I modified the WIKI page to incorporate the feedbacks from mailing list and KIP hangout.
- Added the deprecation plan for TIMEOUT_CONFIG - Added the actions to take after request timeout I finally chose to create a new connection if requests timeout. The reason is: 1. In most cases, if a broker is just slow, as long as we set request timeout to be a reasonable value, we should not see many new connections get created. 2. If a broker is down, hopefully metadata refresh will find the new broker and we will not try to reconnect to the broker anymore. Comments are welcome! Thanks. Jiangjie (Becket) Qin On 5/12/15, 2:59 PM, "Mayuresh Gharat" <gharatmayures...@gmail.com> wrote: >+1 Becket. That would give enough time for clients to move. We should make >this change very clear. > >Thanks, > >Mayuresh > >On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 1:45 PM, Jiangjie Qin <j...@linkedin.com.invalid> >wrote: > >> Hey Ewen, >> >> Very good summary about the compatibility. What you proposed makes >>sense. >> So basically we can do the following: >> >> In next release, i.e. 0.8.3: >> 1. Add REPLICATION_TIMEOUT_CONFIG (“replication.timeout.ms”) >> 2. Mark TIMEOUT_CONFIG as deprecated >> 3. Override REPLICATION_TIMEOUT_CONFIG with TIMEOUT_CONFIG if it is >> defined and give a warning about deprecation. >> In the release after 0.8.3, we remove TIMEOUT_CONFIG. >> >> This should give enough buffer for this change. >> >> Request timeout is a complete new thing we add to fix a bug, I’m with >>you >> it does not make sense to have it maintain the old buggy behavior. So we >> can set it to a reasonable value instead of infinite. >> >> Jiangjie (Becket) Qin >> >> On 5/12/15, 12:03 PM, "Ewen Cheslack-Postava" <e...@confluent.io> wrote: >> >> >I think my confusion is coming from this: >> > >> >> So in this KIP, we only address (3). The only public interface change >> >>is a >> >> new configuration of request timeout (and maybe change the >>configuration >> >> name of TIMEOUT_CONFIG to REPLICATION_TIMEOUT_CONFIG). >> > >> >There are 3 possible compatibility issues I see here: >> > >> >* I assumed this meant the constants also change, so "timeout.ms" >>becomes >> >" >> >replication.timeout.ms". This breaks config files that worked on the >> >previous version and the only warning would be in release notes. We do >> >warn >> >about unused configs so they might notice the problem. >> > >> >* Binary and source compatibility if someone configures their client in >> >code and uses the TIMEOUT_CONFIG variable. Renaming it will cause >>existing >> >jars to break if you try to run against an updated client (which seems >>not >> >very significant since I doubt people upgrade these without recompiling >> >but >> >maybe I'm wrong about that). And it breaks builds without have >>deprecated >> >that field first, which again, is probably not the biggest issue but is >> >annoying for users and when we accidentally changed the API we >>received a >> >complaint about breaking builds. >> > >> >* Behavior compatibility as Jay mentioned on the call -- setting the >> >config >> >(even if the name changed) doesn't have the same effect it used to. >> > >> >One solution, which admittedly is more painful to implement and >>maintain, >> >would be to maintain the timeout.ms config, have it override the others >> if >> >it is specified (including an infinite request timeout I guess?), and >>if >> >it >> >isn't specified, we can just use the new config variables. Given a real >> >deprecation schedule, users would have better warning of changes and a >> >window to make the changes. >> > >> >I actually think it might not be necessary to maintain the old behavior >> >precisely, although maybe for some code it is an issue if they start >> >seeing >> >timeout exceptions that they wouldn't have seen before? >> > >> >-Ewen >> > >> >On Wed, May 6, 2015 at 6:06 PM, Jun Rao <j...