Ok, most of those make sense to me (I think the last two, and particularly the last one, are confounded by the fact couch will initiate read repair if it sees a lack of convergence, i.e, R to N* different revisions, and will perform the usual arbitrary-but-consistent winner algorithm right there).
So, what we want is not really r_met in the sense that fabric means it; which is the minimum number of responses to wait for before returning, regardless of whether they are the same revision or not. It’s as you said, did we see at least R responses with the same revision? Would we want additional nuance like whether the responses were so inconsistent that we ran read repair? This would distinguish the case where there are simply fewer than R responses (for nodes down / slow / partitioned) that are returning the same revision versus the case where all R to N* responses return different revisions. I’ll see how easy it is to return the first value while we ponder the other question. * I say "R to N" to mean fabric will wait for at least R responses (or timeout) but up to N responses (or timeout) if the responses vary. B. > On 4 Apr 2015, at 02:08, Mutton, James <[email protected]> wrote: > > * Report the number of r_met failed conditions to a statistical aggregator > for alerting or trending on client-visible behavior. > * Pause some operation for a time if possible, retry later. > * Possibly re-resolve and use another cluster that is more healthy or less > loaded > * Indicate some hidden failure or bug in how shards got moved around/restored > from down nodes > > </JamesM> > > On Apr 3, 2015, at 17:27, Robert Samuel Newson <[email protected]> wrote: > >> >> I’ve pushed an update to the fabric branch which accounts for when the r= >> value is higher than the number of replicas (so that it returns r_met:false) >> >> Changing this so that r_met is true only if R matching revisions are seen >> doesn’t sound too difficult. >> >> Where I struggle is seeing what a client can usefully do with this >> information. When you receive the r_met:false indication, however we end up >> conveying it, what will you do? Retry until r_met:true? >> >> B. >> >>> On 4 Apr 2015, at 00:55, Mutton, James <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Based on Paul’s description it sounds like we may need to decide 3 things >>> to close this out: >>> * What does satisfying R mean? >>> * What is the appropriate scope of when R is applied? >>> * How do we most appropriately convey the lack of R? >>> >>> I’m basing my opinions of R on W. W is satisfied when a write succeeds to >>> W nodes. For behavior to be consistent between R and W, R should be >>> considered to be met when R “matching” results have been found, if we treat >>> “matching” == “successful”. I believe this to be a more-correct >>> interpretation of R-W consistency then treating R-satisfied as >>> “found-but-not-matching” since it matches the complete positive of W's >>> “successfully-written”. For scope, W acts for both current versions and >>> historical revision updates (e.g. resolving conflicts). W also functions >>> in bulk operations so R should function in multi-key requests as well if >>> it’s to be consistent. >>> >>> The last question is how to appropriately convey lack of R. I tested these >>> branches to see that the _r_met was present, that worked. I also made some >>> quick modifications to return a 203 to see how some clients behaved. Here >>> are my test results: https://gist.github.com/jamutton/c823fdac328777e22646 >>> >>> I tested a few clients including an old version of couchdbkit and all >>> worked while the server was returning a 203 and/or the meta-field. A quick >>> test-with replication was mixed. I did a replicate into a couchdb 1.6 >>> machine and although I did see some errors, replication succeeded (the >>> errors were related to checkpointing the target and my 1.6 could have been >>> messed up). All that to say that where I tested it, returning a 203 on R >>> was accepted behavior by clients, just as returning a 202 on W. By no >>> means is that extensive but at least indicative. So, I think both >>> approaches, field and status-code, are possible for single key requests >>> (more on that in a second) and whether it’s status or field, I favor at >>> least having consistency with W. We could also have consistency by >>> converting W’s 202 to a to be an in-document meta field like _w_met and >>> only present when ?is_w_met=true is present on the query string. That >>> feels more drastic. >>> >>> So the last issue is for the bulk/multi-doc responses. Here the entire >>> approach of reads and writes diverges. Writes are still individual >>> doc-updates, whereas reads of multi-docs are basically