Re: aprmemcache question
Now that we've established that the TTL passed into the server-create call is for reaping idle connections and not individual operation timeouts, I want to ask about timing out individual operations. If memcached freezes, then it appears my calls to 'get' will block until memcached wakes up. Is there any way to set a timeout for that call? I can repro this in my unit tests by sending a SIGSTOP to memcached before doing a 'get'. -Josh On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 4:37 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: This helps a lot. I think 600 seconds seems like a fine idle-reap timeout. I need to investigate why some lookups take a second or more. Maybe there's a mutex contention on my end somewhere. Thanks! -Josh On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 2:08 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 1:55 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: That one call-site is HTTP_24/src/modules/cache/mod_socache_memcache.c, right? That was where I stole my args from. no, subversion As the TCP/IP layer is a lower level abstraction than bathe apr_memcache interface, I'm still not clear on exactly what that means. Does a value of 600 mean that a single multiget must complete in 600 microseconds otherwise it fails with APR_TIMEUP? ttl only affects connections which are not currently used; it does not control I/O timeouts That might explain the behavior I saw. I've now jacked that up by x1e6 to 600 seconds and I don't see timeouts, but I'm hoping someone can bridge the gap between the socket-level explanation and the apr_memcache API call. I was assuming that apr_memcache created the TCP/IP connection when I called apr_memcache_server_create, and there even 600 seconds seems too short. Is the functionality more like it will create connections on-demand and leave them running for N microseconds, re-using the connection for multiple requests until TTL microseconds have elapsed since creation? create on demand reuse existing idle connections when possible when performing maintenance on the idle connections, clean up any which were idle for N microseconds If a connection is always reused before it is idle for N microseconds, it will live as long as memcached allows. If that's the case then I guess that every 10 minutes one of my cache lookups may have high latency to re-establish the connection, is that right? I've been histogramming this under load and seeing some long tail requests with very high latency. My median latency is only 143us which is great. My 90%, 95% and 99% are all around 5ms, which is fine as well. But I've got a fairly significant number of long-tail lookups that take hundreds of ms or even seconds to finish, and one crazy theory is that this is all reconnect cost. It would be nice if the TTL were interpreted as a maximum idle time before the connection is reaped, rather than stuttering response-time on a very active channel. It is. The ttl is interpreted by the reslist layer, which won't touch objects until they're returned to the list. This testing is all using a single memcached running on localhost. -Josh On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 11:24 AM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 11:15 AM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Ben Noordhuis i...@bnoordhuis.nl wrote: If dlsym() is called with the special handle NULL, it is interpreted as a reference to the executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared object can reference its own symbols. And that's how it works on Linux, Solaris, NetBSD and probably OpenBSD as well. Cool, thanks. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? You mean what units it uses? Microseconds (at least, in 2.4). Actually what I meant was what that value is used for in the library. The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Does it really mean the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. TCP/IP connections, once created, will be retained for the specified (ttl) number of seconds. They'll be created when needed. The socket connect timeout is hard-coded to 1 second, and there's no timeout for I/O. It is a little disturbing from a module-developer perspective to have the meaning of that parameter change by a factor of 1M between versions. Would it be better to revert the recent change and instead change the doc to match the current behavior? The doc was already changed to match the behavior, but I missed that. The caller I know of
Re: aprmemcache question
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 4:05 AM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: RE failing the build of my module -- the dominant usage is via precompiled binaries we supply. Is there an apr query for determining whether apr was compiled with threads I could do on startup? I don't think there's an official way but you know apr was compiled with APR_HAS_THREADS when dlsym(NULL, apr_os_thread_current) != NULL. Using dlsym() like that is not quite compatible with POSIX but it works on all the major Unices.
Re: aprmemcache question
Thanks Ben, That might be an interesting hack to try, although I wonder whether some of our friends running mod_pagespeed on FreeBSD might run into trouble with it. I did confirm that my prefork build has APR built with APR_HAS_THREADS, which for some reason I had earlier thought was not the case. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? -Josh On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 8:53 AM, Ben Noordhuis i...@bnoordhuis.nl wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 4:05 AM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: RE failing the build of my module -- the dominant usage is via precompiled binaries we supply. Is there an apr query for determining whether apr was compiled with threads I could do on startup? I don't think there's an official way but you know apr was compiled with APR_HAS_THREADS when dlsym(NULL, apr_os_thread_current) != NULL. Using dlsym() like that is not quite compatible with POSIX but it works on all the major Unices.
