Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
Hi Philip, Colin, Chris, Matthias, Kirk, David, Xiangyuan LI, KIP-944 was extended a bit more to explain why effect systems like Zio and Cats-effects make it impossible to run code on a specific thread. I understand that using an effect system is pretty far removed from writing Java in transaction script style, the style that is probably used by most Kafka committers. I took me quite some time to get comfortable with effects. It is not the academic fringe tool as perceived by many. For me it is a way to quickly and correctly write serious data processing applications. Even so, we both use the same Kafka eco-system and supporting different styles only makes it more rich. IMHO it would be a shame if we can not live together using the same code base. Philip, thanks for your support. I hope I have convinced the others as well by now. If not, I am giving up and I will spend my energy elsewhere. Kind regards, Erik. Op 24-07-2023 om 18:12 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello Xiangyuan LI, I am not familiar with coroutines, nor with Kotlin. You will have to work with the documentation: https://kotlinlang.org/docs/coroutines-overview.html However, I am familiar with Zio and Cats-effects (both Scala libraries). In both Zio and Cats-effects one creates effects (aka workflows) which are descriptions of a computation. For example, when executing the Scala code `val effect = ZIO.attempt(println("Hello world!"))` one creates only a description; it does not print anything yet. The language to describe these effects is rich enough to describe entire applications including things like concurrency. In fact, the language is so rich, that it is the most convenient way that I know to safely write highly concurrent and async applications. For many developer teams the performance penalty (which is real but not big) is worth it. To execute a Zio or Cats effect one gives it to the runtime. The runtime then schedules the work on one of the threads in its thread-pool. Zio, nor Cats-effects supports running an effect on the thread that manages the thread-pool. I hope this clear enough. Kind regards, Erik. Op 24-07-2023 om 05:21 schreef Xiangyuan LI: Hi Erik: I read KIP-944 and email list roughly, it seems most Java developer not familiar with the conception of "coroutine" so cannot imagine why code of one function without Thread.start() may run in separate threads and even developer couldn't control it. Maybe you need a more elaborate description to demonstrate how coroutine code run. Erik van Oosten 于2023年7月23日周日 17:47写道: -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I am aware of that. This is not an issue; all async runtimes can cooperate with blocking code. Hmm, not sure what you mean by "cooperate with blocking code." If you have 10 green threads you're multiplexing on to one CPU thread, and that CPU thread gets blocked because of what one green thread is doing, the other 9 green threads are blocked too, right? I guess it's "just" a performance problem, but it still seems like it could be a serious one. > I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach we are taking. Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some work in callbacks: * commit completed callback: register that the callback is complete, * partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to submit commits from everything consumed and processed so far, using timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async runtime, this is an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we cannot do timeouts without involving multiple threads. I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why can't we have the other threads report back what messages they've processed to the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these callbacks without involving the other threads. regards, Colin I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use case. Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my goals are modest. Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. Kind regards, Erik. Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: Hi Erik, It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of things that wouldn't work. I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the client. Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hell
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
gt;>>>>> another thread.* > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> To make sure there are no more misunderstandings about > this, I > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> have > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> added this goal to the KIP. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Hi Erik, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Sorry, I spoke imprecisely. My concern is not concurrent > >>>>>>>>>>>>> access, but > >>>>>>>>>>>> multithreaded access in general. Basically cache line > visibility > >>>>>>>>>>>> issues. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > This is true even if the accesses happen at different > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> times, > >>>>>>>>>>>> because > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee > inter-thread > >>>>>>>>>>>> visibilty > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> of loads and stores. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> In KIP-944, the callback thread can only delegate to another > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> thread > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> after reading from and writing to a threadlocal variable, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> providing the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> barriers right there. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I don't see any documentation that accessing thread local > >>>>>>>>>>>>> variables > >>>>>>>>>>>> provides a total store or load barrier. Do you have such > >>>>>>>>>>>> documentation? It > >>>>>>>>>>>> seems like if this were the case, we could eliminate volatile > >>>>>>>>>>>> variables > >>>>>>>>>>>> from most of the code base. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > I know that there are at least a few locks in the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> consumer code > >>>>>>>>>>>> now, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> don't think > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is > making > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> calls > >>>>>>>>>>>> from > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> In the current implementation the consumer is also invoked > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> from random > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> threads. If it works now, it should continue to work. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I'm not sure what you're referring to. Can you expand on > this? > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> traditional > >>>>>>>>>>>> model > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients > passes > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> the given > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> data to a single background worker thread. This would > avoid a > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> lot lof > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> the footguns of the current model and probably better > reflect > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> how > >>>>>>>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> That is awesome. However, I'd rather not wait for that. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > Another issue is that neither the producer nor the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> consumer is > >>>>>>>>>>>> fully > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in > fact > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> block. > >>>>>>>>>>>> From > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> and the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> I am aware of that. This is not an issue; all async > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> runtimes can > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> cooperate with blocking code. