On Thu, Feb 16, 2017 at 4:33 PM, Ariel Weisberg <ar...@weisberg.ws> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> Classic Paxos doesn't have a leader. There are variants on the original
> Lamport approach that will elect a leader (or some other variation like
> Mencius) to improve throughput, latency, and performance under contention.
> Cassandra implements the approach from the beginning of "Paxos Made Simple"
> (https://goo.gl/SrP0Wb) with no additional optimizations that I am aware
> of. There is no distinguished proposer (leader).
>
> That paper does go on to discuss electing a distinguished proposer, but
> that was never done for C*. I believe it's not considered a good fit for C*
> philosophically.
>
> Ariel
>
> On Thu, Feb 16, 2017, at 04:20 PM, Kant Kodali wrote:
>
> @Ariel Weisberg EPaxos looks very interesting as it looks like it doesn't
> need any designated leader for C* but I am assuming the paxos that is
> implemented today for LWT's requires Leader election and If so, don't we
> need to have an odd number of nodes or racks or DC's to satisfy N = 2F + 1
> constraint to tolerate F failures ? I understand it is not needed when not
> using LWT's since Cassandra is a master-less system.
>
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:25 AM, Kant Kodali <k...@peernova.com> wrote:
>
> Thanks Ariel! Yes I knew there are so many variations and optimizations of
> Paxos. I just wanted to see if we had any plans on improving the existing
> Paxos implementation and it is great to see the work is under progress! I
> am going to follow that ticket and read up the references pointed in it
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 8:33 AM, Ariel Weisberg <ar...@weisberg.ws> wrote:
>
>
> Hi,
>
> Cassandra's implementation of Paxos doesn't implement many optimizations
> that would drastically improve throughput and latency. You need consensus,
> but it doesn't have to be exorbitantly expensive and fall over under any
> kind of contention.
>
> For instance you could implement EPaxos https://issues.apache.o
> rg/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-6246
> <https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CASSANDRA-6246?jql=text%20~%20%22epaxos%22>,
> batch multiple operations into the same Paxos round, have an affinity for a
> specific proposer for a specific partition, implement asynchronous commit,
> use a more efficient implementation of the Paxos log, and maybe other
> things.
>
>
> Ariel
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017, at 05:31 AM, Benjamin Roth wrote:
>
> Hi Kant,
>
> If you read the published papers about Paxos, you will most probably
> recognize that there is no way to "do it better". This is a conceptional
> thing due to the nature of distributed systems + the CAP theorem.
> If you want A+P in the triangle, then C is very expensive. CS is made for
> A+P mostly with tunable C. In ACID databases this is a completely different
> thing as they are mostly either not partition tolerant, not highly
> available or not scalable (in a distributed manner, not speaking of
> "monolithic super servers").
>
> There is no free lunch ...
>
>
> 2017-02-10 11:09 GMT+01:00 Kant Kodali <k...@peernova.com>:
>
> "That’s the safety blanket everyone wants but is extremely expensive,
> especially in Cassandra."
>
> yes LWT's are expensive. Are there any plans to make this better?
>
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 12:17 AM, Kant Kodali <k...@peernova.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Jon,
>
> Thanks a lot for your response. I am well aware that the LWW != LWT but I
> was talking more in terms of LWW with respective to LWT's which I believe
> you answered. so thanks much!
>
>
> kant
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 6:01 PM, Jon Haddad <jonathan.had...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> LWT != Last Write Wins.  They are totally different.
>
> LWTs give you (assuming you also read at SERIAL) “atomic consistency”,
> meaning you are able to perform operations atomically and in isolation.
> That’s the safety blanket everyone wants but is extremely expensive,
> especially in Cassandra.  The lightweight part, btw, may be a little
> optimistic, especially if a key is under contention.  With regard to the
> “last write” part you’re asking about - w/ LWT Cassandra provides the
> timestamp and manages it as part of the ballot, and it always is
> increasing.  See 
> org.apache.cassandra.service.ClientState#getTimestampForPaxos.
> From the code:
>
>  * Returns a timestamp suitable for paxos given the timestamp of the last
> known commit (or in progress update).
>  * Paxos ensures that the timestamp it uses for commits respects the
> serial order of those commits. It does so
>  * by having each replica reject any proposal whose timestamp is not
> strictly greater than the last proposal it
>  * accepted. So in practice, which timestamp we use for a given proposal
> doesn't affect correctness but it does
>  * affect the chance of making progress (if we pick a timestamp lower than
> what has been proposed before, our
>  * new proposal will just get rejected).
>
> Effectively paxos removes the ability to use custom timestamps and
> addresses clock variance by rejecting ballots with timestamps less than
> what was last seen.  You can learn more by reading through the other
> comments and code in that file.