@confluent.io> wrote: >> > >> >> Jiangjie, >> >> >> >> Yes, I think using metadata timeout to expire batches in the record >> >> accumulator makes sense. >> >> >> >> Thanks, >> >> >> >> Jun >> >> >> >> On Mon, May 4, 2015 at 10:32 AM, Jiangjie Qin >> >><j...@linkedin.com.invalid> >> >> wrote: >> >> >> >> > I incorporated Ewen and Guozhang’s comments in the KIP page. Want >>to >> >> speed >> >> > up on this KIP because currently we experience mirror-maker hung >>very >> >> > likely when a broker is down. >> >> > >> >> > I also took a shot to solve KAFKA-1788 in KAFKA-2142. I used >>metadata >> >> > timeout to expire the batches which are sitting in accumulator >>without >> >> > leader info. I did that because the situation there is essentially >> >> missing >> >> > metadata. >> >> > >> >> > As a summary of what I am thinking about the timeout in new >>Producer: >> >> > >> >> > 1. Metadata timeout: >> >> > - used in send(), blocking >> >> > - used in accumulator to expire batches with timeout exception. >> >> > 2. Linger.ms >> >> > - Used in accumulator to ready the batch for drain >> >> > 3. Request timeout >> >> > - Used in NetworkClient to expire a batch and retry if no >>response >> >>is >> >> > received for a request before timeout. >> >> > >> >> > So in this KIP, we only address (3). The only public interface >>change >> >>is >> >> a >> >> > new configuration of request timeout (and maybe change the >> >>configuration >> >> > name of TIMEOUT_CONFIG to REPLICATION_TIMEOUT_CONFIG). >> >> > >> >> > Would like to see what people think of above approach? >> >> > >> >> > Jiangjie (Becket) Qin >> >> > >> >> > On 4/20/15, 6:02 PM, "Jiangjie Qin" <j...@linkedin.com> wrote: >> >> > >> >> > >Jun, >> >> > > >> >> > >I thought a little bit differently on this. >> >> > >Intuitively, I am thinking that if a partition is offline, the >> >>metadata >> >> > >for that partition should be considered not ready because we don’t >> >>know >> >> > >which broker we should send the message to. So those sends need >>to be >> >> > >blocked on metadata timeout. >> >> > >Another thing I’m wondering is in which scenario an offline >>partition >> >> will >> >> > >become online again in a short period of time and how likely it >>will >> >> > >occur. My understanding is that the batch timeout for batches >> >>sitting in >> >> > >accumulator should be larger than linger.ms but should not be too >> >>long >> >> > >(e.g. less than 60 seconds). Otherwise it will exhaust the shared >> >>buffer >> >> > >with batches to be aborted. >> >> > > >> >> > >That said, I do agree it is reasonable to buffer the message for >>some >> >> time >> >> > >so messages to other partitions can still get sent. But adding >> >>another >> >> > >expiration in addition to linger.ms - which is essentially a >>timeout >> >>- >> >> > >sounds a little bit confusing. Maybe we can do this, let the batch >> >>sit >> >> in >> >> > >accumulator up to linger.ms, then fail it if necessary. >> >> > > >> >> > >What do you think? >> >> > > >> >> > >Thanks, >> >> > > >> >> > >Jiangjie (Becket) Qin >> >> > > >> >> > >On 4/20/15, 1:11 PM, "Jun Rao" <j...@confluent.io> wrote: >> >> > > >> >> > >>Jiangjie, >> >> > >> >> >> > >>Allowing messages to be accumulated in an offline partition >>could be >> >> > >>useful >> >> > >>since the partition may become available before the request >>timeout >> >>or >> >> > >>linger time is reached. Now that we are planning to add a new >> >>timeout, >> >> it >> >> > >>would be useful to think through whether/how that applies to >> >>messages >> >> in >> >> > >>the accumulator too. >> >> > >> >> >> > >>Thanks, >> >> > >> >> >> > >>Jun >> >> > >> >> >> > >> >> >> > >>On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 1:02 PM, Jiangjie Qin >> >> <j...