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Displaying posts with tag: MyRocks (reset)
Hot Backup For MyRocks(Rocksdb) using Percona Xtrabackup

Xtrabackup now supports Hotbackup for Myrocks!! yes you heard me right, this is one of the most awaited features with xtrabackup. With the latest release of percona xtrabackup 8.0.6 this is enabled and is supported only for Percona Server version 8.0.15-6 or higher, you can see detailed released notes here.

Myrocks is getting much of the attention now because of its much improved write capabilities and compression. We have also planned to have detailed blog on Myrocks features and limitations.

We shall proceed to test the backup and restore of Myrocks

Environment:

OS : Debian GNU/Linux 9 …
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Exposing MyRocks Internals Via System Variables: Part 3, Compaction

(In the previous post, Part 2, we covered Initial Data Flushing.)

In this blog post, we continue our series of exploring MyRocks mechanics by looking at the configurable server variables and column family options. In our last post, I explained at a high level how data moves from immutable memtables to disk. In this post, we’re going to talk about what happens to that data as it moves through the compaction process.

What is Compaction?

One of the philosophies of MyRocks is “write the data quickly and sort out data organization later”, which is pretty far removed from engines like InnoDB that take the approach of “continuously organize data on disk so it’s optimal as soon as possible”. MyRocks implements its philosophy in a way that is heavily reliant on a process …

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Exposing MyRocks Internals via system variables: Part 2, Initial Data Flushing

(In the previous post, Part 1, we covered Data Writing.)

In this blog post, we continue on our series of exploring MyRocks mechanics by looking at configurable server variables and column family options. In our last post, I explained at a high level how data first entered memory space and in this post, we’re going to pick up where we left off and talk about how the flush from immutable memtable to disk occurs. We’re also going to talk about how newly created secondary indexes on existing tables get written to disk.

We already know from our previous post in the series that a flush can be prompted by one of several events, the most common of which would be when an active memtable is filled to its maximum capacity and is rotated into immutable status.

When your immutable memtable(s) is ready …

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Exposing MyRocks internals via system variables: Part 1, Data Writing

Series Introduction

Back in 2016 I decided to write a blog series on InnoDB in hopes that it would help give a good description of the high level mechanics of the storage engine. The main motivating factor at that time was that I knew there was a lot of information out there about InnoDB, but a lot of it was ambiguous or even contradictory and I wanted to help make things a bit clearer if I could.

Now there’s a new storage engine that’s rising in popularity that I feel needs similar attention. Specifically MyRocks, the log-structured merge-driven RocksDB engine in MySQL. Given the amount of discussion in the community about MyRocks, I’m sure most of you already have some degree of familiarity, or at the very least have heard the name.

Now we’ve arrived at a point where this is no longer just a Facebook integration project and major players in the community like Maria and Percona have their own implemented …

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Column Families in MyRocks

In my webinar How To Rock with MyRocks I briefly mentioned the column families feature in MyRocks, that allows a fine tuning for indexes and primary keys.

Let’s review it in more detail.

To recap, MyRocks is based on the RocksDB library, which stores all data in [key => value] pairs, so when it translates to MySQL, all Primary Keys (data) and secondary keys (indexes) are stored in [ key => value ] pairs, which by default are assigned to “default” Column Family.

Each column family has individual set of

  • SST files, and their parameters
  • Memtable and its parameters
  • Bloom filters, and their parameters
  • Compression settings

There is a N:1 relation between tables and indexes to column family, so schematically it looks like this:

How do you assign …

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Upcoming Webinar Thurs 1/17: How to Rock with MyRocks

Please join Percona’s Chief Technology Officer, Vadim Tkachenko, as he presents How to Rock with MyRocks on Thursday, January 17th at 10:00 AM PDT (UTC-7) / 1:00 PM EDT (UTC-4).

Register Now

MyRocks is a new storage engine from Facebook and is available in Percona Server for MySQL. In what cases will you want to use it? We will check different workloads and when MyRocks is most suitable for you. Also, as for any new engine, it’s important to set it up and tune it properly. So, we will review the most important settings to pay attention to.

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Tuning MyRocks for performance

There are basically two things which I majorly like about using MyRocks, 1. LSM Advantage – smaller space & lower write amplification and 2. Best of MySQL like replication, storage engine centric database infrastructure operations and MySQL orchestration tools. Facebook built RocksDB as an embeddable and persistent key-value store with lower amplification factor () compared to InnoDB. Let me explain a scenario were InnoDB proves less efficient compared to RocksDB in SSD:
We know InnoDB is constrained by a fixed compressed page size. Alignment during fragmentation and compression causes extra unused space because the leaf nodes are not full. Let’s consider a InnoDB table with a compressed page size of 8KB. A 16KB in-memory page compressed to 5KB still uses 8KB on storage. Adding to this, each entry in the primary key index has 13 bytes of metadata (6 byte transaction id + 7 byte rollback pointer), and …

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Scaling IO-Bound Workloads for MySQL in the Cloud – part 2

This post is a followup to my previous article https://www.percona.com/blog/2018/08/29/scaling-io-bound-workloads-mysql-cloud/

In this instance, I want to show the data in different dimensions, primarily to answer questions around how throughput scales with increasing IOPS.

A recap: for the test I use Amazon instances and Amazon gp2 and io1 volumes. In addition to the original post, I also tested two gpl2 volumes combined in software RAID0. I did this for the following reason: Amazon cap the single gp2 volume throughput to 160MB/sec, and as we will see from the charts, this limits InnoDB performance.

Also, a reminder from the previous post: we can increase gp2 IOPS by increasing volume size (to the top limit 10000 IOPS), and for io1 we can increase IOPS by paying per additional IOPS.

Scaling with InnoDB …

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Scaling IO-Bound Workloads for MySQL in the Cloud

Is increasing GP2 volumes size or increasing IOPS for IO1 volumes a valid method for scaling IO-Bound workloads? In this post I’ll focus on one question: how much can we improve performance if we use faster cloud volumes? This post is a continuance of previous cloud research posts:

To recap, in Amazon EC2 we can use gp2 and io1 volumes. gp2 performance can be scaled with size, i.e for gp2 volume size of 500GB we get 1500 iops; size 1000GB – 3000 iops; and for 3334GB – 10000 iops (maximal …

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Comparing TokuDB, RocksDB and InnoDB Performance on Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6140 CPU

Recently one of our customers wanted us to benchmark InnoDB, TokuDB and RocksDB on Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6140 CPU (with 72 CPUs),  nvme SSD (7 TB) and  530 GB RAM for performance. We have used Ubuntu xenial 16.04.4, Percona Server 5.7 (included storage engines- InnoDB/XtraDB, TokuDB and RocksDB) and  Sysbench 1.0.15 with custom Lua scripts for this exercise, This benchmarking exercise included bulk INSERTS, WRITES, READS and READS-WRITES. We have tried our best to capture maximum information about the hardware infrastructure and copied / shared scripts we have used for benchmarking. This is not a paid / sponsored benchmarking effort by any of the software or hardware vendors, We will remain forever an vendor neutral and independent web-scale database infrastructure operations company with core expertise in performance, scalability, high availability and database reliability engineering. This benchmarking is …

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