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Hmm, not sure what you mean by "cooperate with blocking > code." > >>>>>>>>>>>>> If you > >>>>>>>>>>>> have 10 green threads you're multiplexing on to one CPU > thread, > >>>>>>>>>>>> and that > >>>>>>>>>>>> CPU thread gets blocked because of what one green thread is > >>>>>>>>>>>> doing, the > >>>>>>>>>>>> other 9 green threads are blocked too, right? I guess it's > >>>>>>>>>>>> "just" a > >>>>>>>>>>>> performance problem, but it still seems like it could be a > >>>>>>>>>>>> serious one. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> coroutines, Zio > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> from a > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> client ot work from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> we are > >>>>>>>>>>>> taking. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> work in > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> callbacks: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> * commit completed callback: register that the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> callback is > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> complete, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> * partition revoked callback: in this callback we > need to > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> submit > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> commits from everything consumed and processed so > far, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> using > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> runtime, this is > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> cannot do > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> timeouts without involving multiple threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." > Why > >>>>>>>>>>>>> can't > >>>>>>>>>>>> we have the other threads report back what messages they've > >>>>>>>>>>>> processed to > >>>>>>>>>>>> the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these > >>>>>>>>>>>> callbacks without > >>>>>>>>>>>> involving the other threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major > use > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> case. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> extensive > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that my > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> goals are modest. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> understanding of the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hi Erik, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> consumer or > >>>>>>>>>>>> producer concurrently from different threads. There are data > >>>>>>>>>>>> structures > >>>>>>>>>>>> that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily > expect > >>>>>>>>>>>> accessing > >>>>>>>>>>>> and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true > even > >>>>>>>>>>>> if the > >>>>>>>>>>>> accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs > require > >>>>>>>>>>>> memory > >>>>>>>>>>>> barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and > >>>>>>>>>>>> stores. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> code (I > >>>>>>>>>>>> haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) > >>>>>>>>>>>> Someone who has > >>>>>>>>>>>> worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give > >>>>>>>>>>>> specific > >>>>>>>>>>>> examples of things that wouldn't work. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> code now, > >>>>>>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I > don't > >>>>>>>>>>>> think > >>>>>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>>>>>>> calls from > >>>>>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> traditional model > >>>>>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes > the > >>>>>>>>>>>> given data > >>>>>>>>>>>> to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot > lof > >>>>>>>>>>>> the > >>>>>>>>>>>> footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how > >>>>>>>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> is fully > >>>>>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>>>>>>> block. From > >>>>>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and > the > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin > coroutines, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Zio > >>>>>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from > a > >>>>>>>>>>>> background > >>>>>>>>>>>> worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>> client ot work > >>>>>>>>>>>> from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> multiple > >>>>>>>>>>>> threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check > the > >>>>>>>>>>>> sections > >>>>>>>>>>>> "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and > >>>>>>>>>>>> Processing." What > >>>>>>>>>>>> I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> response. > >>>>>>>>>>>> However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion > >>>>>>>>>>>> before > >>>>>>>>>>>> getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a > >>>>>>>>>>>> procedural step. > >>>>>>>>>>>> Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also > >>>>>>>>>>>> chime in. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> best, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Dear PMCs, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I > understand > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> this may > >>>>>>>>>>>> not > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is > important > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> to people > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hello all, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> runtimes in > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under > >>>>>>>>>>>> discussion' > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> hope the KIP > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> is clear! > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> KIP > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > >
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
ill be able to handle these callbacks without involving the other threads. regards, Colin I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use case. Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my goals are modest. Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. Kind regards, Erik. Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: Hi Erik, It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of things that wouldn't work. I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the client. Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
