[ 
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-15369?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
 ]

ZhaoYang updated CASSANDRA-15369:
---------------------------------
    Test and Documentation Plan: 
Added unit tests to read RT with named queries and slice queries.

[CIrcle 
CI|https://circleci.com/workflow-run/2d7af5ed-1ee6-4188-af62-90cb7f55b697] 
running

  was:
Added unit tests to read RT with named queries and slice queries.

[CIrcle 
CI|https://circleci.com/workflow-run/5b72aec3-9a21-4393-9641-1c4c36f03b0c] 
running


> Fake row deletions and range tombstones, causing digest mismatch and sstable 
> growth
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CASSANDRA-15369
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-15369
>             Project: Cassandra
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Consistency/Coordination, Local/Memtable, Local/SSTable
>            Reporter: Benedict Elliott Smith
>            Assignee: ZhaoYang
>            Priority: Normal
>             Fix For: 3.0.x, 3.11.x, 4.0-beta
>
>
> As assessed in CASSANDRA-15363, we generate fake row deletions and fake 
> tombstone markers under various circumstances:
>  * If we perform a clustering key query (or select a compact column):
>  * Serving from a {{Memtable}}, we will generate fake row deletions
>  * Serving from an sstable, we will generate fake row tombstone markers
>  * If we perform a slice query, we will generate only fake row tombstone 
> markers for any range tombstone that begins or ends outside of the limit of 
> the requested slice
>  * If we perform a multi-slice or IN query, this will occur for each 
> slice/clustering
> Unfortunately, these different behaviours can lead to very different data 
> stored in sstables until a full repair is run.  When we read-repair, we only 
> send these fake deletions or range tombstones.  A fake row deletion, 
> clustering RT and slice RT, each produces a different digest.  So for each 
> single point lookup we can produce a digest mismatch twice, and until a full 
> repair is run we can encounter an unlimited number of digest mismatches 
> across different overlapping queries.
> Relatedly, this seems a more problematic variant of our atomicity failures 
> caused by our monotonic reads, since RTs can have an atomic effect across (up 
> to) the entire partition, whereas the propagation may happen on an 
> arbitrarily small portion.  If the RT exists on only one node, this could 
> plausibly lead to fairly problematic scenario if that node fails before the 
> range can be repaired. 
> At the very least, this behaviour can lead to an almost unlimited amount of 
> extraneous data being stored until the range is repaired and compaction 
> happens to overwrite the sub-range RTs and row deletions.



--
This message was sent by Atlassian Jira
(v8.3.4#803005)

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: commits-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: commits-h...@cassandra.apache.org

Reply via email to