[Glass] [GLASS] Seaside - growing extent - normal?

Lawrence Kellogg via Glass glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com
Wed Mar 25 19:34:37 PDT 2015


Hello Dale, 

  Well, I replaced the WACache>>gemstoneReap method and ran the code from before but it just shows Scan Progress: 0 over and over again. 

  I let it run a few hours but had to kill it as the computer is in my bedroom and I can’t sleep if it makes noise all night. 

  Do I try again tomorrow? 

  best, 

  Larry

 
> On Mar 25, 2015, at 6:23 PM, Dale Henrichs <dale.henrichs at gemtalksystems.com> wrote:
> 
> Hmm, I scanned the code in WACache>>gemstoneReap and saw that a commit was being down every 100 entries, but presumably you blew up while building the collection of entries to expire ... sorry about that ... There should be a a stack dump in the gem log (depending upon where you ran the expressions where we can verify my assumption.
> 
> It looks like we need to replace WACache>>gemstoneReap with the following:
> 
> gemstoneReap
>   "Iterate through the cache and remove objects that have expired."
> 
>   "In GemStone, this method is performed by a separate maintenance VM, 
>      so we are already in transaction (assumed to be running in #autoBegin 
>      transactionMode) and do not have to worry about acquiring the TransactionMutex.
>     Since we are using reducedConflict dictionaries in the first place, we will remove the keys
>     and values from the existing dictionaries without using the mutex."
> 
>   | expired count platform |
>   expired := UserGlobals at: #'ExpiryCleanup' put: OrderedCollection new.
>   platform := GRPlatform current.
>   platform doCommitTransaction.
>   count := 0.
>   objectsByKey
>     associationsDo: [ :assoc | 
>       (self expiryPolicy isExpiredUpdating: assoc value key: assoc key)
>         ifTrue: [ 
>           self notifyRemoved: assoc value key: assoc key.
>           count := count + 1.
>           expired add: assoc.
>           count \\ 100 == 0
>             ifTrue: [ platform doCommitTransaction ].
>           count \\ 1000 == 0
>             ifTrue: [ Transcript cr; show: 'Scan progress: ' , count printString.] ] ].
>   Transcript cr; show: 'finished scan: ' , count printString.
>   count := 0.
>   (UserGlobals at: #'ExpiryCleanup' )
>     do: [ :assoc | 
>       count := count + 1.
>       objectsByKey removeKey: assoc key ifAbsent: [].
>       keysByObject removeKey: assoc value ifAbsent: [  ].
>       count \\ 100 == 0
>         ifTrue: [ platform doCommitTransaction ].
>       count \\ 1000 == 0
>         ifTrue: [ Transcript cr; show: 'Expire progress: ' , count printString.]].
>   platform doCommitTransaction.
>   UserGlobals removeKey: #'ExpiryCleanup'.
>   platform doCommitTransaction.
>   ^ expired size
> 
> This implementation should be more resistant to an out of memory condition and I've got some logging in  there as well ... the `Transcript show:` should show up in the gem.log and/or Transcript... 
> 
> I haven't tested this but if there's a problem in the scan loop it will fail quickly. If there's a problem in the expire loop, you can skip the scan loop, and just run the expire loop ...
> 
> Sorry about that ... hopefully the second time will be the charm ...
> 
> Dale
> 
> On 3/25/15 2:36 PM, Lawrence Kellogg wrote:
>> Hello Dale, 
>> 
>>   Well, Step 1 ran for hours and halted in the debugger with this error: 
>> 
>> Error: VM temporary object memory is full 
>> , almost out of memory, too many markSweeps since last successful scavenge
>> 
>> 
>> What do I do now? 
>> 
>> Best, 
>> 
>>   Larry 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> On Mar 25, 2015, at 2:15 PM, Dale Henrichs <dale.henrichs at gemtalksystems.com <mailto:dale.henrichs at gemtalksystems.com>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Okay here's the sequence of steps that I think you should take:
>>> 
>>>   1. expire all of your sessions:
>>> 
>>>   | expired |
>>>   Transcript cr; show: 'Unregistering...' , DateAndTime now printString.
>>>   expired := WABasicDevelopment reapSeasideCache.
>>>   expired > 0
>>>     ifTrue: [ (ObjectLogEntry trace: 'MTCE: expired sessions' object: expired) addToLog ].
>>>   Transcript cr; show: '...Expired: ' , expired printString , ' sessions.'.
>>>   System commitTransactions
>>> 
>>>   2. initalize your object log
>>> 
>>>   3. run MFC
>>> 
>>>   [ 
>>>   System abortTransaction.
>>>   SystemRepository markForCollection ]
>>>     on: Warning
>>>     do: [ :ex | 
>>>       Transcript
>>>         cr;
>>>         show: ex description.
>>>       ex resume ]
>>> 
>>>   4. Then do a backup and restore ... you can use GemTools to do the restore, 
>>>       but then you should read the SysAdmin docs[1] for instructions to do the restore
>>>       (I've enclosed link to 3.2 docs, but the procedure and commands should pretty 
>>>       much be the same, but it's best to look up the docs for your GemStone version[2]
>>>       and follow those instructions)
>>> 
>>> As I mentioned earlier, it will probably take a while for each of these operations to complete (object log will be fast and the backup will be fast, if the mfc tosses out the majority of your data) and it is likely that the repository will grow some more during the process (hard to predict this one, tho).
>>> 
>>> Step 1 will touch every session and every continuation so it is hard to say what percent of the objects are going to be touched (the expensive part), still there are likely to be a lot of those puppies and they will have to be read from disk into the SPC ... 