gt;>>>>>>> > It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer or > >>>>>>>>>>>>> producer concurrently from different threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>> Concurrent access is /not/ a design goal of KIP-944. In fact, > >>>>>>>>>>>> it goes > >>>>>>>>>>>> through great lengths to make sure that this cannot happen. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> *The only design goal is to allow callbacks to call the > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer from > >>>>>>>>>>>> another thread.* > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> To make sure there are no more misunderstandings about this, I > >>>>>>>>>>>> have > >>>>>>>>>>>> added this goal to the KIP. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Hi Erik, > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Sorry, I spoke imprecisely. My concern is not concurrent > >>>>>>>>>>> access, but > >>>>>>>>>> multithreaded access in general. Basically cache line visibility > >>>>>>>>>> issues. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > This is true even if the accesses happen at different > >>>>>>>>>>>> times, > >>>>>>>>>> because > >>>>>>>>>>>>> modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread > >>>>>>>>>> visibilty > >>>>>>>>>>>>> of loads and stores. > >>>>>>>>>>>> In KIP-944, the callback thread can only delegate to another > >>>>>>>>>>>> thread > >>>>>>>>>>>> after reading from and writing to a threadlocal variable, > >>>>>>>>>>>> providing the > >>>>>>>>>>>> barriers right there. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> I don't see any documentation that accessing thread local > >>>>>>>>>>> variables > >>>>>>>>>> provides a total store or load barrier. Do you have such > >>>>>>>>>> documentation? It > >>>>>>>>>> seems like if this were the case, we could eliminate volatile > >>>>>>>>>> variables > >>>>>>>>>> from most of the code base. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > I know that there are at least a few locks in the > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer code > >>>>>>>>>> now, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I > >>>>>>>>>>>>> don't think > >>>>>>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>>>>>>>> calls > >>>>>>>>>> from > >>>>>>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>> In the current implementation the consumer is also invoked > >>>>>>>>>>>> from random > >>>>>>>>>>>> threads. If it works now, it should continue to work. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> I'm not sure what you're referring to. Can you expand on this? > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> > There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>>>> traditional > >>>>>>>>>> model > >>>>>>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes > >>>>>>>>>>>>> the given > >>>>>>>>>>>>> data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a > >>>>>>>>>>>>> lot lof > >>>>>>>>>>>>> the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect > >>>>>>>>>>>>> how > >>>>>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>>>> That is awesome. However, I'd rather not wait for that. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> > Another issue is that neither the producer nor the > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer is > >>>>>>>>>> fully > >>>>>>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>>>>>>>> block. > >>>>>>>>>> From > >>>>>>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> and the > >>>>>>>>>>>>> consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>>>> I am aware of that. This is not an issue; all async > >>>>>>>>>>>> runtimes can > >>>>>>>>>>>> cooperate with blocking code. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Hmm, not sure what you mean by "cooperate with blocking code." > >>>>>>>>>>> If you > >>>>>>>>>> have 10 green threads you're multiplexing on to one CPU thread, > >>>>>>>>>> and that > >>>>>>>>>> CPU thread gets blocked because of what one green thread is > >>>>>>>>>> doing, the > >>>>>>>>>> other 9 green threads are blocked too, right? I guess it's > >>>>>>>>>> "just" a > >>>>>>>>>> performance problem, but it still seems like it could be a > >>>>>>>>>> serious one. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin > >>>>>>>>>>>> coroutines, Zio > >>>>>>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and > >>>>>>>>>>>>> from a > >>>>>>>>>>>>> background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer > >>>>>>>>>>>>> the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>>> client ot work from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>> In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach > >>>>>>>>>>>> we are > >>>>>>>>>> taking. > >>>>>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some > >>>>>>>>>>>> work in > >>>>>>>>>>>> callbacks: > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> * commit completed callback: register that the > >>>>>>>>>>>> callback is > >>>>>>>>>>>> complete, > >>>>>>>>>>>> * partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to > >>>>>>>>>>>> submit > >>>>>>>>>>>>commits from everything consumed and processed so far, > >>>>>>>>>>>> using > >>>>>>>>>>>>timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async > >>>>>>>>>>>> runtime, this is > >>>>>>>>>>>>an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we > >>>>>>>>>>>> cannot do > >>>>>>>>>>>>timeouts without involving multiple threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why > >>>>>>>>>>> can't > >>>>>>>>>> we have the other threads report back what messages they've > >>>>>>>>>> processed to > >>>>>>>>>> the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these > >>>>>>>>>> callbacks without > >>>>>>>>>> involving the other threads. > >>>>>>>>>>> regards, > >>>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use > >>>>>>>>>>>> case. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is > >>>>>>>>>>>> extensive > >>>>>>>>>>>> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find > >>>>>>>>>>>> that my > >>>>>>>>>>>> goals are modest. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With > >>>>>>>>>>>> understanding of the > >>>>>>>>>>>> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Hi Erik, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>>> consumer or > >>>>>>>>>> producer concurrently from different threads. There are data > >>>>>>>>>> structures > >>>>>>>>>> that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect > >>>>>>>>>> accessing > >>>>>>>>>> and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even > >>>>>>>>>> if the > >>>>>>>>>> accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require > >>>>>>>>>> memory > >>>>>>>>>> barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and > >>>>>>>>>> stores. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the > >>>>>>>>>>>>> code (I > >>>>>>>>>> haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) > >>>>>>>>>> Someone who has > >>>>>>>>>> worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give > >>>>>>>>>> specific > >>>>>>>>>> examples of things that wouldn't work. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>>> code now, > >>>>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't > >>>>>>>>>> think > >>>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>>>>> calls from > >>>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>>>>> traditional model > >>>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the > >>>>>>>>>> given data > >>>>>>>>>> to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof > >>>>>>>>>> the > >>>>>>>>>> footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how > >>>>>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>>> is fully > >>>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>>>>> block. From > >>>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the > >>>>>>>>>> consumer > >>>>>>>>>> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Zio > >>>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a > >>>>>>>>>> background > >>>>>>>>>> worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>> client ot work > >>>>>>>>>> from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle > >>>>>>>>>>>>> multiple > >>>>>>>>>> threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the > >>>>>>>>>> sections > >>>>>>>>>> "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and > >>>>>>>>>> Processing." What > >>>>>>>>>> I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick > >>>>>>>>>>>>> response. > >>>>>>>>>> However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion > >>>>>>>>>> before > >>>>>>>>>> getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a > >>>>>>>>>> procedural step. > >>>>>>>>>> Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also > >>>>>>>>>> chime in. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> best, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Dear PMCs, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> this may > >>>>>>>>>> not > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> to people > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hello all, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> runtimes in > >>>>>>>>>> consumer. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under > >>>>>>>>>> discussion' > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> hope the KIP > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> is clear! > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> KIP > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> > > > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > >
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
s where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
gt;>>>>>>>> don't think > >>>>>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>>>>>>> calls > >>>>>>>>> from > >>>>>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>> In the current implementation the consumer is also invoked > >>>>>>>>>>> from random > >>>>>>>>>>> threads. If it works now, it should continue to work. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> I'm not sure what you're referring to. Can you expand on this? > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> > There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>>> traditional > >>>>>>>>> model > >>>>>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes > >>>>>>>>>>>> the given > >>>>>>>>>>>> data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a > >>>>>>>>>>>> lot lof > >>>>>>>>>>>> the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect > >>>>>>>>>>>> how > >>>>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>>> That is awesome. However, I'd rather not wait for that. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> > Another issue is that neither the producer nor the > >>>>>>>>>>> consumer is > >>>>>>>>> fully > >>>>>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>>>>>>> block. > >>>>>>>>> From > >>>>>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and > the > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>>> I am aware of that. This is not an issue; all async runtimes > can > >>>>>>>>>>> cooperate with blocking code. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> Hmm, not sure what you mean by "cooperate with blocking code." > >>>>>>>>>> If you > >>>>>>>>> have 10 green threads you're multiplexing on to one CPU thread, > >>>>>>>>> and that > >>>>>>>>> CPU thread gets blocked because of what one green thread is > >>>>>>>>> doing, the > >>>>>>>>> other 9 green threads are blocked too, right? I guess it's > "just" a > >>>>>>>>> performance problem, but it still seems like it could be a > >>>>>>>>> serious one. > >>>>>>>>>>> > I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin > >>>>>>>>>>> coroutines, Zio > >>>>>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from > a > >>>>>>>>>>>> background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer > >>>>>>>>>>>> the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>> client ot work from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>> In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach > >>>>>>>>>>> we are > >>>>>>>>> taking. > >>>>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some > >>>>>>>>>>> work in > >>>>>>>>>>> callbacks: > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> * commit completed callback: register that the callback is > >>>>>>>>>>> complete, > >>>>>>>>>>> * partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to > >>>>>>>>>>> submit > >>>>>>>>>>>commits from everything consumed and processed so far, > >>>>>>>>>>> using > >>>>>>>>>>>timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async > >>>>>>>>>>> runtime, this is > >>>>>>>>>>>an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we > >>>>>>>>>>> cannot do > >>>>>>>>>>>timeouts without involving multiple threads. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why > >>>>>>>>>> can't > >>>>>>>>> we have the other threads report back what messages they've > >>>>>>>>> processed to > >>>>>>>>> the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these > >>>>>>>>> callbacks without > >>>>>>>>> involving the other threads. > >>>>>>>>>> regards, > >>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use > >>>>>>>>>>> case. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is > >>>>>>>>>>> extensive > >>>>>>>>>>> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find > >>>>>>>>>>> that my > >>>>>>>>>>> goals are modest. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With > >>>>>>>>>>> understanding of the > >>>>>>>>>>> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: > >>>>>>>>>>>> Hi Erik, > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>>>> consumer or > >>>>>>>>> producer concurrently from different threads. There are data > >>>>>>>>> structures > >>>>>>>>> that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect > >>>>>>>>> accessing > >>>>>>>>> and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even > >>>>>>>>> if the > >>>>>>>>> accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require > >>>>>>>>> memory > >>>>>>>>> barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. > >>>>>>>>>>>> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the > >>>>>>>>>>>> code (I > >>>>>>>>> haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) > >>>>>>>>> Someone who has > >>>>>>>>> worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give > specific > >>>>>>>>> examples of things that wouldn't work. > >>>>>>>>>>>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>> code now, > >>>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't > >>>>>>>>> think > >>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>>>> calls from > >>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>>>> traditional model > >>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the > >>>>>>>>> given data > >>>>>>>>> to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof > >>>>>>>>> the > >>>>>>>>> footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how > >>>>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>>>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer > >>>>>>>>>>>> is fully > >>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>>>> block. From > >>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the > >>>>>>>>> consumer > >>>>>>>>> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>>>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, > >>>>>>>>>>>> Zio > >>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a > >>>>>>>>> background > >>>>>>>>> worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka > >>>>>>>>> client ot work > >>>>>>>>> from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>>>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle > >>>>>>>>>>>> multiple > >>>>>>>>> threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the > >>>>>>>>> sections > >>>>>>>>> "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and > >>>>>>>>> Processing." What > >>>>>>>>> I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. > >>>>>>>>>>>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick > >>>>>>>>>>>> response. > >>>>>>>>> However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion > >>>>>>>>> before > >>>>>>>>> getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a > >>>>>>>>> procedural step. > >>>>>>>>> Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also > >>>>>>>>> chime in. > >>>>>>>>>>>> best, > >>>>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Dear PMCs, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand > >>>>>>>>>>>>> this may > >>>>>>>>> not > >>>>>>>>>>>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important > >>>>>>>>>>>>> to people > >>>>>>>>>>>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Hello all, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in > >>>>>>>>> consumer. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under > >>>>>>>>> discussion' > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> hope the KIP > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> is clear! > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> KIP description: > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>>>> > >> -- > >> Erik van Oosten > >> e.vanoos...@grons.nl > >> https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > >> > >> > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > >
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
