this
will cause spurious timeout warnings, and the caller will lose its place
in the pool queue.
Touches #11735.
## Summary of changes
Makes several improvements to retries and related logic:
* Don't include pool acquisition time under request timeouts.
* Move attempt timeouts out of `Retry` and into the closure.
* Make `Retry` configurable, move constants into main module.
* Don't backoff on the first retry, and reduce initial/max backoffs to
5ms and 5s respectively.
* Add `with_retries` and `with_timeout` helpers.
* Add slow logging for pool acquisition, and a `warn_slow` counterpart
to `log_slow`.
* Add debug logging for requests and responses at the client boundary.
## Problem
For the communicator scheduling policy, we need to understand the
server-side cost of idle gRPC streams.
Touches #11735.
## Summary of changes
Add an `idle-streams` benchmark to `pagebench` which opens a large
number of idle gRPC GetPage streams.
## Problem
When refreshing cancellation data we resend the entire value again just
to reset the TTL, which causes unnecessary load in proxy, on network and
possibly on redis side.
## Summary of changes
* Switch from using SET with full value to using EXPIRE to reset TTL.
* Add a tiny delay between retries to prevent busy loop.
* Shorten CancelKeyOp variants: drop redundant suffix.
* Retry SET when EXPIRE failed.
## Problem
When a connection terminates its maintain_cancel_key task keeps running
until the CANCEL_KEY_REFRESH sleep finishes and then it triggers another
cancel key TTL refresh before exiting.
## Summary of changes
* Check for cancellation while sleeping and interrupt sleep.
* If cancelled, break the loop, don't send a refresh cmd.
## Problem
We don't validate the validity of the `new_sk_set` before starting the
migration. It is validated later, so the migration to an invalid
safekeeper set will fail anyway. But at this point we might already
commited an invalid `new_sk_set` to the database and there is no `abort`
command yet (I ran into this issue in neon_local and ruined the timeline
:)
- Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11669
## Summary of changes
- Add safekeeper count and safekeeper duplication checks before starting
the migration
- Test that we validate the `new_sk_set` before starting the migration
- Add `force` option to the `TimelineSafekeeperMigrateRequest` to
disable not-mandatory checks
Serialize query row responses directly into JSON. Some of this code
should be using the `json::value_as_object/list` macros, but I've
avoided it for now to minimize the size of the diff.
## Problem
To store cancellation data we send two commands to redis because the
redis server version doesn't support HSET with EX. Also, HSET is not
really needed.
## Summary of changes
* Replace the HSET + EXPIRE command pair with one SET .. EX command.
* Replace HGET with GET.
* Leave a workaround for old keys set with HSET.
* Replace some anyhow errors with specific errors to surface the
WRONGTYPE error from redis.
# TLDR
Problem-I is a bug fix. The rest are no-ops.
## Problem I
Page server checks image layer creation based on the elapsed time but
this check depends on the current logical size, which is only computed
on shard 0. Thus, for non-0 shards, the check will be ineffective and
image creation will never be done for idle tenants.
## Summary of changes I
This PR fixes the problem by simply removing the dependency on current
logical size.
## Summary of changes II
This PR adds a timeout when calling page server to split shard to make
sure SC does not wait for the API call forever. Currently the PR doesn't
adds any retry logic because it's not clear whether page server shard
split can be safely retried if the existing operation is still ongoing
or left the storage in a bad state. Thus it's better to abort the whole
operation and restart.
## Problem III
`test_remote_failures` requires PS to be compiled in the testing mode.
For PS in dev/staging, they are compiled without this mode.
## Summary of changes III
Remove the restriction and also increase the number of total failures
allowed.
## Summary of changes IV
remove test on PS getpage http route.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Yecheng Yang <carlton.yang@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Vlad Lazar <vlad@neon.tech>
## Problem
close LKB-162
close https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30665, related to
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29434
We see a lot of errors like:
```
2025-05-22T23:06:14.928959Z ERROR compaction_loop{tenant_id=? shard_id=0304}:run:gc_compact_timeline{timeline_id=?}: error applying 4 WAL records 35/DC0DF0B8..3B/E43188C0 (8119 bytes) to key 000000067F0000400500006027000000B9D0, from base image with LSN 0/0 to reconstruct page image at LSN 61/150B9B20 n_attempts=0: apply_wal_records
Caused by:
0: read walredo stdout
1: early eof
```
which is an acceptable form of error and we should downgrade it to
warning.
## Summary of changes
walredo error during gc-compaction is expected when the data below the
gc horizon does not contain a full key history. This is possible in some
rare cases of gc that is only able to remove data in the middle of the
history but not all earlier history when a full keyspace gets deleted.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
Fixes [LKB-61](https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-61):
`test_timeline_archival_chaos` being flaky with storcon error `Requested
tenant is missing`.
When a tenant migration is ongoing, and the attach request has been sent
to the new location, but the attach hasn't finished yet, it is possible
for the pageserver to return a 412 precondition failed HTTP error on
timeline deletion, because it is being sent to the new location already.
That one we would previously log via sth like:
```
ERROR request{method=DELETE path=/v1/tenant/1f544a11c90d1afd7af9b26e48985a4e/timeline/32818fb3ebf07cb7f06805429d7dee38 request_id=c493c04b-7f33-46d2-8a65-aac8a5516055}: Error processing HTTP request: InternalServerError(Error deleting timeline 32
818fb3ebf07cb7f06805429d7dee38 on 1f544a11c90d1afd7af9b26e48985a4e on node 2 (localhost): pageserver API: Precondition failed: Requested tenant is missing
```
This patch changes that and makes us return a more reasonable resource
unavailable error. Not sure how scalable this is with tenants with a
large number of shards, but that's a different discussion (we'd probably
need a limited amount of per-storcon retries).
example
[link](https://neon-github-public-dev.s3.amazonaws.com/reports/pr-12398/15981821532/index.html#/testresult/e7785dfb1238d92f).
Update the WSS estimate before acquring the lock, so that we don't need
to hold the lock for so long. That seems safe to me, see added comment.
I was planning to do this with the new rust-based communicator
implementation anyway, but it might help a little with the current C
implementation too. And more importantly, having this as a separate PR
gives us a chance to review this aspect independently.
## Problem
Canceelation requires redis, redis required control-plane.
## Summary of changes
Make redis for cancellation not require control plane.
Add instructions for setting up redis locally.
Split the functions into two: one internal function to calculate the
estimate, and another (two functions) to expose it as SQL functions.
This is in preparation of adding new communicator implementation. With
that, the SQL functions will dispatch the call to the old or new
implementation depending on which is being used.
This is a no-op for the neon deployment
* Introduce the concept image consistent lsn: of the largest LSN below
which all pages have been redone successfully
* Use the image consistent LSN for forced image layer creations
* Optionally expose the image consistent LSN via the timeline describe
HTTP endpoint
* Add a sharded timeline describe endpoint to storcon
---------
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
## Problem
We have a `safekeeper_migrate` handler, but no subcommand in
`storcon_cli`. Same for `/:timeline_id/locate` for identifying current
set of safekeepers.
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12395
## Summary of changes
- Add `timeline-safekeeper-migrate` and `timeline-locate` subcommands to
`storcon_cli`
On December 8th, 2023, an engineering escalation (INC-110) was opened
after it was found that BYPASSRLS was being applied to all roles.
PR that introduced the issue:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/5657
Subsequent commit on main:
ad99fa5f03
NOBYPASSRLS and INHERIT are the defaults for a Postgres role, but
because it isn't easy to know if a Postgres cluster is affected by the
issue, we need to keep the migration around for a long time, if not
indefinitely, so any cluster can be fixed.
Branching is the gift that keeps on giving...
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan.partin@databricks.com>
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan.partin@databricks.com>
## Problem
With gRPC `GetPageRequest` batches, we'll have non-trivial
fragmentation/reassembly logic in several places of the stack
(concurrent reads, shard splits, LFC hits, etc). If we included the
block numbers with the pages in `GetPageResponse` we could have better
verification and observability that the final responses are correct.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12480.
## Summary of changes
Add a `Page` struct with`block_number` for `GetPageResponse`, along with
the `RelTag` for completeness, and verify them in the rich gRPC client.
## Problem
Part of LKB-379
The pageserver connstrings are updated in the postmaster and then
there's a hook to propagate it to the shared memory of all backends.
However, the shard stripe doesn't. This would cause problems during
shard splits:
* the compute has active reads/writes
* shard split happens and the cplane applies the new config (pageserver
connstring + stripe size)
* pageserver connstring will be updated immediately once the postmaster
receives the SIGHUP, and it will be copied over the the shared memory of
all other backends.
* stripe size is a normal GUC and we don't have special handling around
that, so if any active backend has ongoing txns the value won't be
applied.
* now it's possible for backends to issue requests based on the wrong
stripe size; what's worse, if a request gets cached in the prefetch
buffer, it will get stuck forever.
## Summary of changes
To make sure it aligns with the current default in storcon.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
`GetPageRequest::request_id` is supposed to be a unique ID for a
request. It's not, because we may retry the request using the same ID.
This causes assertion failures and confusion.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12480.
## Summary of changes
Extend the request ID with a retry attempt, and handle it in the gRPC
client and server.
## Problem
One PG tenant may write too fast and overwhelm the PS. The other tenants
sharing the same PSs will get very little bandwidth.
We had one experiment that two tenants sharing the same PSs. One tenant
runs a large ingestion that delivers hundreds of MB/s while the other
only get < 10 MB/s.
## Summary of changes
Rate limit how fast PG can generate WALs. The default is -1. We may
scale the default value with the CPU count. Need to run some experiments
to verify.
## How is this tested?
CI.
PGBench. No limit first. Then set to 1 MB/s and you can see the tps
drop. Then reverted the change and tps increased again.
pgbench -i -s 10 -p 55432 -h 127.0.0.1 -U cloud_admin -d postgres
pgbench postgres -c 10 -j 10 -T 6000000 -P 1 -b tpcb-like -h 127.0.0.1
-U cloud_admin -p 55432
progress: 33.0 s, 986.0 tps, lat 10.142 ms stddev 3.856 progress: 34.0
s, 973.0 tps, lat 10.299 ms stddev 3.857 progress: 35.0 s, 1004.0 tps,
lat 9.939 ms stddev 3.604 progress: 36.0 s, 984.0 tps, lat 10.183 ms
stddev 3.713 progress: 37.0 s, 998.0 tps, lat 10.004 ms stddev 3.668
progress: 38.0 s, 648.9 tps, lat 12.947 ms stddev 24.970 progress: 39.0
s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 40.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat
0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 41.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev
0.000 progress: 42.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress:
43.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 44.0 s, 0.0 tps,
lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 45.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev
0.000 progress: 46.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress:
47.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 48.0 s, 0.0 tps,
lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 49.0 s, 347.3 tps, lat 321.560 ms
stddev 1805.633 progress: 50.0 s, 346.8 tps, lat 9.898 ms stddev 3.809
progress: 51.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 52.0 s,
0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 53.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000
ms stddev 0.000 progress: 54.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000
progress: 55.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 56.0 s,
0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 57.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000
ms stddev 0.000 progress: 58.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000
progress: 59.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 60.0 s,
0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000 progress: 61.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000
ms stddev 0.000 progress: 62.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000
progress: 63.0 s, 494.5 tps, lat 276.504 ms stddev 1853.689 progress:
64.0 s, 488.0 tps, lat 20.530 ms stddev 71.981 progress: 65.0 s, 407.8
tps, lat 9.502 ms stddev 3.329 progress: 66.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms
stddev 0.000 progress: 67.0 s, 0.0 tps, lat 0.000 ms stddev 0.000
progress: 68.0 s, 504.5 tps, lat 71.627 ms stddev 397.733 progress: 69.0
s, 371.0 tps, lat 24.898 ms stddev 29.007 progress: 70.0 s, 541.0 tps,
lat 19.684 ms stddev 24.094 progress: 71.0 s, 342.0 tps, lat 29.542 ms
stddev 54.935
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
After https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12240 we observed
issues in our go code as `ComputeStatus` is not stateless, thus doesn't
deserialize as string.
```
could not check compute activity: json: cannot unmarshal object into Go struct field
ComputeState.status of type computeclient.ComputeStatus
```
- Fix this by splitting this status into two.
- Update compute OpenApi spec to reflect changes to `/terminate` in
previous PR
## Problem
If we have catalog update AND a pageserver migration batched in a single
spec, we will not be able to apply the spec (running the SQL) because
the compute is not attached to the right pageserver and we are not able
to read anything if we don't pick up the latest pageserver connstring.
This is not a case for now because cplane always schedules shard split /
pageserver migrations with `skip_pg_catalog_updates` (I suppose).
Context:
https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1752163559259399?thread_ts=1752160163.141149&cid=C09254R641L
With this fix, backpressure will likely not be able to affect
reconfigurations.
## Summary of changes
Do `pg_reload_conf` before we apply specs in SQL.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We need to benchmark the rich gRPC client
`client_grpc::PageserverClient` against the basic, no-frills
`page_api::Client` to determine how much overhead it adds.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12476.
## Summary of changes
Add a `pagebench --rich-client` parameter to use
`client_grpc::PageserverClient`. Also adds a compression parameter to
the client.
## Problem
Sometimes we run out of free ports in `PortDistributor`. This affects
particularly failed tests that we rerun automatically up to 3 times
(which makes it use up to 3x more ports)
## Summary of changes
- Cycle over the range of ports to reuse freed ports from previous tests
Ref: LKB-62
## Problem
The communicator gRPC client must support changing the shard map on
splits.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12476.
## Summary of changes
* Wrap the shard set in a `ArcSwap` to allow swapping it out.
* Add a new `ShardSpec` parameter struct to pass validated shard info to
the client.
* Add `update_shards()` to change the shard set. In-flight requests are
allowed to complete using the old shards.
* Restructure `get_page` to use a stable view of the shard map, and
retry errors at the top (pre-split) level to pick up shard map changes.
* Also marks `tonic::Status::Internal` as non-retryable, so that we can
use it for client-side invariant checks without continually retrying
these.
# TLDR
All changes are no-op except some metrics.
## Summary of changes I
### Pageserver
Added a new global counter metric
`pageserver_pagestream_handler_results_total` that categorizes
pagestream request results according to their outcomes:
1. Success
2. Internal errors
3. Other errors
Internal errors include:
1. Page reconstruction error: This probably indicates a pageserver
bug/corruption
2. LSN timeout error: Could indicate overload or bugs with PS's ability
to reach other components
3. Misrouted request error: Indicates bugs in the Storage Controller/HCC
Other errors include transient errors that are expected during normal
operation or errors indicating bugs with other parts of the system
(e.g., malformed requests, errors due to cancelled operations during PS
shutdown, etc.)
## Summary of changes II
This PR adds a pageserver endpoint and its counterpart in storage
controller to list visible size of all tenant shards. This will be a
prerequisite of the tenant rebalance command.
## Problem III
We need a way to download WAL
segments/layerfiles from S3 and replay WAL records. We cannot access
production S3 from our laptops directly, and we also can't transfer any
user data out of production systems for GDPR compliance, so we need
solutions.
## Summary of changes III
This PR adds a couple of tools to support the debugging
workflow in production:
1. A new `pagectl download-remote-object` command that can be used to
download remote storage objects assuming the correct access is set up.
## Summary of changes IV
This PR adds a command to list all visible delta and image layers from
index_part. This is useful to debug compaction issues as index_part
often contain a lot of covered layers due to PITR.
---------
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Vlad Lazar <vlad@neon.tech>
## Problem
close LKB-253
## Summary of changes
404 for timeline requests could happen when the tenant is intended to be
on a pageserver but not attached yet. This patch adds handling for the
lease request. In the future, we should extend this handling to more
operations.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Safekeeper and pageserver metrics collection might time out. We've seen
this in both hadron and neon.
## Summary of changes
This PR moves metrics collection in PS/SK to the background so that we
will always get some metrics, despite there may be some delays. Will
leave it to the future work to reduce metrics collection time.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
## Problem
The gRPC client pools don't reap idle resources.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12475.
## Summary of changes
Reap idle pool resources (channels/clients/streams) after 3 minutes of
inactivity.
Also restructure the `StreamPool` to use a mutex rather than atomics for
synchronization, for simplicity. This will be optimized later.
This PR introduces a `image_creation_timeout` to page servers so that we
can force the image creation after a certain period. This is set to 1
day on dev/staging for now, and will rollout to production 1/2 weeks
later.
Majority of the PR are boilerplate code to add the new knob. Specific
changes of the PR are:
1. During L0 compaction, check if we should force a compaction if
min(LSN) of all delta layers < force_image_creation LSN.
2. During image creation, check if we should force a compaction if the
image's LSN < force_image_creation LSN and there are newer deltas with
overlapping key ranges.
3. Also tweaked the check image creation interval to make sure we honor
image_creation_timeout.
Vlad's note: This should be a no-op. I added an extra PS config for the
large timeline
threshold to enable this.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
When a function is owned by a superuser (bootstrap user or otherwise),
we consider it safe to run it. Only a superuser could have installed it,
typically from CREATE EXTENSION script: we trust the code to execute.
## Problem
This is intended to solve running pg_graphql Event Triggers
graphql_watch_ddl and graphql_watch_drop which are executing the secdef
function graphql.increment_schema_version().
## Summary of changes
Allow executing Event Trigger function owned by a superuser and with
SECURITY DEFINER properties. The Event Trigger code runs with superuser
privileges, and we consider that it's fine.
---------
Co-authored-by: Tristan Partin <tristan.partin@databricks.com>
There are a couple of places that call `CompactionError::is_cancel` but
don't check the `::Other` variant via downcasting for root cause being
cancellation.
The only place that does it is `log_compaction_error`.
It's sad we have to do it, but, until we get around cleaning up all the
culprits,
a step forward is to unify the behavior so that all places that inspect
a
`CompactionError` for cancellation reason follow the same behavior.
Thus, this PR ...
- moves the downcasting checks against the `::Other` variant from
`log_compaction_error` into `is_cancel()` and
- enforces via type system that `.is_cancel()` is used to check whether
a CompactionError is due to cancellation (matching on the
`CompactionError::ShuttingDown` will cause a compile-time error).
I don't think there's a _serious_ case right now where matching instead
of using `is_cancel` causes problems.
The worst case I could find is the circuit breaker and
`compaction_failed`,
which don't really matter if we're shutting down the timeline anyway.
