Setting RRD deletion granularity - rrdtool

We currently use RRDtool through munin for trending of our services. We'd like to keep more data than we currently do, that is, we don't want the interstitial points deleted once we get the data gets older than a week. I can't find a flag that I can pass to RRDtool to do this.
We're aware that this will increase the storage requirements, but we'd like to make the decision as to how much data is too much, rather than have it made for us.

you can use rrdtool resize to modify the length of the RRAs

Related

Generate blocks of 128MB in Nifi

What I'm trying to do is to deposit into HDFS blocks of size of 128MB I've been trying several processors but can't get the good one or I haven't identify the correct property:
This is how prety much the flow looks like:
Right now I'm using PutParquet but this processor doesn't have a property to do that
The previous processor is a MergeContent and this is the configuration
and on the SplitAvro I have next configuration
Hope someone can help I'm really stuck trying to do this.
You shouldn't need the SplitAvro or ConvertAvroToJSON, if you use MergeRecord instead you can supply an AvroReader and JsonRecordSetWriter and it will do the conversion for you. If you know the approximate number of records that will fit in an HDFS block, you can set that as the Maximum Number of Entries and also the Max Group Size. Keep in mind those are soft limits though, so you might want to set it to something safer like 100MB.
When you tried with your flow from the description, what did you observe? Were the files still too big, or did it not seem to obey the min/max limits, etc.?

Is there any possibility that deleted data can be recovered back in SAS?

I am working on production environment. Last day accidentally I made changes to Master dataset permanently while trying to get the sample out of it in work directory. Unfortunately they don't have any backup for this data.
I wanted to execute this:
Data work.facttable;
Set Master.facttable(obs=10);
run;
instead of this, accidentally I executed the following:
data Master.facttable;
set Master.facttable(obs=10);
run;
You can clearly see what sort of blunder it was!
Facttable has been building up nearly from 2 long years and it is of 250GB and has millions of rows. Now it has 10 rows and is of 128kb :(
I am very much worried how to recover the data back. It is crucial for the business teams. I have no idea how to proceed to get it back.
I know that SAS doesn't support any rollback options or recovery process. We don't use Audit trail method also.
I am just wondering if there is any way that still we can get the data back in spite of all these.
Details: Dataset is assigned on SPDE Engine. I checked the data files(.dpf) but all were disappeared except yesterday's data file which is of 128kb
You appear to have exhausted most of the simple options already:
Restore from external/OS-level backup
Restore from previous generation via the gennum= data set option (only available if the genmax option was set to 1+ when creating the dataset).
Restore from SAS audit trail
I think that leaves you with just 2 options:
Rebuild the dataset from the underlying source(s), if you still have them.
Engage the services of a professional data recovery company, who might be able to recover some or all of the deleted files, depending on the complexity of your storage environment, and how much of the original 250GB has since been overwritten.
Either way, it sounds as though this may prove to have been an expensive mistake.

What is the most efficient way to store time series in Riak with heavy reads

My current approach:
I have one domain class - Application
Each application in my system is stored in "applications" bucket under APPLICATION_KEY key
Apart from application metadata stored in this bucket, each application has its own bucket called "time_metrics/APPLICATION_KEY" where I store time series in a way:
KEY - timestamp / VALUE - some attributes
My concern is efficiency of queries made over specific time window for given application. Currently to get time series from some specific time window and eventually make some reductions I have to make map/reduce over whole "time_metric/APPLICATION_KEY" bucket, which what I have found is not the recommended use case for Riak Map/Reduce.
My question: what would be the best db structure for this kind of a system and how efficiently query it.
Adding onto #macintux's answer.
Basho has had a few customers that have used riak for time series metrics.
Boundary has a nice tech talk about how they use Riak with their network monitoring software. They rollup data into different chunks of time (1m, 5m, 15m) for analysis.
They also have a series of blog posts about lessons learned while implementing this system.
Kivra also has a good slide deck about how they use timeseries data with riak.
You could roll up your data into some sort of arbitrary time length, then read the range you need by issuing regular K/V gets, and then reconstruct the larger picture / reduce in your application.
If you have spare computing power and you know in advance what keys you need, you certainly can use Riak's MapReduce, but often retrieving the keys and running your processing on the client will be as fast (and won't strain your cluster).
Some general ideas:
Roll up your data into larger blocks
If you're concerned about losing data if your client crashes while buffering it, you can always store the data as it arrives
Similar idea: store the data as it arrives, then retrieve it and roll it up at certain intervals
You can automatically expire data once you're confident it is being reliably stored in larger blocks, using either the Bitcask or Memory backends
Memory backend is quite useful (RAM permitting) for any data that only needs to be stored for a limited period of time
Related: don't be afraid to store multiple copies of your data to make reading/reporting easier later
Multiple chunks of time (5- and 15-minute blocks, for example)
Multiple report formats
Having said all that, if you're doing straight key/value requests (it's ideal to always be able to compute the keys you need, rather than doing indexing or searching), Riak can support very heavy traffic loads, so I wouldn't recommend spending too much time creating alternative storage mechanisms unless you know you're going to face latency problems.