Re: aprmemcache question
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 4:29 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Thanks Ben, That might be an interesting hack to try, although I wonder whether some of our friends running mod_pagespeed on FreeBSD might run into trouble with it. I did confirm that my prefork build has APR built with APR_HAS_THREADS, which for some reason I had earlier thought was not the case. It should work, provided you linked against libapr. The FreeBSD man page says this: If dlsym() is called with the special handle NULL, it is interpreted as a reference to the executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared object can reference its own symbols. And that's how it works on Linux, Solaris, NetBSD and probably OpenBSD as well. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? You mean what units it uses? Microseconds (at least, in 2.4).
Re: aprmemcache question
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Ben Noordhuis i...@bnoordhuis.nl wrote: If dlsym() is called with the special handle NULL, it is interpreted as a reference to the executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared object can reference its own symbols. And that's how it works on Linux, Solaris, NetBSD and probably OpenBSD as well. Cool, thanks. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? You mean what units it uses? Microseconds (at least, in 2.4). Actually what I meant was what that value is used for in the library. The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Does it really mean the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. It is a little disturbing from a module-developer perspective to have the meaning of that parameter change by a factor of 1M between versions. Would it be better to revert the recent change and instead change the doc to match the current behavior? -Josh
Re: aprmemcache question
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Ben Noordhuis i...@bnoordhuis.nl wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 4:29 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Thanks Ben, That might be an interesting hack to try, although I wonder whether some of our friends running mod_pagespeed on FreeBSD might run into trouble with it. I did confirm that my prefork build has APR built with APR_HAS_THREADS, which for some reason I had earlier thought was not the case. It should work, provided you linked against libapr. The FreeBSD man page says this: If dlsym() is called with the special handle NULL, it is interpreted as a reference to the executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared object can reference its own symbols. And that's how it works on Linux, Solaris, NetBSD and probably OpenBSD as well. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? You mean what units it uses? Microseconds (at least, in 2.4). Right. I screwed up on changing that yesterday. The APR doc was already fixed long ago to indicate it was microseconds instead of seconds, the Subversion code hasn't been fixed to respect that, and the bug that was opened to fix the code to use seconds put me in the wrong frame of mind :( What does ttl mean for this particular API? All resources in the resource list are cleaned up when the memcache server is deleted/pool is cleared/destroyed. Individual resources are returned to the list at the end of individual memcache operations. When a resource is returned to the list, old resources are destroyed, where old is determined by the ttl. Destroying a memcache resource means it sends the quit message to memcached and closes the socket. So ttl sets a limit on how long a particular connection to memcached can be used. -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
Re: aprmemcache question
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 11:15 AM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Ben Noordhuis i...@bnoordhuis.nl wrote: If dlsym() is called with the special handle NULL, it is interpreted as a reference to the executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared object can reference its own symbols. And that's how it works on Linux, Solaris, NetBSD and probably OpenBSD as well. Cool, thanks. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? You mean what units it uses? Microseconds (at least, in 2.4). Actually what I meant was what that value is used for in the library. The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Does it really mean the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. TCP/IP connections, once created, will be retained for the specified (ttl) number of seconds. They'll be created when needed. The socket connect timeout is hard-coded to 1 second, and there's no timeout for I/O. It is a little disturbing from a module-developer perspective to have the meaning of that parameter change by a factor of 1M between versions. Would it be better to revert the recent change and instead change the doc to match the current behavior? The doc was already changed to match the behavior, but I missed that. The caller I know of used the wrong unit, and I'll submit a patch to fix that in the caller, as well as revert my screw-up from yesterday. -Josh -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
Re: aprmemcache question