a “view” even if >>> it’s all_docs. IMHO, views could be called out of scope for when R is >>> Applied. It doesn’t even descend into doc_open to apply R unless “keys” >>> are specified and normal views without include_docs would do the same IIRC. >>> This approach of calling all views out of scope because they could only >>> even be in scope under certain circumstances, leaves the door open still >>> for either a status-code or field (and again, if using a field it would be >>> more consistent API behavior to switch W to behave the same) >>> >>> Cheers, >>> </JamesM> >>> >>> On Apr 2, 2015, at 3:51, Robert Samuel Newson <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>> To move this along I have COUCHDB-2655 and three branches with a working >>>> solution; >>>> >>>> https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=couchdb-chttpd.git;h=b408ce5 >>>> https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=couchdb-couch.git;h=7d811d3 >>>> https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf?p=couchdb-fabric.git;h=90e9691 >>>> >>>> All three branches are called 2655-r-met if you want to try this locally >>>> (and please do!) >>>> >>>> Sample output; >>>> >>>> curl -v 'foo:bar@localhost:15984/db1/doc1?is_r_met=true' >>>> >>>> {"_id":"doc1","_rev":"1-967a00dff5e02add41819138abb3284d","_r_met":true} >>>> >>>> By making it opt-in, I think we avoid all the collateral damage that Paul >>>> was concerned about. >>>> >>>> B. >>>> >>>> >>>>> On 2 Apr 2015, at 10:36, Robert Samuel Newson <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Yeah, not a bad idea. An extra query arg (akin to open_revs=all, >>>>> conflicts=true, etc) would avoid compatibility breaks and would clearly >>>>> put the onus on those supplying it to tolerate the presence of the extra >>>>> reserved field. >>>>> >>>>> +1 >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>> On 2 Apr 2015, at 10:32, Benjamin Bastian <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> What about adding an optional query parameter to indicate whether or not >>>>>> Couch should include the _r_met flag in the document body/bodies >>>>>> (defaulting to false)? That wouldn't break older clients and it'd work >>>>>> for >>>>>> the bulk API as well. As far as the case where there are conflicts, it >>>>>> seems like the most intuitive thing would be for the "r" in "_r_met" to >>>>>> have the same semantic meaning as the "r" in "?r=" (i.e. "?r=" means >>>>>> "wait >>>>>> for r copies of the same doc rev until a timeout" and "_r_met" would mean >>>>>> "we got/didn't get r copies of the same doc rev within the timeout"). >>>>>> >>>>>> Just my two cents. >>>>>> >>>>>> On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 1:22 AM, Robert Samuel Newson <[email protected]> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Paul outlined his previous efforts to introduce this indication, and the >>>>>>> problems he faced doing so. Can we come up with an acceptable mechanism? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> A different status code will break a lot of users. While the http spec >>>>>>> says you can treat any 2xx code as success, plenty of libraries, etc, >>>>>>> only >>>>>>> recognise 201 / 202 as successful write and 200 (and maybe 204, 206) for >>>>>>> reads. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> My preference is for a change that "can’t" break anyone, which I think >>>>>>> only leaves an "X-CouchDB-R-Met: 2" response header, which isn’t the >>>>>>> most >>>>>>> pleasant thing. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Suggestions? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> B. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On 1 Apr 2015, at 06:55, Mutton, James <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> For at least my part of it, I agree with Adam. Bigcouch has made an >>>>>>> effort to inform in the case of a failure to apply W. I've seen it lead >>>>>>> to >>>>>>> confusion when the same logic was not applied on R. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I also agree that W and R are not binding contracts. There's no >>>>>>> agreement protocol to assure that W is met before being committed to >>>>>>> disk. >>>>>>> But they are exposed as a blocking parameter of the request, so >>>>>>> notification being consistent appeared to me to be the best compromise >>>>>>> (vs >>>>>>> straight up removal). >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> </JamesM> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On Mar 31, 2015, at 13:15, Robert Newson <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> If a way can be found that doesn't break things that can be sent in >>>>>>>>> all >>>>>>> or most cases, sure. It's what a user can really infer from that which I >>>>>>> focused on. Not as much, I think, as users that want that info really >>>>>>> want. