Merge pull request 'New article: Bringing theoretical design and observed performances face to face' (#12) from perf into master
Reviewed-on: #12
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/1million-both.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 295 KiB |
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/1million.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 232 KiB |
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/amplification.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 144 KiB |
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/complexity.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 194 KiB |
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/db_engine.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 177 KiB |
513
content/blog/2022-perf/index.md
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,513 @@
|
||||||
|
+++
|
||||||
|
title="Confronting theoretical design with observed performances"
|
||||||
|
date=2022-09-26
|
||||||
|
+++
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*During the past years, we have thought a lot about possible design decisions and
|
||||||
|
their theoretical trade-offs for Garage. In particular, we pondered the impacts
|
||||||
|
of data structures, networking methods, and scheduling algorithms.
|
||||||
|
Garage worked well enough for our production
|
||||||
|
cluster at Deuxfleurs, but we also knew that people started to experience some
|
||||||
|
unexpected behaviors, which motivated us to start a round of benchmarks and performance
|
||||||
|
measurements to see how Garage behaves compared to our expectations.
|
||||||
|
This post presents some of our first results, which cover
|
||||||
|
3 aspects of performance: efficient I/O, "myriads of objects", and resiliency,
|
||||||
|
reflecting the high-level properties we are seeking.*
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
<!-- more -->
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
---
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## ⚠️ Disclaimer
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The results presented in this blog post must be taken with a (critical) grain of salt due to some
|
||||||
|
limitations that are inherent to any benchmarking endeavor. We try to reference them as
|
||||||
|
exhaustively as possible here, but other limitations might exist.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Most of our tests were made on _simulated_ networks, which by definition cannot represent all the
|
||||||
|
diversity of _real_ networks (dynamic drop, jitter, latency, all of which could be
|
||||||
|
correlated with throughput or any other external event). We also limited
|
||||||
|
ourselves to very small workloads that are not representative of a production
|
||||||
|
cluster. Furthermore, we only benchmarked some very specific aspects of Garage:
|
||||||
|
our results are not an evaluation of the performance of Garage as a whole.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
For some benchmarks, we used Minio as a reference. It must be noted that we did
|
||||||
|
not try to optimize its configuration as we have done for Garage, and more
|
||||||
|
generally, we have significantly less knowledge of Minio's internals compared to Garage, which could lead
|
||||||
|
to underrated performance measurements for Minio. It must also be noted that
|
||||||
|
Garage and Minio are systems with different feature sets. For instance, Minio supports
|
||||||
|
erasure coding for higher data density and Garage doesn't, Minio implements
|
||||||
|
way more S3 endpoints than Garage, etc. Such features necessarily have a cost
|
||||||
|
that you must keep in mind when reading the plots we will present. You should consider
|
||||||
|
Minio's results as a way to contextualize Garage's numbers, to justify that our improvements
|
||||||
|
are not simply artificial in the light of existing object storage implementations.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The impact of the testing environment is also not evaluated (kernel patches,
|
||||||
|
configuration, parameters, filesystem, hardware configuration, etc.). Some of
|
||||||
|
these parameters could favor one configuration or software product over another.
|
||||||
|
Especially, it must be noted that most of the tests were done on a
|
||||||
|
consumer-grade PC with only a SSD, which is different from most
|
||||||
|
production setups. Finally, our results are also provided without statistical
|
||||||
|
tests to validate their significance, and might have insufficient ground
|
||||||
|
to be claimed as reliable.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
When reading this post, please keep in mind that **we are not making any
|
||||||
|
business or technical recommendations here, and this is not a scientific paper
|
||||||
|
either**; we only share bits of our development process as honestly as
|
||||||
|
possible.
|
||||||
|
Make your own tests if you need to take a decision,
|
||||||
|
remember to read [benchmarking crimes](https://gernot-heiser.org/benchmarking-crimes.html)
|
||||||
|
and to remain supportive and caring with your peers ;)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## About our testing environment
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
We made a first batch of tests on
|
||||||
|
[Grid5000](https://www.grid5000.fr/w/Grid5000:Home), a large-scale and flexible
|
||||||
|
testbed for experiment-driven research in all areas of computer science,
|
||||||
|
which has an
|
||||||
|
[open access program](https://www.grid5000.fr/w/Grid5000:Open-Access).
