asafm commented on code in PR #18878:
URL: https://github.com/apache/pulsar/pull/18878#discussion_r1047159786
##########
site2/docs/concepts-messaging.md:
##########
@@ -599,10 +599,157 @@ In the diagram below, **Consumer A**, **Consumer B** and
**Consumer C** are all
#### Key_Shared
-In the *Key_Shared* type, multiple consumers can attach to the same
subscription. Messages are delivered in distribution across consumers and
messages with the same key or same ordering key are delivered to only one
consumer. No matter how many times the message is re-delivered, it is delivered
to the same consumer. When a consumer connects or disconnects, it causes the
served consumer to change some message keys.
+In the *Key_Shared* type, multiple consumers can attach to the same
subscription. Messages are delivered in distribution across consumers and
messages with the same key or same ordering key are delivered to only one
consumer. No matter how many times the message is re-delivered, it is delivered
to the same consumer.

+There are three types of mapping algorithms dictating how to select a consumer
for a given message key (or ordering key): Sticky, Auto-split Hash Range, and
Auto-split Consistent Hashing. The steps for all algorithms are:
+1. The message key (or ordering key) is passed to a hash function (e.g.,
Murmur3 32-bit), yielding a 32-bit integer hash.
+2. That hash number is fed to the algorithm to select a consumer from the
existing connected consumers.
+
+```
+ +--------------+
+-----------+
+Message Key -----> / Hash Function / ----- hash (32-bit) -------> / Algorithm
/ ----> Consumer
+ +---------------+ +----------+
+```
+
+
+When a new consumer is connected and thus added to the list of connected
consumers, the algorithm re-adjusts the mapping such that some keys currently
mapped to existing consumers will be mapped to the newly added consumer. When a
consumer is disconnected, thus removed from the list of connected consumers,
keys mapped to it will be mapped to other consumers. The sections below will
explain how a consumer is selected given the message hash and how the mapping
is adjusted given a new consumer is connected or an existing consumer
disconnects for each algorithm.
+
+##### Auto-split Hash Range
+
+The algorithm assumes there is a range of numbers between 0 to 2^16 (65,536).
Each consumer is mapped into a single region in this range, so all mapped
regions cover the entire range, and no regions overlap. A consumer is selected
for a given key by running a modulo operation on the message hash by the range
size (65,536). The number received ( 0 <= i < 65,536) is contained within a
single region. The consumer mapped to that region is the one selected.
+
+Example:
+
+Suppose we have 4 consumers (C1, C2, C3 and C4), then:
+
+```
+ 0 16,384 32,768 49,152 65,536
+ |------- C3 ------|------- C2 ------|------- C1 ------|------- C4 ------|
+```
+
+Given a message key `Order-3459134`, its hash would be
`murmur32("Order-3459134") = 3112179635`, and its index in the range would be
`3112179635 mod 65536 = 6067`. That index is contained within region `[0,
16384)` thus consumer C1 will be mapped to this message key.
+
+When a new consumer is connected, the largest region is chosen and is then
split in half - the lower half will be mapped to the newly added consumer and
upper half will be mapped to the consumer owning that region. Here is how it
looks like from 1 to 4 consumers:
+
+```
+C1 connected:
+|---------------------------------- C1 ---------------------------------|
+
+C2 connected:
+|--------------- C2 ----------------|---------------- C1 ---------------|
+
+C3 connected:
+|------- C3 ------|------- C2 ------|---------------- C1 ---------------|
+
+C4 connected:
+|------- C3 ------|------- C2 ------|------- C1 ------|------- C4 ------|
+```
+
+When a consumer is disconnected its region will be merged into the region on
its right. Examples:
+
+C4 is disconnected:
+
+```
+|------- C3 ------|------- C2 ------|---------------- C1 ---------------|
+```
+
+C1 is disconnected:
+
+```
+|------- C3 ------|-------------------------- C2 -----------------------|
+```
+
+The advantages of this algorithm is that it affects only a single existing
consumer upon add/delete consumer, at the expense of regions not evenly sized.
Thi means some consumers gets more keys that others. The next algorithm does
the other way around.
+
+##### Auto-split Consistent Hashing
+
+This algorithm uses a Hash Ring. It's a range of number from 0 to MAX_INT
(32-bit) in which if you traverse the range, when reaching MAX_INT, the next
number would be zero. It is as if you took a line starting from 0 ending at
MAX_INT and bent into a circle such that the end glues to the start:
+
+```
+ MAX_INT -----++--------- 0
+ ||
+ , - ~ ~ ~ - ,
+ , ' ' ,
+ , ,
+ , ,
+ , ,
+ , ,
+ , ,
+ , ,
+ , ,
+ , , '
+ ' - , _ _ _ , '
+```
+
+When adding a consumer, we mark 100 points on that circle and associate them
to the newly added consumer. For each number between 1 and 100, we concatenate
the consumer name to that number and run the hash function on it to get the
location of the point on the circle that will be marked. For Example, if the
consumer name is "orders-aggregator-pod-2345-consumer" then we would mark 100
points on that circle:
Review Comment:
<img width="1053" alt="image"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/989425/207334834-3585dedf-dabd-417b-b2a3-4f116009ded4.png">
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