ponses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
;>>> Sorry, I spoke imprecisely. My concern is not concurrent > >>>>>>>> access, but > >>>>>>> multithreaded access in general. Basically cache line visibility > >>>>>>> issues. > >>>>>>>>>> This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, > >>>>>>> because > >>>>>>>>>> modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread > >>>>>>> visibilty > >>>>>>>>>> of loads and stores. > >>>>>>>>> In KIP-944, the callback thread can only delegate to another > >>>>>>>>> thread > >>>>>>>>> after reading from and writing to a threadlocal variable, > >>>>>>>>> providing the > >>>>>>>>> barriers right there. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> I don't see any documentation that accessing thread local > >>>>>>>> variables > >>>>>>> provides a total store or load barrier. Do you have such > >>>>>>> documentation? It > >>>>>>> seems like if this were the case, we could eliminate volatile > >>>>>>> variables > >>>>>>> from most of the code base. > >>>>>>>>>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the > >>>>>>>>> consumer code > >>>>>>> now, > >>>>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I > >>>>>>>>>> don't think > >>>>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>>>>> calls > >>>>>>> from > >>>>>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>> In the current implementation the consumer is also invoked > >>>>>>>>> from random > >>>>>>>>> threads. If it works now, it should continue to work. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> I'm not sure what you're referring to. Can you expand on this? > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>> traditional > >>>>>>> model > >>>>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes > >>>>>>>>>> the given > >>>>>>>>>> data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a > >>>>>>>>>> lot lof > >>>>>>>>>> the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect > >>>>>>>>>> how > >>>>>>> people > >>>>>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>> That is awesome. However, I'd rather not wait for that. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the > >>>>>>>>> consumer is > >>>>>>> fully > >>>>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>>>>> block. > >>>>>>> From > >>>>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the > >>>>>>>>>> consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>> I am aware of that. This is not an issue; all async runtimes can > >>>>>>>>> cooperate with blocking code. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> Hmm, not sure what you mean by "cooperate with blocking code." > >>>>>>>> If you > >>>>>>> have 10 green threads you're multiplexing on to one CPU thread, > >>>>>>> and that > >>>>>>> CPU thread gets blocked because of what one green thread is > >>>>>>> doing, the > >>>>>>> other 9 green threads are blocked too, right? I guess it's "just" a > >>>>>>> performance problem, but it still seems like it could be a > >>>>>>> serious one. > >>>>>>>>>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin > >>>>>>>>> coroutines, Zio > >>>>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a > >>>>>>>>>> background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer > >>>>>>>>>> the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>> client ot work from random threads. > >>>>>>>>> In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach > >>>>>>>>> we are > >>>>>>> taking. > >>>>>>>>> Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some > >>>>>>>>> work in > >>>>>>>>> callbacks: > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> * commit completed callback: register that the callback is > >>>>>>>>> complete, > >>>>>>>>> * partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to > >>>>>>>>> submit > >>>>>>>>> commits from everything consumed and processed so far, > >>>>>>>>> using > >>>>>>>>> timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async > >>>>>>>>> runtime, this is > >>>>>>>>> an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we > >>>>>>>>> cannot do > >>>>>>>>> timeouts without involving multiple threads. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why > >>>>>>>> can't > >>>>>>> we have the other threads report back what messages they've > >>>>>>> processed to > >>>>>>> the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these > >>>>>>> callbacks without > >>>>>>> involving the other threads. > >>>>>>>> regards, > >>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use > >>>>>>>>> case. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is > >>>>>>>>> extensive > >>>>>>>>> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find > >>>>>>>>> that my > >>>>>>>>> goals are modest. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With > >>>>>>>>> understanding of the > >>>>>>>>> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>Erik. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: > >>>>>>>>>> Hi Erik, > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka > >>>>>>>>>> consumer or > >>>>>>> producer concurrently from different threads. There are data > >>>>>>> structures > >>>>>>> that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect > >>>>>>> accessing > >>>>>>> and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even > >>>>>>> if the > >>>>>>> accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require > >>>>>>> memory > >>>>>>> barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. > >>>>>>>>>> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the > >>>>>>>>>> code (I > >>>>>>> haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) > >>>>>>> Someone who has > >>>>>>> worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific > >>>>>>> examples of things that wouldn't work. > >>>>>>>>>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer > >>>>>>>>>> code now, > >>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't > >>>>>>> think > >>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making > >>>>>>> calls from > >>>>>>> random threads. > >>>>>>>>>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more > >>>>>>>>>> traditional model > >>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the > >>>>>>> given data > >>>>>>> to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof > >>>>>>> the > >>>>>>> footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how > >>>>>>> people > >>>>>>> actually use the client. > >>>>>>>>>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer > >>>>>>>>>> is fully > >>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact > >>>>>>> block. From > >>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the > >>>>>>> consumer > >>>>>>> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>>>>>>>>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, > >>>>>>>>>> Zio > >>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a > >>>>>>> background > >>>>>>> worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka > >>>>>>> client ot work > >>>>>>> from random threads. > >>>>>>>>>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle > >>>>>>>>>> multiple > >>>>>>> threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the > >>>>>>> sections > >>>>>>> "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and > >>>>>>> Processing." What > >>>>>>> I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. > >>>>>>>>>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick > >>>>>>>>>> response. > >>>>>>> However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion > >>>>>>> before > >>>>>>> getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a > >>>>>>> procedural step. > >>>>>>> Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also > >>>>>>> chime in. > >>>>>>>>>> best, > >>>>>>>>>> Colin > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: > >>>>>>>>>>> Dear PMCs, > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand > >>>>>>>>>>> this may > >>>>>>> not > >>>>>>>>>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important > >>>>>>>>>>> to people > >>>>>>>>>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>> Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: > >>>>>>>>>>>> Hello all, > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in > >>>>>>> consumer. > >>>>>>>>>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under > >>>>>>> discussion' > >>>>>>>>>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I > >>>>>>>>>>>> hope the KIP > >>>>>>>>>>>> is clear! > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>>>>>>>>>Erik. > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>>>>> > >> > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > >
