+1 (binding)

On Tue, Nov 8, 2016 at 10:26 AM, radai <radai.rosenbl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've updated the KIP page to specify the new config would co-exist with
> "queued.max.request" to minimize the impact on compatibility.
>
> On Tue, Nov 8, 2016 at 7:02 AM, radai <radai.rosenbl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> My personal opinion on this is that control of memory was always the
>> intent behind queued.max.requests and so this KIP could completely obsolete
>> it.
>> For now its probably safest to leave it as-is (making memory-bound
>> "opt-in") and revisit this at a later date
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 7, 2016 at 2:32 PM, Gwen Shapira <g...@confluent.io> wrote:
>>
>>> Hey Radai,
>>>
>>> Looking at the proposal, it looks like a major question is still
>>> unresolved?
>>> "This configuration parameter can either replace queued.max.requests
>>> completely, or co-exist with it (by way of either-or or respecting
>>> both bounds and not picking up new requests when either is hit)."
>>>
>>> On Mon, Nov 7, 2016 at 1:08 PM, radai <radai.rosenbl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> > Hi,
>>> >
>>> > I would like to initiate a vote on KIP-72:
>>> >
>>> > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/KIP-72%3A+
>>> Allow+putting+a+bound+on+memory+consumed+by+Incoming+requests
>>> >
>>> > The kip allows specifying a limit on the amount of memory allocated for
>>> > reading incoming requests into. This is useful for "sizing" a broker and
>>> > avoiding OOMEs under heavy load (as actually happens occasionally at
>>> > linkedin).
>>> >
>>> > I believe I've addressed most (all?) concerns brought up during the
>>> > discussion.
>>> >
>>> > To the best of my understanding this vote is about the goal and
>>> > public-facing changes related to the new proposed behavior, but as for
>>> > implementation, i have the code up here:
>>> >
>>> > https://github.com/radai-rosenblatt/kafka/tree/broker-memory
>>> -pool-with-muting
>>> >
>>> > and I've stress-tested it to work properly (meaning it chugs along and
>>> > throttles under loads that would DOS 10.0.1.0 code).
>>> >
>>> > I also believe that the primitives and "pattern"s introduced in this KIP
>>> > (namely the notion of a buffer pool and retrieving from / releasing to
>>> said
>>> > pool instead of allocating memory) are generally useful beyond the
>>> scope of
>>> > this KIP for both performance issues (allocating lots of short-lived
>>> large
>>> > buffers is a performance bottleneck) and other areas where memory limits
>>> > are a problem (KIP-81)
>>> >
>>> > Thank you,
>>> >
>>> > Radai.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Gwen Shapira
>>> Product Manager | Confluent
>>> 650.450.2760 | @gwenshap
>>> Follow us: Twitter | blog
>>>
>>
>>



-- 
Gwen Shapira
Product Manager | Confluent
650.450.2760 | @gwenshap
Follow us: Twitter | blog

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