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Edward Ribeiro commented on ZOOKEEPER-1416: ------------------------------------------- My two cents: to leave as is would be **very** nice, but I am afraid only having NodeCreated/NodeDeleted would be better option because persistent watch is recursive anyway and due to scaling issues (thousands of children node changes, each firing 2 events). So, if we could cut the number of events in half it could be better, *imho* (excuse me if I misunderstood the question). [~fpj], [~hanm], [~phunt], wdyt? > Persistent Recursive Watch > -------------------------- > > Key: ZOOKEEPER-1416 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-1416 > Project: ZooKeeper > Issue Type: Improvement > Components: c client, documentation, java client, server > Reporter: Phillip Liu > Assignee: Jordan Zimmerman > Attachments: ZOOKEEPER-1416.patch, ZOOKEEPER-1416.patch > > Original Estimate: 504h > Remaining Estimate: 504h > > h4. The Problem > A ZooKeeper Watch can be placed on a single znode and when the znode changes > a Watch event is sent to the client. If there are thousands of znodes being > watched, when a client (re)connect, it would have to send thousands of watch > requests. At Facebook, we have this problem storing information for thousands > of db shards. Consequently a naming service that consumes the db shard > definition issues thousands of watch requests each time the service starts > and changes client watcher. > h4. Proposed Solution > We add the notion of a Persistent Recursive Watch in ZooKeeper. Persistent > means no Watch reset is necessary after a watch-fire. Recursive means the > Watch applies to the node and descendant nodes. A Persistent Recursive Watch > behaves as follows: > # Recursive Watch supports all Watch semantics: CHILDREN, DATA, and EXISTS. > # CHILDREN and DATA Recursive Watches can be placed on any znode. > # EXISTS Recursive Watches can be placed on any path. > # A Recursive Watch behaves like a auto-watch registrar on the server side. > Setting a Recursive Watch means to set watches on all descendant znodes. > # When a watch on a descendant fires, no subsequent event is fired until a > corresponding getData(..) on the znode is called, then Recursive Watch > automically apply the watch on the znode. This maintains the existing Watch > semantic on an individual znode. > # A Recursive Watch overrides any watches placed on a descendant znode. > Practically this means the Recursive Watch Watcher callback is the one > receiving the event and event is delivered exactly once. > A goal here is to reduce the number of semantic changes. The guarantee of no > intermediate watch event until data is read will be maintained. The only > difference is we will automatically re-add the watch after read. At the same > time we add the convience of reducing the need to add multiple watches for > sibling znodes and in turn reduce the number of watch messages sent from the > client to the server. > There are some implementation details that needs to be hashed out. Initial > thinking is to have the Recursive Watch create per-node watches. This will > cause a lot of watches to be created on the server side. Currently, each > watch is stored as a single bit in a bit set relative to a session - up to 3 > bits per client per znode. If there are 100m znodes with 100k clients, each > watching all nodes, then this strategy will consume approximately 3.75TB of > ram distributed across all Observers. Seems expensive. > Alternatively, a blacklist of paths to not send Watches regardless of Watch > setting can be set each time a watch event from a Recursive Watch is fired. > The memory utilization is relative to the number of outstanding reads and at > worst case it's 1/3 * 3.75TB using the parameters given above. > Otherwise, a relaxation of no intermediate watch event until read guarantee > is required. If the server can send watch events regardless of one has > already been fired without corresponding read, then the server can simply > fire watch events without tracking. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)