>
> Last write wins is a free for all that guarantees you *nothing* except the
> timestamp is used as a tiebreaker.  Here we acknowledge things like the
> speed of light as being a real problem that isn’t going away anytime soon.
> This problem is sometimes addressed with event sourcing rather than
> mutating in place.
>
> Hope this helps.
>
>
> Jon
>
>
>
>
> On Feb 9, 2017, at 5:21 PM, Kant Kodali <k...@peernova.com> wrote:
>
> @Justin I read this article http://www.datastax.com/dev/bl
> og/lightweight-transactions-in-cassandra-2-0. And it clearly says
> Linearizable consistency can be achieved with LWT's.  so should I assume
> the Linearizability in the context of the above article is possible with
> LWT's and synchronization of clocks through ntpd ? because LWT's also
> follow Last Write Wins. isn't it? Also another question does most of the
> production clusters do setup ntpd? If so what is the time it takes to sync?
> any idea
>
> @Micheal Schuler Are you referring to  something like true time as in
> https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.c
> om/en//archive/spanner-osdi2012.pdf?  Actually I never heard of setting
> up GPS modules and how that can be helpful. Let me research on that but
> good point.
>
> On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 5:09 PM, Michael Shuler <mich...@pbandjelly.org>
> wrote:
>
> If you require the best precision you can get, setting up a pair of
> stratum 1 ntpd masters in each data center location with a GPS modules
> is not terribly complex. Low latency and jitter on servers you manage.
> 140ms is a long way away network-wise, and I would suggest that was a
> poor choice of upstream (probably stratum 2 or 3) source.
>
> As Jonathan mentioned, there's no guarantee from Cassandra, but if you
> need as close as you can get, you'll probably need to do it yourself.
>
> (I run several stratum 2 ntpd servers for pool.ntp.org)
>
> --
> Kind regards,
> Michael
>
> On 02/09/2017 06:47 PM, Kant Kodali wrote:
> > Hi Justin,
> >
> > There are bunch of issues w.r.t to synchronization of clocks when we
> > used ntpd. Also the time it took to sync the clocks was approx 140ms
> > (don't quote me on it though because it is reported by our devops :)
> >
> > we have multiple clients (for example bunch of micro services are
> > reading from Cassandra) I am not sure how one can achieve
> > Linearizability by setting timestamps on the clients ? since there is no
> > total ordering across multiple clients.
> >
> > Thanks!
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Feb 9, 2017 at 4:16 PM, Justin Cameron <jus...@instaclustr.com
> > <mailto:jus...@instaclustr.com>> wrote:
> >
> >     Hi Kant,
> >
> >     Clock synchronization is important - you should ensure that ntpd is
> >     properly configured on all nodes. If your particular use case is
> >     especially sensitive to out-of-order mutations it is possible to set
> >     timestamps on the client side using the
> >     drivers. https://docs.datastax.com/en/d
> eveloper/java-driver/3.1/manual/query_timestamps/
> >     <https://docs.datastax.com/en/developer/java-driver/3.1/man
> ual/query_timestamps/>
> >
> >     We use our own NTP cluster to reduce clock drift as much as
> >     possible, but public NTP servers are good enough for most
> >     uses. https://www.instaclustr.com/blog/2015/11/05/apache-cassandra
> -synchronization/
> >     <https://www.instaclustr.com/blog/2015/11/05/apache-cassand
> ra-synchronization/>
> >
> >     Cheers,
> >     Justin
> >
> >     On Thu, 9 Feb 2017 at 16:09 Kant Kodali <k...@peernova.com
> >     <mailto:k...@peernova.com>> wrote:
> >
> >         How does Cassandra achieve Linearizability with “Last write
> >         wins” (conflict resolution methods based on time-of-day clocks) ?
> >
> >         Relying on synchronized clocks are almost certainly
> >         non-linearizable, because clock timestamps cannot be guaranteed
> >         to be consistent with actual event ordering due to clock skew.
> >         isn't it?
> >
> >         Thanks!
> >
> >     --
> >
> >     Justin Cameron
> >
> >     Senior Software Engineer | Instaclustr
> >
> >
> >
> >
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>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Benjamin Roth
> Prokurist
>
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>
One thing that always bothered me: Intelligent clients and dynamic snitch
are designed to attempt to route requests to the same node to attempt to
take advantage of cache pinning etc. You would think under these conditions
one could naturally elect a "leader" for a "group" of keys that could
persist for a few hundred milliseconds and batch up the round trips for a
number of operations. Maybe that is what the distinguished coordinator is
in some regards.

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