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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-20250?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17927105#comment-17927105
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Benedict Elliott Smith commented on CASSANDRA-20250:
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So, by my reading we have reduced the overhead of non-timer metrics by about 
80% ((8.65-4.69)/0.74)? That is great.

It looks like there's some minor improvements I can suggest when I get a 
moment, but I think this is a pretty good place from a performance perspective.

We can probably improve our reservoir performance if we want to, perhaps in a 
follow-up patch? For instance, we could have a small thread-local buffer of 
(time, latency) pairs that we periodically flush together, so that we amortise 
the memory latency costs. Or we could explore maintaining a per-thread 
HdrHistogram, that we periodically flush. This would be a good time to explore 
fully migrating to HdrHistogram, as it has built-in merge semantics iirc. I am 
not sure what the decayed version would look like there, but I am certain we 
could maintain a separate decayed HdrHistogram.

> 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, 5.1_tl4_profile_cpu.html, 
> Histogram_AtomicLong.png, 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.



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