But that's the point. I can not reach 30 active requests. I can only reach 10 active requests without error.
Any ideas on how I can debug this? Cheers, Gary. On Mar 2, 7:05 am, "Nick Johnson (Google)" <nick.john...@google.com> wrote: > Hi, > > On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 1:54 PM, Wooble <geoffsp...@gmail.com> wrote: > > The 500 requests per second number relies on the probably-unreasonable > > assumption that each request can complete in ~75ms. Deliberately > > making your requests take a whole 3 seconds each is, obviously, not > > going to work. You can only have 10 instances active at a time by > > default; if the pages you're serving actually take 3 seconds to > > complete you'll need to optimize things a whole lot or be stuck with a > > 3.33 request/sec maximum. > > Actually, the default limit is 30 active requests. > > -Nick Johnson > > > > > > > On Mar 1, 11:33 pm, Gary Orser <garyor...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Hi Nick, > > > > Hmm, I was running tests on a billing enabled appspot today. 100 > > > requests/test. > > > > 10 threads getting a URL with a 3 second sleep (to emulate > > > computation) on appspot, was the most I could get without getting 500 > > > errors. > > > If I raised the thread pool beyond 10, I started getting errors?? > > > > That doesn't reconcile very well with this statement from the > > > appengine website. > > > "Requests > > > The total number of requests to the app. The per-minute quotas for > > > application with billing enabled allow for up to 500 requests per > > > second--more than one billion requests per month. If your application > > > requires even higher quotas than the "billing-enabled" values listed > > > below, you can request an increase in these limits here. > > > " > > > > Is there some billing setting that affects this? > > > > Cheers, Gary > > > > PS. dead simple request handler. > > > > import time > > > from django import http > > > def sit(req): > > > time.sleep(3) > > > return http.HttpResponse('foo') > > > > errors are: > > > > 03-01 04:15PM 48.177 /sit/91 500 10019ms 0cpu_ms 0kb gzip(gfe) > > > 153.90.236.210 - - [01/Mar/2010:16:15:58 -0800] "GET /sit/91 HTTP/1.1" > > > 500 0 - "gzip(gfe)" ".appspot.com" > > > W 03-01 04:15PM 58.197 > > > Request was aborted after waiting too long to attempt to service your > > > request. Most likely, this indicates that you have reached your > > > simultaneous dynamic request limit. This is almost always due to > > > excessively high latency in your app. Please seehttp:// > > code.google.com/appengine/docs/quotas.htmlfor more details. > > > > On Mar 1, 2:36 pm, Michael Wesner <mike.wes...@webfilings.com> wrote: > > > > > Correction/addition to my last email. > > > > > It turns out that our requests for this EC2 pull thing are actually > > much faster now. Gary and our other devs have reworked it. I need updated > > numbers, but they don't take 10s, probably more like 2s. We still have some > > heavy ~5s services though, so the same issue exists with the simul-req > > stuff, just to less extent. We don't actually hit this limit much now with > > the current beta that is in production, but it is low traffic at the moment. > > We are just getting ready to ramp up heavily. > > > > > I asked Nick what we should do, well just today after my last email, I > > have made contact with a Developer Advocate and whatnot, which is fantastic. > > It looks like we, as a business, will be able to have better contact with > > the GAE team. We would very much like to continue working with you to figure > > out what actions we can take and what provisioning we can do to make our > > product successful and scale it as we grow in the near future. Gary Orser > > will be replying to this thread soon with more findings from both our real > > app code and a little test app we are using and which he will share with > > you. > > > > > We plan on having a presence at Google I/O this year as we did at > > PyCon. Hopefully we can even get setup in the demonstration area at I/O. > > > > > Thanks Nick for your help. Could we possibly setup a quick skype conf > > call at some point? > > > > > -Mike Wesner > > > > > On Mar 1, 2010, at 1:13 PM, Michael Wesner wrote: > > > > > > Nick, > > > > > > If we (I work with Gary) require fairly heavy requests which run for > > multiple seconds then it is not possible to get anywhere near 400 QPS. The > > math used on the docs page only applies to 75ms requests. > > > > > > (1000 ms/second / 75 ms/request) * 30 = 400 requests/second > > > > > > so lets say each request takes 10 seconds (and ours, pulling data to > > EC2 for a heavy operation that we can't do on GAE could take that much since > > we have to process and update some XML before sending it) > > > > > > (1000 ms/second / 10000 ms/request) * 30 = 3 requests/second > > > > > > And that does not even take into account all the other traffic to our > > application, nor the fact that many users could be