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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-11349?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15266474#comment-15266474
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Stefan Podkowinski commented on CASSANDRA-11349:
------------------------------------------------

I'm not sure introducing a new tracker interface is the best way to handle 
this. It took me a while to actually figure out the differences between the 
{{update}} implementations in both trackers, since for most parts it's sharing 
the same copied code. It would probably be better to have ValidationTracker 
subclass RegularCompactionTracker, add {{remove/addUnwrittenTombstone}} 
implemented empty for validation.

The {{addRangeTombstone}} semantics also look like a case of leaky abstractions 
to me. It's adding nothing at all for regular compaction, but serves as early 
exit path for validation. 

Good news is that the dtests and unit tests seem to pass with the patch. :)

> MerkleTree mismatch when multiple range tombstones exists for the same 
> partition and interval
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-11349
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-11349
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Fabien Rousseau
>            Assignee: Stefan Podkowinski
>              Labels: repair
>             Fix For: 2.1.x, 2.2.x
>
>         Attachments: 11349-2.1-v2.patch, 11349-2.1.patch
>
>
> We observed that repair, for some of our clusters, streamed a lot of data and 
> many partitions were "out of sync".
> Moreover, the read repair mismatch ratio is around 3% on those clusters, 
> which is really high.
> After investigation, it appears that, if two range tombstones exists for a 
> partition for the same range/interval, they're both included in the merkle 
> tree computation.
> But, if for some reason, on another node, the two range tombstones were 
> already compacted into a single range tombstone, this will result in a merkle 
> tree difference.
> Currently, this is clearly bad because MerkleTree differences are dependent 
> on compactions (and if a partition is deleted and created multiple times, the 
> only way to ensure that repair "works correctly"/"don't overstream data" is 
> to major compact before each repair... which is not really feasible).
> Below is a list of steps allowing to easily reproduce this case:
> {noformat}
> ccm create test -v 2.1.13 -n 2 -s
> ccm node1 cqlsh
> CREATE KEYSPACE test_rt WITH replication = {'class': 'SimpleStrategy', 
> 'replication_factor': 2};
> USE test_rt;
> CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS table1 (
>     c1 text,
>     c2 text,
>     c3 float,
>     c4 float,
>     PRIMARY KEY ((c1), c2)
> );
> INSERT INTO table1 (c1, c2, c3, c4) VALUES ( 'a', 'b', 1, 2);
> DELETE FROM table1 WHERE c1 = 'a' AND c2 = 'b';
> ctrl ^d
> # now flush only one of the two nodes
> ccm node1 flush 
> ccm node1 cqlsh
> USE test_rt;
> INSERT INTO table1 (c1, c2, c3, c4) VALUES ( 'a', 'b', 1, 3);
> DELETE FROM table1 WHERE c1 = 'a' AND c2 = 'b';
> ctrl ^d
> ccm node1 repair
> # now grep the log and observe that there was some inconstencies detected 
> between nodes (while it shouldn't have detected any)
> ccm node1 showlog | grep "out of sync"
> {noformat}
> Consequences of this are a costly repair, accumulating many small SSTables 
> (up to thousands for a rather short period of time when using VNodes, the 
> time for compaction to absorb those small files), but also an increased size 
> on disk.



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