Previously Block columns wasn't properly limited by maxColumnsPerBlock.
And it was possible a case, when more columns per block added than
expected.
For example, if ingested log stream has many unuqie fields
and it's sum exceed maxColumnsPerBlock.
We only enforce fieldsPerBlock limit during row parsing, which limits
isn't enough to mitigate this issue. Also it
would be very expensive to apply maxColumnsPerBlock limit during
ingestion, since it requires to track all possible field tags
combinations.
This commit adds check for maxColumnsPerBlock limit during
MustInitFromRows function call. And it returns offset of the rows and
timestamps added to the block.
Function caller must create another block and ingest remaining rows
into it.
Related issue:
https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/7568
### Describe Your Changes
Please provide a brief description of the changes you made. Be as
specific as possible to help others understand the purpose and impact of
your modifications.
### Checklist
The following checks are **mandatory**:
- [ ] My change adheres [VictoriaMetrics contributing
guidelines](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/contributing/).
---------
Signed-off-by: f41gh7 <nik@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
If the number of output (bloom, values) shards is zero, then this may lead to panic
as shown at https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/7391 .
This panic may happen when parts with only constant fields with distinct values are merged into
output part with non-constant fields, which should be written to (bloom, values) shards.
(cherry picked from commit 102e9d4f4e)
This allows reducing the amounts of data, which must be read during queries over logs with big number of fields (aka "wide events").
This, in turn, improves query performance when the data, which needs to be scanned during the query, doesn't fit OS page cache.
(cherry picked from commit 7a62eefa34)
It has been appeared that VictoriaLogs is frequently used for collecting logs with tens of fields.
For example, standard Kuberntes setup on top of Filebeat generates more than 20 fields per each log.
Such logs are also known as "wide events".
The previous storage format was optimized for logs with a few fields. When at least a single field
was referenced in the query, then the all the meta-information about all the log fields was unpacked
and parsed per each scanned block during the query. This could require a lot of additional disk IO
and CPU time when logs contain many fields. Resolve this issue by providing an (field -> metainfo_offset)
index per each field in every data block. This index allows reading and extracting only the needed
metainfo for fields used in the query. This index is stored in columnsHeaderIndexFilename ( columns_header_index.bin ).
This allows increasing performance for queries over wide events by 10x and more.
Another issue was that the data for bloom filters and field values across all the log fields except of _msg
was intermixed in two files - fieldBloomFilename ( field_bloom.bin ) and fieldValuesFilename ( field_values.bin ).
This could result in huge disk read IO overhead when some small field was referred in the query,
since the Operating System usually reads more data than requested. It reads the data from disk
in at least 4KiB blocks (usually the block size is much bigger in the range 64KiB - 512KiB).
So, if 512-byte bloom filter or values' block is read from the file, then the Operating System
reads up to 512KiB of data from disk, which results in 1000x disk read IO overhead. This overhead isn't visible
for recently accessed data, since this data is usually stored in RAM (aka Operating System page cache),
but this overhead may become very annoying when performing the query over large volumes of data
which isn't present in OS page cache.
The solution for this issue is to split bloom filters and field values across multiple shards.
This reduces the worst-case disk read IO overhead by at least Nx where N is the number of shards,
while the disk read IO overhead is completely removed in best case when the number of columns doesn't exceed N.
Currently the number of shards is 8 - see bloomValuesShardsCount . This solution increases
performance for queries over large volumes of newly ingested data by up to 1000x.
The new storage format is versioned as v1, while the old storage format is version as v0.
It is stored in the partHeader.FormatVersion.
Parts with the old storage format are converted into parts with the new storage format during background merge.
It is possible to force merge by querying /internal/force_merge HTTP endpoint - see https://docs.victoriametrics.com/victorialogs/#forced-merge .