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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AURORA-734?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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brian wickman updated AURORA-734:
---------------------------------
    Description: 
The current state of affairs is that the default finalization is 30 seconds.  
Thermos supports something called the "preemption notice" which roughly 
translates to "how long we'll allow this task to finalize before we kill 
everything no matter what."  The idea of preemption notice is that you may have 
somebody who needs the resources with a higher priority, but is only willing to 
wait a fixed amount of time for its predecessor to clean up.  (More altruistic 
preemptors will make this value high if they don't need the resources 
immediately, e.g. a high priority batch job, but a revenue-critical task could 
very well make this 0 seconds and give you no opportunity to finalize.)

We never integrated preemption notice into Aurora because the use-case never 
materialized (also, for many, preemption is fairly rare.)  Instead Thermos just 
uses a default of 60 seconds.  This means that no matter how big you make the 
finalization wait, it can never be longer than 60 seconds before Thermos kills 
everything, so keep that in mind before you use this feature heavily.


  was:
{noformat}
The current state of affairs is that the default finalization is 30 seconds.  
Thermos supports something called the "preemption notice" which roughly 
translates to "how long we'll allow this task to finalize before we kill 
everything no matter what."  The idea of preemption notice is that you may have 
somebody who needs the resources with a higher priority, but is only willing to 
wait a fixed amount of time for its predecessor to clean up.  (More altruistic 
preemptors will make this value high if they don't need the resources 
immediately, e.g. a high priority batch job, but a revenue-critical task could 
very well make this 0 seconds and give you no opportunity to finalize.)

We never integrated preemption notice into Aurora because the use-case never 
materialized (also, for many, preemption is fairly rare.)  Instead Thermos just 
uses a default of 60 seconds.  This means that no matter how big you make the 
finalization wait, it can never be longer than 60 seconds before Thermos kills 
everything, so keep that in mind before you use this feature heavily.
{noformat}


> document the behavior of finalization_wait in thermos
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: AURORA-734
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/AURORA-734
>             Project: Aurora
>          Issue Type: Task
>          Components: Documentation
>            Reporter: brian wickman
>            Priority: Minor
>
> The current state of affairs is that the default finalization is 30 seconds.  
> Thermos supports something called the "preemption notice" which roughly 
> translates to "how long we'll allow this task to finalize before we kill 
> everything no matter what."  The idea of preemption notice is that you may 
> have somebody who needs the resources with a higher priority, but is only 
> willing to wait a fixed amount of time for its predecessor to clean up.  
> (More altruistic preemptors will make this value high if they don't need the 
> resources immediately, e.g. a high priority batch job, but a revenue-critical 
> task could very well make this 0 seconds and give you no opportunity to 
> finalize.)
> We never integrated preemption notice into Aurora because the use-case never 
> materialized (also, for many, preemption is fairly rare.)  Instead Thermos 
> just uses a default of 60 seconds.  This means that no matter how big you 
> make the finalization wait, it can never be longer than 60 seconds before 
> Thermos kills everything, so keep that in mind before you use this feature 
> heavily.



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