- Use binary search instead of linear scan when locating the run of smallest timestamps
in blocks with intersected time ranges. This should improve performance
when merging blocks with big number of samples
- Skip samples with duplicate timestamps. This should increase query performance
in cluster version of VictoriaMetrics with the enabled replication.
* vmalert: deprecate alert's status link
Deprecate alert's status link `/api/v1/<groupID>/<alertID>/status` in favour of
`api/v1/alerts?group_id=<group_id>&alert_id=<alert_id>"`.
The change was needed for simplifying logic in vmselect for proxying vmalert's requests.
The old alert's status link will be still supported for a few versions but will be removed in the future.
https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/2825
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* vmalert: fix review comments
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Previously the time series could be put into dateMetricIDCache without
registering in the per-day inverted index if GetOrCreateTSIDByName
finds TSID entry in the global index. This could lead to missing
series in query results.
The issue has been introduced in the commit 55e7afae3a,
which has been included in VictoriaMetrics v1.78.0
* docs: warn about potential issue with read queries for 1.78.0
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* docs: warn about potential issue with read queries for 1.78.0
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Previously SearchMetricNames was returning unmarshaled metric names.
This wasn't great for vmstorage, which should spend additional CPU time
for marshaling the metric names before sending them to vmselect.
While at it, remove possible duplicate metric names, which could occur when
multiple samples for new time series are ingested via concurrent requests.
Also sort the metric names before returning them to the client.
This simplifies debugging of the returned metric names across repeated requests to /api/v1/series
Previously the cache could store 10K unique regexps. When every regexp is huge (e.g. hundreds of kilobytes),
then the total cache size could grow to multiples of gigabytes. Now the cache size is limited by the total length
of all cached regexps. So huge regexps won't result in high memory usage for the cache.
Metrics `vm_partial_results_total` and `vm_requests_total` serving
the similar purpose, but contain inconsistent set of labels.
This change updates `vm_partial_results_total` labels to be consistent
with `vm_requests_total`.
The change breaks backward compatibility with assumption that
`vm_partial_results_total` wasn't widely used, since it is
not documented and absent in the alerts and dashboards.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
If the previous dial attempt was unsuccessful, then all the new dial attempts are skipped
until the background goroutine determines that the given address can be successfully dialed.
This reduces query latency when some of vmstorage nodes are unavailable and dialing them is slow.
This should help with https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/711
This commit is based on ideas from the https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/pull/2756
The main differences are:
- The check for healthy/unhealthy storage nodes is moved one level lower from app/vmselect/netstorage to lib/netutil.ConnPool.
This makes possible re-using this feature everywhere lib/netutil.ConnPool is used.
- The check doesn't take into account handshake errors for already established connections.
Handshake errors usually mean improperly configured VictoriaMetrics cluster, so they shouldn't be ignored.