doing this same heavy > > operation at the same time. Our application will see spikes in this type of > > activity also. The docs also mention that CPU heavy apps incur penalties, > > which is vague and scary. > > > > > > Great effort is put into doing things in the most efficient way > > possible, but not everyones apps can do everything in 75ms. Most all of our > > service calls are under 250ms. We do have a little overhead from our > > framework which we are constantly working on improving. Our application is > > AMF service/object based which is inherently heavy compared to simple web > > requests. It limits the amount of memcache work we can do also, but we are > > also working on improving our use of that. > > > > > > We easily hit these boundaries during testing so I think we really > > need much higher simultaneous dynamic request limits for not only our > > production instance but our dev/qa instances so we can test and load them to > > some degree. Our QA team could easily bust this limit 20 times over. > > > > > > So, Nick Johnson... I ask your advice. We are running a > > company/product on GAE. We are more than happy to pay for > > quota/service/extra assistance in these matters. What do you suggest we do? > > > > > > I should also mention that I spoke with Brett Slatkin at PyCon and he > > is now at least semi-familiar with the scope of product we have developed. > > I have exchanged contact info with him but have not heard anything back > > from him yet. We would really appreciate contact or even a brief meeting at > > some point (in person or otherwise). > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > > > -Mike Wesner > > > > > > On Mar 1, 2010, at 7:40 AM, Nick Johnson (Google) wrote: > > > > > >> Hi Gary, > > > > > >> Practically speaking, for an app that hasn't been given elevated > > permissions, you should be able to have at least 30 concurrent requests - > > equating to around 400 QPS if your app is fairly efficient. What problems > > are you running into that lead you to conclude you're hitting a limit at 4 > > QPS, and that the problem is at App Engine's end? > > > > > >> -Nick Johnson > > > > > >> On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 8:23 PM, Gary Orser <garyor...@gmail.com> > > wrote: > > > > >> Hi all, > > > > > >> We were trying to create programmatic parallel access to our > > appengine > > > > >> application. > > > > > >> From EC2, we were attempting (with threads) to run parallel access > > > > >> (url gets/posts) to > > > > >> our appid. There are some long running processes that we need to > > run > > > > >> on EC2, for which > > > > >> we would like to get a bunch of information (entities + processing > > on > > > > >> appspot) quickly. > > > > > >> We seem to be running into a limit on the number of accesses that > > are > > > > >> allowed. > > > > >> (4 threads seems to be the effective limit) > > > > > >> Is there some sort of denial of service limit imposed on multiple > > > > >> accesses from a single IP? > > > > > >> Cheers, Gary > > > > > >> -- > > > > >> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google > > Groups "Google App Engine" group. > > > > >> To post to this group, send email to > > google-appeng...@googlegroups.com. > > > > >> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > google-appengine+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com<google-appengine%2bunsubscr...@googlegroups.com> > > . > > > > >> For more options, visit this group athttp:// > > groups.google.com/group/google-appengine?hl=en. > > > > > >> -- > > > > >> Nick Johnson, Developer Programs Engineer, App Engine > > > > >> Google Ireland Ltd. :: Registered in Dublin, Ireland, Registration > > Number: 368047 > > > > > >> -- > > > > >> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google > > Groups "Google App Engine" group. > > > > >> To post to this group, send email to > > google-appeng...@googlegroups.com. > > > > >> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > google-appengine+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com<google-appengine%2bunsubscr...@googlegroups.com> > > . > > > > >> For more options, visit this group athttp:// > > groups.google.com/group/google-appengine?hl=en. > > > -- > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > > "Google App Engine" group. > > To post to this group, send email to google-appeng...@googlegroups.com. > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to > > google-appengine+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com<google-appengine%2bunsubscr...@googlegroups.com> > > . > > For more options, visit this group at > >http://groups.google.com/group/google-appengine?hl=en. > > -- > Nick Johnson, Developer Programs Engineer, App Engine > Google Ireland Ltd. :: Registered in Dublin, Ireland, Registration Number: > 368047 -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Google App Engine" group. 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