|
||||||
|
During our tests, we used part of the following clusters:
|
||||||
|
[nova](https://www.grid5000.fr/w/Lyon:Hardware#nova),
|
||||||
|
[paravance](https://www.grid5000.fr/w/Rennes:Hardware#paravance), and
|
||||||
|
[econome](https://www.grid5000.fr/w/Nantes:Hardware#econome), to make a
|
||||||
|
geo-distributed topology. We used the Grid5000 testbed only during our
|
||||||
|
preliminary tests to identify issues when running Garage on many powerful
|
||||||
|
servers. We then reproduced these issues in a controlled environment
|
||||||
|
outside of Grid5000, so don't be
|
||||||
|
surprised then if Grid5000 is not always mentioned on our plots.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
To reproduce some environments locally, we have a small set of Python scripts
|
||||||
|
called [`mknet`](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/mknet) tailored to our
|
||||||
|
needs[^ref1]. Most of the following tests were run locally with `mknet` on a
|
||||||
|
single computer: a Dell Inspiron 27" 7775 AIO, with a Ryzen 5 1400, 16GB of
|
||||||
|
RAM and a 512GB SSD. In terms of software, NixOS 22.05 with the 5.15.50 kernel is
|
||||||
|
used with an ext4 encrypted filesystem. The `vm.dirty_background_ratio` and
|
||||||
|
`vm.dirty_ratio` have been reduced to `2` and `1` respectively: with default
|
||||||
|
values, the system tends to freeze under heavy I/O load.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Efficient I/O
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The main purpose of an object storage system is to store and retrieve objects
|
||||||
|
across the network, and the faster these two functions can be accomplished,
|
||||||
|
the more efficient the system as a whole will be. For this analysis, we focus on
|
||||||
|
2 aspects of performance. First, since many applications can start processing a file
|
||||||
|
before receiving it completely, we will evaluate the time-to-first-byte (TTFB)
|
||||||
|
on `GetObject` requests, i.e. the duration between the moment a request is sent
|
||||||
|
and the moment where the first bytes of the returned object are received by the client.
|
||||||
|
Second, we will evaluate generic throughput, to understand how well
|
||||||
|
Garage can leverage the underlying machine's performance.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Time-to-First-Byte** - One specificity of Garage is that we implemented S3
|
||||||
|
web endpoints, with the idea to make it a platform of choice to publish
|
||||||
|
static websites. When publishing a website, TTFB can be directly observed
|
||||||
|
by the end user, as it will impact the perceived reactivity of the page being loaded.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Up to version 0.7.3, time-to-first-byte on Garage used to be relatively high.
|
||||||
|
This can be explained by the fact that Garage was not able to handle data internally
|
||||||
|
at a smaller granularity level than entire data blocks, which are up to 1MB chunks of a given object
|
||||||
|
(a size which [can be configured](https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/documentation/reference-manual/configuration/#block-size)).
|
||||||
|
Let us take the example of a 4.5MB object, which Garage will split by default into four 1MB blocks and one 0.5MB block.
|
||||||
|
With the old design, when you were sending a `GET`
|
||||||
|
request, the first block had to be _fully_ retrieved by the gateway node from the
|
||||||
|
storage node before it starts to send any data to the client.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
With Garage v0.8, we added a data streaming logic that allows the gateway
|
||||||
|
to send the beginning of a block without having to wait for the full block to be received from
|
||||||
|
the storage node. We can visually represent the difference as follow:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
<center>
|
||||||
|
<img src="schema-streaming.png" alt="A schema depicting how streaming improves the delivery of a block" />
|
||||||
|
</center>
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
As our default block size is only 1MB, the difference should be marginal on
|
||||||
|
fast networks: it takes only 8ms to transfer 1MB on a 1Gbps network,
|
||||||
|
adding at most 8ms of latency to a `GetObject` request (assuming no other
|
||||||
|
data transfer is happening in parallel). However,
|
||||||
|
on a very slow network, or a very congested link with many parallel requests
|
||||||
|
handled, the impact can be much more important: on a 5Mbps network, it takes at least 1.6 seconds
|
||||||
|
to transfer our 1MB block, and streaming will heavily improve user experience.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
We wanted to see if this theory holds in practice: we simulated a low latency
|
||||||
|
but slow network using `mknet` and did some requests with block streaming (Garage v0.8 beta) and
|
||||||
|
without (Garage v0.7.3). We also added Minio as a reference. To
|
||||||
|
benchmark this behavior, we wrote a small test named
|
||||||
|
[s3ttfb](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/mknet/src/branch/main/benchmarks/s3ttfb),
|
||||||
|
whose results are shown on the following figure:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Plot showing the TTFB observed on Garage v0.8, v0.7 and Minio](ttfb.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Garage v0.7, which does not support block streaming, gives us a TTFB between 1.6s
|
||||||
|
and 2s, which matches the time required to transfer the full block which we calculated above.
