Hi everyone, We upgraded to Helix 1.0.1 and switched to the WAGED rebalancer and it worked extremely well for us. Thank you again for all your assistance!
On Mon, Feb 8, 2021 at 4:03 PM Wang Jiajun <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Phong, > > The WAGED rebalancer respects the MAX_PARTITIONS_PER_INSTANCE > automatically. So probably you don't need to do any specific configuration. > However, you do need to be on the new version to use the WAGED rebalancer. > > Also to confirm what you said, I believe the consistent hashing based > strategies (Crush and CrushEd) do not respect > the MAX_PARTITIONS_PER_INSTANCE. I guess there was some design concern. > > Anyway, using WAGED is the current recommendation : ) Could you please > have a try and let us know if it is a good fit? > > Best Regards, > Jiajun > > > On Mon, Feb 8, 2021 at 3:55 PM Xue Junkai <[email protected]> wrote: > >> CRUSHED is trying its best to evenly distribute the replicas. So you >> dont need identical assignments for each of the instances? >> If that's the case, I would suggest you to migrate to WAGED rebalancer >> with constraints setup. For more details, you can refer: >> https://github.com/apache/helix/wiki/Weight-aware-Globally-Evenly-distributed-Rebalancer >> <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__github.com_apache_helix_wiki_Weight-2Daware-2DGlobally-2DEvenly-2Ddistributed-2DRebalancer&d=DwMFaQ&c=sWW_bEwW_mLyN3Kx2v57Q8e-CRbmiT9yOhqES_g_wVY&r=OK-6RxrdKOH6KRwDOySNaLx6hy0DI7lQsJgNkY9rapU&m=y8sLBZjx235emP_H8CEdxlyUfhGoxD7ogIhyTUj8qtA&s=hFcMAED5DL1uYTHQNjzaOQ2twDmdmS3-bgpLAbLZnRo&e=> >> >> Best, >> >> Junkai >> >> >> On Mon, Feb 8, 2021 at 3:28 PM Phong X. Nguyen <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> >>> I believe it's #2, but perhaps I should explain: >>> >>> Here's a simplified view of mapFields; >>> "mapFields" : { >>> "partition_11" : { >>> "server05.verizonmedia.com" : "ONLINE" >>> }, >>> "partition_22" : { >>> "server05.verizonmedia.com" : "ONLINE" >>> }, >>> }, >>> >>> Server 5 has partitions (replicas?) 11 and 22 assigned to it; and that's >>> currently fine. We could, for example, have partition_17 also assigned, >>> which would be fine, but if a fourth one were to be assigned then we stand >>> a high likelihood of crashing. >>> >>> Bootstrapping replicas is also expensive, so we'd like to minimize that >>> as well. >>> >>> On Mon, Feb 8, 2021 at 3:14 PM Xue Junkai <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>> Thanks Phong. Can you clarify which you are looking for? >>>> 1. parallel number of state transitions for bootstrapping replicas. >>>> 2. number of replicas holding in an instance for limitation. >>>> >>>> Best, >>>> >>>> Junkai >>>> >>>> >>>> On Mon, Feb 8, 2021 at 3:06 PM Phong X. Nguyen < >>>> [email protected]> wrote: >>>> >>>>> Hello! >>>>> >>>>> I'm currently on a project that uses Apache Helix 0.8.4 (with a >>>>> pending upgrade to Helix 1.0.1) to distribute partitions across a number >>>>> of >>>>> hosts (currently 32 partitions, 16 hosts). Once a partition is allocated >>>>> to >>>>> a host a bunch of expensive initialization steps occur, and the >>>>> system proceeds to do a bunch of computations for the partition on a >>>>> scheduled interval. We seek to minimize initializations when possible. >>>>> >>>>> If a system goes down (due to either maintenance or failure), the >>>>> partitions get reshuffled. Currently we are using >>>>> the CrushEdRebalanceStrategy in the hopes of minimizing partition >>>>> movements. However, we noticed that unlike the earlier AutoRebalancer >>>>> scheme, the CrushEdRebalanceStrategy does not limit the number of >>>>> partitions per node. In our case, this can cause severe out-of-memory >>>>> issues, which will then cascade as node after node gets more and more >>>>> partitions that it cannot handle. We have on rare occasion seen our entire >>>>> cluster fail as a result, and then our production engineers must manually >>>>> - >>>>> and carefully - bring the system back online. This is undesirable. >>>>> >>>>> Does Helix have a rebalancing strategy that minimizes partition >>>>> movement yet also permits enforcement of maximum partitions per node? >>>>> >>>>> Thanks, >>>>> - Phong X. Nguyen >>>>> >>>>