Incremental update of millions of records, indexed vs. join

I'm currently developing a strategy for an incremental update of our user data. We assume 100_000_000 records in our database of which approximately 1_000_000 records are updated per workflow.
The idea is to update records in a MapReduce job. Is it useful to use an indexed storage (eg. Cassandra) to be able to access current records randomly? Or is it preferable to retrieve data from HDFS and join new information to existing records.
The record size is O(200 Bytes). The user data has a fixed length but should be extendable. The log events have a similar but not equal structure. The number of user records is likely to grow. Near real-time updates are desirable, ie. a 3 hour time gap is not acceptable, few minutes is OK.
Have you made any experiences with either of these strategies and data of this size?
Is the pig JOIN fast enough? Is it a bottleneck always to read all records? Is Cassandra able to hold this amount of data efficiently? Which solution is scalable? What about the complexity of the system?
You need to define your requirements first. Your record volumes are not a problem, but you don't give a record length. Are they fixed length, fixed field number, likely to change format over time? Are we talking 100 byte records or 100,000 byte records? You need an index on a field/column if you wish to query by that field/column, unless you do all your work using map/reduce. Will the number of user records stay at 100mill (1 server will probably suffice) or will it grow 100% per year ( probably multiple servers adding new ones over time).
How you access records for updating depends on whether you need to update them in real-time or whether you can run a batch job. Will updates be every minute, or hour, or month?
I would strongly suggest you do some experimenting. Have you done any testing already? This will give you a context for your questions and this will lead to more objective questions and answers. It is unlikely that you can 'whiteboard' a solution based on your question.

