XAP

Controlling the Replication Redo Log

On replicated clusters, each member (which is a source that sends replication events to its targets) has a replication redo log. This is a list of pending replication packets that need to be dispatched to the different targets.

A replication packet is either a single non-transactional "destructive" (write/take/update) operation, or a group of these operations that are done under the same transaction. The redo log contains a single list that is kept for all the targets, and for each target a different state is maintained, which represents its position in the redo log. When the cluster is in a normal state, this redo log should remain at some low constant size. However, in certain common scenarios, such as a momentary network disconnection or a burst of high load, the redo log keeps all the pending events that need to be replicated until the source member manages to re-establish connection with the target, or until the replication target manages to catch up with the temporary load. As a result, the redo log size increases and can become quite large, depending on the different cluster usage, which affects the rate of creating replicated events.

Format of the Redo Log

The redo log per target can be limited to in-memory only or both in-memory and disk according to how it is configured.

If the redo log grows beyond the configured redo log memory capacity limit, the following formats can be used.

Naturally, writing the redo log to the file-system has a performance impact. Therefore, it is recommended to configure the redo log to save to disk only for targets that cannot fully recover from the SpaceClosed Where GigaSpaces data is stored. It is the logical cache that holds data objects in memory and might also hold them in layered in tiering. Data is hosted from multiple SoRs, consolidated as a unified data model. as mirror targets, and to use the appropriate disk.

Two options are available for the format of the redo log:

  • byte-buffer is the default format and consists of data in a binary format.

  • SQLite format writes the redo log data into a SQLite database located in the work directory.

The SQLite format allows the user to browse through the redo log data using a SQLite JDBC viewer.

If the redo type is SQLite, then there is an option to Flush Redo Log to Disk.

Configuring the Redo Log Capacity

The configuration parameters described in this topic have a significant effect on the behavior of the replication mechanism and the overall and performance of the Space cluster. You should carefully evaluate every change you make to their default values, and consult the GigaSpaces support team if needed.

Redo Log Parameters

You can configure the following parameters to adjust the redo log behavior. You can configure the redo log behavior between Spaces and their mirror, and between replicated Spaces.

Space Cluster Property Description Default Value
Global
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.redo-log-memory-capacity Specifies the maximum number of replication packets the redo log keeps in memory for all target types. 150000
Backup Partition
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.redo-log-capacity Specifies the total capacity of replication packets the redo log can hold for a standard replication target. 150000
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.redo-log-recovery-capacity Specifies the total capacity of replication packets the redo log can hold for a standard replication target while it is undergoing a recovery process. 5000000
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.on-redo-log-capacity-exceeded See the Handling an Increasing Redo Log section for details. drop-oldest
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.on-missing-packets Options: ignore, recover. See the Handling Dropped Replication Packets section for details. recover
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.redo-log-compaction Options: mirror, none. See the Redo Log Compaction section for details. mirror
MirrorClosed Performs the replication of changes to the target table or accumulation of source table changes used to replicate changes to the target table at a later time. If you have implemented bidirectional replication in your environment, mirroring can occur to and from both the source and target tables.
cluster-config.mirror-service.redo-log-capacity Specifies the total capacity of replication packets the redo log can hold for a mirror service replication target. 1000000
cluster-config.mirror-service.on-redo-log-capacity-exceeded See the Handling an Increasing Redo Log section for details. block-operations

The following are low-level configuration parameters that relate to the swap redo log mechanism:

Space Cluster Property Description Default Value
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.swap-redo-log.storage-type

Specifies the format of the redo log. Optional values: byte-buffer, sqlite.

- byte-buffer (default) writes the log in a binary format.

- sqlite writes the log to a database. The database can be accessed using standard tools to view the details of the log. For more information, see Controlling the Replication Redo Log.

byte-buffer
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.swap-redo-log.flush-buffer-packet-count Specifies the number of the packets/buffer size that the swap redo log uses when flushing packets to the disk. 500
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.swap-redo-log.segment-size Specifies the size (in bytes) of each swap redo log segment file. 10485760 (10MB)
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.swap-redo-log.fetch-buffer-packet-count Specifies the number of packets/buffer size that the swap redo log is uses when retrieving packets from disk to memory. 500
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.swap-redo-log.max-scan-length Specifies the maximum allowed scan length (in bytes) in the swap redo log file in order to locate a packet. 51200 (50KB)
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.swap-redo-log.max-open-cursors Specifies the maximum number of open file descriptors that the swap redo log will use. 10

Here is an example of how to use the above parameters:

<os-core:embedded-space id="space" space-name="mySpace" mirror="true">
    <os-core:properties>
    <props>
        <prop key="cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.redo-log-capacity">100000</prop>
        <prop key="cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.redo-log-memory-capacity">100</prop>
    </props>
    </os-core:properties>
</os-core:embedded-space>

For all of these parameters, -1 specifies unlimited behavior. When the memory capacity is smaller than the entire capacity, if the memory capacity is reached the redo log stores the remaining packets on the disk, which prevents the JVMClosed Java Virtual Machine. A virtual machine that enables a computer to run Java programs as well as programs written in other languages that are also compiled to Java bytecode. from running out of memory when the redo log size increases for the reasons mentioned above.

