redict/tests/unit/scan.tcl

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Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
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proc test_scan {type} {
test "{$type} SCAN basic" {
2013-10-30 06:34:01 -04:00
r flushdb
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
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populate 1000
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set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
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if {$cur == 0} break
}
set keys [lsort -unique $keys]
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assert_equal 1000 [llength $keys]
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
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test "{$type} SCAN COUNT" {
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r flushdb
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
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populate 1000
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set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur count 5]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
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if {$cur == 0} break
}
set keys [lsort -unique $keys]
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assert_equal 1000 [llength $keys]
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN MATCH" {
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r flushdb
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
2021-06-09 08:13:24 -04:00
populate 1000
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set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur match "key:1??"]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
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if {$cur == 0} break
}
set keys [lsort -unique $keys]
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assert_equal 100 [llength $keys]
}
2013-10-30 06:58:04 -04:00
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN TYPE" {
r flushdb
# populate only creates strings
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
2021-06-09 08:13:24 -04:00
populate 1000
# Check non-strings are excluded
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur type "list"]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
assert_equal 0 [llength $keys]
# Check strings are included
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur type "string"]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
assert_equal 1000 [llength $keys]
# Check all three args work together
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur type "string" match "key:*" count 10]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
assert_equal 1000 [llength $keys]
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN unknown type" {
r flushdb
# make sure that passive expiration is triggered by the scan
r debug set-active-expire 0
populate 1000
r hset hash f v
r pexpire hash 1
after 2
# TODO: remove this in redis 8.0
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur type "string1"]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
assert_equal 0 [llength $keys]
# make sure that expired key have been removed by scan command
assert_equal 1000 [scan [regexp -inline {keys\=([\d]*)} [r info keyspace]] keys=%d]
# TODO: uncomment in redis 8.0
#assert_error "*unknown type name*" {r scan 0 type "string1"}
# expired key will be no touched by scan command
#assert_equal 1001 [scan [regexp -inline {keys\=([\d]*)} [r info keyspace]] keys=%d]
r debug set-active-expire 1
} {OK} {needs:debug}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN with expired keys" {
r flushdb
# make sure that passive expiration is triggered by the scan
r debug set-active-expire 0
populate 1000
r set foo bar
r pexpire foo 1
# add a hash type key
r hset hash f v
r pexpire hash 1
after 2
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur count 10]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
assert_equal 1000 [llength $keys]
# make sure that expired key have been removed by scan command
assert_equal 1000 [scan [regexp -inline {keys\=([\d]*)} [r info keyspace]] keys=%d]
r debug set-active-expire 1
} {OK} {needs:debug}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN with expired keys with TYPE filter" {
r flushdb
# make sure that passive expiration is triggered by the scan
r debug set-active-expire 0
populate 1000
r set foo bar
r pexpire foo 1
# add a hash type key
r hset hash f v
r pexpire hash 1
after 2
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur type "string" count 10]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
assert_equal 1000 [llength $keys]
# make sure that expired key have been removed by scan command
assert_equal 1000 [scan [regexp -inline {keys\=([\d]*)} [r info keyspace]] keys=%d]
# TODO: uncomment in redis 8.0
# make sure that only the expired key in the type match will been removed by scan command
#assert_equal 1001 [scan [regexp -inline {keys\=([\d]*)} [r info keyspace]] keys=%d]
r debug set-active-expire 1
} {OK} {needs:debug}
foreach enc {intset listpack hashtable} {
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SSCAN with encoding $enc" {
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# Create the Set
r del set
if {$enc eq {intset}} {
set prefix ""
} else {
set prefix "ele:"
}
set count [expr {$enc eq "hashtable" ? 200 : 100}]
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set elements {}
for {set j 0} {$j < $count} {incr j} {
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lappend elements ${prefix}${j}
}
r sadd set {*}$elements
# Verify that the encoding matches.
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
2021-06-09 08:13:24 -04:00
assert_encoding $enc set
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# Test SSCAN
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r sscan set $cur]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
set keys [lsort -unique $keys]
assert_equal $count [llength $keys]
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}
}
2013-10-30 11:24:39 -04:00
foreach enc {listpack hashtable} {
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} HSCAN with encoding $enc" {