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> On 31 Mar 2015, at 21:08, Adam Kocoloski <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> I hope we can all agree that CouchDB should inform the user when it >>>>>>>>>> is >>>>>>> unable to satisfy the requested read "quorum". >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Adam >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> On Mar 31, 2015, at 3:20 PM, Paul Davis >>>>>>>>>>> <[email protected]> >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> Sounds like there's a bit of confusion here. >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> What Nathan is asking for is the ability to have Couch respond with >>>>>>> some >>>>>>>>>>> information on the actual number of replicas that responded to a >>>>>>>>>>> read >>>>>>>>>>> request. That way a user could tell that they issued an r=2 request >>>>>>> when >>>>>>>>>>> only r=1 was actually performed. Depending on your point of view in >>>>>>> an MVCC >>>>>>>>>>> world this is either a bug or a feature. :) >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> It was generally agreed upon that if we could return this >>>>>>>>>>> information >>>>>>> it >>>>>>>>>>> would be beneficial. Although what happened when I started >>>>>>> implementing >>>>>>>>>>> this patch was that we are either only able to return it in a subset >>>>>>> of >>>>>>>>>>> cases where it happens, return it inconsistently between various >>>>>>> responses, >>>>>>>>>>> or break replication. >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> The three general methods for this would be to either include a new >>>>>>>>>>> "_r_met" key in the doc body that would be a boolean indicating if >>>>>>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>>>> requested read quorum was actually met for the document. The second >>>>>>> was to >>>>>>>>>>> return a custom X-R-Met type header, and lastly was the status code >>>>>>>>>>> as >>>>>>>>>>> described. >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> The _r_met member was thought to be the best, but unfortunately that >>>>>>> breaks >>>>>>>>>>> replication with older clients because we throw an error rather than >>>>>>> ignore >>>>>>>>>>> any unknown underscore prefixed field name. Thus having something >>>>>>> that was >>>>>>>>>>> just dynamically injected into the document body was a non-starter. >>>>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, if we don't inject into the document body then we >>>>>>>>>>> limit >>>>>>>>>>> ourselves to only the set of APIs where a single document is >>>>>>> returned. This >>>>>>>>>>> is due to both streaming semantics (we can't buffer an entire >>>>>>> response in >>>>>>>>>>> memory for large requests to _all_docs) as well as multi-doc >>>>>>> responses (a >>>>>>>>>>> single boolean doesn't say which document may have not had a >>>>>>>>>>> properly >>>>>>> met >>>>>>>>>>> R). >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> On top of that, the other confusing part of meeting the read quorum >>>>>>> is that >>>>>>>>>>> given MVCC semantics it becomes a bit confusing on how you respond >>>>>>>>>>> to >>>>>>>>>>> documents with different revision histories. For instance, if we >>>>>>>>>>> read >>>>>>> two >>>>>>>>>>> docs, we have technically made the r=2 requirement, but what should >>>>>>> our >>>>>>>>>>> response be if those two revisions are different (technically, in >>>>>>> this case >>>>>>>>>>> we wait for the third response, but the decision on what to return >>>>>>> for the >>>>>>>>>>> "r met" value is still unclear). >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> While I think everyone is in agreement that it'd be nice to return >>>>>>> some of >>>>>>>>>>> the information about the copies read, I think its much less clear >>>>>>> what and >>>>>>>>>>> how it should be returned in the multitude of cases that we can >>>>>>> specify an >>>>>>>>>>> value for R. >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> While that doesn't offer a concrete path forward, hopefully it >>>>>>> clarifies >>>>>>>>>>> some of the issues at hand. >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> On Tue, Mar 31, 2015 at 1:47 PM, Robert Samuel Newson < >>>>>>> [email protected]> >>>>>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> It’s testament to my friendship with Mike that we can disagree on >>>>>>> such >>>>>>>>>>>> things and remain friends. I am sorry he misled you, though. