Commit Graph

19 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
tidwall 9e68703841 Update expiration logic
This commit changes the logic for managing the expiration of
objects in the database.

Before: There was a server-wide hashmap that stored the
collection key, id, and expiration timestamp for all objects
that had a TTL. The hashmap was occasionally probed at 20
random positions, looking for objects that have expired. Those
expired objects were immediately deleted, and if there was 5
or more objects deleted, then the probe happened again, with
no delay. If the number of objects was less than 5 then the
there was a 1/10th of a second delay before the next probe.

Now: Rather than a server-wide hashmap, each collection has
its own ordered priority queue that stores objects with TTLs.
Rather than probing, there is a background routine that
executes every 1/10th of a second, which pops the expired
objects from the collection queues, and deletes them.

The collection/queue method is a more stable approach than
the hashmap/probing method. With probing, we can run into
major cache misses for some cases where there is wide
TTL duration, such as in the hours or days. This may cause
the system to occasionally fall behind, leaving should-be
expired objects in memory. Using a queue, there is no
cache misses, all objects that should be expired will be
right away, regardless of the TTL durations.

Fixes #616
2021-07-12 13:37:50 -07:00
tidwall 6b08f7fa9e Code cleanup
- Removed unused functions and variables
- Wrapped client formatted errors
- Updated deprecated packages
- Changed suggested code patterns
2021-03-31 08:13:44 -07:00
tidwall 72dfaaec63 Updated dependencies 2021-02-07 17:54:56 -07:00
tidwall 016f397124 Replace tinybtree 2021-01-25 14:34:40 -07:00
tidwall 9998e03f6f Optimization for non-cross geofence detection
This commit fixes a performance issue with the algorithm that
determines with geofences are potential candidates for
notifications following a SET operation.

Details

Prior to commit b471873 (10 commits ago) there was a bug where
the "cross" detection was not firing in all cases. This happened
because when looking for candidates for "cross" due to a SET
operation, only the geofences that overlapped the previous
position of the object and the geofences that overlapped the new
position where searched. But, in fac, all of the geofences that
overlapped the union rectangle of the old and new position should
have been searched.

That commit fixed the problem by searching a union rect of the
old and new positions. While this is an accurate solution, it
caused a slowdown on systems that have big/wild position changes
that might cross a huge number of geofences, even when those
geofences did not need actually need "cross" detection.

The fix

With this commit the geofences that have a "cross" detection
are stored in a seperated tree from those that do not. This
allows for a hybrid of the functionality prior and post b471873.

Fixes #583
2020-10-23 09:51:27 -07:00
Terra Brown 9202fd0206
s/64/12/ 2020-08-11 18:11:06 -04:00
Alex Roitman 5faccc3b4c Avoid sorting fields for each written object. 2020-03-03 13:39:43 -08:00
tidwall 23b016d192 Fix excessive memory usage for objects with TTLs
This commit fixes an issue where Tile38 was using lots of extra
memory to track objects that are marked to expire. This was
creating problems with applications that set big TTLs.

How it worked before:

Every collection had a unique hashmap that stores expiration
timestamps for every object in that collection. Along with
the hashmaps, there's also one big server-wide list that gets
appended every time a new SET+EX is performed.

From a background routine, this list is looped over at least
10 times per second and is randomly searched for potential
candidates that might need expiring. The routine then removes
those entries from the list and tests if the objects matching
the entries have actually expired. If so, these objects are
deleted them from the database. When at least 25% of
the 20 candidates are deleted the loop is immediately
continued, otherwise the loop backs off with a 100ms pause.

Why this was a problem.

The list grows one entry for every SET+EX. When TTLs are long,
like 24-hours or more, it would take at least that much time
before the entry is removed. So for databased that have objects
that use TTLs and are updated often this could lead to a very
large list.

How it was fixed.

The list was removed and the hashmap is now search randomly. This
required a new hashmap implementation, as the built-in Go map
does not provide an operation for randomly geting entries. The
chosen implementation is a robinhood-hash because it provides
open-addressing, which makes for simple random bucket selections.

Issue #502
2019-10-29 11:19:33 -07:00
tidwall 87185319b2 Fix JSET cancels expiry
issue #498
2019-10-08 09:45:46 -07:00
tidwall 639f6e2deb Replaced boxtree for rbang 2019-09-12 18:42:53 -07:00
tidwall 0aecef6a5c Added TIMEOUT command 2019-04-24 05:09:41 -07:00
tidwall 92c1ce8ef9 Update tinybtree dep 2019-02-11 13:39:29 -07:00
Alex Roitman e1c82e17f7 Refactor to be more consistent with redis responses. 2018-12-28 14:46:54 -08:00
Alex Roitman 01a7dda2a1 Add RENAME and RENAMENX commands. 2018-12-27 17:15:53 -08:00
tidwall 8b29e98359 Optimized spatial index for fences 2018-11-23 18:15:14 -07:00
tidwall f2c217c216 Refactor and comment command details 2018-11-23 15:53:33 -07:00
tidwall 07bae979a5 Added Cursor interface 2018-11-02 06:09:56 -07:00
Alex Roitman 0933c541f4 Refactor cursor/paging. 2018-10-31 22:01:37 -07:00
tidwall 555e47036c Replaced net package with evio
- Added threads startup flag
- Replaced net package with evio
- Refactored controller into server
2018-10-28 15:51:47 -07:00