|
||||||
|
On the other side of the plot, we can see Garage v0.8 with a very low TTFB thanks to the
|
||||||
|
streaming feature (the lowest value is 43ms). Minio sits between the two
|
||||||
|
Garage versions: we suppose that it does some form of batching, but smaller
|
||||||
|
than our initial 1MB default.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Throughput** - As soon as we publicly released Garage, people started
|
||||||
|
benchmarking it, comparing its performances to writing directly on the
|
||||||
|
filesystem, and observed that Garage was slower (eg.
|
||||||
|
[#288](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/288)). To improve the
|
||||||
|
situation, we did some optimizations, such as putting costly processing like hashing on a dedicated thread,
|
||||||
|
and many others
|
||||||
|
([#342](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/pulls/342),
|
||||||
|
[#343](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/pulls/343)), which led us to
|
||||||
|
version 0.8 "Beta 1". We also noticed that some of the logic we wrote
|
||||||
|
to better control resource usage
|
||||||
|
and detect errors, including semaphores and timeouts, was artificially limiting
|
||||||
|
performances. In another iteration, we made this logic less restrictive at the
|
||||||
|
cost of higher resource consumption under load
|
||||||
|
([#387](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/pulls/387)), resulting in
|
||||||
|
version 0.8 "Beta 2". Finally, we currently do multiple `fsync` calls each time we
|
||||||
|
write a block. We know that this is expensive and did a test build without any
|
||||||
|
`fsync` call ([see the
|
||||||
|
commit](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/commit/432131f5b8c2aad113df3b295072a00756da47e7))
|
||||||
|
that will not be merged, only to assess the impact of `fsync`. We refer to it
|
||||||
|
as `no-fsync` in the following plot.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*A note about `fsync`: for performance reasons, operating systems often do not
|
||||||
|
write directly to the disk when a process creates or updates a file in your
|
||||||
|
filesystem. Instead, the write is kept in memory, and flushed later in a batch
|
||||||
|
with other writes. If a power loss occurs before the OS has time to flush
|
||||||
|
data to disk, some writes will be lost. To ensure that a write is effectively
|
||||||
|
written to disk, the
|
||||||
|
[`fsync(2)`](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/fsync.2.html) system call must be used,
|
||||||
|
which effectively blocks until the file or directory on which it is called has been flushed from volatile
|
||||||
|
memory to the persistent storage device. Additionally, the exact semantic of
|
||||||
|
`fsync` [differs from one OS to another](https://mjtsai.com/blog/2022/02/17/apple-ssd-benchmarks-and-f_fullsync/)
|
||||||
|
and, even on battle-tested software like Postgres, it was
|
||||||
|
["done wrong for 20 years"](https://archive.fosdem.org/2019/schedule/event/postgresql_fsync/).
|
||||||
|
Note that on Garage, we are still working on our `fsync` policy and thus, for
|
||||||
|
now, you should expect limited data durability in case of power loss, as we are
|
||||||
|
aware of some inconsistencies on this point (which we describe in the following
|
||||||
|
and plan to solve).*
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
To assess performance improvements, we used the benchmark tool
|
||||||
|
[minio/warp](https://github.com/minio/warp) in a non-standard configuration,
|
||||||
|
adapted for small-scale tests, and we kept only the aggregated result named
|
||||||
|
"cluster total". The goal of this experiment is to get an idea of the cluster
|
||||||
|
performance with a standardized and mixed workload.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Plot showing IO performances of Garage configurations and Minio](io.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Minio, our reference point, gives us the best performances in this test.
|
||||||
|
Looking at Garage, we observe that each improvement we made had a visible
|
||||||
|
impact on performances. We also note that we have a progress margin in
|
||||||
|
terms of performances compared to Minio: additional benchmarks, tests, and
|
||||||
|
monitoring could help us better understand the remaining gap.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## A myriad of objects
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Object storage systems do not handle a single object but huge numbers of them:
|
||||||
|
Amazon claims to handle trillions of objects on their platform, and Red Hat
|
||||||
|
tout Ceph as being able to handle 10 billion objects. All these
|
||||||
|
objects must be tracked efficiently in the system to be fetched, listed,
|
||||||
|
removed, etc. In Garage, we use a "metadata engine" component to track them.