The redo log capacity for a mirror service must be the same or higher than the redo log capacity for a non-mirror target.

These defaults are supposed to address the following scenario: a cluster tolerates a 4-5 minute backlog accumulated in the cluster members without being replicated to the mirror, assuming a load of 3,000-5,000 transactions per second on each partition. When the redo log size reaches this size, operations are blocked until the mirror reconnects and/or keeps up with the pace. For a backup Space, the redo log is kept for a short disconnection of 20-30 seconds. Any disconnection longer than that is considered as if the backup is down, and it must do a full recovery. When the connection is re-established, its redo log is dropped without blocking operations.

Weight Policy

Transactions are replicated in a single packet (to ensure atomicity), and the packet weight is the sum of the transaction operations it contains. Replication configuration is affected by the weight (size) of the redo log, which is a record of the packets that have accumulated prior to replicating to the target.

Two policies are available:

  • Accumulated
    A single write/take/update operation is translated into a packet with a weight of 1.
    Multiple operations are translated into multiple single operations with a packet weight of 1.
    A transaction is translated into a packet with the accumulated weight of all the single operations within the transaction.

  • Fixed
    All packets have a weight of 1.

You can use the cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.backlog-weight-policy property to configure the weight policy:

Space Cluster Property Description Default
cluster-config.groups.group.repl-policy.backlog-weight-policy Weight policy. Either fixed or accumulated accumulated

All configuration properties that affect the size or capacity of the redo log refer to the redo log weight when running with the weight policy set to accumulated. Users upgrading from previous versions, who modified the default replication settings, should make sure they understand this change and test it before they upgrade the production environment. If it affects them, we recommend recalibrating the replication settings to suit the new behavior.

Here is an example of a transaction with a weight of 10, where the weight policy is set to accumulated:

TransactionStatus status = ptm.getTransaction(definition);
for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
   Person person = new Person();
   person.setId(i);
   gigaSpace.write(person)
}
ptm.commit(status);

Redo Log Compaction

Redo log compaction means replacing the full packet with a lightweight discarded packet. The redo log weight is affected by the compaction, so the original packet weight is decreased and the (number-of-discarded-packet * 0.01) is added.

When the redo-log-compaction parameter is set to mirror, compaction is performed on every packet that has been received by all replication targets except for the mirror, and only for packets of type @SpaceClass(persist=false) (which means the packet should not be persisted to the database).

To disable compaction, set the redo-log-compaction parameter to none.

Handling a Increasingly Larger Redo Log

There are two major reasons why the redo log size increases enough that it may indicate or cause a future problem. One cause is long disconnections, and the other is when the target (i.e backup) Space can't keep up with the source (i.e primary) Space. For example, a mirror service that persists the replicated data to a database, where the database is constantly slower than the rate of incoming replicated events.

The two most common replication targets are:

  • Backup Space
  • Mirror

A backup Space scenario has one significant difference compared to the mirror scenario. The backup Space can always perform a full recovery from its source (primary) Space. However, a mirror is a stateless component, which only tunnels the changes in the cluster to its target, normally a database. Therefore it cannot recover missing packets.

The redo log capacity should be used to handle these scenarios, by determining the type of action to take once the capacity is reached. The action can be configured for two types of replication targets; a mirror target and a non-mirror target in the cluster schema. A mirror is configured in the mirror service element, and a non-mirror target is configured in the replication policy element. Both have the same parameter name of on-redo-log-capacity-exceeded, and there are two available configuration options:

  • block-operations - all cluster operations that need to be replicated (write/update/take) are blocked until the redo log size decreases to below the maximum capacity (users get RedoLogCapacityExceededException exceptions while trying to execute these operations).
  • drop-oldest - the oldest packet in the redo log is dropped.

A mirror can never recover missing packets, therefore it is best to use block-operation mode when the redo log size is exceeded so that changes aren't dropped before reaching the database. Additionally, the redo log capacity for the mirror scenario should be larger for the same reason. If the redo log size reaches this state frequently, it means that the mirror is not handling the load, and the cluster and environment should be examined.