Amazon SimpleDB Woes: Implementing counter attributes

Long story short, I'm rewriting a piece of a system and am looking for a way to store some hit counters in AWS SimpleDB.
For those of you not familiar with SimpleDB, the (main) problem with storing counters is that the cloud propagation delay is often over a second. Our application currently gets ~1,500 hits per second. Not all those hits will map to the same key, but a ballpark figure might be around 5-10 updates to a key every second. This means that if we were to use a traditional update mechanism (read, increment, store), we would end up inadvertently dropping a significant number of hits.
One potential solution is to keep the counters in memcache, and using a cron task to push the data. The big problem with this is that it isn't the "right" way to do it. Memcache shouldn't really be used for persistent storage... after all, it's a caching layer. In addition, then we'll end up with issues when we do the push, making sure we delete the correct elements, and hoping that there is no contention for them as we're deleting them (which is very likely).
Another potential solution is to keep a local SQL database and write the counters there, updating our SimpleDB out-of-band every so many requests or running a cron task to push the data. This solves the syncing problem, as we can include timestamps to easily set boundaries for the SimpleDB pushes. Of course, there are still other issues, and though this might work with a decent amount of hacking, it doesn't seem like the most elegant solution.
Has anyone encountered a similar issue in their experience, or have any novel approaches? Any advice or ideas would be appreciated, even if they're not completely flushed out. I've been thinking about this one for a while, and could use some new perspectives.
The existing SimpleDB API does not lend itself naturally to being a distributed counter. But it certainly can be done.
Working strictly within SimpleDB there are 2 ways to make it work. An easy method that requires something like a cron job to clean up. Or a much more complex technique that cleans as it goes.
The Easy Way
The easy way is to make a different item for each "hit". With a single attribute which is the key. Pump the domain(s) with counts quickly and easily. When you need to fetch the count (presumable much less often) you have to issue a query
SELECT count(*) FROM domain WHERE key='myKey'
Of course this will cause your domain(s) to grow unbounded and the queries will take longer and longer to execute over time. The solution is a summary record where you roll up all the counts collected so far for each key. It's just an item with attributes for the key {summary='myKey'} and a "Last-Updated" timestamp with granularity down to the millisecond. This also requires that you add the "timestamp" attribute to your "hit" items. The summary records don't need to be in the same domain. In fact, depending on your setup, they might best be kept in a separate domain. Either way you can use the key as the itemName and use GetAttributes instead of doing a SELECT.
Now getting the count is a two step process. You have to pull the summary record and also query for 'Timestamp' strictly greater than whatever the 'Last-Updated' time is in your summary record and add the two counts together.
SELECT count(*) FROM domain WHERE key='myKey' AND timestamp > '...'
You will also need a way to update your summary record periodically. You can do this on a schedule (every hour) or dynamically based on some other criteria (for example do it during regular processing whenever the query returns more than one page). Just make sure that when you update your summary record you base it on a time that is far enough in the past that you are past the eventual consistency window. 1 minute is more than safe.
This solution works in the face of concurrent updates because even if many summary records are written at the same time, they are all correct and whichever one wins will still be correct because the count and the 'Last-Updated' attribute will be consistent with each other.
This also works well across multiple domains even if you keep your summary records with the hit records, you can pull the summary records from all your domains simultaneously and then issue your queries to all domains in parallel. The reason to do this is if you need higher throughput for a key than what you can get from one domain.
This works well with caching. If your cache fails you have an authoritative backup.
The time will come where someone wants to go back and edit / remove / add a record that has an old 'Timestamp' value. You will have to update your summary record (for that domain) at that time or your counts will be off until you recompute that summary.
This will give you a count that is in sync with the data currently viewable within the consistency window. This won't give you a count that is accurate up to the millisecond.
The Hard Way
The other way way is to do the normal read - increment - store mechanism but also write a composite value that includes a version number along with your value. Where the version number you use is 1 greater than the version number of the value you are updating.
get(key) returns the attribute value="Ver015 Count089"
Here you retrieve a count of 89 that was stored as version 15. When you do an update you write a value like this:
put(key, value="Ver016 Count090")
The previous value is not removed and you end up with an audit trail of updates that are reminiscent of lamport clocks.
This requires you to do a few extra things.
the ability to identify and resolve conflicts whenever you do a GET
a simple version number isn't going to work you'll want to include a timestamp with resolution down to at least the millisecond and maybe a process ID as well.
in practice you'll want your value to include the current version number and the version number of the value your update is based on to more easily resolve conflicts.
you can't keep an infinite audit trail in one item so you'll need to issue delete's for older values as you go.
What you get with this technique is like a tree of divergent updates. you'll have one value and then all of a sudden multiple updates will occur and you will have a bunch of updates based off the same old value none of which know about each other.
When I say resolve conflicts at GET time I mean that if you read an item and the value looks like this:
11 --- 12
/
10 --- 11
\
11