But it's unaesthetic and might cause log/alert noise down the line,
so, this PR fixes that at least.
Refs
- https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-182
- slack conversation about this PR:
https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1751284317955159
## Problem
close LKB-199
## Summary of changes
We always return the error as 500 to the cplane if a LSN lease request
fails. This cause issues for the cplane as they don't retry on 500. This
patch correctly passes through the error and assign the error code so
that cplane can know if it is a retryable error. (TODO: look at the
cplane code and learn the retry logic).
Note that this patch does not resolve LKB-253 -- we need to handle not
found error separately in the lsn lease path, like wait until the tenant
gets attached, or return 503 so that cplane can retry.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
Change the unreliable storage wrapper to fail by probability when there
are more failure attempts left.
Co-authored-by: Yecheng Yang <carlton.yang@databricks.com>
## Problem
Test `test_branch_creation_before_gc` is flaky in the internal repo.
Pageserver sometimes lags behind write LSN. When we call GC it might not
reach the LSN we try to create the branch at yet.
## Summary of changes
- Wait till flush lsn on pageserver reaches the latest LSN before
calling GC.
## Problem
GetPage bulk requests such as prefetches and vacuum can head-of-line
block foreground requests, causing increased latency.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12469.
## Summary of changes
* Use dedicated channel/client/stream pools for bulk GetPage requests.
* Use lower concurrency but higher queue depth for bulk pools.
* Make pool limits configurable.
* Require unbounded client pool for stream pool, to avoid accidental
starvation.
## Problem
Follow up of #12400
## Summary of changes
We didn't set remote_size_mb to Some when initialized so it never gets
computed :(
Also added a new API to force refresh the properties.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Due to a lag in replication, we sometimes cannot get the parent branch
definition just after completion of the Public API restore call. This
leads to the test failures.
https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-279
## Summary of changes
The workaround is implemented. Now test retries up to 30 seconds,
waiting for the branch definition to appear.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
## Problem
As discovered in https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12394,
test_multiple_subscription_branching generates skewed data distribution,
that leads to test failures when the unevenly filled last table receives
even more data.
for table t0: pub_res = (42001,), sub_res = (42001,)
for table t1: pub_res = (29001,), sub_res = (29001,)
for table t2: pub_res = (21001,), sub_res = (21001,)
for table t3: pub_res = (21001,), sub_res = (21001,)
for table t4: pub_res = (1711001,), sub_res = (1711001,)
## Summary of changes
Fix the name of the workload parameter to generate data as expected.
## Problem
The rich gRPC Pageserver client needs to split GetPage batches that
straddle multiple shards.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12462.
## Summary of changes
Adds a `GetPageSplitter` which splits `GetPageRequest` that span
multiple shards, and then reassembles the responses. Dispatches
per-shard requests in parallel.
## Problem
See [Slack
Channel](https://databricks.enterprise.slack.com/archives/C091LHU6NNB)
Dropping connection without resetting prefetch state can cause
request/response mismatch.
And lack of check response correctness in communicator_prefetch_lookupv
can cause data corruption.
## Summary of changes
1. Validate response before assignment to prefetch slot.
2. Consume prefetch requests before sending any other requests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kosntantin Knizhnik <konstantin.knizhnik@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
The `--timelines-onto-safekeepers` flag is very consequential in the
sense that it controls every single timeline creation. However, we don't
have any automatic insight whether enabling the option will break things
or not.
The main way things can break is by misconfigured safekeepers, say they
are marked as paused in the storcon db. The best input so far we can
obtain via manually connecting via storcon_cli and listing safekeepers,
but this is cumbersome and manual so prone to human error.
So at storcon startup, do a simulated "test creation" in which we call
`timelines_onto_safekeepers` with the configuration provided to us, and
print whether it was successful or not. No actual timeline is created,
and nothing is written into the storcon db. The heartbeat info will not
have reached us at that point yet, but that's okay, because we still
fall back to safekeepers that don't have any heartbeat.
Also print some general scheduling policy stats on initial safekeeper
load.
Part of #11670.
## Problem
For the communicator, we need a rich Pageserver gRPC client.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12434.
## Summary of changes
This patch adds an initial rich Pageserver gRPC client. It supports:
* Sharded tenants across multiple Pageservers.
* Pooling of connections, clients, and streams for efficient resource
use.
* Concurrent use by many callers.
* Internal handling of GetPage bidirectional streams, with pipelining
and error handling.
* Automatic retries.
* Observability.
The client is still under development. In particular, it needs GetPage
batch splitting, shard map updates, and performance optimization. This
will be addressed in follow-up PRs.
The only differentiated handling of it is for `is_critical`, which in
turn is a `matches!()` on several variants of the `enum
CollectKeyspaceError`
which is the value contained insided
`CompactionError::CollectKeyspaceError`.
This PR introduces a new error for `repartition()`, allowing its
immediate
callers to inspect it like `is_critical` did.
A drive-by fix is more precise classification of WaitLsnError::BadState
when mapping to `tonic::Status`.
refs
- https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-182
## Problem
close LKB-209
## Summary of changes
- We should not allow lease creation below the applied gc cutoff.
- Also removed the condition for `AttachedSingle`. We should always
check the lease against the gc cutoff in all attach modes.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We only trim the senders if we tried to send a message to them and
discovered that the channel is closed. This is problematic if the
pageserver keeps connecting while there's nothing to send back for the
shard. In this scenario we never trim down the senders list and can
panic due to the u8 limit.
## Summary of Changes
Trim down the dead senders before adding a new one.
Closes LKB-178
## Problem
We lost capability to explicitly disable the global eviction task (for
testing).
## Summary of changes
Add an `enabled` flag to `DiskUsageEvictionTaskConfig` to indicate
whether we should run the eviction job or not.
## Problem
The communicator will need gRPC channel/client/stream pools for
efficient reuse across many backends.
Touches #11735.
Requires #12396.
## Summary of changes
Adds three nested resource pools:
* `ChannelPool` for gRPC channels (i.e. TCP connections).
* `ClientPool` for gRPC clients (i.e. `page_api::Client`). Acquires
channels from `ChannelPool`.
* `StreamPool` for gRPC GetPage streams. Acquires clients from
`ClientPool`.
These are minimal functional implementations that will need further
improvements and performance optimization. However, the overall
structure is expected to be roughly final, so reviews should focus on
that.
The pools are not yet in use, but will form the foundation of a rich
gRPC Pageserver client used by the communicator (see #12462). This PR
also adds the initial crate scaffolding for that client.
See doc comments for details.
# TLDR
All changes are no-op except
1. publishing additional metrics.
2. problem VI
## Problem I
It has come to my attention that the Neon Storage Controller doesn't
correctly update its "observed" state of tenants previously associated
with PSs that has come back up after a local data loss. It would still
think that the old tenants are still attached to page servers and won't
ask more questions. The pageserver has enough information from the
reattach request/response to tell that something is wrong, but it
doesn't do anything about it either. We need to detect this situation in
production while I work on a fix.
(I think there is just some misunderstanding about how Neon manages
their pageserver deployments which got me confused about all the
invariants.)
## Summary of changes I
Added a `pageserver_local_data_loss_suspected` gauge metric that will be
set to 1 if we detect a problematic situation from the reattch response.
The problematic situation is when the PS doesn't have any local tenants
but received a reattach response containing tenants.
We can set up an alert using this metric. The alert should be raised
whenever this metric reports non-zero number.
Also added a HTTP PUT
`http://pageserver/hadron-internal/reset_alert_gauges` API on the
pageserver that can be used to reset the gauge and the alert once we
manually rectify the situation (by restarting the HCC).
## Problem II
Azure upload is 3x slower than AWS. -> 3x slower ingestion.
The reason for the slower upload is that Azure upload in page server is
much slower => higher flush latency => higher disk consistent LSN =>
higher back pressure.
## Summary of changes II
Use Azure put_block API to uploads a 1 GB layer file in 8 blocks in
parallel.
I set the put_block block size to be 128 MB by default in azure config.
To minimize neon changes, upload function passes the layer file path to
the azure upload code through the storage metadata. This allows the
azure put block to use FileChunkStreamRead to stream read from one
partition in the file instead of loading all file data in memory and
split it into 8 128 MB chunks.
## How is this tested? II
1. rust test_real_azure tests the put_block change.
3. I deployed the change in azure dev and saw flush latency reduces from
~30 seconds to 10 seconds.
4. I also did a bunch of stress test using sqlsmith and 100 GB TPCDS
runs.
## Problem III
Currently Neon limits the compaction tasks as 3/4 * CPU cores. This
limits the overall compaction throughput and it can easily cause
head-of-the-line blocking problems when a few large tenants are
compacting.
## Summary of changes III
This PR increases the limit of compaction tasks as `BG_TASKS_PER_THREAD`
(default 4) * CPU cores. Note that `CONCURRENT_BACKGROUND_TASKS` also
limits some other tasks `logical_size_calculation` and `layer eviction`
. But compaction should be the most frequent and time-consuming task.
## Summary of changes IV
This PR adds the following PageServer metrics:
1. `pageserver_disk_usage_based_eviction_evicted_bytes_total`: captures
the total amount of bytes evicted. It's more straightforward to see the
bytes directly instead of layers.
2. `pageserver_active_storage_operations_count`: captures the active
storage operation, e.g., flush, L0 compaction, image creation etc. It's
useful to visualize these active operations to get a better idea of what
PageServers are spending cycles on in the background.
## Summary of changes V
When investigating data corruptions, it's useful to search the base
image and all WAL records of a page up to an LSN, i.e., a breakdown of
GetPage@LSN request. This PR implements this functionality with two
tools:
1. Extended `pagectl` with a new command to search the layer files for a
given key up to a given LSN from the `index_part.json` file. The output
can be used to download the files from S3 and then search the file
contents using the second tool.
Example usage:
```
cargo run --bin pagectl index-part search --tenant-id 09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d --timeline-id 7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab --path ~/Downloads/corruption/index_part.json-0000000c-formatted --key 000000067F000080140000802100000D61BD --lsn 70C/BF3D61D8
```
Example output:
```
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F0000801400000B180000000002-000000067F0000801400008028000002FEFF__000007089F0B5381-0000070C7679EEB9-0000000c
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000000000000000000000000000000000-000000067F0000801400008028000002F3F1__000006DD95B6F609-000006E2BA14C369-0000000c
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F0000801400000B180000000002-000000067F000080140000802100001B0973__000006D33429F539-000006DD95B6F609-0000000c
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F0000801400000B180000000002-000000067F00008014000080210000164D81__000006C6343B2D31-000006D33429F539-0000000b
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F0000801400000B180000000002-000000067F0000801400008021000017687B__000006BA344FA7F1-000006C6343B2D31-0000000b
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F0000801400000B180000000002-000000067F00008014000080210000165BAB__000006AD34613D19-000006BA344FA7F1-0000000b
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F0000801400000B180000000002-000000067F00008014000080210000137A39__0000069F34773461-000006AD34613D19-0000000b
tenants/09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d-0304/timelines/7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab/000000067F000080140000802100000D4000-000000067F000080140000802100000F0000__0000069F34773460-0000000b
```
2. Added a unit test to search the layer file contents. It's not
implemented part of `pagectl` because it depends on some test harness
code, which can only be used by unit tests.
Example usage:
```
cargo test --package pageserver --lib -- tenant::debug::test_search_key --exact --nocapture -- --tenant-id 09b99ea3239bbb3b2d883a59f087659d --timeline-id 7bedf4a6995baff7c0421ff9aebbcdab --data-dir /Users/chen.luo/Downloads/corruption --key 000000067F000080140000802100000D61BD --lsn 70C/BF3D61D8
```
Example output:
```
# omitted image for brievity
delta: 69F/769D8180: will_init: false, "OgAAALGkuwXwYp12nwYAAECGAAASIqLHAAAAAH8GAAAUgAAAIYAAAL1hDQD/DLGkuwUDAAAAEAAWAA=="
delta: 69F/769CB6D8: will_init: false, "PQAAALGkuwXotZx2nwYAABAJAAAFk7tpACAGAH8GAAAUgAAAIYAAAL1hDQD/CQUAEAASALExuwUBAAAAAA=="
```
## Problem VI
Currently when page service resolves shards from page numbers, it
doesn't fully support the case that the shard could be split in the
middle. This will lead to query failures during the tenant split for
either commit or abort cases (it's mostly for abort).
## Summary of changes VI
This PR adds retry logic in `Cache::get()` to deal with shard resolution
errors more gracefully. Specifically, it'll clear the cache and retry,
instead of failing the query immediately. It also reduces the internal
timeout to make retries faster.
The PR also fixes a very obvious bug in
`TenantManager::resolve_attached_shard` where the code tries to cache
the computed the shard number, but forgot to recompute when the shard
count is different.
---------
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Vlad Lazar <vlad.lazar@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Vlad Lazar <vlad@neon.tech>
This patch tightens up `page_api::Client`. It's mostly superficial
changes, but also adds a new constructor that takes an existing gRPC
channel, for use with the communicator connection pool.
## Problem
Some feature flags are used heavily on the critical path and we want the
"get feature flag" operation as cheap as possible.
## Summary of changes
Add a `test_remote_size_flag` as an example of such flags. In the
future, we can use macro to generate all those fields. The flag is
updated in the housekeeping loop. The retrieval of the flag is simply
reading an atomic flag.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
The goal of this code was to test out if resetting the broker
subscription helps alleviate the issues we've been seeing in staging.
Looks like it did the trick. However, the original version was too
eager.
## Summary of Changes
Only reset the stream when:
* we are waiting for WAL
* there's no connection candidates lined up
* we're not already connected to a safekeeper
The only call stack that can emit the `::AlreadyRunning` variant is
```
-> iteration_inner
-> iteration
-> compaction_iteration
-> compaction_loop
-> start_background_loops
```
And on that call stack, the only differentiated handling of it is its
invocations of
`log_compaction_error -> CompactionError::is_cancel()`, which returns
`true` for
`::AlreadyRunning`.
I think the condition of `AlreadyRunning` is severe; it really shouldn't
happen.
So, this PR starts treating it as something that is to be logged at
`ERROR` / `WARN`
level, depending on the `degrate_to_warning` argument to
`log_compaction_error`.
refs
- https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-182
## Problem
Grafana Alloy in cluster mode seems to send duplicate "seconds" scrape
URL parameters
when one of its instances is disrupted.
## Summary of changes
Temporarily accept duplicate parameters as long as their value is
identical.
Looks can be deceiving: the match blocks in
`maybe_trip_compaction_breaker`
and at the end of `compact_with_options` seem like differentiated error
handling, but in reality, these branches are unreachable at runtime
because the only source of `CompactionError::Offload` within the
compaction code is at the end of `Tenant::compaction_iteration`.
We can simply map offload cancellation to CompactionError::Cancelled and
all other offload errors to ::Other, since there's no differentiated
handling for them in the compaction code.
Also, the OffloadError::RemoteStorage variant has no differentiated
handling, but was wrapping the remote storage anyhow::Error in a
`anyhow(thiserror(anyhow))` sandwich. This PR removes that variant,
mapping all RemoteStorage errors to `OffloadError::Other`.
Thereby, the sandwich is gone and we will get a proper anyhow backtrace
to the remote storage error location if when we debug-print the
OffloadError (or the CompactionError if we map it to that).
refs
- https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-182
- the observation that there's no need for differentiated handling of
CompactionError::Offload was made in
https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1751286453930269?thread_ts=1751284317.955159&cid=C09254R641L
Before this PR, macOS builds would get clippy warning
```
warning: `tokio_epoll_uring::thread_local_system` does not refer to an existing function
```
The reason is that the `thread_local_system` function is only defined on
Linux.
Add `allow-invalid = true` to make macOS clippy pass, and manually test
that on Linux builds, clippy still fails when we use it.
refs
- https://databricks.slack.com/archives/C09254R641L/p1751917655527099
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <Christian Schwarz>
## Problem
Deletion process does not calculate preferred nodes correctly - it
doesn't consider current tenant-shard layout among all pageservers.
## Summary of changes
- Added a schedule context calculation for node deletion
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
The introduction of the default lease deadline feature 9 months ago made
it so
that after PS restart, `.timeline_gc()` calls in Python tests are no-ops
for 10 minute after pageserver startup: the `gc_iteration()` bails with
`Skipping GC because lsn lease deadline is not reached`.
I did some impact analysis in the following PR. About 30 Python tests
are affected:
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12411
Rust tests that don't explicitly enable periodic GC or invoke GC
manually
are unaffected because we disable periodic GC by default in
the `TenantHarness`'s tenant config.
Two tests explicitly did `start_paused=true` + `tokio::time::advance()`,
but it would add cognitive and code bloat to each existing and future
test case that uses TenantHarness if we took that route.
So, this PR sets the default lease deadline feature in both Python
and Rust tests to zero by default. Tests that test the feature were
thus identified by failing the test:
- Python test `test_readonly_node_gc` + `test_lsn_lease_size`
- Rust test `test_lsn_lease`.
To accomplish the above, I changed the code that computes the initial
lease
deadline to respect the pageserver.toml's default tenant config, which
it didn't before (and I would consider a bug). The Python test harness
and the Rust TenantHarness test harness then simply set the default
tenant
config field to zero.
Drive-by:
- `test_lsn_lease_size` was writing a lot of data unnecessarily; reduce
the amount and speed up the test
refs
- PR that introduced default lease deadline:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/9055/files
- fixes https://databricks.atlassian.net/browse/LKB-92
---------
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <Christian Schwarz>
## Problem
Extension tests were previously run sequentially, resulting in
unnecessary wait time and underutilization of available CPU cores.
## Summary of changes
Tests are now executed in a customizable number of parallel threads
using separate database branches. This reduces overall test time by
approximately 50% (e.g., on my laptop, parallel test lasts 173s, while
sequential one lasts 340s) and increases the load on the pageserver,
providing better test coverage.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexander Bayandin <alexander@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Devin AI <158243242+devin-ai-integration[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexey Masterov <alexey.masterov@databricks.com>
## Problem
Pageserver now writes errors in the log during the safekeeper migration.
Some errors are added to allowed errors, but "timeline not found in
global map" is not.
- Will be properly fixed in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12191
## Summary of changes
Add "timeline not found in global map" error in a list of allowed errors
in `test_safekeeper_migration_simple`
## Problem
Test is flaky due to the following warning in the logs:
```
Keeping extra secondaries: can't determine which of [NodeId(1), NodeId(2)] to remove (some nodes offline?)
