HBASE-21606 document meta table load metrics
Closes #369 Signed-off-by: Xu Cang <xcang@apache.org> Signed-off-by: Sakthi <sakthivel.azhaku@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Sean Busbey <busbey@apache.org>
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@ -1738,6 +1738,100 @@ hbase.regionserver.authenticationFailures::
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hbase.regionserver.mutationsWithoutWALCount ::
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Count of writes submitted with a flag indicating they should bypass the write ahead log
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[[rs_meta_metrics]]
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=== Meta Table Load Metrics
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HBase meta table metrics collection feature is available in HBase 1.4+ but it is disabled by default, as it can
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affect the performance of the cluster. When it is enabled, it helps to monitor client access patterns by collecting
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the following statistics:
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* number of get, put and delete operations on the `hbase:meta` table
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* number of get, put and delete operations made by the top-N clients
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* number of operations related to each table
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* number of operations related to the top-N regions
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When to use the feature::
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This feature can help to identify hot spots in the meta table by showing the regions or tables where the meta info is
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modified (e.g. by create, drop, split or move tables) or retrieved most frequently. It can also help to find misbehaving
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client applications by showing which clients are using the meta table most heavily, which can for example suggest the
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lack of meta table buffering or the lack of re-using open client connections in the client application.
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.Possible side-effects of enabling this feature
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[WARNING]
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====
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Having large number of clients and regions in the cluster can cause the registration and tracking of a large amount of
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metrics, which can increase the memory and CPU footprint of the HBase region server handling the `hbase:meta` table.
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It can also cause the significant increase of the JMX dump size, which can affect the monitoring or log aggregation
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system you use beside HBase. It is recommended to turn on this feature only during debugging.
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====
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Where to find the metrics in JMX::
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Each metric attribute name will start with the ‘MetaTable_’ prefix. For all the metrics you will see five different
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JMX attributes: count, mean rate, 1 minute rate, 5 minute rate and 15 minute rate. You will find these metrics in JMX
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under the following MBean:
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`Hadoop -> HBase -> RegionServer -> Coprocessor.Region.CP_org.apache.hadoop.hbase.coprocessor.MetaTableMetrics`.
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.Examples: some Meta Table metrics you can see in your JMX dump
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[source,json]
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----
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{
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"MetaTable_get_request_count": 77309,
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"MetaTable_put_request_mean_rate": 0.06339092997186495,
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"MetaTable_table_MyTestTable_request_15min_rate": 1.1020599841623246,
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"MetaTable_client_/172.30.65.42_lossy_request_count": 1786
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"MetaTable_client_/172.30.65.45_put_request_5min_rate": 0.6189810954855728,
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"MetaTable_region_1561131112259.c66e4308d492936179352c80432ccfe0._lossy_request_count": 38342,
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"MetaTable_region_1561131043640.5bdffe4b9e7e334172065c853cf0caa6._lossy_request_1min_rate": 0.04925099917433935,
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}
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----
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Configuration::
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To turn on this feature, you have to enable a custom coprocessor by adding the following section to hbase-site.xml.
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This coprocessor will run on all the HBase RegionServers, but will be active (i.e. consume memory / CPU) only on
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the server, where the `hbase:meta` table is located. It will produce JMX metrics which can be downloaded from the
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web UI of the given RegionServer or by a simple REST call. These metrics will not be present in the JMX dump of the
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other RegionServers.
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.Enabling the Meta Table Metrics feature
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[source,xml]
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----
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<property>
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<name>hbase.coprocessor.region.classes</name>
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<value>org.apache.hadoop.hbase.coprocessor.MetaTableMetrics</value>
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</property>
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----
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.How the top-N metrics are calculated?
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[NOTE]
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====
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The 'top-N' type of metrics will be counted using the Lossy Counting Algorithm (as defined in
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link:http://www.vldb.org/conf/2002/S10P03.pdf[Motwani, R; Manku, G.S (2002). "Approximate frequency counts over data streams"]),
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which is designed to identify elements in a data stream whose frequency count exceed a user-given threshold.
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The frequency computed by this algorithm is not always accurate but has an error threshold that can be specified by the
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user as a configuration parameter. The run time space required by the algorithm is inversely proportional to the
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specified error threshold, hence larger the error parameter, the smaller the footprint and the less accurate are the
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metrics.
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You can specify the error rate of the algorithm as a floating-point value between 0 and 1 (exclusive), it's default
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value is 0.02. Having the error rate set to `E` and having `N` as the total number of meta table operations, then
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(assuming the uniform distribution of the activity of low frequency elements) at most `7 / E` meters will be kept and
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each kept element will have a frequency higher than `E * N`.
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An example: Let’s assume we are interested in the HBase clients that are most active in accessing the meta table.
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When there was 1,000,000 operations on the meta table so far and the error rate parameter is set to 0.02, then we can
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assume that only at most 350 client IP address related counters will be present in JMX and each of these clients
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accessed the meta table at least 20,000 times.
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[source,xml]
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----
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<property>
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<name>hbase.util.default.lossycounting.errorrate</name>
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<value>0.02</value>
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</property>
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----
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====
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[[ops.monitoring]]
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== HBase Monitoring
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