Do we know what would need to change in HBase in order to be able to manage 
more regions per regionserver?
With 20 regions per server, one would need 300G regions to just utilize 6T of 
drive space.


To utilize a regionserver/datanode with 24T drive space the region size would 
be an insane 1T.

-- Lars

________________________________
From: Nicolas Spiegelberg <nspiegelb...@fb.com>
To: "user@hbase.apache.org" <user@hbase.apache.org>
Cc: Karthik Ranganathan <kranganat...@fb.com>; Kannan Muthukkaruppan 
<kan...@fb.com>
Sent: Tuesday, November 1, 2011 3:57 PM
Subject: Re: region size/count per regionserver

Simple answer
-------------
20 regions/server & <2000 regions/cluster is a good rule of thumb if you
can't profile your workload yet.  You really want to ensure that

1) You need to limits the regions/cluster so the master can have a
reasonable startup time & can handle all the region state transitions via
ZK.  Most bigger companies are running 2,000 in production and achieve
reasonable startup times (< 2 minutes for region assignment on cold
start).  If you want to test the scalability of that algorithm beyond what
other companies need, admin beware.
2) The more regions/server you have, the faster that recovery can happen
after RS death because you can currently parallelize recovery on a
region-granularity.  Too many regions/server and #1 starts to be a problem.



Complicated answer
------------------
More information is optimize this formula.  Additional considerations:

1) Are you IO-bound or CPU-bound
2) What is your grid topology like
3) What is your network hardware like
4) How many disks (not just size)
5) What is the data locality between RegionServer & DataNode

In the Facebook case, we have 5 racks with 20 nodes each.  Servers in the
rack are connected by 1G Eth to a switch with a 10G uplink.  We are
network bound.  Our saturation point is mostly commonly on the top-of-rack
switch.  With 20 regions/server, we can roughly parallelize our
distributed log splitting within a single rack on RS death (although 2
regions do split off-rack).  This minimizes top-of-rack traffic and
optimized our recovery time.  Even if you are CPU-bound, log splitting
(hence recovery time) is an IO-bound operation.  A lot of our work on
region assignment is about maximizing data locality, even on RS death, so
we avoid top-of-rack saturation.


On 11/1/11 10:54 AM, "Sujee Maniyam" <su...@sujee.net> wrote:

>HI all,
>My HBase cluster is 10 nodes, each node has 12core ,   48G RAM, 24TB disk,
>10GEthernet.
>My region size is 1GB.
>
>Any guidelines on how many regions can a RS  handle comfortably?
>I vaguely remember reading some where to have no more than 1000 regions /
>server; that comes to 1TB / server.  Seems pretty low for the current
>hardware config.
>
>Any rules of thumb?  experiences?
>
>thanks
>Sujee
>
>http://sujee.net

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