```
Some nodes being offline is expected behavior in this test.
## Summary of changes
- Added `Keeping extra secondaries` to the list of allowed errors
- Improved logging for better debugging experience
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
## Problem
The endpoint filter cache is still unused because it's not yet reliable
enough to be used. It only consumes a lot of memory.
## Summary of changes
Remove the code. Needs a new design.
neondatabase/cloud#30634
See #11992 and #11961 for some examples of usecases.
This introduces a JSON serialization lib, designed for more flexibility
than serde_json offers.
## Dynamic construction
Sometimes you have dynamic values you want to serialize, that are not
already in a serde-aware model like a struct or a Vec etc. To achieve
this with serde, you need to implement a lot of different traits on a
lot of different new-types. Because of this, it's often easier to
give-in and pull all the data into a serde-aware model
(serde_json::Value or some intermediate struct), but that is often not
very efficient.
This crate allows full control over the JSON encoding without needing to
implement any extra traits. Just call the relevant functions, and it
will guarantee a correctly encoded JSON value.
## Async construction
Similar to the above, sometimes the values arrive asynchronously. Often
collecting those values in memory is more expensive than writing them as
JSON, since the overheads of `Vec` and `String` is much higher, however
there are exceptions.
Serializing to JSON all in one go is also more CPU intensive and can
cause lag spikes, whereas serializing values incrementally spreads out
the CPU load and reduces lag.
## Problem
We don't log gRPC request errors on the server.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
Automatically log non-OK gRPC response statuses in the observability
middleware, and add corresponding logging for the `get_pages` stream.
Also adds the peer address and gRPC method to the gRPC tracing span.
Example output:
```
2025-07-02T20:18:16.813718Z WARN grpc:pageservice{peer=127.0.0.1:56698 method=CheckRelExists tenant_id=c7b45faa1924b1958f05c5fdee8b0d04 timeline_id=4a36ee64fd2f97781b9dcc2c3cddd51b shard_id=0000}: request failed with NotFound: Tenant c7b45faa1924b1958f05c5fdee8b0d04 not found
```
## Problem
Names are not consistent between safekeeper migration RFC and the actual
implementation.
It's not used anywhere in production yet, so it's safe to rename. We
don't need to worry about backward compatibility.
- Follow up on https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12432
## Summary of changes
- rename term -> last_log_term in TimelineMembershipSwitchResponse
- add missing fields to TimelineMembershipSwitchResponse in python
## Problem
The safekeeper migration code/logic slightly diverges from the initial
RFC. This PR aims to address these differences.
- Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12192
## Summary of changes
- Adjust the RFC to reflect that we implemented the safekeeper
reconciler with in-memory queue.
- Add `sk_set_notified_generation` field to the `timelines` table in the
RFC to address the "finish migration atomically" problem.
- Describe how we are going to make the timeline migration handler fully
retriable with in-memory reconciler queue.
- Unify type/field/method names in the code and RFC.
- Fix typos
This doesn't do anything interesting yet, but demonstrates linking Rust
code to the neon Postgres extension, so that we can review and test
drive just the build process changes independently.
Mostly a revert of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11851 and
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12330 .
Christian suggested reverting his PR to fix the issue
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12369 .
Alternatives considered:
1. I have originally wanted to introduce cancellation tokens to
`RequestContext`, but in the end I gave up on them because I didn't find
a select-free way of preventing
`test_layer_download_cancelled_by_config_location` from hanging.
Namely if I put a select around the `get_or_maybe_download` invocation
in `get_values_reconstruct_data`, it wouldn't hang, but if I put it
around the `download_init_and_wait` invocation in
`get_or_maybe_download`, the test would still hang. Not sure why, even
though I made the attached child function of the `RequestContext` create
a child token.
2. Introduction of a `download_cancel` cancellation token as a child of
a timeline token, putting it into `RemoteTimelineClient` together with
the main token, and then putting it into the whole
`RemoteTimelineClient` read path.
3. Greater refactorings, like to make cancellation tokens follow a DAG
structure so you can have tokens cancelled either by say timeline
shutting down or a request ending. It doesn't just represent an effort
that we don't have the engineering budget for, it also causes
interesting questions like what to do about batching (do you cancel the
entire request if only some requests get cancelled?).
We might see a reemergence of
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11762, but given that we
have https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11853 and
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12376 now, it is possible that
it will not come back. Looking at some code, it might actually fix the
locations where the error pops up. Let's see.
---------
Co-authored-by: Christian Schwarz <christian@neon.tech>
- Add ComputeSpec flag `offload_lfc_interval_seconds` controlling
whether LFC should be offloaded to endpoint storage. Default value
(None) means "don't offload".
- Add glue code around it for `neon_local` and integration tests.
- Add `autoprewarm` mode for `test_lfc_prewarm` testing
`offload_lfc_interval_seconds` and `autoprewarm` flags in conjunction.
- Rename `compute_ctl_lfc_prewarm_requests_total` and
`compute_ctl_lfc_offload_requests_total` to
`compute_ctl_lfc_prewarms_total`
and `compute_ctl_lfc_offloads_total` to reflect we count prewarms and
offloads, not `compute_ctl` requests of those.
Don't count request in metrics if there is a prewarm/offload already
ongoing.
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/19011
Resolves: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30770
Don't build walproposer-lib as a separate job. It only takes a few
seconds, after you have built all its dependencies.
Don't cache the Neon Pg extensions in the per-postgres-version caches.
This is in preparation for the communicator project, which will
introduce Rust parts to the Neon Pg extension, which complicates the
build process. With that, the 'make neon-pg-ext' step requires some of
the Rust bits to be built already, or it will build them on the spot,
which in turn requires all the Rust sources to be present, and we don't
want to repeat that part for each Postgres version anyway. To prepare
for that, rely on "make all" to build the neon extension and the rust
bits in the correct order instead. Building the neon extension doesn't
currently take very long anyway after you have built Postgres itself, so
you don't gain much by caching it. See
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12266.
Add an explicit "rustup update" step to update the toolchain. It's not
strictly necessary right now, because currently "make all" will only
invoke "cargo build" once and the race condition described in the
comment doesn't happen. But prepare for the future.
To further simplify the build, get rid of the separate 'build-postgres'
jobs too, and just build Postgres as a step in the main job. That makes
the overall workflow run longer, because we no longer build all the
postgres versions in parallel (although you still get intra-runner
parallelism thanks to `make -j`), but that's acceptable. In the
cache-hit case, it might even be a little faster because there is less
overhead from launching jobs, and in the cache-miss case, it's maybe
5-10 minutes slower altogether.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexander Bayandin <alexander@neon.tech>
## Problem
The current deletion operation is synchronous and blocking, which is
unsuitable for potentially long-running tasks like. In such cases, the
standard HTTP request-response pattern is not a good fit.
## Summary of Changes
- Added new `storcon_cli` commands: `NodeStartDelete` and
`NodeCancelDelete` to initiate and cancel deletion asynchronously.
- Added corresponding `storcon` HTTP handlers to support the new
start/cancel deletion flow.
- Introduced a new type of background operation: `Delete`, to track and
manage the deletion process outside the request lifecycle.
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
## Problem
I suspect that the pageservers get stuck on receiving broker updates.
## Summary of changes
This is a an opportunistic (staging only) patch that resets the
susbscription
stream if it's been idle for a while. This won't go to prod in this
form.
I'll revert or update it before Friday.
## Problem
DEBUG_LOCAL_COMPARE mode allows to detect data corruption.
But it requires rebuild of neon extension (and so requires special
image) and significantly slowdown execution because always fetch pages
from page server.
## Summary of changes
Introduce new GUC `neon.debug_compare_local`, accepting the following
values: " none", "prefetch", "lfc", "all" (by default it is definitely
disabled).
In mode less than "all", neon SMGR will not fetch page from PS if it is
found in local caches.
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
The background installed extensions worker relied on `interval.tick()`
to go to sleep for a period of time. This can lead to bugs due to the
interval being updated at the end of the loop as the first tick is
[instantaneous](https://docs.rs/tokio/latest/tokio/time/struct.Interval.html#method.tick).
## Summary of changes
Changed it to a `tokio::time::sleep` to prevent this issue. Now it puts
the thread to sleep and only wakes up after the specified duration
## Problem
Better investigate memory usage during backpressure
## Summary of changes
Print open layer size if backpressure is activated
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Ancestor detach from a previously detached parent when there were no
writes panics since it tries to upload the tombstone layer twice.
## Summary of Changes
If we're gonna copy the tombstone from the ancestor, don't bother
creating it.
Fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12458
When deploying new safekeepers, we don't immediately want to send
traffic to them. Maybe they are not ready yet by the time the deploy
script is registering them with the storage controller.
For pageservers, the storcon solves the problem by not scheduling stuff
to them unless there has been a positive heartbeat response. We can't do
the same for safekeepers though, otherwise a single down safekeeper
would mean we can't create new timelines in smaller regions where there
is only three safekeepers in total.
So far we have created safekeepers as `pause` but this adds a manual
step to safekeeper deployment which is prone to oversight. We want
things to be automatted. So we introduce a new state `activating` that
acts just like `pause`, except that we automatically transition the
policy to `active` once we get a positive heartbeat from the safekeeper.
For `pause`, we always keep the safekeeper paused.
## Problem
Currently, if `storcon` (storage controller) reconciliations repeatedly
fail, the system will indefinitely freeze optimizations. This can result
in optimization starvation for several days until the reconciliation
issues are manually resolved. To mitigate this, we should detect
persistently failing reconciliations and exclude them from influencing
the optimization decision.
## Summary of Changes
- A tenant shard reconciliation is now considered "keep-failing" if it
fails 5 consecutive times. These failures are excluded from the
optimization readiness check.
- Added a new metric: `storage_controller_keep_failing_reconciles` to
monitor such cases.
- Added a warning log message when a reconciliation is marked as
"keep-failing".
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
## TLDR
This PR is a no-op. The changes are disabled by default.
## Problem
I. Currently we don't have a way to detect disk I/O failures from WAL
operations.
II.
We observe that the offloader fails to upload a segment due to race
conditions on XLOG SWITCH and PG start streaming WALs. wal_backup task
continously failing to upload a full segment while the segment remains
partial on the disk.
The consequence is that commit_lsn for all SKs move forward but
backup_lsn stays the same. Then, all SKs run out of disk space.
III.
We have discovered SK bugs where the WAL offload owner cannot keep up
with WAL backup/upload to S3, which results in an unbounded accumulation
of WAL segment files on the Safekeeper's disk until the disk becomes
full. This is a somewhat dangerous operation that is hard to recover
from because the Safekeeper cannot write its control files when it is
out of disk space. There are actually 2 problems here:
1. A single problematic timeline can take over the entire disk for the
SK
2. Once out of disk, it's difficult to recover SK
IV.
Neon reports certain storage errors as "critical" errors using a marco,
which will increment a counter/metric that can be used to raise alerts.
However, this metric isn't sliced by tenant and/or timeline today. We
need the tenant/timeline dimension to better respond to incidents and
for blast radius analysis.
## Summary of changes
I.
The PR adds a `safekeeper_wal_disk_io_errors ` which is incremented when
SK fails to create or flush WALs.
II.
To mitigate this issue, we will re-elect a new offloader if the current
offloader is lagging behind too much.
Each SK makes the decision locally but they are aware of each other's
commit and backup lsns.
The new algorithm is
- determine_offloader will pick a SK. say SK-1.
- Each SK checks
-- if commit_lsn - back_lsn > threshold,
-- -- remove SK-1 from the candidate and call determine_offloader again.
SK-1 will step down and all SKs will elect the same leader again.
After the backup is caught up, the leader will become SK-1 again.
This also helps when SK-1 is slow to backup.
I'll set the reelect backup lag to 4 GB later. Setting to 128 MB in dev
to trigger the code more frequently.
III.
This change addresses problem no. 1 by having the Safekeeper perform a
timeline disk utilization check check when processing WAL proposal
messages from Postgres/compute. The Safekeeper now rejects the WAL
proposal message, effectively stops writing more WAL for the timeline to
disk, if the existing WAL files for the timeline on the SK disk exceeds
a certain size (the default threshold is 100GB). The disk utilization is
calculated based on a `last_removed_segno` variable tracked by the
background task removing WAL files, which produces an accurate and
conservative estimate (>= than actual disk usage) of the actual disk
usage.
IV.
* Add a new metric `hadron_critical_storage_event_count` that has the
`tenant_shard_id` and `timeline_id` as dimensions.
* Modified the `crtitical!` marco to include tenant_id and timeline_id
as additional arguments and adapted existing call sites to populate the
tenant shard and timeline ID fields. The `critical!` marco invocation
now increments the `hadron_critical_storage_event_count` with the extra
dimensions. (In SK there isn't the notion of a tenant-shard, so just the
tenant ID is recorded in lieu of tenant shard ID.)
I considered adding a separate marco to avoid merge conflicts, but I
think in this case (detecting critical errors) conflicts are probably
more desirable so that we can be aware whenever Neon adds another
`critical!` invocation in their code.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chen Luo <chen.luo@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Haoyu Huang <haoyu.huang@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: William Huang <william.huang@databricks.com>
## Problem
integrating subzero requires a bit of refactoring. To make the
integration PR a bit more manageable, the refactoring is done in this
separate PR.
## Summary of changes
* move common types/functions used in sql_over_http to errors.rs and
http_util.rs
* add the "Local" auth backend to proxy (similar to local_proxy), useful
in local testing
* change the Connect and Send type for the http client to allow for
custom body when making post requests to local_proxy from the proxy
---------
Co-authored-by: Ruslan Talpa <ruslan.talpa@databricks.com>
## Problem
`keep_connection` does not exit, so it was never setting
`credentials_refreshed`.
## Summary of changes
Set `credentials_refreshed` to true when we first establish a
connection, and after we re-authenticate the connection.
## Problem
#12450
## Summary of changes
Instead of `#[arg(default_value_t = typed_default_value)]`, we use
`#[arg(default_value = "str that deserializes into the value")]`,
because apparently you can't convince clap to _not_ deserialize from the
Display implementation of an imported enum.
Health checks for pg-sni-router open a TCP connection and immediately
close it again. This is noisy. We will filter out any EOF errors on the
first message.
"acquired permit" debug log is incorrect since it logs when we timedout
as well. This fixes the debug log.
## Problem
When local proxy is configured with TLS, the certificate does not match
the endpoint string. This currently returns an error.
## Summary of changes
I don't think this code is necessary anymore, taking the prefix from the
hostname is good enough (and is equivalent to what `endpoint_sni` was
doing) and we ignore checking the domain suffix.
## Problem
Neon currently implements several features that guarantee high uptime of
compute nodes:
1. Storage high-availability (HA), i.e. each tenant shard has a
secondary pageserver location, so we can quickly switch over compute to
it in case of primary pageserver failure.
2. Fast compute provisioning, i.e. we have a fleet of pre-created empty
computes, that are ready to serve workload, so restarting unresponsive
compute is very fast.
3. Preemptive NeonVM compute provisioning in case of k8s node
unavailability.
This helps us to be well-within the uptime SLO of 99.95% most of the
time. Problems begin when we go up to multi-TB workloads and 32-64 CU
computes. During restart, compute looses all caches: LFC, shared
buffers, file system cache. Depending on the workload, it can take a lot
of time to warm up the caches, so that performance could be degraded and
might be even unacceptable for certain workloads. The latter means that
although current approach works well for small to
medium workloads, we still have to do some additional work to avoid
performance degradation after restart of large instances.
[Rendered
version](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/blob/alexk/pg-prewarm-rfc/docs/rfcs/2025-03-17-compute-prewarm.md)
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/19011
## Problem
The billing team wants to change the billing events pipeline and use a
common events format in S3 buckets across different event producers.
## Summary of changes
Change the events storage format for billing events from JSON to NDJSON.
Also partition files by hours, rather than days.
Resolves: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29995
We would like to move towards an arena system for JSON encoding the
responses. This change pushes an "out" parameter into the pg-test to
json routines to make swapping in an arena system easier in the future.
(see #11992)
This additionally removes the redundant `column: &[Type]` argument, as
well as rewriting the pg_array parser.
---
I rewrote the pg_array parser since while making these changes I found
it hard to reason about. I went back to the specification and rewrote it
from scratch. There's 4 separate routines:
1. pg_array_parse - checks for any prelude (multidimensional array
ranges)
2. pg_array_parse_inner - only deals with the arrays themselves
3. pg_array_parse_item - parses a single item from the array, this might
be quoted, unquoted, or another nested array.
4. pg_array_parse_quoted - parses a quoted string, following the
relevant string escaping rules.
Don't print errors like:
```
Compaction failed 1 times, retrying in 2s: Failed to offload timeline: Unexpected offload error: Timeline deletion is already in progress
```
Print it at info log level instead.
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30666
## Problem
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712 changed how computes are
started in the test: the lsn is specified, making them read-only static
replicas. Lsn is `last_record_lsn` from pageserver. It works fine with
read-only branches (because their `last_record_lsn` is equal to
`start_lsn` and always valid). But with writable timelines, the
`last_record_lsn` on the pageserver might be stale.
Particularly in this test, after the `detach_branch` operation, the
tenant is reset on the pagesever. It leads to `last_record_lsn` going
back to `disk_consistent_lsn`, so basically rolling back some recent
writes.
If we start a primary compute, it will start at safekeepers' commit Lsn,
which is the correct one , and will wait till pageserver catches up with
this Lsn after reset.
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12365
## Summary of changes
- Start `primary` compute for writable timelines.
## Problem
Part of #11813
## Summary of changes
* Compute tenant remote size in the housekeeping loop.
* Add a new `TenantFeatureResolver` struct to cache the tenant-specific
properties.
* Evaluate feature flag based on the remote size.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
close https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11528
## Summary of changes
Gives us better observability of compaction progress.
- Image creation: num of partition processed / total partition
- Gc-compaction: index of the in the queue / total items for a full
compaction
- Shard ancestor compaction: layers to rewrite / total layers
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
L0 compaction currently holds the read lock for a long region while it
doesn't need to.
## Summary of changes
This patch reduces the one long contention region into 2 short ones:
gather the layers to compact at the beginning, and several short read
locks when querying the image coverage.
Co-Authored-By: Chen Luo
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
This PR works on adding dynamic masking support for `anon` v2. It
currently only supports static masking.
## Summary of changes
Added a security definer function that sets the dynamic masking guc to
`true` with superuser permissions.