A backup Space can always fall back to full recovery, so it is reasonable to configure replication in drop-oldest mode. This scenario can also make do with a smaller redo log capacity, which will prevent writing packets to disk when a long disconnection occurs and forces a full recovery by the backup Space. If the redo log size is very large, it may take more time just to replicate the cluster changes, instead of just performing full recovery of the data.

The redo-log-recovery-capacity parameter is used only when a target Space member is currently recovering from a source Space member (both target and source can never be a mirror Space). When this happens, the redo log size of the source may increase because it holds the replication backlog that accumulated during the recovery process, and we would like it to be larger than the regular capacity. This is done by setting the redo-log-recovery-capacity. If this capacity is reached during a recovery process, new replicated operations are blocked (with the same exception as above) until the redo log size decreases.

Handling Dropped Replication Packets

You can configure how a backup replication target behaves when there are missing replication packets, due to packets being dropped when configuring the drop-oldest behavior at its source. An active Space (primary) has no choice but to accept the state when expected replication packets are missing and keep running as usual, namely as an active-active replicated cluster. However, a backup Space can be configured either to ignore missing packets, or when it encounters such a scenario, to change its state to inconsistent. This causes it to be automatically redeployed, which forces a full recovery, thus keeping its state synchronized with the primary Space. This property is configured in the cluster schema replication policy element, by setting on-missing-packets to ignore or recover. A backup Space has this configured to recover by default.

This property only affects Spaces that are not in primary mode. It has no affect on active-active topologies or if on-missing-packets is in ignore mode.

Recommendations

  • Configuring an unlimited redo log capacity and a limited memory capacity can create a risky situation if there is a mirror, so this should be done with extreme care. When the redo log capacity is unlimited and the memory capacity is reached, the redo log is kept on the disk if the mirror cannot keep up with the pace. This means that the redo log can increase in size dramatically and become huge without being noticed (other than monitoring the redo log size via management facilities). This can create a very large gap between the cluster state and the database state without any automatic throttling. This may also eventually cause the disk to run out of space.

  • When using the drop-oldest replication mode on active-active topologies, or towards a mirror target, missing replication packets will cause differences between cluster members. This should be taken into account.

Application-Specific Tuning

When tuning the redo log capacities for your application, you should address the following two aspects:

  • Allowed disconnection time
  • Memory consumption

For instance, consider a situation where you have a mirror, and you want the system to have a maximum backlog of the last 5 minutes when a mirror service is down, and after that you want to block new operations. In this case, you should consider what is the expected performance of a single partition per second, for example 5,000 transactions. Multiply this by 5 minutes, which results in a configuration of 1,500,000 redo-log-capacity for the mirror target, and operations getting blocked (block-operations) when this size is reached. Regarding memory consumption, you should have an approximation of the average memory size of each replication packet (single "destructive" transaction/non-transactional operation), for example 1Kb. If you want to hold up to 200Mb of packets in memory, this results in 200,000 packets configured for the redo-log-memory-capacity.

Limitations

When EDS is used with the central data source set to false, (which means each cluster member has its own private database), a backup Space recovers from its private database once re-started, and not from its primary Space. Therefore if drop-oldest replication mode is used, the dropped packets never reach the backup Space and these members remain out of sync.

Monitoring the Redo Log Size

You can see the redo log size using the GigaSpaces Management Center, the Web Management Console, or the Administration API.

Viewing the Redo Size in the GigaSpaces Management Center

The GigaSpaces Management Center has been deprecated and will be removed in a future release.

To see the redo log size in the GigaSpaces Management Center, enable the redo log size monitoring:

red-log1.jpg

A new column is added to the Space list table:

red-log2.jpg

Viewing the Redo Size in the Web Management Console

To see the redo log size in the Web Management Console:

  1. From the Spaces view, drill through to the required Space instance.

  2. in any column header, click the down arrow and hover over the Columns option to display the list of available columns.

  3. Select Replication Redo Log. The column is added to the Space instance table.

Getting the Redo Log Using the Administration API

The following example shows how to get the redo log size using the Administration API:

Admin   admin = new AdminFactory().createAdmin();
Space space = admin.getSpaces().waitFor("mySpace", 10, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
space.waitFor(space.getNumberOfInstances(), SpaceMode.PRIMARY,10 , TimeUnit.SECONDS);
SpacePartition partitions[]= space.getPartitions();
while(true)
{
    for (int i=0;i<partitions.length;i++){
        SpacePartition partition = partitions[i];
        long redologSize = partition.getPrimary().getStatistics().getReplicationStatistics().getOutgoingReplication().getRedoLogSize();
        System.out.println("redo log size for partition " + partition.getPartitionId() + " is:" +redologSize );
    }
    Thread.sleep(1000);
}