You have to to be able to figure that the real value is 14. Which you can do if you include for each new value the version of the value(s) you are updating.
It shouldn't be rocket science
If all you want is a simple counter: this is way over-kill. It shouldn't be rocket science to make a simple counter. Which is why SimpleDB may not be the best choice for making simple counters.
That isn't the only way but most of those things will need to be done if you implement an SimpleDB solution in lieu of actually having a lock.
Don't get me wrong, I actually like this method precisely because there is no lock and the bound on the number of processes that can use this counter simultaneously is around 100. (because of the limit on the number of attributes in an item) And you can get beyond 100 with some changes.
Note
But if all these implementation details were hidden from you and you just had to call increment(key), it wouldn't be complex at all. With SimpleDB the client library is the key to making the complex things simple. But currently there are no publicly available libraries that implement this functionality (to my knowledge).
To anyone revisiting this issue, Amazon just added support for Conditional Puts, which makes implementing a counter much easier.
Now, to implement a counter - simply call GetAttributes, increment the count, and then call PutAttributes, with the Expected Value set correctly. If Amazon responds with an error ConditionalCheckFailed, then retry the whole operation.
Note that you can only have one expected value per PutAttributes call. So, if you want to have multiple counters in a single row, then use a version attribute.
pseudo-code:
begin
attributes = SimpleDB.GetAttributes
initial_version = attributes[:version]
attributes[:counter1] += 3
attributes[:counter2] += 7
attributes[:version] += 1
SimpleDB.PutAttributes(attributes, :expected => {:version => initial_version})
rescue ConditionalCheckFailed
retry
end
I see you've accepted an answer already, but this might count as a novel approach.
If you're building a web app then you can use Google's Analytics product to track page impressions (if the page to domain-item mapping fits) and then to use the Analytics API to periodically push that data up into the items themselves.
I haven't thought this through in detail so there may be holes. I'd actually be quite interested in your feedback on this approach given your experience in the area.
Thanks
Scott
For anyone interested in how I ended up dealing with this... (slightly Java-specific)
I ended up using an EhCache on each servlet instance. I used the UUID as a key, and a Java AtomicInteger as the value. Periodically a thread iterates through the cache and pushes rows to a simpledb temp stats domain, as well as writing a row with the key to an invalidation domain (which fails silently if the key already exists). The thread also decrements the counter with the previous value, ensuring that we don't miss any hits while it was updating. A separate thread pings the simpledb invalidation domain, and rolls up the stats in the temporary domains (there are multiple rows to each key, since we're using ec2 instances), pushing it to the actual stats domain.
I've done a little load testing, and it seems to scale well. Locally I was able to handle about 500 hits/second before the load tester broke (not the servlets - hah), so if anything I think running on ec2 should only improve performance.
Answer to feynmansbastard:
If you want to store huge amount of events i suggest you to use distributed commit log systems such as kafka or aws kinesis. They allow to consume stream of events cheap and simple (kinesis's pricing is 25$ per month for 1K events per seconds) – you just need to implement consumer (using any language), which bulk reads all events from previous checkpoint, aggregates counters in memory then flushes data into permanent storage (dynamodb or mysql) and commit checkpoint.
Events can be logged simply using nginx log and transfered to kafka/kinesis using fluentd. This is very cheap, performant and simple solution.
Also had similiar needs/challenges.
I looked at using google analytics and count.ly. the latter seemed too expensive to be worth it (plus they have a somewhat confusion definition of sessions). GA i would have loved to use, but I spent two days using their libraries and some 3rd party ones (gadotnet and one other from maybe codeproject). unfortunately I could only ever see counters post in GA realtime section, never in the normal dashboards even when the api reported success. we were probably doing something wrong but we exceeded our time budget for ga.
We already had an existing simpledb counter that updated using conditional updates as mentioned by previous commentor. This works well, but suffers when there is contention and conccurency where counts are missed (for example, our most updated counter lost several million counts over a period of 3 months, versus a backup system).
We implemented a newer solution which is somewhat similiar to the answer for this question, except much simpler.
We just sharded/partitioned the counters. When you create a counter you specify the # of shards which is a function of how many simulatenous updates you expect. this creates a number of sub counters, each which has the shard count started with it as an attribute :
COUNTER (w/5shards) creates :
shard0 { numshards = 5 } (informational only)
shard1 { count = 0, numshards = 5, timestamp = 0 }
shard2 { count = 0, numshards = 5, timestamp = 0 }
shard3 { count = 0, numshards = 5, timestamp = 0 }
shard4 { count = 0, numshards = 5, timestamp = 0 }
shard5 { count = 0, numshards = 5, timestamp = 0 }
Sharded Writes
Knowing the shard count, just randomly pick a shard and try to write to it conditionally. If it fails because of contention, choose another shard and retry.
If you don't know the shard count, get it from the root shard which is present regardless of how many shards exist. Because it supports multiple writes per counter, it lessens the contention issue to whatever your needs are.
Sharded Reads
if you know the shard count, read every shard and sum them.
If you don't know the shard count, get it from the root shard and then read all and sum.
Because of slow update propogation, you can still miss counts in reading but they should get picked up later. This is sufficient for our needs, although if you wanted more control over this you could ensure that- when reading- the last timestamp was as you expect and retry.