Added a security definer function that adds `anon` to
`session_preload_libraries` if it's not already present.
Related to: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/20456
## Problem
Currently we do not have metrics for autovacuum.
## Summary of changes
Added a metric that extracts the top 5 DBs with oldest mxid and frozen
xid. Tables that were vacuumed recently should have younger value (or
younger age).
Related Issue: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/27296
## Problem
#8843
User initiated sql queries are being classified as "postgres" errors,
whereas they're really user errors.
## Summary of changes
Classify user-initiated postgres errors as user errors if they are
related to a sql query that we ran on their behalf. Do not log those
errors.
Add support to transport syslogs over TLS. Since TLS params essentially
require passing host and port separately, add a boolean flag to the
configuration template and also use the same `action` format for
plaintext logs. This allows seamless transition.
The plaintext host:port is picked from `AUDIT_LOGGING_ENDPOINT` (as
earlier) and from `AUDIT_LOGGING_TLS_ENDPOINT`. The TLS host:port is
used when defined and non-empty.
`remote_endpoint` is split separately to hostname and port as required
by `omfwd` module.
Also the address parsing and config content generation are split to more
testable functions with basic tests added.
## Problem
We persist safekeeper host/port in the storcon DB after
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712, so the storcon fails to
ping safekeepers in the compatibility tests, where we start the cluster
from the snapshot.
PR also adds some small code improvements related to the test failure.
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12339
## Summary of changes
- Update safekeeper ports in the storcon DB when starting the neon from
the dir (snapshot)
- Fail the response on all not-success codes (e.g. 3xx). Should not
happen, but just to be more safe.
- Add `neon_previous/` to .gitignore to make it easier to run compat
tests.
- Add missing EXPORT to the instruction for running compat tests
## Problem
Previously, the background worker that collects the list of installed
extensions across DBs had a timeout set to 1 hour. This cause a problem
with computes that had a `suspend_timeout` > 1 hour as this collection
was treated as activity, preventing compute shutdown.
Issue: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30147
## Summary of changes
Passing the `suspend_timeout` as part of the `ComputeSpec` so that any
updates to this are taken into account by the background worker and
updates its collection interval.
If a hardlink operation inside `detach_ancestor` fails due to the layer
already existing, we delete the layer to make sure the source is one we
know about, and then retry.
But we deleted the wrong file, namely, the one we wanted to use as the
source of the hardlink. As a result, the follow up hard link operation
failed. Our PR corrects this mistake.
## Problem
We don't notify cplane about safekeeper membership change yet. Without
the notification the compute needs to know all the safekeepers on the
cluster to be able to speak to them. Change notifications will allow to
avoid it.
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12188
## Summary of changes
- Implement `notify_safekeepers` method in `ComputeHook`
- Notify cplane about safekeepers in `safekeeper_migrate` handler.
- Update the test to make sure notifications work.
## Out of scope
- There is `cplane_notified_generation` field in `timelines` table in
strocon's database. It's not needed now, so it's not updated in the PR.
Probably we can remove it.
- e2e tests to make sure it works with a production cplane
## Problem
The gRPC API does not provide LSN leases.
## Summary of changes
* Add LSN lease support to the gRPC API.
* Use gRPC LSN leases for static computes with `grpc://` connstrings.
* Move `PageserverProtocol` into the `compute_api::spec` module and
reuse it.
## Problem
Location config changes can currently result in changes to the shard
identity. Such changes will cause data corruption, as seen with #12217.
Resolves#12227.
Requires #12377.
## Summary of changes
Assert that the shard identity does not change on location config
updates and on (re)attach.
This is currently asserted with `critical!`, in case it misfires in
production. Later, we should reject such requests with an error and turn
this into a proper assertion.
Implicit mapping to an `anyhow::Error` when we do `?` is discouraged
because tooling to find those places isn't great.
As a drive-by, also make SplitImageLayerWriter::new infallible and sync.
I think we should also make ImageLayerWriter::new completely lazy,
then `BatchLayerWriter:new` infallible and async.
Reverts neondatabase/neon#11663 and
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11265/
Step Security is not yet approved by Databricks team, in order to
prevent issues during Github org migration, I'll revert this PR to use
the previous action instead of Step Security maintained action.
## Problem
Similarly to #12217, the following endpoints may result in a stripe size
mismatch between the storage controller and Pageserver if an unsharded
tenant has a different stripe size set than the default. This can lead
to data corruption if the tenant is later manually split without
specifying an explicit stripe size, since the storage controller and
Pageserver will apply different defaults. This commonly happens with
tenants that were created before the default stripe size was changed
from 32k to 2k.
* `PUT /v1/tenant/config`
* `PATCH /v1/tenant/config`
These endpoints are no longer in regular production use (they were used
when cplane still managed Pageserver directly), but can still be called
manually or by tests.
## Summary of changes
Retain the current shard parameters when updating the location config in
`PUT | PATCH /v1/tenant/config`.
Also opportunistically derive `Copy` for `ShardParameters`.
## Problem
Some of the design decisions in PR #12256 were influenced by the
requirements of consistency tests. These decisions introduced
intermediate logic that is no longer needed and should be cleaned up.
## Summary of Changes
- Remove the `feature("testing")` flag related to
`kick_secondary_download`.
- Set the default value of `kick_secondary_download` back to false,
reflecting the intended production behavior.
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr.sarantsev@databricks.com>
## Problem
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12298
## Summary of changes
- Set `timeline_safekeeper_count` in `neon_local` if we have less than 3
safekeepers
- Remove `cfg!(feature = "testing")` code from
`safekeepers_for_new_timeline`
- Change `timeline_safekeeper_count` type to `usize`
## Problem
`compute_ctl` should support gRPC base backups.
Requires #12111.
Requires #12243.
Touches #11926.
## Summary of changes
Support `grpc://` connstrings for `compute_ctl` base backups.
## Problem
The problem has been well described in already-commited PR #11853.
tl;dr: BufferedWriter is sensitive to cancellation, which the previous
approach was not.
The write path was most affected (ingest & compaction), which was mostly
fixed in #11853:
it introduced `PutError` and mapped instances of `PutError` that were
due to cancellation of underlying buffered writer into
`CreateImageLayersError::Cancelled`.
However, there is a long tail of remaining errors that weren't caught by
#11853 that result in `CompactionError::Other`s, which we log with great
noise.
## Solution
The stack trace logging for CompactionError::Other added in #11853
allows us to chop away at that long tail using the following pattern:
- look at the stack trace
- from leaf up, identify the place where we incorrectly map from the
distinguished variant X indicating cancellation to an `anyhow::Error`
- follow that anyhow further up, ensuring it stays the same anyhow all
the way up in the `CompactionError::Other`
- since it stayed one anyhow chain all the way up, root_cause() will
yield us X
- so, in `log_compaction_error`, add an additional `downcast_ref` check
for X
This PR specifically adds checks for
- the flush task cancelling (FlushTaskError, BlobWriterError)
- opening of the layer writer (GateError)
That should cover all the reports in issues
- https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29434
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12162
## Refs
- follow-up to #11853
- fixup of / fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11762
- fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12162
- refs https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29434
We don't have cancellation support for timeline deletions. In other
words, timeline deletion might still go on in an older generation while
we are attaching it in a newer generation already, because the
cancellation simply hasn't reached the deletion code.
This has caused us to hit a situation with offloaded timelines in which
the timeline was in an unrecoverable state: always returning an accepted
response, but never a 404 like it should be.
The detailed description can be found in
[here](https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30406#issuecomment-3008667859)
(private repo link).
TLDR:
1. we ask to delete timeline on old pageserver/generation, starts
process in background
2. the storcon migrates the tenant to a different pageserver.
- during attach, the pageserver still finds an index part, so it adds it
to `offloaded_timelines`
4. the timeline deletion finishes, removing the index part in S3
5. there is a retry of the timeline deletion endpoint, sent to the new
pageserver location. it is bound to fail however:
- as the index part is gone, we print `Timeline already deleted in
remote storage`.
- the problem is that we then return an accepted response code, and not
a 404.
- this confuses the code calling us. it thinks the timeline is not
deleted, so keeps retrying.
- this state never gets recovered from until a reset/detach, because of
the `offloaded_timelines` entry staying there.
This is where this PR fixes things: if no index part can be found, we
can safely assume that the timeline is gone in S3 (it's the last thing
to be deleted), so we can remove it from `offloaded_timelines` and
trigger a reupload of the manifest. Subsequent retries will pick that
up.
Why not improve the cancellation support? It is a more disruptive code
change, that might have its own risks. So we don't do it for now.
Fixes https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30406
Mainly for general readability. Some notable changes:
- Postgres can be built without the rest of the repository, and in
particular without any of the Rust bits. Some CI scripts took advantage
of that, so let's make that more explicit by separating those parts.
Also add an explicit comment about that in the new postgres.mk file.
- Add a new PG_INSTALL_CACHED variable. If it's set, `make all` and
other top-Makefile targets skip checking if Postgres is up-to-date. This
is also to be used in CI scripts that build and cache Postgres as
separate steps. (It is currently only used in the macos walproposer-lib
rule, but stay tuned for more.)
- Introduce a POSTGRES_VERSIONS variable that lists all supported
PostgreSQL versions. Refactor a few Makefile rules to use that.
## Problem
In large oltp test run
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/actions/runs/15905488707/job/44859116742
we see that the `Benchmark database maintenance` step is skipped in all
3 strategy variants, however it should be executed in two.
This is due to treating the `test_maintenance` boolean type in the
strategy in the condition of the `Benchmark database maintenance` step
## Summary of changes
Use a boolean condition instead of a string comparison
## Test run from this pull request branch
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/actions/runs/15923605412
## Problem
When resolving a shard during a split we might have multiple attached
shards with the old shard count (i.e. not all of them are marked in
progress and ignored). Hence, we can compute the desired shard number
based on the old shard count and misroute the request.
## Summary of Changes
Recompute the desired shard every time the shard count changes during
the iteration
# Problem
In #12335 I moved the `authenticate` method outside of the
`connect_to_compute` loop. This triggered [e2e tests to become
flaky](https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/pull/30533). This
highlighted an edge case we forgot to consider with that change.
When we connect to compute, the compute IP might be cached. This cache
hit might however be stale. Because we can't validate the IP is
associated with a specific compute-id☨, we will succeed the
connect_to_compute operation and fail when it comes to password
authentication☨☨. Before the change, we were invalidating the cache and
triggering wake_compute if the authentication failed.
Additionally, I noticed some faulty logic I introduced 1 year ago
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/8141/files#diff-5491e3afe62d8c5c77178149c665603b29d88d3ec2e47fc1b3bb119a0a970afaL145-R147
☨ We can when we roll out TLS, as the certificate common name includes
the compute-id.
☨☨ Technically password authentication could pass for the wrong compute,
but I think this would only happen in the very very rare event that the
IP got reused **and** the compute's endpoint happened to be a
branch/replica.
# Solution
1. Fix the broken logic
2. Simplify cache invalidation (I don't know why it was so convoluted)
3. Add a loop around connect_to_compute + authenticate to re-introduce
the wake_compute invalidation we accidentally removed.
I went with this approach to try and avoid interfering with
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/compare/main...cloneable/proxy-pglb-connect-compute-split.
The changes made in commit 3 will move into `handle_client_request` I
suspect,
## Problem
Some pageservers hit `max_size_entries` limit in staging with only ~25
MiB storage used by basebackup cache. The limit is too strict. It should
be safe to relax it.
- Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29353
## Summary of changes
- Increase the default `max_size_entries` from 1000 to 10000
## Problem
Druing shard splits we shut down the remote client early and allow the
parent shard to keep ingesting data. While ingesting data, the wal
receiver task may wait for the current flush to complete in order to
apply backpressure. Notifications are delivered via
`Timeline::layer_flush_done_tx`.
When the remote client was being shut down the flush loop exited
whithout delivering a notification. This left
`Timeline::wait_flush_completion` hanging indefinitely which blocked the
shutdown of the wal receiver task, and, hence, the shard split.
## Summary of Changes
Deliver a final notification when the flush loop is shutting down
without the timeline cancel cancellation token having fired. I tried
writing a test for this, but got stuck in failpoint hell and decided
it's not worth it.
`test_sharding_autosplit`, which reproduces this reliably in CI, passed
with the proposed fix in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12304.
Closes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12060
Make the safekeeper `pull_timeline` endpoint support timelines that
haven't had any writes yet. In the storcon managed sk timelines world,
if a safekeeper goes down temporarily, the storcon will schedule a
`pull_timeline` call. There is no guarantee however that by when the
safekeeper is online again, there have been writes to the timeline yet.
The `snapshot` endpoint gives an error if the timeline hasn't had
writes, so we avoid calling it if `timeline_start_lsn` indicates a
freshly created timeline.
Fixes#11422
Part of #11670
## Problem
gRPC base backups do not use the base backup cache.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11728.
## Summary of changes
Integrate gRPC base backups with the base backup cache.
Also fixes a bug where the base backup cache did not differentiate
between primary/replica base backups (at least I think that's a bug?).
## Problem
In our infra config, we have to split server_api_key and other fields in
two files: the former one in the sops file, and the latter one in the
normal config. It creates the situation that we might misconfigure some
regions that it only has part of the fields available, causing
storcon/pageserver refuse to start.
## Summary of changes
Allow PostHog config to have part of the fields available. Parse it
later.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Basebackup cache now uses unbounded channel for prepare requests. In
theory it can grow large if the cache is hung and does not process the
requests.
- Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29353
## Summary of changes
- Replace an unbounded channel with a bounded one, the size is
configurable.
- Add `pageserver_basebackup_cache_prepare_queue_size` to observe the
size of the queue.
- Refactor a bit to move all metrics logic to `basebackup_cache.rs`
I was looking at how we could expose our proxy config as toml again, and
as I was writing out the schema format, I noticed some cruft in our CLI
args that no longer seem to be in use.
The redis change is the most complex, but I am pretty sure it's sound.
Since https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/pull/15613 cplane longer
publishes to the global redis instance.
## Problem
If LFC generation is changed then `lfc_readv_select` will return -1 but
pages are still marked as available in bitmap.
## Summary of changes
Update bitmap after generation check.
Co-authored-by: Kosntantin Knizhnik <konstantin.knizhnik@databricks.com>
## Problem
Fix for https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12324
## Summary of changes
Need `serde(default)` to allow this field not present in the config,
otherwise there will be a config deserialization error.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
gRPC base backups use gRPC compression. However, this has two problems:
* Base backup caching will cache compressed base backups (making gRPC
compression pointless).
* Tonic does not support varying the compression level, and zstd default
level is 10% slower than gzip fastest level.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11728.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29353.
## Summary of changes
This patch adds a gRPC parameter `BaseBackupRequest::compression`
specifying the compression algorithm. It also moves compression into
`send_basebackup_tarball` to reduce code duplication.
A follow-up PR will integrate the base backup cache with gRPC.
## Summary
A design for a storage system that allows storage of files required to
make
Neon's Endpoints have a better experience at or after a reboot.
## Motivation
Several systems inside PostgreSQL (and Neon) need some persistent
storage for
optimal workings across reboots and restarts, but still work without.
Examples are the cumulative statistics file in `pg_stat/global.stat`,
`pg_stat_statements`' `pg_stat/pg_stat_statements.stat`, and
`pg_prewarm`'s
`autoprewarm.blocks`. We need a storage system that can store and manage
these files for each Endpoint.
[GH rendered
file](https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/blob/MMeent/rfc-unlogged-file/docs/rfcs/040-Endpoint-Persistent-Unlogged-Files-Storage.md)
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/24225
## Problem
part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11813
## Summary of changes
It costs $$$ to directly retrieve the feature flags from the pageserver.
Therefore, this patch adds new APIs to retrieve the spec from the
storcon and updates it via pageserver.
* Storcon retrieves the feature flag and send it to the pageservers.
* If the feature flag gets updated outside of the normal refresh loop of
the pageserver, pageserver won't fetch the flags on its own as long as
the last updated time <= refresh_period.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/30539
If the current leader cancels the `call` function, then it has removed
the jobs from the queue, but will never finish sending the responses.
Because of this, it is not cancellation safe.
## Summary of changes
Document these functions as not cancellation safe. Move cancellation of
the queued jobs into the queue itself.
## Alternatives considered
1. We could spawn the task that runs the batch, since that won't get
cancelled.
* This requires `fn call(self: Arc<Self>)` or `fn call(&'static self)`.
2. We could add another scopeguard and return the requests back to the
queue.
* This requires that requests are always retry safe, and also requires
requests to be `Clone`.
## Problem
While working more on TLS to compute, I realised that Console Redirect
-> pg-sni-router -> compute would break if channel binding was set to
prefer. This is because the channel binding data would differ between
Console Redirect -> pg-sni-router vs pg-sni-router -> compute.
I also noticed that I actually disabled channel binding in #12145, since
`connect_raw` would think that the connection didn't support TLS.
## Summary of changes
Make sure we specify the channel binding.
Make sure that `connect_raw` can see if we have TLS support.
In `test_layer_download_cancelled_by_config_location`, we simulate hung
downloads via the `before-downloading-layer-stream-pausable` failpoint.
Then, we cancel a timeline via the `location_config` endpoint.
With the new default as of
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712, we would be creating
the timeline on safekeepers regardless if there have been writes or not,
and it turns out the test relied on the timeline not existing on
safekeepers, due to a cancellation bug:
* as established before, the test makes the read path hang
* the timeline cancellation function first cancels the walreceiver, and
only then cancels the timeline's token
* `WalIngest::new` is requesting a checkpoint, which hits the read path
* at cancellation time, we'd be hanging inside the read, not seeing the
cancellation of the walreceiver
* the test would time out due to the hang
This is probably also reproducible in the wild when there is S3
unavailabilies or bottlenecks. So we thought that it's worthwhile to fix
the hang issue. The approach chosen in the end involves the
`tokio::select` macro.
In PR 11712, we originally punted on the test due to the hang and opted
it out from the new default, but now we can use the new default.
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12299
pgaudit can spam logs due to all the monitoring that we do. Logs from
these connections are not necessary for HIPPA compliance, so we can stop
logging from those connections.
Part-of: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29574
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
This makes it possible for the compiler to validate that a match block
matched all PostgreSQL versions we support.
## Problem
We did not have a complete picture about which places we had to test
against PG versions, and what format these versions were: The full PG
version ID format (Major/minor/bugfix `MMmmbb`) as transfered in
protocol messages, or only the Major release version (`MM`). This meant
type confusion was rampant.