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> CouchDB 2.0 (like Cloudant) does not have read or write quorums at >>>>>>> all, at >>>>>>>>>>>> least in the formal sense, the only one that matters, this is >>>>>>> unfortunately >>>>>>>>>>>> sloppy language in too many places to correct. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> The r= and w= parameters control only how many of the n possible >>>>>>> responses >>>>>>>>>>>> are collected before returning an http response. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> It’s not true that returning 202 in the situation where one write >>>>>>>>>>>> is >>>>>>> made >>>>>>>>>>>> but fewer than 'r' writes are made means we’ve chosen availability >>>>>>> over >>>>>>>>>>>> consistency since even if we returned a 500 or closed the >>>>>>>>>>>> connection >>>>>>>>>>>> without responding, a subsequent GET could return the document (a >>>>>>>>>>>> probability that increases over time as anti-entropy makes the >>>>>>> missing >>>>>>>>>>>> copies). A write attempt that returned a 409 could, likewise, >>>>>>> introduce a >>>>>>>>>>>> new edit branch into the document, which might then 'win', altering >>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>>>>> results of a subsequent GET. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> The essential thing to remember is this: the ’n’ copies of your >>>>>>>>>>>> data >>>>>>> are >>>>>>>>>>>> completely independent when written/read by the clustered layer >>>>>>> (fabric). >>>>>>>>>>>> It is internal replication (anti-entropy) that converges those >>>>>>> copies, >>>>>>>>>>>> pair-wise, to the same eventual state. Fabric is converting the 3 >>>>>>>>>>>> independent results into a single result as best it can. Older >>>>>>> versions did >>>>>>>>>>>> not expose the 201 vs 202 distinction, calling both of them 201. I >>>>>>> do agree >>>>>>>>>>>> with you that there’s little value in the 202 distinction. About >>>>>>>>>>>> the >>>>>>> only >>>>>>>>>>>> thing you could do is investigate your cluster for connectivity >>>>>>> issues or >>>>>>>>>>>> overloading if you get a sustained period of 202’s, as it would be >>>>>>>>>>>> an >>>>>>>>>>>> indicator that the system is partitioned. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> In order to achieve your goals, CouchDB 2.0 would have to ensure >>>>>>> that the >>>>>>>>>>>> result of a write did not change after the fact. That is, >>>>>>> anti-entropy >>>>>>>>>>>> would need to be disabled, or somehow agree to roll forward or >>>>>>> backward >>>>>>>>>>>> based on the initial circumstances. In short, we’d have to >>>>>>>>>>>> introduce >>>>>>> strong >>>>>>>>>>>> consistency (paxos or raft or zab, say). While this would be a >>>>>>>>>>>> great >>>>>>>>>>>> feature to add, it’s not currently present, and no amount of >>>>>>> twiddling the >>>>>>>>>>>> status codes will achieve it. We’d rather be honest about our >>>>>>> position on >>>>>>>>>>>> the CAP triangle. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> B. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 30 Mar 2015, at 22:37, Nathan Vander Wilt < >>>>>>> [email protected]> >>>>>>>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> A technical co-founder of Cloudant agreed that this was a bug >>>>>>>>>>>>> when I >>>>>>>>>>>> first hit it a few years ago. I found back the original thread here >>>>>>> — this >>>>>>>>>>>> is the discussion I was trying to recall in my OP: >>>>>>>>>>>>> It sounds like perhaps there is a related issue tracked internally >>>>>>> at >>>>>>>>>>>> Cloudant as a result of that conversation. >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> JamesM, thanks for your support here and tracking this down. 203 >>>>>>> seemed >>>>>>>>>>>> like the best status code to "steal" for this to me too. Best >>>>>>>>>>>> wishes >>>>>>> in >>>>>>>>>>>> getting this fixed! >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> regards, >>>>>>>>>>>>> -natevw >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> On Mar 25, 2015, at 4:49 AM, Robert Newson <[email protected]> >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> 2.0 is explicitly an AP system, the behaviour you describe is not >>>>>>>>>>>> classified as a bug. >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Anti-entropy is the main reason that you cannot get strong >>>>>>> consistency >>>>>>>>>>>> from the system, it will transform "failed" writes (those that >>>>>>> succeeded on >>>>>>>>>>>> one node but fewer than R nodes) into success (N copies) as long as >>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>>>>> nodes have enough healthy uptime. >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> True of cloudant and 2.0. >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Sent from my iPhone >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 