|
||||||
|
For this analysis, we compare different metadata engines in Garage and see how
|
||||||
|
well the best one scales to a million objects.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Testing metadata engines** - With Garage, we chose not to store metadata
|
||||||
|
directly on the filesystem, like Minio for example, but in a specialized on-disk
|
||||||
|
B-Tree data structure; in other words, in an embedded database engine. Until now,
|
||||||
|
the only supported option was [sled](https://sled.rs/), but we started having
|
||||||
|
serious issues with it - and we were not alone
|
||||||
|
([#284](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/284)). With Garage
|
||||||
|
v0.8, we introduce an abstraction semantic over the features we expect from our
|
||||||
|
database, allowing us to switch from one metadata back-end to another without touching
|
||||||
|
the rest of our codebase. We added two additional back-ends: LMDB
|
||||||
|
(through [heed](https://github.com/meilisearch/heed)) and SQLite
|
||||||
|
(using [Rusqlite](https://github.com/rusqlite/rusqlite)). **Keep in mind that they
|
||||||
|
are both experimental: contrarily to sled, we have yet to run them in production
|
||||||
|
for a significant time.**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Similarly to the impact of `fsync` on block writing, each database engine we use
|
||||||
|
has its own `fsync` policy. Sled flushes its writes every 2 seconds by
|
||||||
|
default (this is
|
||||||
|
[configurable](https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/documentation/reference-manual/configuration/#sled-flush-every-ms)).
|
||||||
|
LMDB default to an `fsync` on each write, which on early tests led to
|
||||||
|
abysmal performance. We thus added 2 flags,
|
||||||
|
[MDB\_NOSYNC](http://www.lmdb.tech/doc/group__mdb__env.html#ga5791dd1adb09123f82dd1f331209e12e)
|
||||||
|
and
|
||||||
|
[MDB\_NOMETASYNC](http://www.lmdb.tech/doc/group__mdb__env.html#ga5021c4e96ffe9f383f5b8ab2af8e4b16),
|
||||||
|
to deactivate `fsync` entirely. On SQLite, it is also possible to deactivate `fsync` with
|
||||||
|
`pragma synchronous = off`, but we have not started any optimization work on it yet:
|
||||||
|
our SQLite implementation currently still calls `fsync` for all write operations. Additionally, we are
|
||||||
|
using these engines through Rust bindings that do not support async Rust,
|
||||||
|
with which Garage is built, which has an impact on performance as well.
|
||||||
|
**Our comparison will therefore not reflect the raw performances of
|
||||||
|
these database engines, but instead, our integration choices.**
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Still, we think it makes sense to evaluate our implementations in their current
|
||||||
|
state in Garage. We designed a benchmark that is intensive on the metadata part
|
||||||
|
of the software, i.e. handling large numbers of tiny files. We chose again
|
||||||
|
`minio/warp` as a benchmark tool, but we
|
||||||
|
configured it with the smallest possible object size it supported, 256
|
||||||
|
bytes, to put pressure on the metadata engine. We evaluated sled twice:
|
||||||
|
with its default configuration, and with a configuration where we set a flush
|
||||||
|
interval of 10 minutes (longer than the test) to disable `fsync`.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*Note that S3 has not been designed for workloads that store huge numbers of small objects;
|
||||||
|
a regular database, like Cassandra, would be more appropriate. This test has
|
||||||
|
only been designed to stress our metadata engine and is not indicative of
|
||||||
|
real-world performances.*
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Plot of our metadata engines comparison with Warp](db_engine.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Unsurprisingly, we observe abysmal performances with SQLite, as it is the engine we did not put work on yet,
|
||||||
|
and that still does an `fsync` for each write. Garage with the `fsync`-disabled LMDB backend performs twice better than
|
||||||
|
with sled in its default version and 60% better than the "no `fsync`" sled version in our
|
||||||
|
benchmark. Furthermore, and not depicted on these plots, LMDB uses way less
|
||||||
|
disk storage and RAM; we would like to quantify that in the future. As we are
|
||||||
|
only at the very beginning of our work on metadata engines, it is hard to draw
|
||||||
|
strong conclusions. Still, we can say that SQLite is not ready for production
|
||||||
|
workloads, and that LMDB looks very promising both in terms of performances and resource
|
||||||
|
usage, and is a very good candidate for being Garage's default metadata engine in
|
||||||
|
future releases, once we figure out the proper `fsync` tuning. In the future, we will need to define a data policy for Garage to help us
|
||||||
|
arbitrate between performance and durability.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*To `fsync` or not to `fsync`? Performance is nothing without reliability, so we
|
||||||
|
need to better assess the impact of possibly losing a write after it has been validated.