@linkedin.com.invalid >> >> > > >> >> > >>wrote: >> >> > >> >> >> > >>> Hi Harsha, >> >> > >>> >> >> > >>> Took a quick look at the patch. I think it is still a little >>bit >> >> > >>> different. KAFKA-1788 only handles the case where a batch >>sitting >> >>in >> >> > >>> accumulator for too long. The KIP is trying to solve the issue >> >>where >> >> a >> >> > >>> batch has already been drained from accumulator and sent to >> >>broker. >> >> > >>> We might be able to apply timeout on batch level to merge those >> >>two >> >> > >>>cases >> >> > >>> as Ewen suggested. But I’m not sure if it is a good idea to >>allow >> >> > >>>messages >> >> > >>> whose target partition is offline to sit in accumulator in the >> >>first >> >> > >>>place. >> >> > >>> >> >> > >>> Jiangjie (Becket) Qin >> >> > >>> >> >> > >>> On 4/16/15, 10:19 AM, "Sriharsha Chintalapani" >><ka...@harsha.io> >> >> > wrote: >> >> > >>> >> >> > >>> >Guozhang and Jiangjie, >> >> > >>> > Isn’t this work being covered in >> >> > >>> >https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-1788 . Can you >> please >> >> the >> >> > >>> >review the patch there. >> >> > >>> >Thanks, >> >> > >>> >Harsha >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >On April 15, 2015 at 10:39:40 PM, Guozhang Wang >> >>(wangg...@gmail.com >> >> ) >> >> > >>> >wrote: >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >Thanks for the update Jiangjie, >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >I think it is actually NOT expected that hardware >>disconnection >> >>will >> >> > >>>be >> >> > >>> >detected by the selector, but rather will only be revealed >>upon >> >>TCP >> >> > >>> >timeout, which could be hours. >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >A couple of comments on the wiki: >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >1. "For KafkaProducer.close() and KafkaProducer.flush() we >>need >> >>the >> >> > >>> >request >> >> > >>> >timeout as implict timeout." I am not very clear what does >>this >> >> mean? >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >2. Currently the producer already has a "TIMEOUT_CONFIG" which >> >> should >> >> > >>> >really be "REPLICATION_TIMEOUT_CONFIG". So if we decide to >>add " >> >> > >>> >REQUEST_TIMEOUT_CONFIG", I suggest we also make this renaming: >> >> > >>>admittedly >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >it will change the config names but will reduce confusions >>moving >> >> > >>> >forward. >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >Guozhang >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 6:48 PM, Jiangjie Qin >> >> > >>><j...@linkedin.com.invalid> >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >wrote: >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >> Checked the code again. It seems that the disconnected >>channel >> >>is >> >> > >>>not >> >> > >>> >> detected by selector as expected. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> Currently we are depending on the >> >> > >>> >> o.a.k.common.network.Selector.disconnected set to see if we >> >>need >> >> to >> >> > >>>do >> >> > >>> >> something for a disconnected channel. >> >> > >>> >> However Selector.disconnected set is only updated when: >> >> > >>> >> 1. A write/read/connect to channel failed. >> >> > >>> >> 2. A Key is canceled >> >> > >>> >> However when a broker is down before it sends back the >> >>response, >> >> the >> >> > >>> >> client seems not be able to detect this failure. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> I did a simple test below: >> >> > >>> >> 1. Run a selector on one machine and an echo server on >>another >> >> > >>>machine. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> Connect a selector to an echo server >> >> > >>> >> 2. Send a message to echo server using selector, then let >>the >> >> > >>>selector >> >> > >>> >> poll() every 10 seconds. >> >> > >>> >> 3. After the sever received the message, unplug cable on the >> >>echo >> >> > >>> >>server. >> >> > >>> >> 4. After waiting for 45 min. The selector still did not >> >>detected >> >> the >> >> > >>> >> network failure. >> >> > >>> >> Lsof on selector machine shows that the TCP connection is >>still >> >> > >>> >>considered >> >> > >>> >> ESTABLISHED. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> I’m not sure in this case what should we expect from the >> >> > >>> >> java.nio.channels.Selector. According to the document, the >> >> selector >> >> > >>> >>does >> >> > >>> >> not verify the status of the associated channel. In my test >> >>case >> >> it >> >> > >>> >>looks >> >> > >>> >> even worse that OS did not think of the socket has been >> >> > >>>disconnected. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> Anyway. It seems adding the client side request timeout is >> >> > >>>necessary. >> >> > >>> >>I’ve >> >> > >>> >> updated the KIP page to clarify the problem we want to solve >> >> > >>>according >> >> > >>> >>to >> >> > >>> >> Ewen’s comments. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> Thanks. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> Jiangjie (Becket) Qin >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> On 4/14/15, 3:38 PM, "Ewen Cheslack-Postava" >> >><e...@confluent.io> >> >> > >>>wrote: >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >On Tue, Apr 14, 2015 at 1:57 PM, Jiangjie Qin >> >> > >>> >><j...@linkedin.com.invalid> >> >> > >>> >> >wrote: >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> Hi Ewen, thanks for the comments. Very good points! >>Please >> >>see >> >> > >>> >>replies >> >> > >>> >> >> inline. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> On 4/13/15, 11:19 PM, "Ewen Cheslack-Postava" < >> >> e...@confluent.io >> >> > > >> >> > >>> >> wrote: >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >Jiangjie, >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >Great start. I have a couple of comments. >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >Under the motivation section, is it really true that the >> >> request >> >> > >>> >>will >> >> > >>> >> >> >never >> >> > >>> >> >> >be completed? Presumably if the broker goes down the >> >> connection >> >> > >>> >>will be >> >> > >>> >> >> >severed, at worst by a TCP timeout, which should clean >>up >> >>the >> >> > >>> >> >>connection >> >> > >>> >> >> >and any outstanding requests, right? I think the real >> >>reason >> >> we >> >> > >>> >>need a >> >> > >>> >> >> >different timeout is that the default TCP timeouts are >> >> > >>>ridiculously >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >>long >> >> > >>> >> >> >in >> >> > >>> >> >> >this context. >> >> > >>> >> >> Yes, when broker is completely down the request should be >> >> cleared >> >> > >>>as >> >> > >>> >>you >> >> > >>> >> >> said. The case we encountered looks like the broker was >>just >> >> not >> >> > >>> >> >> responding but TCP connection was still alive though. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >Ok, that makes sense. >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >My second question is about whether this is the right >> >>level to >> >> > >>> >>tackle >> >> > >>> >> >>the >> >> > >>> >> >> >issue/what user-facing changes need to be made. A >>related >> >> > >>>problem >> >> > >>> >>came >> >> > >>> >> >>up >> >> > >>> >> >> >in https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-1788 >>where >> >> > >>>producer >> >> > >>> >> >> records >> >> > >>> >> >> >get stuck indefinitely because there's no client-side >> >>timeout. >> >> > >>>This >> >> > >>> >>KIP >> >> > >>> >> >> >wouldn't fix that problem or any problems caused by >>lack of >> >> > >>> >> >>connectivity >> >> > >>> >> >> >since this would only apply to in flight requests, >>which by >> >> > >>> >>definition >> >> > >>> >> >> >must >> >> > >>> >> >> >have been sent on an active connection. >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >I suspect both types of problems probably need to be >> >>addressed >> >> > >>> >> >>separately >> >> > >>> >> >> >by introducing explicit timeouts. However, because the >> >> settings >> >> > >>> >> >>introduced >> >> > >>> >> >> >here are very much about the internal implementations of >> >>the >> >> > >>> >>clients, >> >> > >>> >> >>I'm >> >> > >>> >> >> >wondering if this even needs to be a user-facing >>setting, >> >> > >>> >>especially >> >> > >>> >> >>if we >> >> > >>> >> >> >have to add other timeouts anyway. For example, would a >> >>fixed, >> >> > >>> >>generous >> >> > >>> >> >> >value that's still much shorter than a TCP timeout, say >> >>15s, >> >> be >> >> > >>> >>good >> >> > >>> >> >> >enough? If other timeouts would allow, for example, the >> >> clients >> >> > >>>to >> >> > >>> >> >> >properly >> >> > >>> >> >> >exit even if requests have not hit their timeout, then >> >>what's >> >> > >>>the >> >> > >>> >> >>benefit >> >> > >>> >> >> >of being able to configure the request-level timeout? >> >> > >>> >> >> That is a very good point. We have three places that we >> >>might >> >> be >> >> > >>> >>able to >> >> > >>> >> >> enforce timeout for a message send: >> >> > >>> >> >> 1. Before append to accumulator - handled by metadata >> >>timeout >> >> on >> >> > >>>per >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> message level. >> >> > >>> >> >> 2. Batch of messages inside accumulator - no timeout >> >>mechanism >> >> > >>>now. >> >> > >>> >> >> 3. Request of batches after messages leave the >>accumulator >> >>- we >> >> > >>>have >> >> > >>> >>a >> >> > >>> >> >> broker side timeout but no client side timeout for now. >> >> > >>> >> >> My current proposal only address (3) but not (2). >> >> > >>> >> >> Honestly I do not have a very clear idea about what >>should >> >>we >> >> do >> >> > >>> >>with >> >> > >>> >> >>(2) >> >> > >>> >> >> right now. But I am with you that we should not expose >>too >> >>many >> >> > >>> >> >> configurations to users. What I am thinking now to handle >> >>(2) >> >> is >> >> > >>> >>when >> >> > >>> >> >>user >> >> > >>> >> >> call send, if we know that a partition is offline, we >>should >> >> > >>>throw >> >> > >>> >> >> exception immediately instead of putting it into >> >>accumulator. >> >> > >>>This >> >> > >>> >>would >> >> > >>> >> >> protect further memory consumption. We might also want to >> >>fail >> >> > >>>all >> >> > >>> >>the >> >> > >>> >> >> batches in the dequeue once we found a partition is >>offline. >> >> That >> >> > >>> >> >>said, I >> >> > >>> >> >> feel timeout might not be quite applicable to (2). >> >> > >>> >> >> Do you have any suggestion on this? >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >Right, I didn't actually mean to solve 2 here, but was >>trying >> >>to >> >> > >>> >>figure >> >> > >>> >> >out >> >> > >>> >> >if a solution to 2 would reduce what we needed to do to >> >>address >> >> 3. >> >> > >>> >>(And >> >> > >>> >> >depending on how they are implemented, fixing 1 might also >> >> address >> >> > >>>2). >> >> > >>> >>It >> >> > >>> >> >sounds like you hit hang that I wasn't really expecting. >>This >> >> > >>>probably >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >just >> >> > >>> >> >means the KIP motivation needs to be a bit clearer about >>what >> >> type >> >> > >>>of >> >> > >>> >> >situation this addresses. The cause of the hang may also be >> >> > >>>relevant >> >> > >>> >>-- if >> >> > >>> >> >it was something like a deadlock then that's something that >> >> should >> >> > >>> >>just be >> >> > >>> >> >fixed, but if it's something outside our control then a >> >>timeout >> >> > >>>makes >> >> > >>> >>a >> >> > >>> >> >lot >> >> > >>> >> >more sense. >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >I know we have a similar setting, >> >> > >>> >> >>max.in.flights.requests.per.connection, >> >> > >>> >> >> >exposed publicly (which I just discovered is missing >>from >> >>the >> >> > >>>new >> >> > >>> >> >>producer >> >> > >>> >> >> >configs documentation). But it looks like the new >>consumer >> >>is >> >> > >>>not >> >> > >>> >> >>exposing >> >> > >>> >> >> >that option, using a fixed value instead. I think we >>should >> >> > >>>default >> >> > >>> >>to >> >> > >>> >> >> >hiding these implementation values