With this change, it becomes easier to develop new version-dependent
features, by making type and niche confusion impossible.
## Summary of changes
Every use of `pg_version` is now typed as either `PgVersionId` (u32,
valued in decimal `MMmmbb`) or PgMajorVersion (an enum, with a value for
every major version we support, serialized and stored like a u32 with
the value of that major version)
---------
Co-authored-by: Arpad Müller <arpad-m@users.noreply.github.com>
## Problem
The billing team wants to change the billing events pipeline and use a
common events format in S3 buckets across different event producers.
## Summary of changes
Change the events storage format for billing events from JSON to NDJSON.
Resolves: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29994
## Problem
PGLB will do the connect_to_compute logic, neonkeeper will do the
session establishment logic. We should split it.
## Summary of changes
Moves postgres authentication to compute to a separate routine that
happens after connect_to_compute.
The 1.88.0 stable release is near (this Thursday). We'd like to fix most
warnings beforehand so that the compiler upgrade doesn't require
approval from too many teams.
This is therefore a preparation PR (like similar PRs before it).
There is a lot of changes for this release, mostly because the
`uninlined_format_args` lint has been added to the `style` lint group.
One can read more about the lint
[here](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#/uninlined_format_args).
The PR is the result of `cargo +beta clippy --fix` and `cargo fmt`. One
remaining warning is left for the proxy team.
---------
Co-authored-by: Conrad Ludgate <conrad@neon.tech>
## Problem
`Attached(0)` tenant migrations can get stuck if the heatmap file has
not been uploaded.
## Summary of Changes
- Added a test to reproduce the issue.
- Introduced a `kick_secondary_downloads` config flag:
- Enabled in testing environments.
- Disabled in production (and in the new test).
- Updated `Attached(0)` locations to consider the number of secondaries
in their intent when deciding whether to download the heatmap.
## Problem
Part of #11813
## Summary of changes
Add a test API to make it easier to manipulate the feature flags within
tests.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
The scheduler uses total shards per AZ to select the AZ for newly
created or attached tenants.
This makes bad decisions when we have different node counts per AZ -- we
might have 2 very busy pageservers in one AZ, and 4 more lightly loaded
pageservers in other AZs, and the scheduler picks the busy pageservers
because the total shard count in their AZ is lower.
## Summary of changes
- Divide the shard count by the number of nodes in the AZ when scoring
in `get_az_for_new_tenant`
---------
Co-authored-by: John Spray <john.spray@databricks.com>
The `--gzip-probability` parameter was removed in #12250. However,
`test_basebackup_with_high_slru_count` still uses it, and keeps failing.
This patch removes the use of the parameter (gzip is enabled by
default).
## Problem
Part of #11813
## Summary of changes
The current interval is 30s and it costs a lot of $$$. This patch
reduced it to 600s refresh interval (which means that it takes 10min for
feature flags to propagate from UI to the pageserver). In the future we
can let storcon retrieve the feature flags and push it to pageservers.
We can consider creating a new release or we can postpone this to the
week after the next week.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
The 'make all' step must run always. PR #12311 accidentally left the
condition in there to skip it if there were no changes in postgres v14
sources. That condition belonged to a whole different step that was
removed altogether in PR#12311, and the condition should've been removed
too.
Per CI failure:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/actions/runs/15820148967/job/44587394469
## Problem
Previously, we couldn't read from an in-memory layer while a batch was
being written to it. Vice-versa, we couldn't write to it while there
was an on-going read.
## Summary of Changes
The goal of this change is to improve concurrency. Writes happened
through a &mut self method so the enforcement was at the type system
level.
We attempt to improve by:
1. Adding interior mutability to EphemeralLayer. This involves wrapping
the buffered writer in a read-write lock.
2. Minimise the time that the read lock is held for. Only hold the read
lock while reading from the buffers (recently flushed or pending
flush). If we need to read from the file, drop the lock and allow IO
to be concurrent.
The new benchmark variants with concurrent reads improve between 70 to
200 percent (against main).
Benchmark results are in this
[commit](891f094ce6).
## Future Changes
We can push the interior mutability into the buffered writer. The
mutable tail goes under a read lock, the flushed part goes into an
ArcSwap and then we can read from anything that is flushed _without_ any
locking.
gRPC base backups send a stream of fixed-size 64KB chunks.
pagebench basebackup with compression enabled shows this to reduce
throughput:
* 64 KB: 55 RPS
* 128 KB: 69 RPS
* 256 KB: 73 RPS
* 1024 KB: 73 RPS
This patch sets the base backup chunk size to 256 KB.
The build-tools image contains various build tools and dependencies,
mostly Rust-related. The compute image build used it to build
compute_ctl and a few other little rust binaries that are included in
the compute image. However, for extensions built in Rust (pgrx), the
build used a different layer which installed the rust toolchain using
rustup.
Switch to using the same rust toolchain for both pgrx-based extensions
and compute_ctl et al. Since we don't need anything else from the
build-tools image, I switched to using the toolchain installed with
rustup, and eliminated the dependency to build-tools altogether. The
compute image build no longer depends on build-tools.
Note: We no longer use 'mold' for linking compute_ctl et al, since mold
is not included in the build-deps-with-cargo layer. We could add it
there, but it doesn't seem worth it. I proposed stopping using mold
altogether in https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/10735, but that
was rejected because 'mold' is faster for incremental builds. That
doesn't matter much for docker builds however, since they're not
incremental, and the compute binaries are not as large as the storage
server binaries anyway.
To avoid duplicating the build logic. `make all` covers the separate
`postgres-*` and `neon-pg-ext` steps, and also does `cargo build`.
That's how you would typically do a full local build anyway.
Every time you run `make`, it runs `make install` on all the PostgreSQL
sources, which copies the header files. That in turn triggers a rebuild
of the `postgres_ffi` crate, and everything that depends on it. We had
worked around this earlier (see #2458), by passing a custom INSTALL
script to the Postgres makefiles, which refrains from updating the
modification timestamp on headers when they have not been changed, but
the v14 makefile didn't obey INSTALL for the header files. Backporting
c0a1d7621b to v14 fixes that.
This backports upstream PostgreSQL commit c0a1d7621b to v14.
Corresponding PR in the 'postgres' repo:
https://github.com/neondatabase/postgres/pull/660
## Problem
In #12217, we began passing the stripe size in reattach responses, and
persisting it in the on-disk state. This is necessary to ensure the
storage controller and Pageserver have a consistent view of the intended
stripe size of unsharded tenants, which will be used for splits that do
not specify a stripe size. However, for backwards compatibility, these
stripe sizes were optional.
## Summary of changes
Make the stripe sizes required for reattach responses and on-disk
location configs. These will always be provided by the previous
(current) release.
The previous behavior was for the compute to override control plane
options if there was a conflict. We want to change the behavior so that
the control plane has the absolute power on what is right. In the event
that we need a new option passed to the compute as soon as possible, we
can initially roll it out in the control plane, and then migrate the
option to EXTRA_OPTIONS within the compute later, for instance.
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
## Problem
We need to specify the number of safekeepers for neon_local without
`testing` feature.
Also we need this option for testing different configurations of
safekeeper migration code.
We cannot set it in `neon_fixtures.py` and in the default config of
`neon_local` yet, because it will fail compatibility tests. I'll make a
separate PR with removing `cfg!("testing")` completely and specifying
this option in the config when this option reaches the release branch.
- Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12298
## Summary of changes
- Add `timeline_safekeeper_count` config option to storcon and
neon_local
Enable it across tests and set it as default. Marks the first milestone
of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/9114. We already enabled
it in all AWS regions and planning to enable it in all Azure regions
next week.
will merge after we roll out in all regions.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Timeline GC is very aggressive with regards to layer map locking.
We've seen timelines with loads of layers in production that hold the
write lock for the layer map for 30 minutes at a time.
This blocks reads and the write path to some extent.
## Summary of changes
Determining the set of layers to GC is done under the read lock.
Applying the updates is done under the write lock.
Previously, everything was done under write lock.
See #11942
Idea:
* if connections are short lived, they can get enqueued and then also
remove themselves later if they never made it to redis. This reduces the
load on the queue.
* short lived connections (<10m, most?) will only issue 1 command, we
remove the delete command and rely on ttl.
* we can enqueue as many commands as we want, as we can always cancel
the enqueue, thanks to the ~~intrusive linked lists~~ `BTreeMap`.
This improves `pagebench getpage-latest-lsn` gRPC support by:
* Using `page_api::Client`.
* Removing `--protocol`, and using the `page-server-connstring` scheme
instead.
* Adding `--compression` to enable zstd compression.
## Problem
Pagebench does not support gRPC for `basebackup` benchmarks.
Requires #12243.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
Add gRPC support via gRPC connstrings, e.g. `pagebench basebackup
--page-service-connstring grpc://localhost:51051`.
Also change `--gzip-probability` to `--no-compression`, since this must
be specified per-client for gRPC.
Introduce a separate `postgres_ffi_types` crate which contains a few
types and functions that were used in the API. `postgres_ffi_types` is a
much small crate than `postgres_ffi`, and it doesn't depend on bindgen
or the Postgres C headers.
Move NeonWalRecord and Value types to wal_decoder crate. They are only
used in the pageserver-safekeeper "ingest" API. The rest of the ingest
API types are defined in wal_decoder, so move these there as well.
We have been bad at keeping them up-to-date, several contrib modules and
neon extensions were missing from the clean rules. Give up trying, and
remove the targets altogether. In practice, it's straightforward to just
do `rm -rf pg_install/build`, so the clean-targets are hardly worth the
maintenance effort.
I kept `make distclean` though. The rule for that is simple enough.
Since commit 87ad50c925, storage_controller has used diesel_async, which
in turn uses tokio-postgres as the Postgres client, which doesn't
require libpq. Thus we no longer need libpq in the storage image.
## Problem
The gRPC page service should support compression.
Requires #12111.
Touches #11728.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/25679.
## Summary of changes
Add support for gzip and zstd compression in the server, and a client
parameter to enable compression.
This will need further benchmarking under realistic network conditions.
## Problem
GC info is an input to updating layer visibility.
Currently, gc info is updated on timeline activation and visibility is
computed on tenant attach, so we ignore branch points and compute
visibility by taking all layers into account.
Side note: gc info is also updated when timelines are created and
dropped. That doesn't help because we create the timelines in
topological order from the root. Hence the root timeline goes first,
without context of where the branch points are.
The impact of this in prod is that shards need to rehydrate layers after
live migration since the non-visible ones were excluded from the
heatmap.
## Summary of Changes
Move the visibility calculation into tenant attachment instead of
activation.
## Problem
`test_runner` integration tests should support gRPC.
Touches #11926.
## Summary of changes
* Enable gRPC for Pageservers, with dynamic port allocations.
* Add a `grpc` parameter for endpoint creation, plumbed through to
`neon_local endpoint create`.
No tests actually use gRPC yet, since computes don't support it yet.
## Problem
`test_sharding_failures` is flaky due to interference from the
`background_reconcile` process.
The details are in the issue
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12029.
## Summary of changes
- Use `reconcile_until_idle` to ensure a stable state before running
test assertions
- Added error tolerance in `reconcile_until_idle` test function (Failure
cases: 1, 3, 19, 20)
- Ignore the `Keeping extra secondaries` warning message since it i
retryable (Failure case: 2)
- Deduplicated code in `assert_rolled_back` and `assert_split_done`
- Added a log message before printing plenty of Node `X` seen on
pageserver `Y`
## Problem
- We run the large tenant oltp workload with a fixed size (larger than
existing customers' workloads).
Our customer's workloads are continuously growing and our testing should
stay ahead of the customers' production workloads.
- we want to touch all tables in the tenant's database (updates) so that
we simulate a continuous change in layer files like in a real production
workload
- our current oltp benchmark uses a mixture of read and write
transactions, however we also want a separate test run with read-only
transactions only
## Summary of changes
- modify the existing workload to have a separate run with pgbench
custom scripts that are read-only
- create a new workload that
- grows all large tables in each run (for the reuse branch in the large
oltp tenant's project)
- updates a percentage of rows in all large tables in each run (to
enforce table bloat and auto-vacuum runs and layer rebuild in
pageservers
Each run of the new workflow increases the logical database size about
16 GB.
We start with 6 runs per day which will give us about 96-100 GB growth
per day.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexander Lakhin <alexander.lakhin@neon.tech>
- Add optional `?mode=fast|immediate` to `/terminate`, `fast` is
default. Immediate avoids waiting 30
seconds before returning from `terminate`.
- Add `TerminateMode` to `ComputeStatus::TerminationPending`
- Use `/terminate?mode=immediate` in `neon_local` instead of `pg_ctl
stop` for `test_replica_promotes`.
- Change `test_replica_promotes` to check returned LSN
- Annotate `finish_sync_safekeepers` as `noreturn`.
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29807
This check API only cheks the safekeeper_connstrings at the moment, and
the validation is limited to checking we have at least one entry in
there, and no duplicates.
## Problem
If the compute_ctl service is started with an empty list of safekeepers,
then hard-to-debug errors may happen at runtime, where it would be much
easier to catch them early.
## Summary of changes
Add an entry point in the compute_ctl API to validate the configuration
for safekeeper_connstrings.
---------
Co-authored-by: Heikki Linnakangas <heikki@neon.tech>
Create a separate stage for downloading the Rust toolchain for pgrx, so
that it can be cached independently of the pg-build layer. Before this,
the 'pg-build-nonroot=with-cargo' layer was unnecessarily rebuilt every
time there was a change in PostgreSQL sources. Furthermore, this allows
using the same cached layer for building the compute images of all
Postgres versions.
## Problem
Full basebackups are used in tests, and may be useful for debugging as
well, so we should support them in the gRPC API.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
Add `GetBaseBackupRequest::full` to generate full base backups.
The libpq implementation also allows specifying `prev_lsn` for full
backups, i.e. the end LSN of the previous WAL record. This is omitted in
the gRPC API, since it's not used by any tests, and presumably of
limited value since it's autodetected. We can add it later if we find
that we need it.
## Problem
The checksum for eigen (a dependency for onnxruntime) has changed which
breaks compute image build.
## Summary of changes
- Add a patch for onnxruntime which backports changes from
f57db79743
(we keep the current version)
Ref https://github.com/microsoft/onnxruntime/issues/24861
## Problem
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/7570
Even triggers are supported only for superusers.
## Summary of changes
Temporary switch to superuser when even trigger is created and disable
execution of user's even triggers under superuser.
---------
Co-authored-by: Dimitri Fontaine <dim@tapoueh.org>
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
When converting `proto::GetPageRequest` into `page_api::GetPageRequest`
and validating the request, errors are returned as `tonic::Status`. This
will tear down the GetPage stream, which is disruptive and unnecessary.
## Summary of changes
Emit invalid request errors as `GetPageResponse` with an appropriate
`status_code` instead.
Also move the conversion from `tonic::Status` to `GetPageResponse` out
into the stream handler.
## Problem
Compatibility tests may be run against a compatibility snapshot
generated with --timelines-onto-safekeepers=false. We need to start the
compute without a generation (or with 0 generation) if the timeline is
not storcon-managed, otherwise the compute will hang.
- Follow up on https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/12203
- Relates to https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712
## Summary of changes
- Handle compatibility snapshot generated with no
`--timelines-onot-safekeepers` properly
## Problem
The cache was introduced as a hackathon project and the only supported
limit was the number of entries.
The basebackup entry size may vary. We need to have more control over
disk space usage to ship it to production.
- Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29353
## Summary of changes
- Store the size of entries in the cache and use it to limit
`max_total_size_bytes`
- Add the size of the cache in bytes to metrics.
## Problem
`neon_local` should support endpoints using gRPC, by providing `grpc://`
connstrings with the Pageservers' gRPC ports.
Requires #12268.
Touches #11926.
## Summary of changes
* Add `--grpc` switch for `neon_local endpoint create`.
* Generate `grpc://` connstrings for endpoints when enabled.
Computes don't actually support `grpc://` connstrings yet, but will
soon.
gRPC is configured when the endpoint is created, not when it's started,
such that it continues to use gRPC across restarts and reconfigurations.
In particular, this is necessary for the storage controller's local
notify hook, which can't easily plumb through gRPC configuration from
the start/reconfigure commands but has access to the endpoint's
configuration.
## Problem
The metrics `storage_controller_safekeeper_request_error` and
`storage_controller_safekeeper_request_latency` currently use
`pageserver_id` as a label.
This can be misleading, as the metrics are about safekeeper requests.
We want to replace this with a more accurate label — either
`safekeeper_id` or `node_id`.
## Summary of changes
- Introduced `SafekeeperRequestLabelGroup` with `safekeeper_id`.
- Updated the affected metrics to use the new label group.
- Fixed incorrect metric usage in safekeeper_client.rs
## Follow-up
- Review usage of these metrics in alerting rules and existing Grafana
dashboards to ensure this change does not break something.
## Problem
Pageservers now expose a gRPC API on a separate address and port. This
must be registered with the storage controller such that it can be
plumbed through to the compute via cplane.
Touches #11926.
## Summary of changes
This patch registers the gRPC address and port with the storage
controller:
* Add gRPC address to `nodes` database table and `NodePersistence`, with
a Diesel migration.
* Add gRPC address in `NodeMetadata`, `NodeRegisterRequest`,
`NodeDescribeResponse`, and `TenantLocateResponseShard`.
* Add gRPC address flags to `storcon_cli node-register`.
These changes are backwards-compatible, since all structs will ignore
unknown fields during deserialization.
## Problem
The gRPC base backup implementation has a few issues: chunks are not
properly bounded, and it's not possible to omit the LSN.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
* Properly bound chunks by using a limited writer.
* Use an `Option<Lsn>` rather than a `ReadLsn` (the latter requires an
LSN).
## Problem
The `stably_attached` function is hard to read due to deeply nested
conditionals
## Summary of Changes
- Refactored `stably_attached` to use early returns and the `?` operator
for improved readability
## Problem
If the node intent includes more than one secondary, we can generate a
replace optimization using a candidate node that is already a secondary
location.
## Summary of changes
- Exclude all other secondary nodes from the scoring process to ensure
optimal candidate selection.
## Problem
We could easily miss a sanitizer-detected defect, if it occurred due to
some race condition, as we just rerun the test and if it succeeds, the
overall test run is considered successful. It was more reasonable
before, when we had much more unstable tests in main, but now we can
track all test failures.