|
||||||
|
Because Garage is a distributed system, even if a node loses its write due to a
|
||||||
|
power loss, it will fetch it back from the 2 other nodes that store it. But rare
|
||||||
|
situations can occur where 1 node is down and the 2 others validate the write and then
|
||||||
|
lose power before having time to flush to disk. What is our policy in this case? For storage durability,
|
||||||
|
we are already supposing that we never lose the storage of more than 2 nodes,
|
||||||
|
so should we also make the hypothesis that we won't lose power on more than 2 nodes at the same
|
||||||
|
time? What should we do about people hosting all of their nodes at the same
|
||||||
|
place without an uninterruptible power supply (UPS)? Historically, it seems that Minio developers also accepted
|
||||||
|
some compromises on this side
|
||||||
|
([#3536](https://github.com/minio/minio/issues/3536),
|
||||||
|
[HN Discussion](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28135533)). Now, they seem to
|
||||||
|
use a combination of `O_DSYNC` and `fdatasync(3p)` - a derivative that ensures
|
||||||
|
only data and not metadata is persisted on disk - in combination with
|
||||||
|
`O_DIRECT` for direct I/O
|
||||||
|
([discussion](https://github.com/minio/minio/discussions/14339#discussioncomment-2200274),
|
||||||
|
[example in Minio source](https://github.com/minio/minio/blob/master/cmd/xl-storage.go#L1928-L1932)).*
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Storing a million objects** - Object storage systems are designed not only
|
||||||
|
for data durability and availability but also for scalability, so naturally,
|
||||||
|
some people asked us how scalable Garage is. If giving a definitive answer to this
|
||||||
|
question is out of the scope of this study, we wanted to be sure that our
|
||||||
|
metadata engine would be able to scale to a million objects. To put this
|
||||||
|
target in context, it remains small compared to other industrial solutions:
|
||||||
|
Ceph claims to scale up to [10 billion objects](https://www.redhat.com/en/resources/data-solutions-overview),
|
||||||
|
which is 4 orders of magnitude more than our current target. Of course, their
|
||||||
|
benchmarking setup has nothing in common with ours, and their tests are way
|
||||||
|
more exhaustive.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
We wrote our own benchmarking tool for this test,
|
||||||
|
[s3billion](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/mknet/src/branch/main/benchmarks/s3billion)[^ref2].
|
||||||
|
The benchmark procedure consists in
|
||||||
|
concurrently sending a defined number of tiny objects (8192 objects of 16
|
||||||
|
bytes by default) and measuring the wall clock time to the last object upload. This step is then repeated a given
|
||||||
|
number of times (128 by default) to effectively create a target number of
|
||||||
|
objects on the cluster (1M by default). On our local setup with 3
|
||||||
|
nodes, both Minio and Garage with LMDB were able to achieve this target. In the
|
||||||
|
following plot, we show how much time it took Garage and Minio to handle
|
||||||
|
each batch.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Before looking at the plot, **you must keep in mind some important points regarding
|
||||||
|
the internals of both Minio and Garage**.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Minio has no metadata engine, it stores its objects directly on the filesystem.
|
||||||
|
Sending 1 million objects on Minio results in creating one million inodes on
|
||||||
|
the storage server in our current setup. So the performances of the filesystem
|
||||||
|
probably have a substantial impact on the observed results.