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# Create the Hash
r del hash
if {$enc eq {listpack}} {
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set count 30
} else {
set count 1000
}
set elements {}
for {set j 0} {$j < $count} {incr j} {
lappend elements key:$j $j
}
r hmset hash {*}$elements
# Verify that the encoding matches.
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
2021-06-09 08:13:24 -04:00
assert_encoding $enc hash
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# Test HSCAN
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r hscan hash $cur]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
set keys2 {}
foreach {k v} $keys {
assert {$k eq "key:$v"}
lappend keys2 $k
}
set keys2 [lsort -unique $keys2]
assert_equal $count [llength $keys2]
}
}
2013-10-30 11:25:47 -04:00
Replace all usage of ziplist with listpack for t_zset (#9366) Part two of implementing #8702 (zset), after #8887. ## Description of the feature Replaced all uses of ziplist with listpack in t_zset, and optimized some of the code to optimize performance. ## Rdb format changes New `RDB_TYPE_ZSET_LISTPACK` rdb type. ## Rdb loading improvements: 1) Pre-expansion of dict for validation of duplicate data for listpack and ziplist. 2) Simplifying the release of empty key objects when RDB loading. 3) Unify ziplist and listpack data verify methods for zset and hash, and move code to rdb.c. ## Interface changes 1) New `zset-max-listpack-entries` config is an alias for `zset-max-ziplist-entries` (same with `zset-max-listpack-value`). 2) OBJECT ENCODING will return listpack instead of ziplist. ## Listpack improvements: 1) Add `lpDeleteRange` and `lpDeleteRangeWithEntry` functions to delete a range of entries from listpack. 2) Improve the performance of `lpCompare`, converting from string to integer is faster than converting from integer to string. 3) Replace `snprintf` with `ll2string` to improve performance in converting numbers to strings in `lpGet()`. ## Zset improvements: 1) Improve the performance of `zzlFind` method, use `lpFind` instead of `lpCompare` in a loop. 2) Use `lpDeleteRangeWithEntry` instead of `lpDelete` twice to delete a element of zset. ## Tests 1) Add some unittests for `lpDeleteRange` and `lpDeleteRangeWithEntry` function. 2) Add zset RDB loading test. 3) Add benchmark test for `lpCompare` and `ziplsitCompare`. 4) Add empty listpack zset corrupt dump test.
2021-09-09 11:18:53 -04:00
foreach enc {listpack skiplist} {
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} ZSCAN with encoding $enc" {
2013-10-30 11:25:47 -04:00
# Create the Sorted Set
r del zset
Replace all usage of ziplist with listpack for t_zset (#9366) Part two of implementing #8702 (zset), after #8887. ## Description of the feature Replaced all uses of ziplist with listpack in t_zset, and optimized some of the code to optimize performance. ## Rdb format changes New `RDB_TYPE_ZSET_LISTPACK` rdb type. ## Rdb loading improvements: 1) Pre-expansion of dict for validation of duplicate data for listpack and ziplist. 2) Simplifying the release of empty key objects when RDB loading. 3) Unify ziplist and listpack data verify methods for zset and hash, and move code to rdb.c. ## Interface changes 1) New `zset-max-listpack-entries` config is an alias for `zset-max-ziplist-entries` (same with `zset-max-listpack-value`). 2) OBJECT ENCODING will return listpack instead of ziplist. ## Listpack improvements: 1) Add `lpDeleteRange` and `lpDeleteRangeWithEntry` functions to delete a range of entries from listpack. 2) Improve the performance of `lpCompare`, converting from string to integer is faster than converting from integer to string. 3) Replace `snprintf` with `ll2string` to improve performance in converting numbers to strings in `lpGet()`. ## Zset improvements: 1) Improve the performance of `zzlFind` method, use `lpFind` instead of `lpCompare` in a loop. 2) Use `lpDeleteRangeWithEntry` instead of `lpDelete` twice to delete a element of zset. ## Tests 1) Add some unittests for `lpDeleteRange` and `lpDeleteRangeWithEntry` function. 2) Add zset RDB loading test. 3) Add benchmark test for `lpCompare` and `ziplsitCompare`. 4) Add empty listpack zset corrupt dump test.
