Perfect! Thank David!
Michael Malgeri Principal Technologist MarkLogic Corporation [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Cell: 1 310 704 6403 www.marklogic.com<http://www.marklogic.com> From: David Ennis <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Reply-To: MarkLogic Developer Discussion <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Date: Thursday, October 31, 2013 7:20 AM To: "[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Subject: Re: [MarkLogic Dev General] Reg: E-Node and D-Node configuration Locks can be obtained on a document(or documennts), directory or collection level. If you are locking a single document, then only that document is locked. If you lock a directory, then there are controls on what gets locked (depth). The automatic lock used for updates is xdmp:lock-for-update - which uses a single URI as its parameter. Regards, David On 31/10/13 15:04, Michael Malgeri wrote: Does a "cluster-wide lock" only pertain to the document that is being updated? In other words if document1 is being updated, can document2 be updated while the lock is still held on document1? Michael Malgeri Principal Technologist MarkLogic Corporation [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Cell: 1 310 704 6403 www.marklogic.com<http://www.marklogic.com> <http://www.marklogic.com><http://www.marklogic.com> On 10/29/13 12:39 PM, "Ron Hitchens" <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> wrote: You can think of a MarkLogic cluster as a single virtual server. A cluster is made up of nodes (E, D or E/D) but the cluster should be thought of as an indivisible unit. D (data) nodes are MarkLogic processes that have forests attached. E (evaluator) nodes are those nodes which run XQuery/XSLT requests on an appserver. In a cluster, all nodes share the same appserver configuration, so any node can be an E node. Typically, when configuring dedicated E and D nodes, you configure things to send requests to only those nodes that you want to act as E's, allowing the others to act only as D's. Communication between nodes in a cluster is basically this: For queries (read-only) no locks are needed (read up on MVCC). Each search operation is fired in parallel to every D node in the cluster (this is the "map" phase). When the last D node has responded, the E node can then merge the results (the "reduce"). So, the lower the latency in communication between nodes, the better the overall throughput. You really don't want any slow links between nodes in the cluster because it can slow down all the E nodes. For update (write), cluster-wide locks must be obtained for documents that are, or might be, updated. All nodes in the cluster must acknowledge the lock(s) before the update(s) can proceed. This basically means that updates can't happen faster than the slowest responding node in the cluster. Oh, and the locks need to be released as well, via inter-node communication. Again, bad for overall performance when communication links between nodes slow down, even with super-fast, beefy hardware. As Mike pointed out, clusters are not database replication. You cluster to improve performance by spreading the immediate work across multiple CPU and disks co-located together. You can add synchronous replication between nodes in a cluster to provide for HA failover in the event a node fails. This has a latency cost, but makes the cluster more robust. You replicate databases asynchronously between clusters to provide for disaster recovery if an entire cluster is lost or becomes unreachable. Hope that helps. --- Ron Hitchens {[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>} +44 7879 358212 On Oct 28, 2013, at 10:03 PM, Arindam3 B <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> wrote: Thanks Mike for the great walkthrough. Just trying to understand more on the xqdp protocol. Can you throw some light on how it operates between enodes n dnodes? Thanks & Regards Arindam -----Michael Blakeley <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> wrote: ----- ======================= To: MarkLogic Developer Discussion <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> From: Michael Blakeley <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> Date: 10/28/2013 10:31PM Subject: Re: [MarkLogic Dev General] Reg: E-Node and D-Node configuration ======================= Hosts within a cluster should have low-latency communications: gigabit ethernet or better. Ideally they should all be on the same switch and/or VLAN, with no router hops between hosts. If you try to set up a cluster across a WAN link you are likely to see poor performance and poor reliability. You might be trying to handle high availability (HA) and disaster recovery (DR) with a single cluster: that would be a mistake. For high availability, use a single cluster with low-latency communications. Configure forest replication and host failover to provide the desired degree of protection against host failures. The docs at http://docs.marklogic.com/guide/cluster/failover talk about this as "local-disk failover". For disaster recovery - scenarios where an entire data center goes offline - use database replication to a different cluster. This can use higher-latency communications, such as a WAN link. The docs at http://docs.marklogic.com/guide/database-replication describe this. The DR replica cluster can also implement local-disk failover to provide its own HA. -- Mike On 28 Oct 2013, at 06:41 , Arindam3 B <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> wrote: Hi, I had a query regarding the E-Node and D-Node setup in Marklogic. In a distributed environment, if I plan to keep the Enodes and DNodes separately in different physical locations over the LAN or WAN (across geographies), what is the potential risk? How does failover work in that scenario? I have read that ENodes and DNodes communicate through XQDP protocol, so in this case will there be performance issues? Does Marklogic recommend having ENode and DNode cluster in the same physical box? If so, then across the network if we have a set of E-D-Nodes, how is the network latency reduced while synching the data during replication? If you can provide me with some information about XQDP protocol it would be great!! Thanks & Regards Arindam Bose =====-----=====-----===== Notice: The information contained in this e-mail message and/or attachments to it may contain confidential or privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, any dissemination, use, review, distribution, printing or copying of the information contained in this e-mail message and/or attachments to it are strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us by reply e-mail or telephone and immediately and permanently delete the message and any attachments. 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