|
||||||
|
In our precise setup, we know that the
|
||||||
|
filesystem we used is not adapted at all for Minio (encryption layer, fixed
|
||||||
|
number of inodes, etc.). Additionally, we mentioned earlier that we deactivated
|
||||||
|
`fsync` for our metadata engine in Garage, whereas Minio has some `fsync` logic here slowing down the
|
||||||
|
creation of objects. Finally, object storage is designed for big objects, for which the
|
||||||
|
costs measured here are negligible. In the end, again, we use Minio only as a
|
||||||
|
reference point to understand what performance budget we have for each part of our
|
||||||
|
software.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Conversely, Garage has an optimization for small objects. Below 3KB, a separate file is
|
||||||
|
not created on the filesystem but the object is directly stored inline in the
|
||||||
|
metadata engine. In the future, we plan to evaluate how Garage behaves at scale with
|
||||||
|
objects above 3KB, which we expect to be way closer to Minio, as it will have to create
|
||||||
|
at least one inode per object. For now, we limit ourselves to evaluating our
|
||||||
|
metadata engine and focus only on 16-byte objects.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Showing the time to send 128 batches of 8192 objects for Minio and Garage](1million-both.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It appears that the performances of our metadata engine are acceptable, as we
|
||||||
|
have a comfortable margin compared to Minio (Minio is between 3x and 4x times
|
||||||
|
slower per batch). We also note that, past the 200k objects mark, Minio's
|
||||||
|
time to complete a batch of inserts is constant, while on Garage it still increases on the observed range.
|
||||||
|
It could be interesting to know if Garage's batch completion time would cross Minio's one
|
||||||
|
for a very large number of objects. If we reason per object, both Minio's and
|
||||||
|
Garage's performances remain very good: it takes respectively around 20ms and
|
||||||
|
5ms to create an object. In a real-world scenario, at 100 Mbps, the upload of a 10MB file takes
|
||||||
|
800ms, and goes up to 8sec for a 100MB file: in both cases
|
||||||
|
handling the object metadata would be only a fraction of the upload time. The
|
||||||
|
only cases where a difference would be noticeable would be when uploading a lot of very
|
||||||
|
small files at once, which again would be an unusual usage of the S3 API.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Let us now focus on Garage's metrics only to better see its specific behavior:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Showing the time to send 128 batches of 8192 objects for Garage only](1million.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Two effects are now more visible: 1., batch completion time increases with the
|
||||||
|
number of objects in the bucket and 2., measurements are scattered, at least
|
||||||
|
more than for Minio. We expected this batch completion time increase to be logarithmic,
|
||||||
|
but we don't have enough data points to conclude confidently it is the case: additional
|
||||||
|
measurements are needed. Concerning the observed instability, it could
|
||||||
|
be a symptom of what we saw with some other experiments on this setup,
|
||||||
|
which sometimes freezes under heavy I/O load. Such freezes could lead to
|
||||||
|
request timeouts and failures. If this occurs on our testing computer, it might
|
||||||
|
occur on other servers as well: it would be interesting to better understand this
|
||||||
|
issue, document how to avoid it, and potentially change how we handle I/O
|
||||||
|
internally in Garage. But still, this was a very heavy test that will probably not be encountered in
|
||||||
|
many setups: we were adding 273 objects per second for 30 minutes straight!
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
To conclude this part, Garage can ingest 1 million tiny objects while remaining
|
||||||
|
usable on our local setup. To put this result in perspective, our production
|
||||||
|
cluster at [deuxfleurs.fr](https://deuxfleurs) smoothly manages a bucket with
|
||||||
|
116k objects. This bucket contains real-world production data: it is used by our Matrix instance
|
||||||
|
to store people's media files (profile pictures, shared pictures, videos,
|
||||||
|
audio files, documents...). Thanks to this benchmark, we have identified two points
|
||||||
|
of vigilance: the increase of batch insert time with the number of existing
|
||||||
|
objects in the cluster in the observed range, and the volatility in our measured data that
|
||||||
|
could be a symptom of our system freezing under the load. Despite these two
|
||||||
|
points, we are confident that Garage could scale way above 1M objects, although
|
||||||
|
that remains to be proven.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## In an unpredictable world, stay resilient
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Supporting a variety of real-world networks and computers, especially ones that
|
||||||
|
were not designed for software-defined storage or even for server purposes, is the
|
||||||
|
core value proposition of Garage. For example, our production cluster is
|
||||||
|
hosted [on refurbished Lenovo Thinkcentre Tiny desktop computers](https://guide.deuxfleurs.fr/img/serv_neptune.jpg)
|
||||||
|
behind consumer-grade fiber links across France and Belgium (if you are reading this,
|
||||||
|
congratulation, you fetched this webpage from it!). That's why we are very
|
||||||
|
careful that our internal protocol (referred to as "RPC protocol" in our documentation)
|
||||||
|
remains as lightweight as possible. For this analysis, we quantify how network
|
||||||
|
latency and number of nodes in the cluster impact the duration of the most
|
||||||
|
important kinds of S3 requests.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Latency amplification** - With the kind of networks we use (consumer-grade
|
||||||
|
fiber links across the EU), the observed latency between nodes is in the 50ms range.