2021-09-09 11:18:53 -04:00
if {$enc eq {listpack}} {
2013-10-30 11:25:47 -04:00
set count 30
} else {
set count 1000
}
set elements {}
for {set j 0} {$j < $count} {incr j} {
lappend elements $j key:$j
}
r zadd zset {*}$elements
# Verify that the encoding matches.
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
2021-06-09 08:13:24 -04:00
assert_encoding $enc zset
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# Test ZSCAN
set cur 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r zscan zset $cur]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
}
set keys2 {}
foreach {k v} $keys {
assert {$k eq "key:$v"}
lappend keys2 $k
}
set keys2 [lsort -unique $keys2]
assert_equal $count [llength $keys2]
}
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN guarantees check under write load" {
r flushdb
Improve test suite to handle external servers better. (#9033) This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as part of the test fixture. This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options. However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests. Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues: * Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves, and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other tests. * Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors). This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands, limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc. The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this works. This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes: * Tests can now be tagged. * Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`. * More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests. * Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a global level and on a per-test file basis. * Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing (a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places). * Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests fail). * Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
2021-06-09 08:13:24 -04:00
populate 100
# We start scanning here, so keys from 0 to 99 should all be
# reported at the end of the iteration.
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cur]
set cur [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cur == 0} break
# Write 10 random keys at every SCAN iteration.
for {set j 0} {$j < 10} {incr j} {
r set addedkey:[randomInt 1000] foo
}
}
set keys2 {}
foreach k $keys {
if {[string length $k] > 6} continue
lappend keys2 $k
}
set keys2 [lsort -unique $keys2]
assert_equal 100 [llength $keys2]
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SSCAN with integer encoded object (issue #1345)" {
set objects {1 a}
r del set
r sadd set {*}$objects
set res [r sscan set 0 MATCH *a* COUNT 100]
assert_equal [lsort -unique [lindex $res 1]] {a}
set res [r sscan set 0 MATCH *1* COUNT 100]
assert_equal [lsort -unique [lindex $res 1]] {1}
}
2013-11-05 09:19:44 -05:00
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SSCAN with PATTERN" {
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r del mykey
r sadd mykey foo fab fiz foobar 1 2 3 4
set res [r sscan mykey 0 MATCH foo* COUNT 10000]
lsort -unique [lindex $res 1]
} {foo foobar}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} HSCAN with PATTERN" {
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r del mykey
r hmset mykey foo 1 fab 2 fiz 3 foobar 10 1 a 2 b 3 c 4 d
set res [r hscan mykey 0 MATCH foo* COUNT 10000]
lsort -unique [lindex $res 1]
} {1 10 foo foobar}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} ZSCAN with PATTERN" {
2013-11-05 09:19:44 -05:00
r del mykey
r zadd mykey 1 foo 2 fab 3 fiz 10 foobar
set res [r zscan mykey 0 MATCH foo* COUNT 10000]
lsort -unique [lindex $res 1]
}
2014-12-03 04:38:56 -05:00
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} ZSCAN scores: regression test for issue #2175" {
2014-12-03 04:38:56 -05:00
r del mykey
for {set j 0} {$j < 500} {incr j} {
r zadd mykey 9.8813129168249309e-323 $j
}
set res [lindex [r zscan mykey 0] 1]
set first_score [lindex $res 1]
assert {$first_score != 0}
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
test "{$type} SCAN regression test for issue #4906" {
for {set k 0} {$k < 100} {incr k} {
r del set
r sadd set x; # Make sure it's not intset encoded
set toremove {}
unset -nocomplain found
array set found {}
# Populate the set
set numele [expr {101+[randomInt 1000]}]
for {set j 0} {$j < $numele} {incr j} {
r sadd set $j
if {$j >= 100} {
lappend toremove $j
}
}
# Start scanning
set cursor 0
set iteration 0
set del_iteration [randomInt 10]
while {!($cursor == 0 && $iteration != 0)} {
lassign [r sscan set $cursor] cursor items
# Mark found items. We expect to find from 0 to 99 at the end
# since those elements will never be removed during the scanning.
foreach i $items {
set found($i) 1
}
incr iteration
# At some point remove most of the items to trigger the
# rehashing to a smaller hash table.
if {$iteration == $del_iteration} {
r srem set {*}$toremove
}
}
# Verify that SSCAN reported everything from 0 to 99
for {set j 0} {$j < 100} {incr j} {
if {![info exists found($j)]} {
fail "SSCAN element missing $j"
