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Benedict Elliott Smith commented on CASSANDRA-20250: ---------------------------------------------------- Also, we can initially just stick with {{long[]}} and explore optimisations in follow-up. I think we can probably quite easily keep the number of metrics per thread manageable by slicing the global metric address range, and perhaps in this case we don't even need to worry about halving the memory consumption. I think it's entirely possible we will come out ahead without any optimisations in all systems that don't have an absurdly high number of threads, and there are several easy optimisations, of which this is only one. > Provide the ability to disable specific metrics collection > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: CASSANDRA-20250 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-20250 > Project: Apache Cassandra > Issue Type: New Feature > Components: Observability/Metrics > Reporter: Dmitry Konstantinov > Assignee: Dmitry Konstantinov > Priority: Normal > Attachments: 5.1_profile_cpu.html, > 5.1_profile_cpu_without_metrics.html, async_profiler_cpu_profiles.zip, > cpu_profile_insert.html, jmh-result.json, vmstat.log, > vmstat_without_metrics.log > > > Cassandra has a lot of metrics collected, many of them are collected per > table, so their instance number is multiplied by number of tables. From one > side it gives a better observability, from another side metrics are not for > free, there is an overhead associated with them: > 1) CPU overhead: in case of simple CPU bound load: I already see like 5.5% of > total CPU spent for metrics in cpu framegraphs for read load and 11% for > write load. > Example: [^cpu_profile_insert.html] (search by "codahale" pattern). The > framegraph is captured using Async profiler build: > async-profiler-3.0-29ee888-linux-x64 > 2) memory overhead: we spend memory for entities used to aggregate metrics > such as LongAdders and reservoirs + for MBeans (String concatenation within > object names is a major cause of it, for each table+metric name combination a > new String is created) > > The idea of this ticket is to allow an operator to configure a list of > disabled metrics in cassandra.yaml, like: > {code:java} > disabled_metrics: > - metric_a > - metric_b > {code} > From implementation point of view I see two possible approaches (which can be > combined): > # Generic: when a metric is registering if it is listed in disabled_metrics > we do not publish it via JMX and provide a noop implementation of metric > object (such as histogram) for it. > Logging analogy: log level check within log method > # Specialized: for some metrics the process of value calculation is not for > free and introduces an overhead as well, in such cases it would be useful to > check within specific logic using an API (like: isMetricEnabled) do we need > to do it. Example of such metric: > ClientRequestSizeMetrics.recordRowAndColumnCountMetrics > Logging analogy: an explicit 'if (isDebugEnabled())' condition used when a > message parameter is expensive. -- This message was sent by Atlassian Jira (v8.20.10#820010) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: commits-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: commits-h...@cassandra.apache.org