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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-12269?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15392169#comment-15392169
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T Jake Luciani commented on CASSANDRA-12269:
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bq. Rather than creating utility classes for setting values we can use
references or optionals or, better, declare a small class that implements
the interface and store these values as class fields.
The problem is none of these work with native types like int and boolean. So
unless I'm missing something the wrapper approach is what I went with.
> Faster write path
> -----------------
>
> Key: CASSANDRA-12269
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-12269
> Project: Cassandra
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Reporter: T Jake Luciani
> Assignee: T Jake Luciani
> Fix For: 3.10
>
>
> The new storage engine (CASSANDRA-8099) has caused a regression in write
> performance. This ticket is to address it and bring 3.0 as close to 2.2 as
> possible. There are four main reasons for this I've discovered after much
> toil:
> 1. The cost of calculating the size of a serialized row is higher now since
> we no longer have the cell name and value managed as ByteBuffers as we did
> pre-3.0. That means we current re-serialize the row twice, once to calculate
> the size and once to write the data. This happens during the SSTable writes
> and was addressed in CASSANDRA-9766.
> Double serialization is also happening in CommitLog and the
> MessagingService. We need to apply the same techniques to these as we did to
> the SSTable serialization.
> 2. Even after fixing (1) there is still an issue with there being more GC
> pressure and CPU usage in 3.0 due to the fact that we encode everything from
> the {{Column}} to the {{Row}} to the {{Partition}} as a {{BTree}}.
> Specifically, the {{BTreeSearchIterator}} is used for all iterator() methods.
> Both these classes are useful for efficient removal and searching of the
> trees but in the case of SerDe we almost always want to simply walk the
> entire tree forwards or reversed and apply a function to each element. To
> that end, we can use lambdas and do this without any extra classes.
> 3. We use a lot of thread locals and check them constantly on the read/write
> paths. For client warnings, tracing, temp buffers, etc. We should move all
> thread locals to FastThreadLocals and threads to FastThreadLocalThreads.
> 4. We changed the memtable flusher defaults in 3.2 that caused a regression
> see: CASSANDRA-12228
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