[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-11818?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Robert Stupp updated CASSANDRA-11818: ------------------------------------- Attachment: 11818-direct-mem-unpooled.png 11818-direct-mem.png This thing's getting weird. I tried a couple of different combinations: # with unpooled direct buffers (change in {{CBUtil}}: {{allocator = new UnpooledByteBufAllocator(true)}}) against Java 1.8.0_92 # with unpooled heap buffers (change in {{CBUtil}}: {{allocator = new UnpooledByteBufAllocator(false)}}) against Java 1.8.0_92 Variant 1 showed the same behavior. Looks like GC causes long STW, causing responses to pile up and then trying to allocate a totally huge amount of direct memory Variant 2 showed a strange behavior with PS GC _and_ ParNew/CMS GC: Works fine until the old gen becomes eligible for GC. And then ends with an effectively endless-GC-loop. (CMS basically blocked the application according to GC log) That led me to the idea to try it with Java 1.8.0_66 - and that works fine with variant 2. Java 1.8.0_77 also works fine with variant 2. So it looks like Java 1.8.0_92 is somehow broken. (Didn’t try variant 1) Unfortunately, the default variant with pooled byte buffers does not work with 1.8.0_77. It shows the same behavior as with u92. So, the underlying problem remains: if GC runs wild (i.e. runs into some longer STW phases - some hundred milliseconds in my test), requests pile up and cause a lot of allocations, which in turn can cause OOMs. I have no idea why it runs into these many, consecutive, long GCs. Just see the result: lots of allocated direct memory, that’s never freed. It then looks like as in the following screenshot. At approx 16:03 a couple of ParNews with 200-500ms kicked in but stopped after a while. At 16:06 some ParNews with 200-500ms STW occurred and lasted until the load driver was killed. As a result all (allowed) direct memory is allocated (configured with 2g max direct memory). !11818-direct-mem.png|pooled direct mem usage w/ 1.8.0u77! Further, using unpooled direct buffers work a bit better than pooled direct buffers: At least, the unpooled buffers are released after a couple of minutes and C* is responsive again. !11818-direct-mem-unpooled.png|unpooled direct mem usage w/ 1.8.0u77! The buffer allocations that cause this problem are for messages with around 4MB or more. Could be, that it is probably not a good idea to use a pre-thread arena for messages that are that big. /cc [~norman], do you have any idea? > C* does neither recover nor trigger stability inspector on direct memory OOM > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: CASSANDRA-11818 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-11818 > Project: Cassandra > Issue Type: Bug > Reporter: Robert Stupp > Attachments: 11818-direct-mem-unpooled.png, 11818-direct-mem.png, > oom-histo-live.txt, oom-stack.txt > > > The following stack trace is not caught by {{JVMStabilityInspector}}. > Situation was caused by a load test with a lot of parallel writes and reads > against a single node. > {code} > ERROR [SharedPool-Worker-1] 2016-05-17 18:38:44,187 Message.java:611 - > Unexpected exception during request; channel = [id: 0x1e02351b, > L:/127.0.0.1:9042 - R:/127.0.0.1:51087] > java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: Direct buffer memory > at java.nio.Bits.reserveMemory(Bits.java:693) ~[na:1.8.0_92] > at java.nio.DirectByteBuffer.<init>(DirectByteBuffer.java:123) > ~[na:1.8.0_92] > at java.nio.ByteBuffer.allocateDirect(ByteBuffer.java:311) > ~[na:1.8.0_92] > at io.netty.buffer.PoolArena$DirectArena.newChunk(PoolArena.java:672) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at io.netty.buffer.PoolArena.allocateNormal(PoolArena.java:234) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at io.netty.buffer.PoolArena.allocate(PoolArena.java:218) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at io.netty.buffer.PoolArena.allocate(PoolArena.java:138) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.buffer.PooledByteBufAllocator.newDirectBuffer(PooledByteBufAllocator.java:270) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.buffer.AbstractByteBufAllocator.directBuffer(AbstractByteBufAllocator.java:177) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.buffer.AbstractByteBufAllocator.directBuffer(AbstractByteBufAllocator.java:168) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.buffer.AbstractByteBufAllocator.buffer(AbstractByteBufAllocator.java:105) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > org.apache.cassandra.transport.Message$ProtocolEncoder.encode(Message.java:349) > ~[main/:na] > at > org.apache.cassandra.transport.Message$ProtocolEncoder.encode(Message.java:314) > ~[main/:na] > at > io.netty.handler.codec.MessageToMessageEncoder.write(MessageToMessageEncoder.java:89) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.invokeWrite(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:619) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.write(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:676) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.channel.AbstractChannelHandlerContext.write(AbstractChannelHandlerContext.java:612) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > org.apache.cassandra.transport.Message$Dispatcher$Flusher.run(Message.java:445) > ~[main/:na] > at > io.netty.util.concurrent.PromiseTask$RunnableAdapter.call(PromiseTask.java:38) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.util.concurrent.ScheduledFutureTask.run(ScheduledFutureTask.java:120) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.util.concurrent.SingleThreadEventExecutor.runAllTasks(SingleThreadEventExecutor.java:358) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at io.netty.channel.nio.NioEventLoop.run(NioEventLoop.java:374) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.util.concurrent.SingleThreadEventExecutor$2.run(SingleThreadEventExecutor.java:112) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at > io.netty.util.concurrent.DefaultThreadFactory$DefaultRunnableDecorator.run(DefaultThreadFactory.java:137) > ~[netty-all-4.0.36.Final.jar:4.0.36.Final] > at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745) [na:1.8.0_92] > {code} > The situation does not get better when the load driver is stopped. > I can reproduce this scenario at will. Managed to get histogram, stack traces > and heap dump. Already increased {{-XX:MaxDirectMemorySize}} to {{2g}}. > A {{nodetool flush}} causes the daemon to exit (as that direct-memory OOM is > caught by {{JVMStabilityInspector}}). -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)