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
oach we are taking. Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some work in callbacks: * commit completed callback: register that the callback is complete, * partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to submit commits from everything consumed and processed so far, using timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async runtime, this is an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we cannot do timeouts without involving multiple threads. I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why can't we have the other threads report back what messages they've processed to the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these callbacks without involving the other threads. regards, Colin I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use case. Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my goals are modest. Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. Kind regards, Erik. Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: Hi Erik, It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of things that wouldn't work. I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the client. Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
ntime, this is an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we cannot do timeouts without involving multiple threads. I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why can't we have the other threads report back what messages they've processed to the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these callbacks without involving the other threads. regards, Colin I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use case. Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my goals are modest. Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. Kind regards, Erik. Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: Hi Erik, It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of things that wouldn't work. I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the client. Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
r load barrier. Do you have such documentation? It >>>>> seems like if this were the case, we could eliminate volatile variables >>>>> from most of the code base. >>>>>>> > I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code >>>>> now, >>>>>>>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think >>>>>>>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls >>>>> from >>>>>>>> random threads. >>>>>>> In the current implementation the consumer is also invoked from random >>>>>>> threads. If it works now, it should continue to work. >>>>>>> >>>>>> I'm not sure what you're referring to. Can you expand on this? >>>>>> >>>>>>> > There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional >>>>> model >>>>>>>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given >>>>>>>> data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof >>>>>>>> the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how >>>>> people >>>>>>>> actually use the client. >>>>>>> That is awesome. However, I'd rather not wait for that. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> > Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is >>>>> fully >>>>>>>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. >>>>> From >>>>>>>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the >>>>>>>> consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. >>>>>>> I am aware of that. This is not an issue; all async runtimes can >>>>>>> cooperate with blocking code. >>>>>>> >>>>>> Hmm, not sure what you mean by "cooperate with blocking code." If you >>>>> have 10 green threads you're multiplexing on to one CPU thread, and that >>>>> CPU thread gets blocked because of what one green thread is doing, the >>>>> other 9 green threads are blocked too, right? I guess it's "just" a >>>>> performance problem, but it still seems like it could be a serious one. >>>>>>> > I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio >>>>>>>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a >>>>>>>> background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka >>>>>>>> client ot work from random threads. >>>>>>> In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach we are >>>>> taking. >>>>>>> Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some work in >>>>>>> callbacks: >>>>>>> >>>>>>>* commit completed callback: register that the callback is complete, >>>>>>>* partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to submit >>>>>>> commits from everything consumed and processed so far, using >>>>>>> timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async runtime, this is >>>>>>> an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we cannot do >>>>>>> timeouts without involving multiple threads. >>>>>>> >>>>>> I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why can't >>>>> we have the other threads report back what messages they've processed to >>>>> the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these callbacks without >>>>> involving the other threads. >>>>>> regards, >>>>>> Colin >>>>>> >>>>>>> I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use case. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive >>>>>>> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my >>>>>>> goals are modest. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the >>>>>>> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. >>>>>>> >>>>>&
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of things that wouldn't work. I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the client. Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
>>> >>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a >>> >>> background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka >>> >>> client ot work from random threads. >>> >> In both zio-kafka and fs2-kafka this is already the approach we are >>> taking. >>> >> >>> >> Unfortunately, the Kafka consumer forces us to perform some work in >>> >> callbacks: >>> >> >>> >>* commit completed callback: register that the callback is complete, >>> >>* partition revoked callback: in this callback we need to submit >>> >> commits from everything consumed and processed so far, using >>> >> timeouts if processing takes to long. In an async runtime, this is >>> >> an inherently multi-threaded process. Especially, we cannot do >>> >> timeouts without involving multiple threads. >>> >> >>> > I don't see why this has to be "inherently multi-threaded." Why can't >>> we have the other threads report back what messages they've processed to >>> the worker thread. Then it will be able to handle these callbacks without >>> involving the other threads. >>> > >>> > regards, >>> > Colin >>> > >>> >> I have extended the KIP's motivation to explain the major use case. >>> >> >>> >> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive >>> >> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my >>> >> goals are modest. >>> >> >>> >> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the >>> >> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. >>> >> >>> >> Kind regards, >>> >> Erik. >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: >>> >>> Hi Erik, >>> >>> >>> >>> It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or >>> producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures >>> that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing >>> and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the >>> accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory >>> barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. >>> >>> >>> >>> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I >>> haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has >>> worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific >>> examples of things that wouldn't work. >>> >>> >>> >>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, >>> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think >>> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from >>> random threads. >>> >>> >>> >>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model >>> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data >>> to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the >>> footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people >>> actually use the client. >>> >>> >>> >>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully >>> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From >>> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer >>> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. >>> >>> >>> >>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio >>> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background >>> worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work >>> from random threads. >>> >>> >>> >>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple >>> threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections >>> "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What >>> I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. >>> >>> >>> >>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. >>> However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before >>> getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. >>> Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. >>> >>> >>> >>> best, >>> >>> Colin >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: >>> >>>> Dear PMCs, >>> >>>> >>> >>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may >>> not >>> >>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people >>> >>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. >>> >>>> >>> >>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? >>> >>>> >>> >>>> Kind regards, >>> >>>>Erik. >>> >>>> >>> >>>> >>> >>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: >>> >>>>> Hello all, >>> >>>>> >>> >>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in >>> consumer. >>> >>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under >>> discussion' >>> >>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP >>> >>>>> is clear! >>> >>>>> >>> >>>>> KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw >>> >>>>> >>> >>>>> Kind regards, >>> >>>>> Erik. >>> >>>>> >>> >>>>> >>> >> -- >>> >> Erik van Oosten >>> >> e.vanoos...@grons.nl >>> >> https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com >>> >>> -- >>> Erik van Oosten >>> e.vanoos...@grons.nl >>> https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com >>> >>>
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
's motivation to explain the major use case. >> >> >> >> Please read KIP-944 again. Even though the description is extensive >> >> (this callback from callback stuff is tricky), you will find that my >> >> goals are modest. >> >> >> >> Also the implementation is just a few lines. With understanding of the >> >> idea it should not be a lot of work to follow it. >> >> >> >> Kind regards, >> >> Erik. >> >> >> >> >> >> Op 07-07-2023 om 19:57 schreef Colin McCabe: >> >>> Hi Erik, >> >>> >> >>> It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or >> producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures >> that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing >> and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the >> accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory >> barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. >> >>> >> >>> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I >> haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has >> worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific >> examples of things that wouldn't work. >> >>> >> >>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, >> due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think >> those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from >> random threads. >> >>> >> >>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model >> where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data >> to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the >> footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people >> actually use the client. >> >>> >> >>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully >> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From >> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer >> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. >> >>> >> >>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio >> coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background >> worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work >> from random threads. >> >>> >> >>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple >> threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections >> "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What >> I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. >> >>> >> >>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. >> However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before >> getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. >> Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. >> >>> >> >>> best, >> >>> Colin >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: >> >>>> Dear PMCs, >> >>>> >> >>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may >> not >> >>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people >> >>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. >> >>>> >> >>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? >> >>>> >> >>>> Kind regards, >> >>>>Erik. >> >>>> >> >>>> >> >>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: >> >>>>> Hello all, >> >>>>> >> >>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in >> consumer. >> >>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under >> discussion' >> >>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP >> >>>>> is clear! >> >>>>> >> >>>>> KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw >> >>>>> >> >>>>> Kind regards, >> >>>>> Erik. >> >>>>> >> >>>>> >> >> -- >> >> Erik van Oosten >> >> e.vanoos...@grons.nl >> >> https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com >> >> -- >> Erik van Oosten >> e.vanoos...@grons.nl >> https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com >> >>
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
; I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I > haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has > worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific > examples of things that wouldn't work. > >>> > >>> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, > due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think > those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from > random threads. > >>> > >>> There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model > where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data > to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the > footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people > actually use the client. > >>> > >>> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully > nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From > memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer > blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. > >>> > >>> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio > coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background > worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work > from random threads. > >>> > >>> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple > threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections > "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What > I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. > >>> > >>> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. > However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before > getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. > Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. > >>> > >>> best, > >>> Colin > >>> > >>> > >>> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: > >>>> Dear PMCs, > >>>> > >>>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may > not > >>>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people > >>>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. > >>>> > >>>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? > >>>> > >>>> Kind regards, > >>>>Erik. