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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-3376?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16096774#comment-16096774
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Tony Kurc commented on NIFI-3376:
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As I understand it, I think the concern is a mix of long lived and short lived
content "in flight". If you have 99.9% short lived content, and 0.01% long
lived content (maybe you're buffering due to an outage, maybe the receiving
service is very slow), you could be holding onto much more content than you may
need and overrun your disks. Does it not make sense to build a strategy to help
cope with the scenario?
> Implement content repository ResourceClaim compaction
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: NIFI-3376
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-3376
> Project: Apache NiFi
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Components: Core Framework
> Affects Versions: 0.7.1, 1.1.1
> Reporter: Michael Moser
> Assignee: Michael Hogue
>
> On NiFi systems that deal with many files whose size is less than 1 MB, we
> often see that the actual disk usage of the content_repository is much
> greater than the size of flowfiles that NiFi reports are in its queues. As
> an example, NiFi may report "50,000 / 12.5 GB" but the content_repository
> takes up 240 GB of its file system. This leads to scenarios where a 500 GB
> content_repository file system gets 100% full, but "I only had 40 GB of data
> in my NiFi!"
> When several content claims exist in a single resource claim, and most but
> not all content claims are terminated, the entire resource claim is still not
> eligible for deletion or archive. This could mean that only one 10 KB
> content claim out of a 1 MB resource claim is counted by NiFi as existing in
> its queues.
> If a particular flow has a slow egress point where flowfiles could back up
> and remain on the system longer than expected, this problem is exacerbated.
> A potential solution is to compact resource claim files on disk. A background
> thread could examine all resource claims, and for those that get "old" and
> whose active content claim usage drops below a threshold, then rewrite the
> resource claim file.
> A potential work-around is to allow modification of the FileSystemRepository
> MAX_APPENDABLE_CLAIM_LENGTH to make it a smaller number. This would increase
> the probability that the content claims reference count in a resource claim
> would reach 0 and the resource claim becomes eligible for deletion/archive.
> Let users trade-off performance for more accurate accounting of NiFi queue
> size to content repository size.
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