This helps a lot. I think 600 seconds seems like a fine idle-reap timeout. I need to investigate why some lookups take a second or more. Maybe there's a mutex contention on my end somewhere. Thanks! -Josh On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 2:08 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 1:55 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: That one call-site is HTTP_24/src/modules/cache/mod_socache_memcache.c, right? That was where I stole my args from. no, subversion As the TCP/IP layer is a lower level abstraction than bathe apr_memcache interface, I'm still not clear on exactly what that means. Does a value of 600 mean that a single multiget must complete in 600 microseconds otherwise it fails with APR_TIMEUP? ttl only affects connections which are not currently used; it does not control I/O timeouts That might explain the behavior I saw. I've now jacked that up by x1e6 to 600 seconds and I don't see timeouts, but I'm hoping someone can bridge the gap between the socket-level explanation and the apr_memcache API call. I was assuming that apr_memcache created the TCP/IP connection when I called apr_memcache_server_create, and there even 600 seconds seems too short. Is the functionality more like it will create connections on-demand and leave them running for N microseconds, re-using the connection for multiple requests until TTL microseconds have elapsed since creation? create on demand reuse existing idle connections when possible when performing maintenance on the idle connections, clean up any which were idle for N microseconds If a connection is always reused before it is idle for N microseconds, it will live as long as memcached allows. If that's the case then I guess that every 10 minutes one of my cache lookups may have high latency to re-establish the connection, is that right? I've been histogramming this under load and seeing some long tail requests with very high latency. My median latency is only 143us which is great. My 90%, 95% and 99% are all around 5ms, which is fine as well. But I've got a fairly significant number of long-tail lookups that take hundreds of ms or even seconds to finish, and one crazy theory is that this is all reconnect cost. It would be nice if the TTL were interpreted as a maximum idle time before the connection is reaped, rather than stuttering response-time on a very active channel. It is. The ttl is interpreted by the reslist layer, which won't touch objects until they're returned to the list. This testing is all using a single memcached running on localhost. -Josh On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 11:24 AM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 11:15 AM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 10:58 AM, Ben Noordhuis i...@bnoordhuis.nl wrote: If dlsym() is called with the special handle NULL, it is interpreted as a reference to the executable or shared object from which the call is being made. Thus a shared object can reference its own symbols. And that's how it works on Linux, Solaris, NetBSD and probably OpenBSD as well. Cool, thanks. Do you have a feel for the exact meaning of that TTL parameter to apr_memcache_server_create? You mean what units it uses? Microseconds (at least, in 2.4). Actually what I meant was what that value is used for in the library. The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Does it really mean the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. TCP/IP connections, once created, will be retained for the specified (ttl) number of seconds. They'll be created when needed. The socket connect timeout is hard-coded to 1 second, and there's no timeout for I/O. It is a little disturbing from a module-developer perspective to have the meaning of that parameter change by a factor of 1M between versions. Would it be better to revert the recent change and instead change the doc to match the current behavior? The doc was already changed to match the behavior, but I missed that. The caller I know of used the wrong unit, and I'll submit a patch to fix that in the caller, as well as revert my screw-up from yesterday. -Josh -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/ -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
aprmemcache question
Hi, I've been having some success with the apr_memcache_* functions. In load-tests, however, I'm finding a lot of timeouts with apr_memcache_multgetp. Specifically, the status returned with the individual elements is APR_TIMEUP. This leads me to wonder what the significance of the second to last arg to this function is: apr_memcache_server_create( pool_, hosts_[i].c_str(), ports_[i], kDefaultServerMin, kDefaultServerSmax, thread_limit_, kDefaultServerTtlUs, server); I have kDefaultServerSmax initialized to 600, as that's the value I found in mod_socache_memcache.c But that seems stingy (if it's really in microseconds). Should I be giving that a few hundred millis instead? http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/1.4/group___a_p_r___util___m_c.html#ga18ddd72bc1ab5edb0a08a8f26f193bd3 claims that means time to live of client connection but I don't understand what that phrase means exactly, or if it relates to the APR_TIMEUP returns I've been suffering from. My code is here; http://code.google.com/p/modpagespeed/source/browse/trunk/src/net/instaweb/apache/apr_mem_cache.cc -Josh
Re: aprmemcache question
