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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-8630?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14727483#comment-14727483
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Joshua McKenzie commented on CASSANDRA-8630:
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In regards to the interrelationship of both. It's really not hard to get
correct (from an NTFS perspective), just that if it's not on our radar (and we
don't run tests on Windows) we can come up with some surprises. My thought is
that any time we change either a) file rename/deletion code or b) mmap code, we
should run the tests on Windows just as a sanity check. Better to find out in
advance than after a commit and who knows what other little "gifts" the
platform has for us in the future? :)
> Faster sequential IO (on compaction, streaming, etc)
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: CASSANDRA-8630
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-8630
> Project: Cassandra
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Components: Core, Tools
> Reporter: Oleg Anastasyev
> Assignee: Stefania
> Labels: compaction, performance
> Fix For: 3.x
>
> Attachments: 8630-FasterSequencialReadsAndWrites.txt, cpu_load.png,
> flight_recorder_001_files.tar.gz, flight_recorder_002_files.tar.gz,
> mmaped_uncomp_hotspot.png
>
>
> When node is doing a lot of sequencial IO (streaming, compacting, etc) a lot
> of CPU is lost in calls to RAF's int read() and DataOutputStream's write(int).
> This is because default implementations of readShort,readLong, etc as well as
> their matching write* are implemented with numerous calls of byte by byte
> read and write.
> This makes a lot of syscalls as well.
> A quick microbench shows than just reimplementation of these methods in
> either way gives 8x speed increase.
> A patch attached implements RandomAccessReader.read<Type> and
> SequencialWriter.write<Type> methods in more efficient way.
> I also eliminated some extra byte copies in CompositeType.split and
> ColumnNameHelper.maxComponents, which were on my profiler's hotspot method
> list during tests.
> A stress tests on my laptop show that this patch makes compaction 25-30%
> faster on uncompressed sstables and 15% faster for compressed ones.
> A deployment to production shows much less CPU load for compaction.
> (I attached a cpu load graph from one of our production, orange is niced CPU
> load - i.e. compaction; yellow is user - i.e. not compaction related tasks)
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