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: > >>>>> Hello all, > >>>>> > >>>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in > consumer. > >>>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' > >>>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP > >>>>> is clear! > >>>>> > >>>>> KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw > >>>>> > >>>>> Kind regards, > >>>>> Erik. > >>>>> > >>>>> > >> -- > >> Erik van Oosten > >> e.vanoos...@grons.nl > >> https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com > >
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer >> concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't >> protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating >> them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen >> at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee >> inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. >> >> I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't >> been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked >> more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of >> things that wouldn't work. >> >> I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to >> our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would >> be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. >> >> There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where >> people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a >> single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of >> the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the >> client. >> >> Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully >> nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From >> memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer >> blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. >> >> I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines >> and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker >> thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from >> random threads. >> >> There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in >> the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer >> Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending >> here is essentially the latter. >> >> I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, >> overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere >> near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the >> people working in the client area can also chime in. >> >> best, >> Colin >> >> >> On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: >>> Dear PMCs, >>> >>> So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not >>> be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people >>> that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. >>> >>> Is there anything you need to come to a decision? >>> >>> Kind regards, >>> Erik. >>> >>> >>> Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: >>>> Hello all, >>>> >>>> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. >>>> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' >>>> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP >>>> is clear! >>>> >>>> KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw >>>> >>>> Kind regards, >>>> Erik. >>>> >>>> > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description:https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
Hi Erik, It's not clear ot me that it's safe to access the Kafka consumer or producer concurrently from different threads. There are data structures that aren't protected by locks, so I wouldn't necessarily expect accessing and mutating them in a concurrent way to work. This is true even if the accesses happen at different times, because modern CPUs require memory barriers to guarantee inter-thread visibilty of loads and stores. I am writing this is without doing a detailed dive into the code (I haven't been into the consumer / producer code in a bit.) Someone who has worked more on the consumer recently might be able to give specific examples of things that wouldn't work. I know that there are at least a few locks in the consumer code now, due to our need to send heartbeats from a worker thread. I don't think those would be sufficient to protect a client that is making calls from random threads. There has been some discussion of moving to a more traditional model where people make calls to the client and the clients passes the given data to a single background worker thread. This would avoid a lot lof the footguns of the current model and probably better reflect how people actually use the client. Another issue is that neither the producer nor the consumer is fully nonblocking. There are some corner cases where we do in fact block. From memory, the producer blocks in some "buffer full" cases, and the consumer blocks sometimes when fetching metadata. I suspect it would be more appropriate for Kotlin coroutines, Zio coroutines and so on to adopt this "pass messages to and from a background worker thread" model than to try to re-engineer the Kafka client ot work from random threads. There is actually somed good advice about how to handle multiple threads in the KafkaConsumer.java header file itself. Check the sections "One Consumer Per Thread" and "Decouple Consumption and Processing." What I'm recommending here is essentially the latter. I do understand that it's frustrating to not get a quick response. However, overall I think this one needs a lot more discussion before getting anywhere near a vote. I will leave a -1 just as a procedural step. Maybe some of the people working in the client area can also chime in. best, Colin On Thu, Jul 6, 2023, at 12:02, Erik van Oosten wrote: > Dear PMCs, > > So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not > be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people > that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. > > Is there anything you need to come to a decision? > > Kind regards, > Erik. > > > Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: >> Hello all, >> >> I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. >> It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' >> between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP >> is clear! >> >> KIP description: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw >> >> Kind regards, >> Erik. >> > -- > Erik van Oosten > e.vanoos...@grons.nl > https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
Re: [VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer, votes needed!
Dear PMCs, So far there have been 0 responses to KIP-944. I understand this may not be something that keeps you busy, but this KIP is important to people that use async runtimes like Zio, Cats and Kotlin. Is there anything you need to come to a decision? Kind regards, Erik. Op 05-07-2023 om 11:38 schreef Erik van Oosten: Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik. -- Erik van Oosten e.vanoos...@grons.nl https://day-to-day-stuff.blogspot.com
[VOTE] KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer
Hello all, I'd like to call a vote on KIP-944 Support async runtimes in consumer. It has has been 'under discussion' for 7 days now. 'Under discussion' between quotes, because there were 0 comments so far. I hope the KIP is clear! KIP description: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/x/chw0Dw Kind regards, Erik.