On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 5:38 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Hi, I've been having some success with the apr_memcache_* functions. In load-tests, however, I'm finding a lot of timeouts with apr_memcache_multgetp. Specifically, the status returned with the individual elements is APR_TIMEUP. This leads me to wonder what the significance of the second to last arg to this function is: apr_memcache_server_create( pool_, hosts_[i].c_str(), ports_[i], kDefaultServerMin, kDefaultServerSmax, thread_limit_, kDefaultServerTtlUs, server); I have kDefaultServerSmax initialized to 600, as that's the value I found in mod_socache_memcache.c But that seems stingy (if it's really in microseconds). Should I be giving that a few hundred millis instead? http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/1.4/group___a_p_r___util___m_c.html#ga18ddd72bc1ab5edb0a08a8f26f193bd3 claims that means time to live of client connection but I don't understand what that phrase means exactly, or if it relates to the APR_TIMEUP returns I've been suffering from. My code is here; http://code.google.com/p/modpagespeed/source/browse/trunk/src/net/instaweb/apache/apr_mem_cache.cc -Josh d...@apr.apache.org is a better place to ask about details of apr functions. Coincidentally, earlier today I committed someone's fix for the confusion about the units of ttl: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?view=revisionrevision=1390530 It is supposed to be in seconds. Pick up the tiny change to apr_memcache.c and see if that helps anything. You should continue this discussion on d...@apr.apache.org. -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
Re: aprmemcache question
+dev (sorry for the duplicate; my first attempt failed due to not being a subscriber). Keeping modules-dev on CC if that's appropriate. Thanks, Jeff, I was wondering if there was a units issue there. I'm still wondering if anyone can describe the meaning of that argument in more detail. Is that related to my multiget APR_TIMEUP returns? The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Would it be inaccurate to instead say the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. I have a practical question about how I release software given this change. Our module (mod_pagespeed) is documented to run with Apache 2.2 and Apache 2.4. It seems like for 2.2 I should probably multiple my desired argument by a million. Same with for 2.4.x and earlier, for some value of x. How should I work this in my code? Should I query the version number using an apr utility or something and multiply by a million in certain cases? What's the best practice calling this function for module developers? -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 6:20 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 5:38 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Hi, I've been having some success with the apr_memcache_* functions. In load-tests, however, I'm finding a lot of timeouts with apr_memcache_multgetp. Specifically, the status returned with the individual elements is APR_TIMEUP. This leads me to wonder what the significance of the second to last arg to this function is: apr_memcache_server_create( pool_, hosts_[i].c_str(), ports_[i], kDefaultServerMin, kDefaultServerSmax, thread_limit_, kDefaultServerTtlUs, server); I have kDefaultServerSmax initialized to 600, as that's the value I found in mod_socache_memcache.c But that seems stingy (if it's really in microseconds). Should I be giving that a few hundred millis instead? http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/1.4/group___a_p_r___util___m_c.html#ga18ddd72bc1ab5edb0a08a8f26f193bd3 claims that means time to live of client connection but I don't understand what that phrase means exactly, or if it relates to the APR_TIMEUP returns I've been suffering from. My code is here; http://code.google.com/p/modpagespeed/source/browse/trunk/src/net/instaweb/apache/apr_mem_cache.cc -Josh d...@apr.apache.org is a better place to ask about details of apr functions. Coincidentally, earlier today I committed someone's fix for the confusion about the units of ttl: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?view=revisionrevision=1390530 It is supposed to be in seconds. Pick up the tiny change to apr_memcache.c and see if that helps anything. You should continue this discussion on d...@apr.apache.org. -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
Re: aprmemcache question
Looking at source, I see that Jeff's patch, and the 'ttl' parameter in general, is only referenced under '#if APR_HAS_THREADS'. When I load-tested and found the timeouts, I was testing under Apache 2.2 Prefork, and thus that patched code is not even compiled, IIUC. However I would still like to know what that parameter is for when running under Worker. I think the implication of my source journey is also that if my module instantiates multiple threads under Prefork (which it does), it must call apr_memcache* routines from only one of them. Is that correct? -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 7:17 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: +dev (sorry for the duplicate; my first attempt failed due to not being a subscriber). Keeping modules-dev on CC if that's appropriate. Thanks, Jeff, I was wondering if there was a units issue there. I'm still wondering if anyone can describe the meaning of that argument in more detail. Is that related to my multiget APR_TIMEUP returns? The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Would