## Summary of changes
Don't rerun failed tests.
## Problem
We don't test debug builds for v14..v16 in the regular "Build and Test"
runs to perform the testing faster, but it means we can't detect
assertion failures in those versions.
(See https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11891,
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11997)
## Summary of changes
Add a new workflow to test all build types and all versions on all
architectures.
## Problem
In our environment, we don't always have access to the pagectl tool on
the pageserver. We have to download the page files to local env to
introspect them. Hence, it'll be useful to be able to parse the local
files using `pagectl`.
## Summary of changes
* Add `dump-layer-local` to `pagectl` that takes a local path as
argument and returns the layer content:
```
cargo run -p pagectl layer dump-layer-local ~/Desktop/000000067F000040490002800000FFFFFFFF-030000000000000000000000000000000002__00003E7A53EDE611-00003E7AF27BFD19-v1-00000001
```
* Bonus: Fix a bug in `pageserver/ctl/src/draw_timeline_dir.rs` in which
we don't filter out temporary files.
## Problem
The `page_api` domain types are missing a few derives.
## Summary of changes
Add `Clone`, `Copy`, and `Debug` derives for all types where
appropriate.
## Problem
Comment for `storage_controller_reconcile_long_running` metric was
copy-pasted and not updated in #9207
## Summary of changes
- Fixed comment
## Problem
Comment is in incorrect place: `/metrics` code is above its description
comment.
## Summary of changes
- `/metrics` code is now below the comment
## Problem
Need to fix naming `safkeeper` -> `safekeeper`
## Summary of changes
- `storage_controller_safkeeper_reconciles_*` renamed to
`storage_controller_safekeeper_reconciles_*`
## Problem
ChaosInjector is intended to skip non-active scheduling policies, but
the current logic skips active shards instead.
## Summary of changes
- Fixed shard eligibility condition to correctly allow chaos injection
for shards with an Active scheduling policy.
## Problem
We would easily hit this limit for a tenant running for enough long
time.
## Summary of changes
Remove the max key limit for time-travel recovery if the command is
running locally.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
Part of #11813
PostHog has two endpoints to retrieve feature flags: the old project ID
one that uses personal API token, and the new one using a special
feature flag secure token that can only retrieve feature flag. The new
API I added in this patch is not documented in the PostHog API doc but
it's used in their Python SDK.
## Summary of changes
Add support for "feature flag secure token API". The API has no way of
providing a project ID so we verify if the retrieved spec is consistent
with the project ID specified by comparing the `team_id` field.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
`test_historic_storage_formats` uses `/tenant_import` to import historic
data. Tenant import does not create timelines onto safekeepers, because
they might already exist on some safekeeper set. If it does, then we may
end up with two different quorums accepting WAL for the same timeline.
If the tenant import is used in a real deployment, the administrator is
responsible for looking for the proper safekeeper set and migrate
timelines into storcon-managed timelines.
- Relates to https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712
## Summary of changes
- Create timelines onto safekeepers manually after tenant import in
`test_historic_storage_formats`
- Add a note to tenant import that timelines will be not storcon-managed
after the import.
## Problem
* Inside `compact_with_gc_inner`, there is a similar log line:
db24ba95d1/pageserver/src/tenant/timeline/compaction.rs (L3181-L3187)
* Also, I think it would be useful when debugging to have the ability to
select a particular sub-compaction job (e.g., `1/100`) to see all the
logs for that job.
## Summary of changes
* Attach a span to the `compact_with_gc_inner`.
CC: @skyzh
Sometimes during a failed redis connection attempt at the init stage
proxy pod can continuously restart. This, in turn, can aggravate the
problem if redis is overloaded.
Solves the #11114
## Problem
The location config (which includes the stripe size) is stored on
pageserver disk.
For unsharded tenants we [do not include the shard identity in the
serialized
description](ad88ec9257/pageserver/src/tenant/config.rs (L64-L66)).
When the pageserver restarts, it reads that configuration and will use
the stripe size from there
and rely on storcon input from reattach for generation and mode.
The default deserialization is ShardIdentity::unsharded. This has the
new default stripe size of 2048.
Hence, for unsharded tenants we can be running with a stripe size
different from that the one in the
storcon observed state. This is not a problem until we shard split
without specifying a stripe size (i.e. manual splits via the UI or
storcon_cli). When that happens the new shards will use the 2048 stripe
size until storcon realises and switches them back. At that point it's
too late, since we've ingested data with the wrong stripe sizes.
## Summary of changes
Ideally, we would always have the full shard identity on disk. To
achieve this over two releases we do:
1. Always persist the shard identity in the location config on the PS.
2. Storage controller includes the stripe size to use in the re attach
response.
After the first release, we will start persisting correct stripe sizes
for any tenant shard that the storage controller
explicitly sends a location_conf. After the second release, the
re-attach change kicks in and we'll persist the
shard identity for all shards.
## Problem
Base64 0.13 is outdated.
## Summary of changes
Update base64 to 0.22. Affects mostly proxy and proxy libs. Also upgrade
serde_with to remove another dep on base64 0.13 from dep tree.
## Problem
The test creates an endpoint and deletes its tenant. The compute cannot
stop gracefully because it tries to write a checkpoint shutdown record
into the WAL, but the timeline had been already deleted from
safekeepers.
- Relates to https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712
## Summary of changes
Stop the compute before deleting a tenant
## Problem
Compatibility tests may be run against a compatibility snapshot
generated with `--timelines-onto-safekeepers=false`. We need to start
the compute without a generation (or with 0 generation) if the timeline
is not storcon-managed, otherwise the compute will hang.
This handler is needed to check if the timeline is storcon-managed.
It's also needed for better test coverage of safekeeper migration code.
- Relates to https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712
## Summary of changes
- Implement `tenant_timeline_locate` handler in storcon to get
safekeeper info from storcon's DB
## Problem
We hold the layer map for too long on occasion.
## Summary of changes
This should help us identify the places where it's happening from.
Related https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12182
## Problem
DROP FUNCTION doesn't allow to specify default for parameters.
## Summary of changes
Remove DEFAULT clause from pgxn/neon/neon--1.6--1.5.sql
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
The project limits were not respected, resulting in errors.
## Summary of changes
Now limits are checked before running an action, and if the action is
not possible to run, another random action will be run.
---------
Co-authored-by: Peter Bendel <peterbendel@neon.tech>
## Problem
See https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12018
Now `prefetch_register_bufferv` calculates min_ring_index of all vector
requests.
But because of pump prefetch state or connection failure, previous slots
can be already proceeded and reused.
## Summary of changes
Instead of returning minimal index, this function should return last
slot index.
Actually result of this function is used only in two places. A first
place just fort checking (and this check is redundant because the same
check is done in `prefetch_register_bufferv` itself.
And in the second place where index of filled slot is actually used,
there is just one request.
Sp fortunately this bug can cause only assert failure in debug build.
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
There is this TODO in code:
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/blob/main/pageserver/src/tenant/mgr.rs#L300-L302
This is an old TODO by @jcsp.
## Summary of changes
This PR addresses the TODO. Specifically, it removes a global static
`TENANTS`. Instead the `TenantManager` now directly manages the tenant
map. Enhancing abstraction.
Essentially, this PR moves all module-level methods to inside the
implementation of `TenantManager`.
## Problem
Looks like our sql-over-http tests get to rely on "trust"
authentication, so the path that made sure the authkeys data was set was
never being hit.
## Summary of changes
Slight refactor to WakeComputeBackends, as well as making sure auth keys
are propagated. Fix tests to ensure passwords are tested.
## Problem
`VotesCollectedMset` uses the wrong safekeeper to update truncateLsn.
This led to some failed assert later in the code during running
safekeeper migration tests.
- Relates to https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11823
## Summary of changes
Use proper safekeeper to update truncateLsn in VotesCollectedMset
## Problem
part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11813
## Summary of changes
Collect pageserver hostname property so that we can use it in the
PostHog UI. Not sure if this is the best way to do that -- open to
suggestions.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/7546
Add Azure time travel recovery support. The tricky thing is how Azure
handles deletes in its blob version API. For the following sequence:
```
upload file_1 = a
upload file_1 = b
delete file_1
upload file_1 = c
```
The "delete file_1" won't be stored as a version (as AWS did).
Therefore, we can never rollback to a state where file_1 is temporarily
invisible. If we roll back to the time before file_1 gets created for
the first time, it will be removed correctly.
However, this is fine for pageservers, because (1) having extra files in
the tenant storage is usually fine (2) for things like
timelines/X/index_part-Y.json, it will only be deleted once, so it can
always be recovered to a correct state. Therefore, I don't expect any
issues when this functionality is used on pageserver recovery.
TODO: unit tests for time-travel recovery.
## Summary of changes
Add Azure blob storage time-travel recovery support.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We are getting tenants with a lot of branches and num of timelines is a
good indicator of pageserver loads. I added this metrics to help us
better plan pageserver capacities.
## Summary of changes
Add `pageserver_timeline_states_count` with two labels: active +
offloaded.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
If a shard split fails and must roll back, the tenant may hit a cold
start as the parent shard's files have already been removed from local
disk.
External contribution with minor adjustments, see
https://neondb.slack.com/archives/C08TE3203RQ/p1748246398269309.
## Summary of changes
Keep the parent shard's files on local disk until the split has been
committed, such that they are available if the spilt is rolled back. If
all else fails, the files will be removed on the next Pageserver
restart.
This should also be fine in a mixed version:
* New storcon, old Pageserver: the Pageserver will delete the files
during the split, storcon will log an error when the cleanup detach
fails.
* Old storcon, new Pageserver: the Pageserver will leave the parent's
files around until the next Pageserver restart.
The change looks good to me, but shard splits are delicate so I'd like
some extra eyes on this.
The current cache invalidation messages are far too specific. They
should be more generic since it only ends up triggering a
`GetEndpointAccessControl` message anyway.
Mappings:
* `/allowed_ips_updated`, `/block_public_or_vpc_access_updated`, and
`/allowed_vpc_endpoints_updated_for_projects` ->
`/project_settings_update`.
* `/allowed_vpc_endpoints_updated_for_org` ->
`/account_settings_update`.
* `/password_updated` -> `/role_setting_update`.
I've also introduced `/endpoint_settings_update`.
All message types support singular or multiple entries, which allows us
to simplify things both on our side and on cplane side.
I'm opening a PR to cplane to apply the above mappings, but for now
using the old phrases to allow both to roll out independently.
This change is inspired by my need to add yet another cached entry to
`GetEndpointAccessControl` for
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/28333
We might delete timelines on safekeepers before we are deleting them on
pageservers. This should be an exceptional situation, but can occur. As
the first step to improve behaviour here, emit a special error that is
less scary/obscure than "was not found in global map".
It is for example emitted when the pageserver tries to run
`IDENTIFY_SYSTEM` on a timeline that has been deleted on the safekeeper.
Found when analyzing the failure of
`test_scrubber_physical_gc_timeline_deletion` when enabling
`--timelines-onto-safekeepers` on the pytests.
Due to safekeeper restarts, there is no hard guarantee that we will keep
issuing this error, so we need to think of something better if we start
encountering this in staging/prod. But I would say that the introduction
of `--timelines-onto-safekeepers` in the pytests and into staging won't
change much about this: we are already deleting timelines from there. In
`test_scrubber_physical_gc_timeline_deletion`, we'd just be leaking the
timeline before on the safekeepers.
Part of #11712
## Problem
PGLB/Neonkeeper needs to separate the concerns of connecting to compute,
and authenticating to compute.
Additionally, the code within `connect_to_compute` is rather messy,
spending effort on recovering the authentication info after
wake_compute.
## Summary of changes
Split `ConnCfg` into `ConnectInfo` and `AuthInfo`. `wake_compute` only
returns `ConnectInfo` and `AuthInfo` is determined separately from the
`handshake`/`authenticate` process.
Additionally, `ConnectInfo::connect_raw` is in-charge or establishing
the TLS connection, and the `postgres_client::Config::connect_raw` is
configured to use `NoTls` which will force it to skip the TLS
negotiation. This should just work.
## Problem
Removed nodes can re-add themselves on restart if not properly
tombstoned. We need a mechanism (e.g. soft-delete flag) to prevent this,
especially in cases where the node is unreachable.
More details there: #12036
## Summary of changes
- Introduced `NodeLifecycle` enum to represent node lifecycle states.
- Added a string representation of `NodeLifecycle` to the `nodes` table.
- Implemented node removal using a tombstone mechanism.
- Introduced `/debug/v1/tombstone*` handlers to manage the tombstone
state.
## Problem
Makes it easier to debug AWS permission issues (i.e., storage scrubber)
## Summary of changes
Install awscliv2 into the docker image.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
neon_local's timeline import subcommand creates timelines manually, but
doesn't create them on the safekeepers. If a test then tries to open an
endpoint to read from the timeline, it will error in the new world with
`--timelines-onto-safekeepers`.
Therefore, if that flag is enabled, create the timelines on the
safekeepers.
Note that this import functionality is different from the fast import
feature (https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/10188, #11801).
Part of #11670
As well as part of #11712
## Problem
The `computed_columns` test assumes that computed columns are always
faster than the request itself. However, this is not always the case on
Neon, which can lead to flaky results.
## Summary of changes
The `computed_columns` test is excluded from the PostGIS test for
PostgreSQL v16, accompanied by related patch refactoring.
## Problem
After introducing a naive downtime calculation for the Postgres process
inside compute in https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11346, I
noticed that some amount of computes regularly report short downtime.
After checking some particular cases, it looks like all of them report
downtime close to the end of the life of the compute, i.e., when the
control plane calls a `/terminate` and we are waiting for Postgres to
exit.
Compute monitor also produces a lot of error logs because Postgres stops
accepting connections, but it's expected during the termination process.
## Summary of changes
Regularly check the compute status inside the main compute monitor loop
and exit gracefully when the compute is in some terminal or
soon-to-be-terminal state.
---------
Co-authored-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
## Problem
- `test_basebackup_cache` fails in
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11712 because after the
timelines on safekeepers are managed by storage controller, they do
contain proper start_lsn and the compute_ctl tool sends the first
basebackup request with this LSN.
- `Failed to prepare basebackup` log messages during timeline
initialization, because the timeline is not yet in the global timeline
map.
- Relates to https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29353
## Summary of changes
- Account for `timeline_onto_safekeepers` storcon's option in the test.
- Do not trigger basebackup prepare during the timeline initialization.
## Problem
The new gRPC page service protocol supports client-side batches. The
current libpq protocol only does best-effort server-side batching.
To compare these approaches, Pagebench should support submitting
contiguous page batches, similar to how Postgres will submit them (e.g.
with prefetches or vectored reads).
## Summary of changes
Add a `--batch-size` parameter specifying the size of contiguous page
batches. One batch counts as 1 RPS and 1 queue depth.
For the libpq protocol, a batch is submitted as individual requests and
we rely on the server to batch them for us. This will give a realistic
comparison of how these would be processed in the wild (e.g. when
Postgres sends 100 prefetch requests).
This patch also adds some basic validation of responses.
## Problem
We support two ingest protocols on the pageserver: vanilla and
interpreted.
Interpreted has been the only protocol in use for a long time.
## Summary of changes
* Remove the ingest handling of the vanilla protocol
* Remove tenant and pageserver configuration for it
* Update all tests that tweaked the ingest protocol
## Compatibility
Backward compatibility:
* The new pageserver version can read the existing pageserver
configuration and it will ignore the unknown field.
* When the tenant config is read from the storcon db or from the
pageserver disk, the extra field will be ignored.
Forward compatiblity:
* Both the pageserver config and the tenant config map missing fields to
their default value.
I'm not aware of any tenant level override that was made for this knob.
## Problem
It will be useful to understand what kind of queries our clients are
executed.
And one of the most important characteristic of query is query execution
time - at least it allows to distinguish OLAP and OLTP queries. Also
monitoring query execution time can help to detect problem with
performance (assuming that workload is more or less stable).
## Summary of changes
Add query execution time histogram.
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
Split the modules responsible for passing data and connecting to compute
from auth and waking for PGLB.
This PR just moves files. The waking is going to get removed from pglb
after this.
## Problem
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11813
In PostHog UI, we need to create the properties before using them as a
filter. We report all variants automatically when we start the
pageserver. In the future, we can report all real tenants instead of
fake tenants (we do that now to save money + we don't need real tenants
in the UI).
## Summary of changes
* Collect `region`, `availability_zone`, `pageserver_id` properties and
use them in the feature evaluation.
* Report 10 fake tenants on each pageserver startup.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
I believe in all environments we now specify either required/rejected
for proxy-protocol V2 as required. We no longer rely on the supported
flow. This means we no longer need to keep around read bytes incase
they're not in a header.
While I designed ChainRW to be fast (the hot path with an empty buffer
is very easy to branch predict), it's still unnecessary.
## Summary of changes
* Remove the ChainRW wrapper
* Refactor how we read the proxy-protocol header using read_exact.
Slightly worse perf but it's hardly significant.
* Don't try and parse the header if it's rejected.
`safekeepers_cmp` was added by #8840 to make changes of the safekeeper
set order independent: a `sk1,sk2,sk3` specifier changed to
`sk3,sk1,sk2` should not cause a walproposer restart. However, this
check didn't support generations, in the sense that it would see the
`g#123:` as part of the first safekeeper in the list, and if the first
safekeeper changes, it would also restart the walproposer.
Therefore, parse the generation properly and make it not be a part of
the generation.
This PR doesn't add a specific test, but I have confirmed locally that
`test_safekeepers_reconfigure_reorder` is fixed with the changes of PR
#11712 applied thanks to this PR.
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11670
## Problem
Inbetween adding the TLS config for compute-ctl, and adding the TLS
config in controlplane, we switched from using a provision flag to a
bind flag. This happened to work in all of my testing in preview regions
as they have no VM pool, so each bind was also a provision. However, in
staging I found that the TLS config is still only processed during
provision, even though it's only sent on bind.
## Summary of changes
* Add a new feature flag value, `tls_experimental`, which tells
postgres/pgbouncer/local_proxy to use the TLS certificates on bind.
* compute_ctl on provision will be told where the certificates are,
instead of being told on bind.
Url::to_string() adds a trailing slash on the base URL, so when we did
the format!(), we were adding a double forward slash.
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
## Problem
The gRPC page service doesn't respect `get_vectored_concurrent_io` and
always uses sequential IO.
## Summary of changes
Spawn a sidecar task for concurrent IO when enabled.