API Example

The RedoLogTest starts a cluster with a single partition (primary + backup) with mirror enabled and WAN gateway enabled. The mirror and WAN gateway are not running. It writes a few entries to the Space and later removes them. A replication filter is active, allowing you to track the activity where Space classes that include replicate=false are not replicated.

redo

You will see the redo log status for each replication target:

  • Sync replica to backup
  • ASync replica to mirror
  • ASync replica to WAN gateway
created backup partition 0 
space got 0 Data objects 
com.test.MyReplicationFilter@2c07545f - process OUTPUT com.test.Data WRITE mySpace_container1_1:mySpace 
com.test.MyReplicationFilter@4c550889 - process INPUT com.test.Data WRITE mySpace_container1:mySpace 
partition clusterInfo RunningNumber:0 wrote 1 objects 
done writing all objects 
partition clusterInfo RunningNumber:0 wrote 1 objects 
done writing all objects 
space got 2 Data objects 
com.test.MyReplicationFilter@2c07545f - process OUTPUT com.test.Data TAKE mySpace_container1_1:mySpace 
com.test.MyReplicationFilter@4c550889 - process INPUT com.test.Data TAKE mySpace_container1:mySpace 
space got 0 Data objects 
redo log size for partition 0 is:4 
------------- Primary space instance replication targets ----------- 

     OutgoingChannel 
      ( 
        getTargetMemberName()=mySpace_container1_1:mySpace, 
        getTargetUuid()=8a44fa4b-93bb-4e0e-81cd-b2ea64b284b7, 
        getTargetHostname()=Shay-PC, 
        getTargetDetails()=ConnectionEndpointDetails[hostName=10.10.10.118,hostAddress=10.10.10.118,pid=23004,version=11.0.0.14800-0], 
        getDelegatorDetails()=null, 
        getReplicationMode()=BACKUP_SPACE, 
        getState()=CONNECTED, 
        getChannelState()=ACTIVE, 
        getOperatingMode()=SYNC, 
        getLastKeyToReplicate()=3, 
        getLastConfirmedKeyFromTarget()=3, 
        getRedologRetainedSize()=0, 
        getSendPacketsPerSecond()=0, 
        getSentBytes()=7298 Bytes, 
        getReceivedBytes()=917 Bytes, 
        getSendBytesPerSecond()=1406 Bytes, 
        getReceiveBytesPerSecond()=284 Bytes, 
        getSendBytesPerPacket()=0 Bytes, 
        isInconsistent()=false, 
        getInconsistencyReason()=NONE 
      ) 

     OutgoingChannel 
      ( 
        getTargetMemberName()=mirror-service_container:mirror-service, 
        getTargetUuid()=null, 
        getTargetHostname()=null, 
        getTargetDetails()=null, 
        getDelegatorDetails()=null, 
        getReplicationMode()=MIRROR, 
        getState()=DISCONNECTED, 
        getChannelState()=DISCONNECTED, 
        getOperatingMode()=RELIABLE_ASYNC, 
        getLastKeyToReplicate()=3, 
        getLastConfirmedKeyFromTarget()=-1, 
        getRedologRetainedSize()=4, 
        getSendPacketsPerSecond()=0, 
        getSentBytes()=0 Bytes, 
        getReceivedBytes()=0 Bytes, 
        getSendBytesPerSecond()=0 Bytes, 
        getReceiveBytesPerSecond()=0 Bytes, 
        getSendBytesPerPacket()=0 Bytes, 
        isInconsistent()=false, 
        getInconsistencyReason()=NONE 
      ) 

     OutgoingChannel 
      ( 
        getTargetMemberName()=gateway:target, 
        getTargetUuid()=null, 
        getTargetHostname()=null, 
        getTargetDetails()=null, 
        getDelegatorDetails()=null, 
        getReplicationMode()=GATEWAY, 
        getState()=DISCONNECTED, 
        getChannelState()=DISCONNECTED, 
        getOperatingMode()=RELIABLE_ASYNC, 
        getLastKeyToReplicate()=3, 
        getLastConfirmedKeyFromTarget()=-1, 
        getRedologRetainedSize()=4, 
        getSendPacketsPerSecond()=0, 
        getSentBytes()=0 Bytes, 
        getReceivedBytes()=0 Bytes, 
        getSendBytesPerSecond()=0 Bytes, 
        getReceiveBytesPerSecond()=0 Bytes, 
        getSendBytesPerPacket()=0 Bytes, 
        isInconsistent()=false, 
        getInconsistencyReason()=NONE 
      )