it be inaccurate to instead say the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. I have a practical question about how I release software given this change. Our module (mod_pagespeed) is documented to run with Apache 2.2 and Apache 2.4. It seems like for 2.2 I should probably multiple my desired argument by a million. Same with for 2.4.x and earlier, for some value of x. How should I work this in my code? Should I query the version number using an apr utility or something and multiply by a million in certain cases? What's the best practice calling this function for module developers? -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 6:20 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 5:38 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Hi, I've been having some success with the apr_memcache_* functions. In load-tests, however, I'm finding a lot of timeouts with apr_memcache_multgetp. Specifically, the status returned with the individual elements is APR_TIMEUP. This leads me to wonder what the significance of the second to last arg to this function is: apr_memcache_server_create( pool_, hosts_[i].c_str(), ports_[i], kDefaultServerMin, kDefaultServerSmax, thread_limit_, kDefaultServerTtlUs, server); I have kDefaultServerSmax initialized to 600, as that's the value I found in mod_socache_memcache.c But that seems stingy (if it's really in microseconds). Should I be giving that a few hundred millis instead? http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/1.4/group___a_p_r___util___m_c.html#ga18ddd72bc1ab5edb0a08a8f26f193bd3 claims that means time to live of client connection but I don't understand what that phrase means exactly, or if it relates to the APR_TIMEUP returns I've been suffering from. My code is here; http://code.google.com/p/modpagespeed/source/browse/trunk/src/net/instaweb/apache/apr_mem_cache.cc -Josh d...@apr.apache.org is a better place to ask about details of apr functions. Coincidentally, earlier today I committed someone's fix for the confusion about the units of ttl: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?view=revisionrevision=1390530 It is supposed to be in seconds. Pick up the tiny change to apr_memcache.c and see if that helps anything. You should continue this discussion on d...@apr.apache.org. -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
Re: aprmemcache question
On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 7:31 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Looking at source, I see that Jeff's patch, and the 'ttl' parameter in general, is only referenced under '#if APR_HAS_THREADS'. When I load-tested and found the timeouts, I was testing under Apache 2.2 Prefork, and thus that patched code is not even compiled, IIUC. However I would still like to know what that parameter is for when running under Worker. I think the implication of my source journey is also that if my module instantiates multiple threads under Prefork (which it does), it must call apr_memcache* routines from only one of them. Is that correct? APR is usually compiled with thread support even when using the prefork MPM. Check APR_HAS_THREADS in apr.h. If APR_HAS_THREADS is 0 (very unlikely), you probably want to fail the build of your module to avoid having to worry about this. As far as what the parameter means... I'll try to look tomorrow if nobody replies first. See apu_version() for the APR-util version. -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 7:17 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: +dev (sorry for the duplicate; my first attempt failed due to not being a subscriber). Keeping modules-dev on CC if that's appropriate. Thanks, Jeff, I was wondering if there was a units issue there. I'm still wondering if anyone can describe the meaning of that argument in more detail. Is that related to my multiget APR_TIMEUP returns? The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Would it be inaccurate to instead say the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. I have a practical question about how I release software given this change. Our module (mod_pagespeed) is documented to run with Apache 2.2 and Apache 2.4. It seems like for 2.2 I should probably multiple my desired argument by a million. Same with for 2.4.x and earlier, for some value of x. How should I work this in my code? Should I query the version number using an apr utility or something and multiply by a million in certain cases? What's the best practice calling this function for module developers? -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 6:20 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 5:38 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Hi, I've been having some success with the apr_memcache_* functions. In load-tests, however, I'm finding a lot of timeouts with apr_memcache_multgetp. Specifically, the status returned with the individual elements is APR_TIMEUP. This leads me to wonder what the significance of the second to last arg to this function is: apr_memcache_server_create( pool_, hosts_[i].c_str(), ports_[i], kDefaultServerMin, kDefaultServerSmax, thread_limit_, kDefaultServerTtlUs, server); I have kDefaultServerSmax initialized to 600, as that's the value I found in mod_socache_memcache.c But that seems stingy (if it's really in microseconds). Should I be giving that a few hundred millis instead? http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/1.4/group___a_p_r___util___m_c.html#ga18ddd72bc1ab5edb0a08a8f26f193bd3 claims that means time to live of client connection but I don't understand what that phrase means exactly, or if it relates to the APR_TIMEUP returns I've been suffering from. My code is here; http://code.google.com/p/modpagespeed/source/browse/trunk/src/net/instaweb/apache/apr_mem_cache.cc -Josh d...