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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-12133?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16921575#comment-16921575
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Ivan Rakov commented on IGNITE-12133:
-------------------------------------

Folks, what if we'll try to apply skip-list approach not to discovery messages 
routing, but to GridDhtPartitionsFullMessage delivery to all server nodes?
This may make onDone() phase of PME faster, especially when full message is 
heavy and cluster topology is large. On the other hand, handling of failed 
nodes during PME will be dramatically complicated: if one of top-level nodes 
will fail, its "children" should somehow request full map from coordinator or 
another server node (currently, we have extra failover logic only for 
coordinator leave case).

> O(log n) partition exchange
> ---------------------------
>
>                 Key: IGNITE-12133
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-12133
>             Project: Ignite
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: Moti Nisenson-Ken
>            Priority: Major
>
> Currently, partition exchange leverages a ring. This means that 
> communications is O\(n) in number of nodes. It also means that if 
> non-coordinator nodes hang it can take much longer to successfully resolve 
> the topology.
> Instead, why not use something like a skip-list where the coordinator is 
> first. The coordinator can notify the first node at each level of the 
> skip-list. Each node then notifies all of its "near-neighbours" in the 
> skip-list, where node B is a near-neighbour of node-A, if max-level(nodeB) <= 
> max-level(nodeA), and nodeB is the first node at its level when traversing 
> from nodeA in the direction of nodeB, skipping over nodes C which have 
> max-level(C) > max-level(A). 
> 1
> 1 .  .  .3
> 1        3 . .  . 5
> 1 . 2 . 3 . 4 . 5 . 6
> In the above 1 would notify 2 and 3, 3 would notify 4 and 5, 2 -> 4, and 4 -> 
> 6, and 5 -> 6.
> One can achieve better redundancy by having each node traverse in both 
> directions, and having the coordinator also notify the last node in the list 
> at each level. This way in the above example if 2 and 3 were both down, 4 
> would still get notified from 5 and 6 (in the backwards direction).
>  
> The idea is that each individual node has O(log n) nodes to notify - so the 
> overall time is reduced. Additionally, we can deal well with at least 1 node 
> failure - if one includes the option of processing backwards, 2 consecutive 
> node failures can be handled as well. By taking this kind of an approach, 
> then the coordinator can basically treat any nodes it didn't receive a 
> message from as not-connected, and update the topology as well (disconnecting 
> any nodes that it didn't get a notification from). While there are some edge 
> cases here (e.g. 2 disconnected nodes, then 1 connected node, then 2 
> disconnected nodes - the connected node would be wrongly ejected from the 
> topology), these would generally be too rare to need explicit handling for.



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