}
}
}
}
test "{$type} SCAN MATCH pattern implies cluster slot" {
# Tests the code path for an optimization for patterns like "{foo}-*"
# which implies that all matching keys belong to one slot.
r flushdb
for {set j 0} {$j < 100} {incr j} {
r set "{foo}-$j" "foo"; # slot 12182
r set "{bar}-$j" "bar"; # slot 5061
r set "{boo}-$j" "boo"; # slot 13142
}
set cursor 0
set keys {}
while 1 {
set res [r scan $cursor match "{foo}-*"]
set cursor [lindex $res 0]
set k [lindex $res 1]
lappend keys {*}$k
if {$cursor == 0} break
}
set keys [lsort -unique $keys]
assert_equal 100 [llength $keys]
}
2013-10-30 06:34:01 -04:00
}
Replace cluster metadata with slot specific dictionaries (#11695) This is an implementation of https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10589 that eliminates 16 bytes per entry in cluster mode, that are currently used to create a linked list between entries in the same slot. Main idea is splitting main dictionary into 16k smaller dictionaries (one per slot), so we can perform all slot specific operations, such as iteration, without any additional info in the `dictEntry`. For Redis cluster, the expectation is that there will be a larger number of keys, so the fixed overhead of 16k dictionaries will be The expire dictionary is also split up so that each slot is logically decoupled, so that in subsequent revisions we will be able to atomically flush a slot of data. ## Important changes * Incremental rehashing - one big change here is that it's not one, but rather up to 16k dictionaries that can be rehashing at the same time, in order to keep track of them, we introduce a separate queue for dictionaries that are rehashing. Also instead of rehashing a single dictionary, cron job will now try to rehash as many as it can in 1ms. * getRandomKey - now needs to not only select a random key, from the random bucket, but also needs to select a random dictionary. Fairness is a major concern here, as it's possible that keys can be unevenly distributed across the slots. In order to address this search we introduced binary index tree). With that data structure we are able to efficiently find a random slot using binary search in O(log^2(slot count)) time. * Iteration efficiency - when iterating dictionary with a lot of empty slots, we want to skip them efficiently. We can do this using same binary index that is used for random key selection, this index allows us to find a slot for a specific key index. For example if there are 10 keys in the slot 0, then we can quickly find a slot that contains 11th key using binary search on top of the binary index tree. * scan API - in order to perform a scan across the entire DB, the cursor now needs to not only save position within the dictionary but also the slot id. In this change we append slot id into LSB of the cursor so it can be passed around between client and the server. This has interesting side effect, now you'll be able to start scanning specific slot by simply providing slot id as a cursor value. The plan is to not document this as defined behavior, however. It's also worth nothing the SCAN API is now technically incompatible with previous versions, although practically we don't believe it's an issue. * Checksum calculation optimizations - During command execution, we know that all of the keys are from the same slot (outside of a few notable exceptions such as cross slot scripts and modules). We don't want to compute the checksum multiple multiple times, hence we are relying on cached slot id in the client during the command executions. All operations that access random keys, either should pass in the known slot or recompute the slot. * Slot info in RDB - in order to resize individual dictionaries correctly, while loading RDB, it's not enough to know total number of keys (of course we could approximate number of keys per slot, but it won't be precise). To address this issue, we've added additional metadata into RDB that contains number of keys in each slot, which can be used as a hint during loading. * DB size - besides `DBSIZE` API, we need to know size of the DB in many places want, in order to avoid scanning all dictionaries and summing up their sizes in a loop, we've introduced a new field into `redisDb` that keeps track of `key_count`. This way we can keep DBSIZE operation O(1). This is also kept for O(1) expires computation as well. ## Performance This change improves SET performance in cluster mode by ~5%, most of the gains come from us not having to maintain linked lists for keys in slot, non-cluster mode has same performance. For workloads that rely on evictions, the performance is similar because of the extra overhead for finding keys to evict. RDB loading performance is slightly reduced, as the slot of each key needs to be computed during the load. ## Interface changes * Removed `overhead.hashtable.slot-to-keys` to `MEMORY STATS` * Scan API will now require 64 bits to store the cursor, even on 32 bit systems, as the slot information will be stored. * New RDB version to support the new op code for SLOT information. --------- Co-authored-by: Vitaly Arbuzov <arvit@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Roshan Khatri <rvkhatri@amazon.com> Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2023-10-15 02:58:26 -04:00
start_server {tags {"scan network standalone"}} {
test_scan "standalone"
}
start_cluster 1 0 {tags {"external:skip cluster scan"}} {
test_scan "cluster"
}