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Benedict Elliott Smith edited comment on CASSANDRA-17292 at 2/5/22, 1:31 PM: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- bq. At the moment streaming and compaction are configured separately We have a largely flat and messy config file today, so I don't think what we do today is relevant. Streaming and compaction are intrinsically linked by repair (except in the case of bootstrap). Streaming is gated by (validation) compaction throughput. Where does repair configuration sit in this world? Where should streaming network settings sit? You also really need to address the logical inconsistency of {{materialized_views.concurrent_writes}} and {{query.concurrent_writes}}, or {{materialized_views.enabled}} and {{query.enable_user_defined_functions}}. In each case we have semantically equivalent things dotted in inconsistent config (if {{concurrent_writes}} is a query option, so is {{concurrent_materialized_view_writes}}; if {{enable_user_defined_functions}} is a query/cql option so is {{enable_materialized_views}}). Honestly, if we cannot come up with a _coherent_ strategy that avoids the above inconsistencies I prefer the grab bag of flat config we have today, just tidied up a bit. Nesting inconsistently is strictly worse for usability IMO. bq. I have never worked on a project where I didn't ask how to configure a feature or a subsystem and instead wanted to look at all rate limiters together You have never had to address database behaviour concerns that cut across features? In my stint as a database operator, most configuration was of no interest. I did not typically delve into feature-level configuration. System settings, tuning and security are the only things I would be interested in, and I would absolutely have preferred to see them presented together rather than spread across the many features I did not know of or understand. bq. but if we do actually implement pluggable storage, where will this be? This same argument can likely be applied to concurrent_reads and concurrent_writes - it also applies to commit log (and implicitly CDC), repair, streaming, hints, memtables and compaction. Even many of the guardrails, particularly e.g. involving tombstones (which are a storage layer concept not all implementations will share). Even MVs perhaps (due to special tombstones). Are we proposing to group these all under {{storage}}? IMO {{storage}} and {{query}} are such broad terms that almost everything can be justified as encompassed by them. To me this is poor API design, as the user has to guess what the authors were thinking, whether in this case it went under this heading, or that one, or if this one was important enough it got its own heading. Particularly if the user doesn't know a priori what the possible configuration options are. was (Author: benedict): bq. At the moment streaming and compaction are configured separately We have a largely flat and messy config file today, so I don't think what we do today is relevant. Streaming and compaction are intrinsically linked by repair (except in the case of bootstrap). Streaming is gated by compaction throughput. Where does repair configuration sit in this world? Where should streaming network configurations sit? You also haven't addressed the clear inconsistency of {{materialized_views.concurrent_writes}} and {{query.concurrent_writes}}, or {{materialized_views.enabled}} and {{query.enable_user_defined_functions}}. In each case we have semantically equivalent things dotted in inconsistent config (if {{concurrent_writes}} is a query option, so is {{concurrent_materialized_view_writes}}; if {{enable_user_defined_functions}} is a query/cql option so is {{enable_materialized_views}}). Honestly, if we cannot come up with a _coherent_ strategy that avoids the above inconsistencies I prefer the grab bag of flat config we have today, just tidied up a bit. Nesting inconsistently is strictly worse for usability IMO. bq. I have never worked on a project where I didn't ask how to configure a feature or a subsystem and instead wanted to look at all rate limiters together You have never had to address database behaviour concerns that cut across features? bq. but if we do actually implement pluggable storage, where will this be? This same argument can likely be applied to concurrent_reads and concurrent_writes - it also applies to commit log (and implicitly CDC), repair, streaming, hints, memtables and compaction. Are we going to group these all under storage? > Move cassandra.yaml toward a nested structure around major database concepts > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: CASSANDRA-17292 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-17292 > Project: Cassandra > Issue Type: Improvement > Components: Local/Config > Reporter: Caleb Rackliffe > Assignee: Caleb Rackliffe > Priority: Normal > Fix For: 5.x > > > Recent mailing list conversation (see "[DISCUSS] Nested YAML configs for new > features") has made it clear we will gravitate toward appropriately nested > structures for new parameters in {{cassandra.yaml}}, but from the scattered > conversation across a few Guardrails tickets (see CASSANDRA-17212 and > CASSANDRA-17148) and CASSANDRA-15234, there is also a general desire to > eventually extend this to the rest of {{cassandra.yaml}}. The benefits of > this change include those we gain by doing it for new features (single point > of interest for feature documentation, typed configuration objects, logical > grouping for additional parameters added over time, discoverability, etc.), > but one a larger scale. > This may overlap with ongoing work, including the Guardrails epic. Ideally, > even a rough cut of a design here would allow that to move forward in a > timely and coherent manner (with less long-term refactoring pain). > While these would have to be adjusted to CASSANDRA-15234 (probably after it > merges), there have been two proposals floated already for what this might > look like: > From [~maedhroz] - > https://github.com/maedhroz/cassandra/commit/49e83c70eba3357978d1081ecf500bbbdee960d8 > From [~benedict] - > https://github.com/belliottsmith/cassandra/commits/CASSANDRA-15234-grouping-ideas -- This message was sent by Atlassian Jira (v8.20.1#820001) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: commits-unsubscr...@cassandra.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: commits-h...@cassandra.apache.org