Cancellation will be addressed separately.
## Problem
The script `compute.sh` had a non-consistent coding style and didn't
follow best practices for modern bash scripts
## Summary of changes
The coding style was fixed to follow best practices.
## Problem
We want to repro an OOM situation, but large partial reads are required.
## Summary of Changes
Make the max partial read size configurable for import jobs.
## Problem
We don't currently run tests for PostGIS in our test environment.
## Summary of Changes
- Added PostGIS test support for PostgreSQL v16 and v17
- Configured different PostGIS versions based on PostgreSQL version:
- PostgreSQL v17: PostGIS 3.5.0
- PostgreSQL v14/v15/v16: PostGIS 3.3.3
- Added necessary test scripts and configurations
This ensures our PostgreSQL implementation remains compatible with this
widely-used extension.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexander Bayandin <alexander@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Devin AI <158243242+devin-ai-integration[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Problem
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11813
## Summary of changes
Add a counter on the feature evaluation outcome and we will set up
alerts for too many failed evaluations in the future.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
JsonResponse::error() properly logs an error message which can be read
in the compute logs. invalid_status() was not going through that helper
function, thus not logging anything.
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
## Problem
This is already the default in production and in our test suite.
## Summary of changes
Set the default proto to interpreted to reduce friction when spinning up
new regions or cells.
## Problem
Currently, `page_api` domain types validate message invariants both when
converting Protobuf → domain and domain → Protobuf. This is annoying for
clients, because they can't use stream combinators to convert streamed
requests (needed for hot path performance), and also performs the
validation twice in the common case.
Blocks #12099.
## Summary of changes
Only validate the Protobuf → domain type conversion, i.e. on the
receiver side, and make domain → Protobuf infallible. This is where it
matters -- the Protobuf types are less strict than the domain types, and
receivers should expect all sorts of junk from senders (they're not
required to validate anyway, and can just construct an invalid message
manually).
Also adds a missing `impl From<CheckRelExistsRequest> for
proto::CheckRelExistsRequest`.
## Problem
Setting `max_batch_size` to anything higher than
`Timeline::MAX_GET_VECTORED_KEYS` will cause runtime error. We should
rather fail fast at startup if this is the case.
## Summary of changes
* Create `max_get_vectored_keys` as a new configuration (default to 32);
* Validate `max_batch_size` against `max_get_vectored_keys` right at
config parsing and validation.
Closes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11994
## Problem
The gRPC `page_api` domain types used smallvecs to avoid heap
allocations in the common case where a single page is requested.
However, this is pointless: the Protobuf types use a normal vec, and
converting a smallvec into a vec always causes a heap allocation anyway.
## Summary of changes
Use a normal `Vec` instead of a `SmallVec` in `page_api` domain types.
## Problem
We print a backtrace in an info level log every 10 seconds while waiting
for the import data to land in the bucket.
## Summary of changes
The backtrace is not useful. Remove it.
## Problem
We should use the full host name for computes, according to
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/26005 , but now a truncated
host name is used.
## Summary of changes
The URL for REMOTE_ONNX is rewritten using the FQDN.
## Problem
fix https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12101; this is a quick
hack and we need better API in the future.
In `get_db_size`, we call `get_reldir_size` for every relation. However,
we do the same deserializing the reldir directory thing for every
relation. This creates huge CPU overhead.
## Summary of changes
Get and deserialize the reldir v1 key once and use it across all
get_rel_size requests.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We should expose the page service over gRPC.
Requires #12093.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
This patch adds an initial page service implementation over gRPC. It
ties in with the existing `PageServerHandler` request logic, to avoid
the implementations drifting apart for the core read path.
This is just a bare-bones functional implementation. Several important
aspects have been omitted, and will be addressed in follow-up PRs:
* Limited observability: minimal tracing, no logging, limited metrics
and timing, etc.
* Rate limiting will currently block.
* No performance optimization.
* No cancellation handling.
* No tests.
I've only done rudimentary testing of this, but Pagebench passes at
least.
A smaller version of #12066 that is somewhat easier to review.
Now that I've been using https://crates.io/crates/top-type-sizes I've
found a lot more of the low hanging fruit that can be tweaks to reduce
the memory usage.
Some context for the optimisations:
Rust's stack allocation in futures is quite naive. Stack variables, even
if moved, often still end up taking space in the future. Rearranging the
order in which variables are defined, and properly scoping them can go a
long way.
`async fn` and `async move {}` have a consequence that they always
duplicate the "upvars" (aka captures). All captures are permanently
allocated in the future, even if moved. We can be mindful when writing
futures to only capture as little as possible.
TlsStream is massive. Needs boxing so it doesn't contribute to the above
issue.
## Measurements from `top-type-sizes`:
### Before
```
10328 {async block@proxy::proxy::task_main::{closure#0}::{closure#0}} align=8
6120 {async fn body of proxy::proxy::handle_client<proxy::protocol2::ChainRW<tokio::net::TcpStream>>()} align=8
```
### After
```
4040 {async block@proxy::proxy::task_main::{closure#0}::{closure#0}}
4704 {async fn body of proxy::proxy::handle_client<proxy::protocol2::ChainRW<tokio::net::TcpStream>>()} align=8
```
## Problem
We need gRPC support in Pagebench to benchmark the new gRPC Pageserver
implementation.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
Adds a `Client` trait to make the client transport swappable, and a gRPC
client via a `--protocol grpc` parameter. This must also specify the
connstring with the gRPC port:
```
pagebench get-page-latest-lsn --protocol grpc --page-service-connstring grpc://localhost:51051
```
The client is implemented using the raw Tonic-generated gRPC client, to
minimize client overhead.
## Problem
The page service logic asserts that a tracing span is present with
tenant/timeline/shard IDs. An initial gRPC page service implementation
thus requires a tracing span.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11728.
## Summary of changes
Adds an `ObservabilityLayer` middleware that generates a tracing span
and decorates it with IDs from the gRPC metadata.
This is a minimal implementation to address the tracing span assertion.
It will be extended with additional observability in later PRs.
## Problem
If the wal receiver is cancelled, there's a 50% chance that it will
ingest yet more WAL.
## Summary of Changes
Always check cancellation first.
Precursor to https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/28333.
We want per-endpoint configuration for rate limits, which will be
distributed via the `GetEndpointAccessControl` API. This lays some of
the ground work.
1. Allow the endpoint rate limiter to accept a custom leaky bucket
config on check.
2. Remove the unused auth rate limiter, as I don't want to think about
how it fits into this.
3. Refactor the caching of `GetEndpointAccessControl`, as it adds
friction for adding new cached data to the API.
That third one was rather large. I couldn't find any way to split it up.
The core idea is that there's now only 2 cache APIs.
`get_endpoint_access_controls` and `get_role_access_controls`.
I'm pretty sure the behaviour is unchanged, except I did a drive by
change to fix#8989 because it felt harmless. The change in question is
that when a password validation fails, we eagerly expire the role cache
if the role was cached for 5 minutes. This is to allow for edge cases
where a user tries to connect with a reset password, but the cache never
expires the entry due to some redis related quirk (lag, or
misconfiguration, or cplane error)
libs/pqproto is designed for safekeeper/pageserver with maximum
throughput.
proxy only needs it for handshakes/authentication where throughput is
not a concern but memory efficiency is. For this reason, we switch to
using read_exact and only allocating as much memory as we need to.
All reads return a `&'a [u8]` instead of a `Bytes` because accidental
sharing of bytes can cause fragmentation. Returning the reference
enforces all callers only hold onto the bytes they absolutely need. For
example, before this change, `pqproto` was allocating 8KiB for the
initial read `BytesMut`, and proxy was holding the `Bytes` in the
`StartupMessageParams` for the entire connection through to passthrough.
## Problem
Release pipeline failing due to some tools cannot be installed.
## Summary of changes
Install with `--locked`.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
The expected operating range for the production NVMe drives is
in the range of 50 to 250us.
The bucket boundaries before this PR were not well suited
to reason about the utilization / queuing / latency variability
of those devices.
# Performance
There was some concern about perf impact of having so many buckets,
considering the impl does a linear search on each observe().
I added a benchmark and measured on relevant machines.
In any way, the PR is 40 buckets, so, won't make a meaningful
difference on production machines (im4gn.2xlarge),
going from 30ns -> 35ns.
## Problem
There's a bunch of TODOs in the import code.
## Summary of changes
1. Bound max import byte range to 128MiB. This might still be too high,
given the default job concurrency, but it needs to be balanced with
going back and forth to S3.
2. Prevent unsigned overflow when determining key range splits for
concurrent jobs
3. Use sharded ranges to estimate task size when splitting jobs
4. Bubble up errors that we might hit due to invalid data in the bucket
back to the storage controller.
5. Tweak the import bucket S3 client configuration.
## Problem
I noticed a small percentage of flakes on some import tests.
They were all instances of the storage controller being too eager on the
finalization.
As a refresher: the pageserver notifies the storage controller that it's
done from the import task
and the storage controller has to call back into it in order to finalize
the import. The pageserver
checks that the import task is done before serving that request. Hence,
we can get this race.
In practice, this has no impact since the storage controller will simply
retry.
## Summary of changes
Allow list such cases
This patch is a fixup for
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/6788
Background
----------
That PR 6788 added artificial advancement of `disk_consistent_lsn`
and `remote_consistent_lsn` for shards that weren't written to
while other shards _were_ written to.
See the PR description for more context.
At the time of that PR, Pageservers shards were doing WAL filtering.
Nowadays, the WAL filtering happens in Safekeepers.
Shards learn about the WAL gaps via
`InterpretedWalRecords::next_record_lsn`.
The Bug
-------
That artificial advancement code also runs if the flush failed.
So, we advance the disk_consistent_lsn / remote_consistent_lsn,
without having the corresponding L0 to the `index_part.json`.
The frozen layer remains in the layer map until detach,
so we continue to serve data correctly.
We're not advancing flush loop variable `flushed_to_lsn` either,
so, subsequent flush requests will retry the flush and repair the
situation if they succeed.
But if there aren't any successful retries, eventually the tenant
will be detached and when it is attached somewhere else, the
`index_part.json` and therefore layer map...
1. ... does not contain the frozen layer that failed to flush and
2. ... won't re-ingest that WAL either because walreceiver
starts up with the advanced disk_consistent_lsn/remote_consistent_lsn.
The result is that the read path will have a gap in the reconstruct
data for the keys whose modifications were lost, resulting in
a) either walredo failure
b) or an incorrect page@lsn image if walredo doesn't error.
The Fix
-------
The fix is to only do the artificial advancement if `result.is_ok()`.
Misc
----
As an aside, I took some time to re-review the flush loop and its
callers.
I found one more bug related to error handling that I filed here:
- https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/12025
## Problem
## Summary of changes
## Problem
Checking the most recent state of pageservers was insufficient to
evaluate whether another pageserver may read in a particular generation,
since the latest state might mask some earlier AttachedSingle state.
Related: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11348
## Summary of changes
- Maintain a history of all attachments
- Write out explicit rules for when a pageserver may read
## Problem
Part of #11813. This pull request adds misc observability improvements
for the functionality.
## Summary of changes
* Info span for the PostHog feature background loop.
* New evaluate feature flag API.
* Put the request error into the error message.
* Log when feature flag gets updated.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
I have a hypothesis that import might be using lower number of jobs than
max for the VM, where the job is running. This change will help finding
this out from logs
## Summary of changes
Added logging of number of jobs, which is passed into both `pg_dump` and
`pg_restore`
Adds two metrics to the storcon that are related to the safekeeper
reconciler:
* `storage_controller_safkeeper_reconciles_queued` to indicate currrent
queue depth
* `storage_controller_safkeeper_reconciles_complete` to indicate the
number of complete reconciles
Both metrics operate on a per-safekeeper basis (as reconcilers run on a
per-safekeeper basis too).
These metrics mirror the `storage_controller_pending_reconciles` and
`storage_controller_reconcile_complete` metrics, although those are not
scoped on a per-pageserver basis but are global for the entire storage
controller.
Part of #11670
## Problem
Disk usage eviction isn't sensitive to layers of imported timelines.
## Summary of changes
Hook importing timelines up into eviction and add a test for it.
I don't think we need any special eviction logic for this. These layers
will all be visible and
their access time will be their creation time. Hence, we'll remove
covered layers first
and get to the imported layers if there's still disk pressure.
## Problem
Importing timelines can't currently be deleted. This is problematic
because:
1. Cplane cannot delete failed imports and we leave the timeline behind.
2. The flow does not support user driven cancellation of the import
## Summary of changes
On the pageserver: I've taken the path of least resistance, extended
`TimelineOrOffloaded`
with a new variant and added handling in the right places. I'm open to
thoughts here,
but I think it turned out better than I was envisioning.
On the storage controller: Again, fairly simple business: when a DELETE
timeline request is
received, we remove the import from the DB and stop any finalization
tasks/futures. In order
to stop finalizations, we track them in-memory. For each finalizing
import, we associate a gate
and a cancellation token.
Note that we delete the entry from the database before cancelling any
finalizations. This is such
that a concurrent request can't progress the import into finalize state
and race with the deletion.
This concern about deleting an import with on-going finalization is
theoretical in the near future.
We are only going to delete importing timelines after the storage
controller reports the failure to
cplane. Alas, the design works for user driven cancellation too.
Closes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11897
## Summary
The optimiser background loop could get delayed a lot by waiting for
timeouts trying to talk to offline nodes.
Fixes: #12056
## Solution
- Skip offline nodes in `get_top_tenant_shards`
Link to Devin run:
https://app.devin.ai/sessions/065afd6756734d33bbd4d012428c4b6e
Requested by: John Spray (john@neon.tech)
Co-authored-by: Devin AI <158243242+devin-ai-integration[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: John Spray <john@neon.tech>
## Problem
Temporarily reduce the concurrency of gc-compaction to 1 job at a time.
We are going to roll out in the largest AWS region next week. Having one
job running at a time makes it easier to identify what tenant causes
problem if it's not running well and pause gc-compaction for that
specific tenant.
(We can make this configurable via pageserver config in the future!)
## Summary of changes
Reduce `CONCURRENT_GC_COMPACTION_TASKS` from 2 to 1.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
The `test_storcon_create_delete_sk_down` test is still flaky. This test
addresses two possible causes for flakiness. both causes are related to
deletion racing with `pull_timeline` which hasn't finished yet.
* the first cause is timeline deletion racing with `pull_timeline`:
* the first deletion attempt doesn't contain the line because the
timeline doesn't exist yet
* the subsequent deletion attempts don't contain it either, only a note
that the timeline is already deleted.
* so this patch adds the note that the timeline is already deleted to
the regex
* the second cause is about tenant deletion racing with `pull_timeline`:
* there were no tenant specific tombstones so if a tenant was deleted,
we only added tombstones for the specific timelines being deleted, not
for the tenant itself.
* This patch changes this, so we now have tenant specific tombstones as
well as timeline specific ones, and creation of a timeline checks both.
* we also don't see any retries of the tenant deletion in the logs. once
it's done it's done. so extend the regex to contain the tenant deletion
message as well.
One could wonder why the regex and why not using the API to check
whether the timeline is just "gone". The issue with the API is that it
doesn't allow one to distinguish between "deleted" and "has never
existed", and latter case might race with `pull_timeline`. I.e. the
second case flakiness helped in the discovery of a real bug (no tenant
tombstones), so the more precise check was helpful.
Before, I could easily reproduce 2-9 occurences of flakiness when
running the test with an additional `range(128)` parameter (i.e. 218
times 4 times). With this patch, I ran it three times, not a single
failure.
Fixes#11838
## Problem
Import planning takes a job size limit as its input. Previously, the job
size came from a pageserver config field. This field may change while
imports are in progress. If this happens, plans will no longer be
identical and the import would fail permanently.
## Summary of Changes
Bake the job size into the import progress reported to the storage
controller. For new imports, use the value from the pagesever config,
and, for existing imports, use the value present in the shard progress.
This value is identical for all shards, but we want it to be versioned
since future versions of the planner might split the jobs up
differently. Hence, it ends up in `ShardImportProgress`.
Closes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11983
## Problem
Previous attempt https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/10548 caused
some issues in staging and we reverted it. This is a re-attempt to
address https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11063.
Currently we create image layers at latest record LSN. We would create
"future image layers" (i.e., image layers with LSN larger than disk
consistent LSN) that need special handling at startup. We also waste a
lot of read operations to reconstruct from L0 layers while we could have
compacted all of the L0 layers and operate on a flat level of historic
layers.
## Summary of changes
* Run repartition at L0-L1 boundary.
* Roll out with feature flags.
* Piggyback a change that downgrades "image layer creating below
gc_cutoff" to debug level.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
There is a new API that I plan to use. We generate client from the spec
so it should be in the spec
## Summary of changes
Document the existing API in openAPI format
## Problem
Currently, we collect metrics of what extensions are installed on
computes at start up time. We do not have a mechanism that does this at
runtime.
## Summary of changes
Added a background thread that queries all DBs at regular intervals and
collects a list of installed extensions.
## Problem
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11813
## Summary of changes
* Support evaluate boolean flags.
* Add docs on how to handle errors.
* Add test cases based on real PostHog config.
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We have some gaps in our traces. This indicates missing spans.
## Summary of changes
This PR adds two new spans:
* WAIT_EXECUTOR: time a batched request spends in the batch waiting to
be picked up
* FLUSH_RESPONSE: time a get page request spends flushing the response
to the compute

## Problem
The page API gRPC errors need a few tweaks to integrate better with the
GetPage machinery.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11728.
## Summary of changes
* Add `GetPageStatus::InternalError` for internal server errors.
* Rename `GetPageStatus::Invalid` to `InvalidRequest` for clarity.
* Rename `status` and `GetPageStatus` to `status_code` and
`GetPageStatusCode`.
* Add an `Into<tonic::Status>` implementation for `ProtocolError`.
Some tests still explicitly specify version 3 of the safekeeper
walproposer protocol. Remove the explicit opt in from the tests as v3 is
the default now since #11518.
We don't touch the places where a test exercises both v2 and v3. Those
we leave for #12021.
Part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/10326
## Problem
Test coverage of timeline imports is lacking.
## Summary of changes
This PR adds a chaos import test. It runs an import while injecting
various chaos events
in the environment. All the commits that follow the test fix various
issues that were surfaced by it.
Closes https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/10191
## Problem
The regression test for the extension online_advisor fails on the
staging instance due to a lack of permission to alter the database.