@apr.apache.org is a better place to ask about details of apr functions. Coincidentally, earlier today I committed someone's fix for the confusion about the units of ttl: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?view=revisionrevision=1390530 It is supposed to be in seconds. Pick up the tiny change to apr_memcache.c and see if that helps anything. You should continue this discussion on d...@apr.apache.org. -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/ -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/
Re: aprmemcache question
RE failing the build of my module -- the dominant usage is via precompiled binaries we supply. Is there an apr query for determining whether apr was compiled with threads I could do on startup? -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 7:40 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 7:31 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Looking at source, I see that Jeff's patch, and the 'ttl' parameter in general, is only referenced under '#if APR_HAS_THREADS'. When I load-tested and found the timeouts, I was testing under Apache 2.2 Prefork, and thus that patched code is not even compiled, IIUC. However I would still like to know what that parameter is for when running under Worker. I think the implication of my source journey is also that if my module instantiates multiple threads under Prefork (which it does), it must call apr_memcache* routines from only one of them. Is that correct? APR is usually compiled with thread support even when using the prefork MPM. Check APR_HAS_THREADS in apr.h. If APR_HAS_THREADS is 0 (very unlikely), you probably want to fail the build of your module to avoid having to worry about this. As far as what the parameter means... I'll try to look tomorrow if nobody replies first. See apu_version() for the APR-util version. -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 7:17 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: +dev (sorry for the duplicate; my first attempt failed due to not being a subscriber). Keeping modules-dev on CC if that's appropriate. Thanks, Jeff, I was wondering if there was a units issue there. I'm still wondering if anyone can describe the meaning of that argument in more detail. Is that related to my multiget APR_TIMEUP returns? The phrase time to live of client connection confuses me. Would it be inaccurate to instead say the maximum number of seconds apr_memcache is willing to wait for a single operation? Or does it mean *both*, implying that a fresh TCP/IP connection is made for every new operation, but will stay alive for only a certain number of seconds. I have a practical question about how I release software given this change. Our module (mod_pagespeed) is documented to run with Apache 2.2 and Apache 2.4. It seems like for 2.2 I should probably multiple my desired argument by a million. Same with for 2.4.x and earlier, for some value of x. How should I work this in my code? Should I query the version number using an apr utility or something and multiply by a million in certain cases? What's the best practice calling this function for module developers? -Josh On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 6:20 PM, Jeff Trawick traw...@gmail.com wrote: On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 5:38 PM, Joshua Marantz jmara...@google.com wrote: Hi, I've been having some success with the apr_memcache_* functions. In load-tests, however, I'm finding a lot of timeouts with apr_memcache_multgetp. Specifically, the status returned with the individual elements is APR_TIMEUP. This leads me to wonder what the significance of the second to last arg to this function is: apr_memcache_server_create( pool_, hosts_[i].c_str(), ports_[i], kDefaultServerMin, kDefaultServerSmax, thread_limit_, kDefaultServerTtlUs, server); I have kDefaultServerSmax initialized to 600, as that's the value I found in mod_socache_memcache.c But that seems stingy (if it's really in microseconds). Should I be giving that a few hundred millis instead? http://apr.apache.org/docs/apr-util/1.4/group___a_p_r___util___m_c.html#ga18ddd72bc1ab5edb0a08a8f26f193bd3 claims that means time to live of client connection but I don't understand what that phrase means exactly, or if it relates to the APR_TIMEUP returns I've been suffering from. My code is here; http://code.google.com/p/modpagespeed/source/browse/trunk/src/net/instaweb/apache/apr_mem_cache.cc -Josh d...@apr.apache.org is a better place to ask about details of apr functions. Coincidentally, earlier today I committed someone's fix for the confusion about the units of ttl: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?view=revisionrevision=1390530 It is supposed to be in seconds. Pick up the tiny change to apr_memcache.c and see if that helps anything. You should continue this discussion on d...@apr.apache.org. -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/ -- Born in Roswell... married an alien... http://emptyhammock.com/