|
||||||
|
When latency is not negligible, you will observe that request completion
|
||||||
|
time is a factor of the observed latency. That's to be expected: in many cases, the
|
||||||
|
node of the cluster you are contacting cannot directly answer your request, and
|
||||||
|
has to reach other nodes of the cluster to get the data. Each
|
||||||
|
of these sequential remote procedure calls - or RPCs - adds to the final S3 request duration, which can quickly become
|
||||||
|
expensive. This ratio between request duration and network latency is what we
|
||||||
|
refer to as *latency amplification*.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
For example, on Garage, a `GetObject` request does two sequential calls: first,
|
||||||
|
it fetches the descriptor of the requested object from the metadata engine, which contains a reference
|
||||||
|
to the first block of data, and then only in a second step it can start retrieving data blocks
|
||||||
|
from storage nodes. We can therefore expect that the
|
||||||
|
request duration of a small `GetObject` request will be close to twice the
|
||||||
|
network latency.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
We tested the latency amplification theory with another benchmark of our own named
|
||||||
|
[s3lat](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/mknet/src/branch/main/benchmarks/s3lat)
|
||||||
|
which does a single request at a time on an endpoint and measures the response
|
||||||
|
time. As we are not interested in bandwidth but latency, all our requests
|
||||||
|
involving objects are made on tiny files of around 16 bytes. Our benchmark
|
||||||
|
tests 5 standard endpoints of the S3 API: ListBuckets, ListObjects, PutObject, GetObject and
|
||||||
|
RemoveObject. Here are the results:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Latency amplification](amplification.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
As Garage has been optimized for this use case from the very beginning, we don't see
|
||||||
|
any significant evolution from one version to another (Garage v0.7.3 and Garage
|
||||||
|
v0.8.0 Beta 1 here). Compared to Minio, these values are either similar (for
|
||||||
|
ListObjects and ListBuckets) or significantly better (for GetObject, PutObject, and
|
||||||
|
RemoveObject). This can be easily explained by the fact that Minio has not been designed with
|
||||||
|
environments with high latencies in mind. Instead, it is expected to run on clusters that are built
|
||||||
|
in a singe data center. In a multi-DC setup, different clusters could then possibly be interconnected with their asynchronous
|
||||||
|
[bucket replication](https://min.io/docs/minio/linux/administration/bucket-replication.html?ref=docs-redirect)
|
||||||
|
feature.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
*Minio also has a [multi-site active-active replication system](https://blog.min.io/minio-multi-site-active-active-replication/)
|
||||||
|
but it is even more sensitive to latency: "Multi-site replication has increased
|
||||||
|
latency sensitivity, as Minio does not consider an object as replicated until
|
||||||
|
it has synchronized to all configured remote targets. Replication latency is
|
||||||
|
therefore dictated by the slowest link in the replication mesh."*
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**A cluster with many nodes** - Whether you already have many compute nodes
|
||||||
|
with unused storage, need to store a lot of data, or are experimenting with unusual
|
||||||
|
system architectures, you might be interested in deploying over a hundred Garage nodes.