unless there's a >>strong >> >> case >> >> > >>>for >> >> > >>> >>a >> >> > >>> >> >> >scenario that requires customization. >> >> > >>> >> >> For producer, max.in.flight.requests.per.connection >>really >> >> > >>>matters. >> >> > >>> >>If >> >> > >>> >> >> people do not want to have reorder of messages, they >>have to >> >> use >> >> > >>> >> >> max.in.flight.requests.per.connection=1. On the other >>hand, >> >>if >> >> > >>> >> >>throughput >> >> > >>> >> >> is more of a concern, it could be set to higher. For the >>new >> >> > >>> >>consumer, I >> >> > >>> >> >> checked the value and I am not sure if the hard coded >> >> > >>> >> >> max.in.flight.requests.per.connection=100 is the right >> >>value. >> >> > >>> >>Without >> >> > >>> >> >>the >> >> > >>> >> >> response to the previous request, what offsets should be >>put >> >> into >> >> > >>> >>the >> >> > >>> >> >>next >> >> > >>> >> >> fetch request? It seems to me the value will be one >>natively >> >> > >>> >>regardless >> >> > >>> >> >>of >> >> > >>> >> >> the setting unless we are sending fetch request to >>different >> >> > >>> >>partitions, >> >> > >>> >> >> which does not look like the case. >> >> > >>> >> >> Anyway, it looks to be a separate issue orthogonal to the >> >> request >> >> > >>> >> >>timeout. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >In other words, since the only user-facing change was >>the >> >> > >>>addition >> >> > >>> >>of >> >> > >>> >> >>the >> >> > >>> >> >> >setting, I'm wondering if we can avoid the KIP >>altogether >> >>by >> >> > >>>just >> >> > >>> >> >>choosing >> >> > >>> >> >> >a good default value for the timeout. >> >> > >>> >> >> The problem is that we have a server side request timeout >> >> exposed >> >> > >>>as >> >> > >>> >>a >> >> > >>> >> >> public configuration. We cannot set the client timeout >> >>smaller >> >> > >>>than >> >> > >>> >>that >> >> > >>> >> >> value, so a hard coded value probably won¹t work here. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >That makes sense, although it's worth keeping in mind that >> >>even >> >> if >> >> > >>>you >> >> > >>> >>use >> >> > >>> >> >"correct" values, they could still be violated due to, >>e.g., >> >>a GC >> >> > >>> >>pause >> >> > >>> >> >that causes the broker to process a request after it is >> >>supposed >> >> to >> >> > >>> >>have >> >> > >>> >> >expired. >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >-Ewen >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >-Ewen >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >On Mon, Apr 13, 2015 at 2:35 PM, Jiangjie Qin >> >> > >>> >> >><j...@linkedin.com.invalid> >> >> > >>> >> >> >wrote: >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >> Hi, >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> I just created a KIP to add a request timeout to >> >> NetworkClient >> >> > >>> >>for >> >> > >>> >> >>new >> >> > >>> >> >> >> Kafka clients. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >>>>https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/KIP-19+-+Add+a+reques >>>>t >> >> > >>>+ >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >>timeout+to+NetworkClient >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> Comments and suggestions are welcome! >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> Thanks. >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> Jiangjie (Becket) Qin >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >> >-- >> >> > >>> >> >> >Thanks, >> >> > >>> >> >> >Ewen >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> > >> >> > >>> >> >-- >> >> > >>> >> >Thanks, >> >> > >>> >> >Ewen >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> >> >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> > >> >> > >>> >-- >> >> > >>> >-- Guozhang >> >> > >>> >> >> > >>> >> >> > > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> >> > >> > >> > >> >-- >> >Thanks, >> >Ewen >> >> > > >-- >-Regards, >Mayuresh R. Gharat >(862) 250-7125