24 Mar 2015, at 15:14, Mutton, James <[email protected]> >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Funny you should mention it. I drafted an email in early >>>>>>> February to >>>>>>>>>>>> queue up the same discussion whenever I could get involved again >>>>>>> (which I >>>>>>>>>>>> promptly forgot about). What happens currently in 2.0 appears >>>>>>> unchanged >>>>>>>>>>>> from earlier versions. When R is not satisfied in fabric, >>>>>>>>>>>> fabric_doc_open:handle_message eventually responds with a {stop, …} >>>>>>> but >>>>>>>>>>>> leaves the acc-state as the original r_not_met which triggers a >>>>>>> read_repair >>>>>>>>>>>> from the response handler. read_repair results in an {ok, …} with >>>>>>> the only >>>>>>>>>>>> doc available, because no other docs are in the list. The final >>>>>>>>>>>> doc >>>>>>>>>>>> returned to chttpd_db:couch_doc_open and thusly to >>>>>>> chttpd_db:db_doc_req is >>>>>>>>>>>> simply {ok, Doc}, which has now lost the fact that the answer was >>>>>>>>>>>> not >>>>>>>>>>>> complete. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> This seems straightforward to fix by a change in >>>>>>>>>>>> fabric_open_doc:handle_response and read_repair. handle_response >>>>>>> knows >>>>>>>>>>>> whether it has R met and could pass that forward, or allow >>>>>>> read-repair to >>>>>>>>>>>> pass it forward if read_repair is able to satisfy acc.r. I can’t >>>>>>> speak for >>>>>>>>>>>> community interest in the behavior of sending a 202, but it’s >>>>>>> something I’d >>>>>>>>>>>> definitely like for the same reasons you cite. Plus it just seems >>>>>>>>>>>> disconnected to do it on writes but not reads. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Cheers, >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> </JamesM> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On Mar 24, 2015, at 14:06, Nathan Vander Wilt < >>>>>>>>>>>> [email protected]> wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Sorry, I have not been following CouchDB 2.0 roadmap but I was >>>>>>>>>>>> extending my fermata-couchdb plugin today and realized that perhaps >>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>>>>> Apache release of BigCouch as CouchDB 2.0 might provide an >>>>>>> opportunity to >>>>>>>>>>>> fix a serious issue I had using Cloudant's implementation. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> See >>>>>>>>>>>> https://github.com/cloudant/bigcouch/issues/55#issuecomment-30186518 >>>>>>> for >>>>>>>>>>>> some additional background/explanation, but my understanding is >>>>>>>>>>>> that >>>>>>>>>>>> Cloudant for all practical purposes ignores the read durability >>>>>>> parameter. >>>>>>>>>>>> So you can write with ?w=N to attempt some level of quorum, and get >>>>>>> a 202 >>>>>>>>>>>> back if that quorum is unment. _However_ when you ?r=N it really >>>>>>> doesn't >>>>>>>>>>>> matter if only <N nodes are available…if even just a single >>>>>>> available node >>>>>>>>>>>> has some version of the requested document you will get a >>>>>>>>>>>> successful >>>>>>>>>>>> response (!). >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> So in practice, there's no way to actually use the quasi-Dynamo >>>>>>>>>>>> features to dynamically _choose_ between consistency or >>>>>>>>>>>> availability >>>>>>> — when >>>>>>>>>>>> it comes time to read back a consistent result, BigCouch instead >>>>>>>>>>>> just >>>>>>>>>>>> always gives you availability* regardless of what a given request >>>>>>> actually >>>>>>>>>>>> needs. (In my usage I ended up treating a 202 write as a 500, >>>>>>>>>>>> rather >>>>>>> than >>>>>>>>>>>> proceeding with no way of ever knowing whether a write did NOT >>>>>>> ACTUALLY >>>>>>>>>>>> conflict or just hadn't YET because $who_knows_how_many nodes were >>>>>>> still >>>>>>>>>>>> down…) >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> IIRC, this was both confirmed and acknowledged as a serious bug >>>>>>> by a >>>>>>>>>>>> Cloudant engineer (or support personnel at least) but could not be >>>>>>> quickly >>>>>>>>>>>> fixed as it could introduce backwards-compatibility concerns. So… >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Is CouchDB 2.0 already breaking backwards compatibility with >>>>>>>>>>>> BigCouch? If true, could this read durability issue now be fixed >>>>>>> during the >>>>>>>>>>>> merge? >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> thanks, >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> -natevw >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> * DISCLAIMER: this statement has not been endorsed by actual >>>>>>> uptime >>>>>>>>>>>> of *any* Couch fork… >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >> >