|
||||||
|
However, in some distributed systems, the number of nodes in the cluster will
|
||||||
|
have an impact on performance. Theoretically, our protocol, which is inspired by distributed
|
||||||
|
hash tables (DHT), should scale fairly well, but until now, we never took the time to test it
|
||||||
|
with a hundred nodes or more.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This test was run directly on Grid5000 with 6 physical servers spread
|
||||||
|
in 3 locations in France: Lyon, Rennes, and Nantes. On each server, we ran up
|
||||||
|
to 65 instances of Garage simultaneously, for a total of 390 nodes. The
|
||||||
|
network between physical servers is the dedicated network provided by
|
||||||
|
the Grid5000 community. Nodes on the same physical machine communicate directly
|
||||||
|
through the Linux network stack without any limitation. We are aware that this is a
|
||||||
|
weakness of this test, but we still think that this test can be relevant as, at
|
||||||
|
each step in the test, each instance of Garage has 83% (5/6) of its connections
|
||||||
|
that are made over a real network. To measure performances for each cluster size, we used
|
||||||
|
[s3lat](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/mknet/src/branch/main/benchmarks/s3lat)
|
||||||
|
again:
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
![Impact of response time with bigger clusters](complexity.png)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Up to 250 nodes, we observed response times that remain constant. After this threshold,
|
||||||
|
results become very noisy. By looking at the server resource usage, we saw
|
||||||
|
that their load started to become non-negligible: it seems that we are not
|
||||||
|
hitting a limit on the protocol side, but have simply exhausted the resource
|
||||||
|
of our testing nodes. In the future, we would like to run this experiment
|
||||||
|
again, but on many more physical nodes, to confirm our hypothesis. For now, we
|
||||||
|
are confident that a Garage cluster with 100+ nodes should work.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Conclusion and Future work
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
During this work, we identified some sensitive points on Garage,
|
||||||
|
on which we will have to continue working: our data durability target and interaction with the
|
||||||
|
filesystem (`O_DSYNC`, `fsync`, `O_DIRECT`, etc.) is not yet homogeneous across
|
||||||
|
our components; our new metadata engines (LMDB, SQLite) still need some testing
|
||||||
|
and tuning; and we know that raw I/O performances (GetObject and PutObject for large objects) have a small
|
||||||
|
improvement margin.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
At the same time, Garage has never been in better shape: its next version (version 0.8) will
|
||||||
|
see drastic improvements in terms of performance and reliability. We are
|
||||||
|
confident that Garage is already able to cover a wide range of deployment needs, up
|
||||||
|
to over a hundred nodes and millions of objects.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
In the future, on the performance aspect, we would like to evaluate the impact
|
||||||
|
of introducing an SRPT scheduler
|
||||||
|
([#361](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/issues/361)), define a data
|
||||||
|
durability policy and implement it, make a deeper and larger review of the
|
||||||
|
state of the art (Minio, Ceph, Swift, OpenIO, Riak CS, SeaweedFS, etc.) to
|
||||||
|
learn from them and, lastly, benchmark Garage at scale with possibly multiple
|
||||||
|
terabytes of data and billions of objects on long-lasting experiments.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
In the meantime, stay tuned: we have released
|
||||||
|
[a first release candidate for Garage v0.8](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/releases/tag/v0.8.0-rc1),
|
||||||
|
and are already working on several features for the next version.
|
||||||
|
For instance, we are working on a new layout that will have enhanced optimality properties,
|
||||||
|
as well as a theoretical proof of correctness
|
||||||
|
([#296](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/pulls/296)). We are also
|
||||||
|
working on a Python SDK for Garage's administration API
|
||||||
|
([#379](https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage/pulls/379)), and we will
|
||||||
|
soon officially introduce a new API (as a technical preview) named K2V
|
||||||
|
([see K2V on our doc for a primer](https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/documentation/reference-manual/k2v/)).
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Notes
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
[^ref1]: Yes, we are aware of [Jepsen](https://github.com/jepsen-io/jepsen)'s
|
||||||
|
existence. Jepsen is far more complex than our set of scripts, but
|
||||||
|
it is also way more versatile.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
[^ref2]: The program name contains the word "billion", although we only tested Garage
|
||||||
|
up to 1 million objects: this is not a typo, we were just a little bit too
|
||||||
|
enthusiastic when we wrote it ;)
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
<style>
|
||||||
|
.footnote-definition p { display: inline; }
|
||||||
|
</style>
|
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/io.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 189 KiB |
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/schema-streaming.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 49 KiB |
BIN
content/blog/2022-perf/ttfb.png
Normal file
After Width: | Height: | Size: 128 KiB |
|
@ -42,7 +42,7 @@
|
||||||
</div>
|
</div>
|
||||||
<div class="content mt-2">
|
<div class="content mt-2">
|
||||||
<div class="text-gray-700 text-lg not-italic">
|
<div class="text-gray-700 text-lg not-italic">
|
||||||
{{ page.summary | safe | striptags }}
|
{{ page.summary | striptags | safe }}
|
||||||
</div>
|
</div>
|
||||||
<a class="group font-semibold p-4 flex items-center space-x-1 text-garage-orange" href='{{ page.permalink }}'>
|
<a class="group font-semibold p-4 flex items-center space-x-1 text-garage-orange" href='{{ page.permalink }}'>
|
||||||
<div class="h-0.5 mt-0.5 w-4 group-hover:w-8 group-hover:bg-garage-gray transition-all bg-garage-orange"></div>
|
<div class="h-0.5 mt-0.5 w-4 group-hover:w-8 group-hover:bg-garage-gray transition-all bg-garage-orange"></div>
|
||||||
|
|