## Summary of changes
A script was added to work around this problem.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alexander Lakhin <alexander.lakhin@neon.tech>
In order to enable TLS connections between computes and safekeepers, we
need to provide the control plane with a way to configure the various
libpq keyword parameters, sslmode and sslrootcert. neon.safekeepers is a
comma separated list of safekeepers formatted as host:port, so isn't
available for extension in the same way that neon.pageserver_connstring
is. This could be remedied in a future PR.
Part-of: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/25823
Link:
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-connect.html#LIBPQ-PARAMKEYWORDS
Signed-off-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
Support timeline creations on the storage controller to opt out from
their creation on the safekeepers, introducing the read-only timelines
concept. Read only timelines:
* will never receive WAL of their own, so it's fine to not create them
on the safekeepers
* the property is non-transitive. children of read-only timelines aren't
neccessarily read-only themselves.
This feature can be used for snapshots, to prevent the safekeepers from
being overloaded by empty timelines that won't ever get written to. In
the current world, this is not a problem, because timelines are created
implicitly by the compute connecting to a safekeeper that doesn't have
the timeline yet. In the future however, where the storage controller
creates timelines eagerly, we should watch out for that.
We represent read-only timelines in the storage controller database so
that we ensure that they never touch the safekeepers at all. Especially
we don't want them to cause a mess during the importing process of the
timelines from the cplane to the storcon database.
In a hypothetical future where we have a feature to detach timelines
from safekeepers, we'll either need to find a way to distinguish the
two, or if not, asking safekeepers to list the (empty) timeline prefix
and delete everything from it isn't a big issue either.
This patch will unconditionally hit the new safekeeper timeline creation
path for read-only timelines, without them needing the
`--timelines-onto-safekeepers` flag enabled. This is done because it's
lower risk (no safekeepers or computes involved at all) and gives us
some initial way to verify at least some parts of that code in prod.
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29435https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11670
Previously we were using project-id/endpoint-id as SYSLOGTAG, which has
a
limit of 32 characters, so the endpoint-id got truncated.
The output is now in RFC5424 format, where the message is json encoded
with additional metadata `endpoint_id` and `project_id`
Also as pgaudit logs multiline messages, we now detect this by parsing
the timestamp in the specific format, and consider non-matching lines to
belong in the previous log message.
Using syslog structured-data would be an alternative, but leaning
towards json
due to being somewhat more generic.
## Problem
part of https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11813
## Summary of changes
* Integrate feature store with tenant structure.
* gc-compaction picks up the current strategy from the feature store.
* We only log them for now for testing purpose. They will not be used
until we have more patches to support different strategies defined in
PostHog.
* We don't support property-based evaulation for now; it will be
implemented later.
* Evaluating result of the feature flag is not cached -- it's not
efficient and cannot be used on hot path right now.
* We don't report the evaluation result back to PostHog right now.
I plan to enable it in staging once we get the patch merged.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We see unexpected basebackup error alerts in the alert channel.
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11778 only fixed the alerts
for shutdown errors. However, another path is that tenant shutting down
while waiting LSN -> WaitLsnError::BadState -> QueryError::Reconnect.
Therefore, the reconnect error should also be discarded from the
ok/error counter.
## Summary of changes
Do not increase ok/err counter for reconnect errors.
---------
Signed-off-by: Alex Chi Z <chi@neon.tech>
## Problem
We didn't test the h3 extension in our test suite.
## Summary of changes
Added tests for h3 and h3-postgis extensions
Includes upgrade test for h3
---------
Co-authored-by: Tristan Partin <tristan@neon.tech>
## Problem
For the gRPC Pageserver API, we should convert the Protobuf types to
stricter, canonical Rust types.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11728.
## Summary of changes
Adds Rust domain types that mirror the Protobuf types, with conversion
and validation.
## Problem
We need authentication for the gRPC server.
Requires #11972.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
Add two request interceptors that decode the tenant/timeline/shard
metadata and authenticate the JWT token against them.
## Problem
We want to expose the page service over gRPC, for use with the
communicator.
Requires #11995.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
This patch wires up a gRPC server in the Pageserver, using Tonic. It
does not yet implement the actual page service.
* Adds `listen_grpc_addr` and `grpc_auth_type` config options (disabled
by default).
* Enables gRPC by default with `neon_local`.
* Stub implementation of `page_api.PageService`, returning unimplemented
errors.
* gRPC reflection service for use with e.g. `grpcurl`.
Subsequent PRs will implement the actual page service, including
authentication and observability.
Notably, TLS support is not yet implemented. Certificate reloading
requires us to reimplement the entire Tonic gRPC server.
## Problem
For #11992 I realised we need to get the type info before executing the
query. This is important to know how to decode rows with custom types,
eg the following query:
```sql
CREATE TYPE foo AS ENUM ('foo','bar','baz');
SELECT ARRAY['foo'::foo, 'bar'::foo, 'baz'::foo] AS data;
```
Getting that to work was harder that it seems. The original
tokio-postgres setup has a split between `Client` and `Connection`,
where messages are passed between. Because multiple clients were
supported, each client message included a dedicated response channel.
Each request would be terminated by the `ReadyForQuery` message.
The flow I opted to use for parsing types early would not trigger a
`ReadyForQuery`. The flow is as follows:
```
PARSE "" // parse the user provided query
DESCRIBE "" // describe the query, returning param/result type oids
FLUSH // force postgres to flush the responses early
// wait for descriptions
// check if we know the types, if we don't then
// setup the typeinfo query and execute it against each OID:
PARSE typeinfo // prepare our typeinfo query
DESCRIBE typeinfo
FLUSH // force postgres to flush the responses early
// wait for typeinfo statement
// for each OID we don't know:
BIND typeinfo
EXECUTE
FLUSH
// wait for type info, might reveal more OIDs to inspect
// close the typeinfo query, we cache the OID->type map and this is kinder to pgbouncer.
CLOSE typeinfo
// finally once we know all the OIDs:
BIND "" // bind the user provided query - already parsed - to the user provided params
EXECUTE // run the user provided query
SYNC // commit the transaction
```
## Summary of changes
Please review commit by commit. The main challenge was allowing one
query to issue multiple sub-queries. To do this I first made sure that
the client could fully own the connection, which required removing any
shared client state. I then had to replace the way responses are sent to
the client, by using only a single permanent channel. This required some
additional effort to track which query is being processed. Lastly I had
to modify the query/typeinfo functions to not issue `sync` commands, so
it would fit into the desired flow above.
To note: the flow above does force an extra roundtrip into each query. I
don't know yet if this has a measurable latency overhead.
## Problem
- Benchmark periodic pagebench had inconsistent benchmarking results
even when run with the same commit hash.
Hypothesis is this was due to running on dedicated but virtualized EC
instance with varying CPU frequency.
- the dedicated instance type used for the benchmark is quite "old" and
we increasingly get `An error occurred (InsufficientInstanceCapacity)
when calling the StartInstances operation (reached max retries: 2):
Insufficient capacity.`
- periodic pagebench uses a snapshot of pageserver timelines to have the
same layer structure in each run and get consistent performance.
Re-creating the snapshot was a painful manual process (see
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/27051 and
https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/27653)
## Summary of changes
- Run the periodic pagebench on a custom hetzner GitHub runner with
large nvme disk and governor set to defined perf profile
- provide a manual dispatch option for the workflow that allows to
create a new snapshot
- keep the manual dispatch option to specify a commit hash useful for
bi-secting regressions
- always use the newest created snapshot (S3 bucket uses date suffix in
S3 key, example
`s3://neon-github-public-dev/performance/pagebench/shared-snapshots-2025-05-17/`
- `--ignore`
`test_runner/performance/pageserver/pagebench/test_pageserver_max_throughput_getpage_at_latest_lsn.py`
in regular benchmarks run for each commit
- improve perf copying snapshot by using `cp` subprocess instead of
traversing tree in python
## Example runs with code in this PR:
- run which creates new snapshot
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/actions/runs/15083408849/job/42402986376#step:19:55
- run which uses latest snapshot
-
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/actions/runs/15084907676/job/42406240745#step:11:65
## Problem
We're about to implement a gRPC interface for Pageserver. Let's upgrade
Tonic first, to avoid a more painful migration later. It's currently
only used by storage-broker.
Touches #11728.
## Summary of changes
Upgrade Tonic 0.12.3 → 0.13.1. Also opportunistically upgrade Prost
0.13.3 → 0.13.5. This transitively pulls in Indexmap 2.0.1 → 2.9.0, but
it doesn't appear to be used in any particularly critical code paths.
## Problem
See https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11997
This guard prevents race condition with pump prefetch state (initiated
by timeout).
Assert checks that prefetching is also done under guard.
But prewarm knows nothing about it.
## Summary of changes
Pump prefetch state only in regular backends.
Prewarming is done by background workers now.
Also it seems to have not sense to pump prefetch state in any other
background workers: parallel executors, vacuum,... because they are
short living and can not leave unconsumed responses in socket.
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
Detect problems with Postgres optimiser: lack of indexes and statistics
## Summary of changes
https://github.com/knizhnik/online_advisor
Add online_advistor extension to docker image
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11988 waits only for max
~200ms, so we still see failures, which self-resolve after several
operation retries.
## Summary of changes
Change it to waiting for at least 5 seconds, starting with 2 ms sleep
between iterations and x2 sleep on each next iteration. It could be that
it's not a problem with a slow `rsyslog` start, but a longer wait won't
hurt. If it won't start, we should debug why `inittab` doesn't start it,
or maybe there is another problem.
Add retry loop around waiting for rsyslog start
## Problem
## Summary of changes
---------
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@garret.ru>
Co-authored-by: Matthias van de Meent <matthias@neon.tech>
Co-authored-by: Konstantin Knizhnik <knizhnik@neon.tech>
## Problem
Basebackup cache is on the hot path of compute startup and is generated
on every request (may be slow).
- Issue: https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/29353
## Summary of changes
- Add `BasebackupCache` which stores basebackups on local disk.
- Basebackup prepare requests are triggered by
`XLOG_CHECKPOINT_SHUTDOWN` records in the log.
- Limit the size of the cache by number of entries.
- Add `basebackup_cache_enabled` feature flag to TenantConfig.
- Write tests for the cache
## Not implemented yet
- Limit the size of the cache by total size in bytes
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <aleksandr@neon.tech>
## Problem
For billing, we'd like per-branch consumption metrics.
Requires https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/pull/11984.
Resolves https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/28155.
## Summary of changes
This patch adds two new consumption metrics:
* `written_size_since_parent`: `written_size - ancestor_lsn`
* `pitr_history_size_since_parent`: `written_size - max(pitr_cutoff,
ancestor_lsn)`
Note that `pitr_history_size_since_parent` will not be emitted until the
PITR cutoff has been computed, and may or may not increase ~immediately
when a user increases their PITR window (depending on how much history
we have available and whether the tenant is restarted/migrated).
## Problem
When testing local proxy the auth-endpoint password shows up in command
line and log
```bash
RUST_LOG=proxy LOGFMT=text cargo run --release --package proxy --bin proxy --features testing -- \
--auth-backend postgres \
--auth-endpoint 'postgresql://postgres:secret_password@127.0.0.1:5432/postgres' \
--tls-cert server.crt \
--tls-key server.key \
--wss 0.0.0.0:4444
```
## Summary of changes
- Allow to set env variable PGPASSWORD
- fall back to use PGPASSWORD env variable when auth-endpoint does not
contain password
- remove auth-endpoint password from logs in `--features testing` mode
Example
```bash
export PGPASSWORD=secret_password
RUST_LOG=proxy LOGFMT=text cargo run --package proxy --bin proxy --features testing -- \
--auth-backend postgres \
--auth-endpoint 'postgresql://postgres@127.0.0.1:5432/postgres' \
--tls-cert server.crt \
--tls-key server.key \
--wss 0.0.0.0:4444
```
## Problem
It is not currently possible to disambiguate a timeline with an
uninitialized PITR cutoff from one that was created within the PITR
window -- both of these have `GcCutoffs::time == Lsn(0)`. For billing
metrics, we need to disambiguate these to avoid accidentally billing the
entire history when a tenant is initially loaded.
Touches https://github.com/neondatabase/cloud/issues/28155.
## Summary of changes
Make `GcCutoffs::time` an `Option<Lsn>`, and only set it to `Some` when
initialized. A `pitr_interval` of 0 will yield `Some(last_record_lsn)`.
This PR takes a conservative approach, and mostly retains the old
behavior of consumers by using `unwrap_or_default()` to yield 0 when
uninitialized, to avoid accidentally introducing bugs -- except in cases
where there is high confidence that the change is beneficial (e.g. for
the `pageserver_pitr_history_size` Prometheus metric and to return early
during GC).
## Problem
Hitting max_client_conn from pgbouncer would lead to invalidation of the
conn info cache.
Customers would hit the limit on wake_compute.
## Summary of changes
`should_retry_wake_compute` detects this specific error from pgbouncer
as non-retriable,
meaning we won't try to wake up the compute again.
## Problem
When using an incorrect endpoint string - `"localhost:4317"`, it's a
runtime error, but it can be a config error
- Closes: https://github.com/neondatabase/neon/issues/11394
## Summary of changes
Add config parse time check via `request::Url::parse` validation.
---------
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Sarantsev <ephemeralsad@gmail.com>
name:Periodic pagebench performance test on dedicated EC2 machine in eu-central-1 region
name:Periodic pagebench performance test on unit-perf-aws-arm runners
on:
schedule:
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ on:
# │ │ ┌───────────── day of the month (1 - 31)
# │ │ │ ┌───────────── month (1 - 12 or JAN-DEC)
# │ │ │ │ ┌───────────── day of the week (0 - 6 or SUN-SAT)
- cron:'0 */3 * * *'# Runs every 3 hours
- cron:'0 */4 * * *'# Runs every 4 hours
workflow_dispatch:# Allows manual triggering of the workflow
inputs:
commit_hash:
@@ -16,6 +16,11 @@ on:
description:'The long neon repo commit hash for the system under test (pageserver) to be tested.'
required:false
default:''
recreate_snapshots:
type:boolean
description:'Recreate snapshots - !!!WARNING!!! We should only recreate snapshots if the previous ones are no longer compatible. Otherwise benchmarking results are not comparable across runs.'
storage_broker={version="0.1",path="./storage_broker/"}# Note: main broker code is inside the binary crate, so linking with the library shouldn't be heavy.
Neon is a serverless open-source alternative to AWS Aurora Postgres. It separates storage and compute and substitutes the PostgreSQL storage layer by redistributing data across a cluster of nodes.
Neon is an open-source serverless Postgres database platform. It separates storage and compute and substitutes the PostgreSQL storage layer by redistributing data across a cluster of nodes.
## Quick start
Try the [Neon Free Tier](https://neon.tech/github) to create a serverless Postgres instance. Then connect to it with your preferred Postgres client (psql, dbeaver, etc) or use the online [SQL Editor](https://neon.tech/docs/get-started-with-neon/query-with-neon-sql-editor/). See [Connect from any application](https://neon.tech/docs/connect/connect-from-any-app/) for connection instructions.
Try the [Neon Free Tier](https://neon.com/signup) to create a serverless Postgres instance. Then connect to it with your preferred Postgres client (psql, dbeaver, etc) or use the online [SQL Editor](https://neon.com/docs/get-started-with-neon/query-with-neon-sql-editor/). See [Connect from any application](https://neon.com/docs/connect/connect-from-any-app/) for connection instructions.
Alternatively, compile and run the project [locally](#running-local-installation).
@@ -301,8 +301,8 @@ See also README files in some source directories, and `rustdoc` style documentat
Other resources:
- [SELECT 'Hello, World'](https://neon.tech/blog/hello-world/): Blog post by Nikita Shamgunov on the high level architecture
- [Architecture decisions in Neon](https://neon.tech/blog/architecture-decisions-in-neon/): Blog post by Heikki Linnakangas
- [SELECT 'Hello, World'](https://neon.com/blog/hello-world/): Blog post by Nikita Shamgunov on the high level architecture
- [Architecture decisions in Neon](https://neon.com/blog/architecture-decisions-in-neon/): Blog post by Heikki Linnakangas
- [Neon: Serverless PostgreSQL!](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rES0yzeERns): Presentation on storage system by Heikki Linnakangas in the CMU Database Group seminar series
# 'gdb' is included so that we get backtraces of core dumps produced in
# regression tests
RUNset -e \
&& apt update \
&& apt install -y \
&& apt-get update \
&& apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \
autoconf \
automake \
bison \
@@ -155,7 +154,7 @@ RUN set -e \
# Keep the version the same as in compute/compute-node.Dockerfile and
# test_runner/regress/test_compute_metrics.py.
ENVSQL_EXPORTER_VERSION=0.17.0
ENVSQL_EXPORTER_VERSION=0.17.3
RUN curl -fsSL \
"https://github.com/burningalchemist/sql_exporter/releases/download/${SQL_EXPORTER_VERSION}/sql_exporter-${SQL_EXPORTER_VERSION}.linux-$(case"$(uname -m)" in x86_64) echo amd64;; aarch64) echo arm64;; esac).tar.gz"\
--output sql_exporter.tar.gz \
@@ -165,6 +164,7 @@ RUN curl -fsSL \
&& rm sql_exporter.tar.gz
# protobuf-compiler (protoc)
# Keep the version the same as in compute/compute-node.Dockerfile
ENVPROTOC_VERSION=25.1
RUN curl -fsSL "https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/releases/download/v${PROTOC_VERSION}/protoc-${PROTOC_VERSION}-linux-$(uname -m | sed 's/aarch64/aarch_64/g').zip" -o "protoc.zip"\
&& unzip -q protoc.zip -d protoc \
@@ -179,19 +179,25 @@ RUN curl -sL "https://github.com/peak/s5cmd/releases/download/v${S5CMD_VERSION}/
&& mv s5cmd /usr/local/bin/s5cmd
# LLVM
ENVLLVM_VERSION=19
ENVLLVM_VERSION=20
RUN curl -fsSL 'https://apt.llvm.org/llvm-snapshot.gpg.key'| apt-key add - \
"Refresh configuration: Retrieved spec is the same as the current spec. Waiting for control plane to update the spec before attempting reconfiguration."
Some files were not shown because too many files have changed in this diff
Show More
Reference in New Issue
Block a user
Blocking a user prevents them from interacting with repositories, such as opening or commenting on pull requests or issues. Learn more about blocking a user.