Smaller requests, of course, will have a higher percentage overhead for each 
request, so you will need more proxies for many small requests than the same 
number of larger requests (all other factors being equal).

If most of the requests are reads, then you probably won't have to worry about 
keystone keeping up.

You may want to look at tuning the object server config variable 
"keep_cache_size". This variable is the maximum size of an object to keep in 
the buffer cache for publicly requested objects. So if you tuned it to be 20K 
(20971520)--by default it is 5424880--you should be able to serve most of your 
requests without needing to do a disk seek, assuming you have enough RAM on the 
object servers. Note that background processes on the object servers end up 
using the cache for storing the filesystem inodes, so lots of RAM will be a 
very good thing in your use case. Of course, the usefulness of this caching is 
dependent on how frequently a given object is accessed. You may consider an 
external caching system (anything from varnish or squid to a CDN provider) if 
the direct public access becomes too expensive.

One other factor to consider is that since swift stores 3 replicas of the data, 
there are 3 servers that can serve a request for a given object, regardless of 
how many storage nodes you have. This means that if all 3500 req/sec are to the 
same object, only 3 object servers are handling that. However, if the 3500 
req/sec are spread over many objects, the full cluster will be utilized. Some 
of us have talked about how to improve swift's performance for concurrent 
access to a single object, but those improvements have not been coded yet.

--John



On Oct 24, 2012, at 1:20 PM, Alejandro Comisario 
<alejandro.comisa...@mercadolibre.com> wrote:

> Thanks Josh, and Thanks John.
> I know it was an exciting Summit! Congrats to everyone !
> 
> John, let me give you extra data and something that i've already said, that 
> might me wrong.
> 
> First, the request size that will compose the 90.000RPM - 200.000 RPM will be 
> from 90% 20K objects, and 10% 150/200K objects.
> Second, all the "GET" requests, are going to be "public", configured through 
> ACL, so, if the GET requests are public (so, no X-Auth-Token is passed) why 
> should i be worried about the keystone middleware ?
> 
> Just to clarify, because i really want to understand what my real metrics are 
> so i can know where to tune in case i need to.
> Thanks !
> 
> ---
> Alejandrito
> 
> 
> On Wed, Oct 24, 2012 at 3:28 PM, John Dickinson <m...@not.mn> wrote:
> Sorry for the delay. You've got an interesting problem, and we were all quite 
> busy last week with the summit.
> 
> First, the standard caveat: Your performance is going to be highly dependent 
> on your particular workload and your particular hardware deployment. 3500 
> req/sec in two different deployments may be very different based on the size 
> of the requests, the spread of the data requested, and the type of requests. 
> Your experience may vary, etc, etc.
> 
> However, for an attempt to answer your question...
> 
> 6 proxies for 3500 req/sec doesn't sound unreasonable. It's in line with 
> other numbers I've seen from people and what I've seen from other large scale 
> deployments. You are basically looking at about 600 req/sec/proxy.
> 
> My first concern is not the swift workload, but how keystone handles the 
> authentication of the tokens. A quick glance at the keystone source seems to 
> indicate that keystone's auth_token middleware is using a standard memcached 
> module that may not play well with concurrent connections in eventlet. 
> Specifically, sockets cannot be reused concurrently by different 
> greenthreads. You may find that the token validation in the auth_token 
> middleware fails under any sort of load. This would need to be verified by 
> your testing or an examination of the memcache module being used. An 
> alternative would be to look at the way swift implements it's memcache 
> connections in an eventlet-friendly way (see 
> swift/common/memcache.py:_get_conns() in the swift codebase).
> 
> --John
> 
> 
> 
> On Oct 11, 2012, at 4:28 PM, Alejandro Comisario 
> <alejandro.comisa...@mercadolibre.com> wrote:
> 
> > Hi Stackers !
> > This is the thing, today we have a 24 datanodes (3 copies, 90TB usables) 
> > each datanode has 2 intel hexacores CPU with HT and 96GB of RAM, and 6 
> > Proxies with the same hardware configuration, using swift 1.4.8 with 
> > keystone.
> > Regarding the networking, each proxy / datanodes has a dual 1Gb nic, bonded 
> > in LACP mode 4, each of the proxies are behind an F5 BigIP Load Balancer ( 
> > so, no worries over there ).
> >
> > Today, we are receiving 5000 RPM ( Requests per Minute ) with 660 RPM per 
> > Proxies, i know its low, but now ... with a new product migration, soon ( 
> > really soon ) we are expecting to receive about a total of 90.000 RPM 
> > average ( 1500 req / s ) with weekly peaks of 200.000 RPM ( 3500 req / s ) 
> > to the swift api, witch will be 90% public gets ( no keystone auth ) and 
> > 10% authorized PUTS (keystone in the middle, worth to know that we have a 
> > 10 keystone vms pool, connected to a 5 nodes galera mysql cluster, so no 
> > worries there either )
> >
> > So, 3500 req/s divided by 6 proxy nodes doesnt sounds too much, but well, 
> > its a number that we cant ignore.
> > What do you think about this numbers? does this 6 proxies sounds good, or 
> > we should double or triple the proxies ? Does anyone has this size of 
> > requests and can share their configs ?
> >
> > Thanks a lot, hoping to ear from you guys !
> >
> > -----
> > alejandrito
> > _______________________________________________
> > Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> > Post to     : openstack@lists.launchpad.net
> > Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> > More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
> 
> 

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