>>> 
>>> Step 3. is going scan all of the live objects and again it hard to predict exactly how expensive it will be ...
>>> 
>>> Dale
>>> 
>>> [1] http://downloads.gemtalksystems.com/docs/GemStone64/3.2.x/GS64-SysAdmin-3.2/GS64-SysAdmin-3.2.htm <http://downloads.gemtalksystems.com/docs/GemStone64/3.2.x/GS64-SysAdmin-3.2/GS64-SysAdmin-3.2.htm>
>>> [2] http://gemtalksystems.com/techsupport/resources/ <http://gemtalksystems.com/techsupport/resources/>
>>> 
>>> On 3/25/15 10:18 AM, Lawrence Kellogg wrote:
>>>> Hello Dale, 
>>>> 
>>>>   Thanks for the help. I’m a terrible system admin when it comes to maintaining a system with one user, LOL. 
>>>> 
>>>>   I’m not running the maintenance VM and I haven’t been doing regular mark for collects. 
>>>> 
>>>>   I’m trying to do a fullBackupTo: at the moment, well see if I get through that. Should I have done a markForCollection before the full backup? 
>>>> 
>>>>   I’ll also try the ObjectLog trick. 
>>>> 
>>>>   I guess I need to start from a fresh extent, as you said, and the extent file will not shrink. I’m at 48% of my available disk space but it does seem slower than usual. 
>>>> 
>>>>   
>>>> Best, 
>>>> 
>>>> Larry
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>>   
>>>>> On Mar 25, 2015, at 12:58 PM, Dale Henrichs via Glass <glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com <mailto:glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com>> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Lawrence,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Are you doing regular Mark for collects? Are you running the maintenance vm along with you seaside servers?
>>>>> 
>>>>> Seaside produces persistent garbage (persistent session state that eventually times out) when it processes requests so if you do not run the maintenance vm the sessions are not expired and if you do not run mfc regularly the expired sessions are not cleaned up ...
>>>>> 
>>>>> Another source of growth could be the Object Log ... (use `ObjectLogEntry initalize` to efficiently reset the Object Log ... pay attention to the mispelling ... thats another story). If you are getting continuations saved to the object log, the stacks that are saved, can hang onto a lot of session state, that even though expired will not be garbage collected because of references from the continuation in the object log keep it alive ...
>>>>> 
>>>>> The best way to shrink your extent (once we understand why it is growing) is to do a backup and then restore into a virgin extent ($GEMSTONE/bin/extent0.seaside.dbf)...
>>>>> 
>>>>> Dale
>>>>> 
>>>>> On 3/25/15 8:34 AM, Lawrence Kellogg via Glass wrote:
>>>>>> Well, Amazon sent me a note that they are having hardware trouble on my instance, so they shut it down. It looks like they’re threatening to take the thing offline permanently so I’m trying to save my work with an AMI and move it somewhere else, if I have to.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I finally got Gemstone/Seaside back up and running and noticed these lines in the Seaside log file. These kind of messages go on once a day for weeks. Is this normal? 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> --- 03/07/2015 02:44:14 PM UTC ---
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22528 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22528 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22544 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22544 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> --- 03/08/2015 03:31:45 PM UTC ---
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22560 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22560 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22576 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22576 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> --- 03/10/2015 03:19:34 AM UTC ---
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22592 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22592 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> --- 03/10/2015 03:46:39 PM UTC ---
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22608 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22608 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>     Extent = !#dbf!/opt/gemstone/GemStone64Bit2.4.4.1-x86_64.Linux/seaside/data/extent0.dbf
>>>>>>        has grown to 22624 megabytes.
>>>>>>     Repository has grown to 22624 megabytes.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> My extent has now grown to 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> -rw------- 1 seasideuser seasideuser 23735566336 Mar 25 15:31 extent0.dbf
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I don’t get a lot of traffic so I’m a little surprised at the growth. Should I try to shrink the extent?
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I suppose I should also do a SystemRepository backup, if I can remember the commands. 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Best, 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Larry
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>>> Glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com <mailto:Glass at lists.gemtalksystems.com>
>>>>>> http://lists.gemtalksystems.com/mailman/listinfo/glass <http://lists.gemtalksystems.com/mailman/listinfo/glass>
>>>>> 
>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>> 
>>> 
>> 
> 

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