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Add concurrency to the find-large-objects scrubber subcommand #8291
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skyzh
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Jul 5, 2024
skyzh
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LGTM
3042 tests run: 2927 passed, 0 failed, 115 skipped (full report)Code coverage* (full report)
* collected from Rust tests only The comment gets automatically updated with the latest test results
9c5e2f3 at 2024-07-05T20:22:56.387Z :recycle: |
The atomic wasn't required after all
created a tracking issue for test lsn lease flaky: #8293 |
they are not needed
VladLazar
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Jul 8, 2024
The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster. Running with concurrency of 64 (default): ``` 2024-07-05T17:30:22.882959Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:30:28.289853Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR: ``` 2024-07-05T17:31:43.375153Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:33:51.987092Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds. Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431
VladLazar
pushed a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Jul 8, 2024
The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster. Running with concurrency of 64 (default): ``` 2024-07-05T17:30:22.882959Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:30:28.289853Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR: ``` 2024-07-05T17:31:43.375153Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:33:51.987092Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds. Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431
VladLazar
pushed a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Jul 8, 2024
The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster. Running with concurrency of 64 (default): ``` 2024-07-05T17:30:22.882959Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:30:28.289853Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR: ``` 2024-07-05T17:31:43.375153Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:33:51.987092Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds. Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431
VladLazar
pushed a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Jul 8, 2024
The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster. Running with concurrency of 64 (default): ``` 2024-07-05T17:30:22.882959Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:30:28.289853Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR: ``` 2024-07-05T17:31:43.375153Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:33:51.987092Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds. Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431
VladLazar
pushed a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Jul 8, 2024
The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster. Running with concurrency of 64 (default): ``` 2024-07-05T17:30:22.882959Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:30:28.289853Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR: ``` 2024-07-05T17:31:43.375153Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:33:51.987092Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds. Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431
VladLazar
pushed a commit
that referenced
this pull request
Jul 8, 2024
The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster. Running with concurrency of 64 (default): ``` 2024-07-05T17:30:22.882959Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:30:28.289853Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR: ``` 2024-07-05T17:31:43.375153Z INFO lazy_load_identity [...] [...] 2024-07-05T17:33:51.987092Z INFO Scanned 500 shards. [...] ``` In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds. Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431
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The find-large-objects scrubber subcommand is quite fast if you run it in an environment with low latency to the S3 bucket (say an EC2 instance in the same region). However, the higher the latency gets, the slower the command becomes. Therefore, add a concurrency param and make it parallelized. This doesn't change that general relationship, but at least lets us do multiple requests in parallel and therefore hopefully faster.
Running with concurrency of 64 (default):
With concurrency of 1, simulating state before this PR:
In other words, to list 500 shards, speed is increased from 2:08 minutes to 6 seconds.
Follow-up of #8257, part of #5431