Categorygithub.com/parseplatform/flashback
modulepackage
0.0.0-20161219160647-29326edb6a9d
Repository: https://github.com/parseplatform/flashback.git
Documentation: pkg.go.dev

# README

What is Flashback

How can you measure how good your MongoDB (or other databases with similar interface) performance is? Easy, you can benchmark it. A general way to solve this problem is to use a benchmark tool to generate queries with random contents under certain random distribution.

But sometimes you are not satisfied with the randomly generated queries, since you're not confident in how much these queries resemble your real workload.

The difficulty compounds when one MongoDB instance may host completely different types of databases that each have their own unique and complicated access patterns.

That is the reason we came up with Flashback, a MongoDB benchmark framework that allows us to benchmark with "real" queries. It is comprised of a set of scripts that fall into the 2 categories:

  1. records the operations(ops) that occur during a stretch of time;
  2. replays the recorded ops.

The two parts are not tied to each other and can be used independently for different purposes.

How it works

Record

How do you know which ops are performed by MongoDB? There are a lot of ways to do this. But in Flashback, we record the ops by enabling MongoDB's profiling.

By setting the profile level to 2 (profile all ops), we'll be able to fetch the ops information detailed enough for future replay -- except for insert ops.

MongoDB does not log insertion details in the profile DB. However, if a MongoDB instance is working in a "replica set", we can capture insert information by reading the oplog.

Thus, we record the ops with the following steps:

  1. The script starts multiple threads to pull the profiling results and oplog entries for collections and databases that we are interested in. Each thread works independently.
  2. After fetching the entries, we'll merge the results from all sources to get a full picture of all operations.

Replay

With the ops being recorded, we also have a replayer to replay them in different ways:

  • Replay ops with "best effort". The replayer diligently sends these ops to databases as fast as possible. This style can help us to measure the limits of databases. Please note to reduce the overhead for loading ops, we'll preload the ops to the memory and replay them as fast as possible. This potentially limits the number of ops played back per session to the available memory on the Replay host.
  • Reply ops in accordance to their original timestamps, which allows us to imitate regular traffic.

The replay module is written in Go because Python doesn't do a good job in concurrent CPU intensive tasks.

How to use it

Record

Prerequisites

  • The "record" module is written in python. You'll need to have pymongo, mongodb's python driver installed.
  • Set MongoDB profiling level to be 2, which captures all the ops.
  • Run MongoDB in a replica set mode (even there is only one node), which allows us to access the oplog.

Configuration

  • If you are a first time user, please run cp config.py.example config.py.
  • In config.py, modify it based on your need. Here are some notes:
    • We intentionally separate the servers for oplog retrieval and profiling results retrieval. As a good practice, it's better to pull oplog from secondaries. However profiling results must be pulled from the primary server.
    • duration_secs indicates the length for the recording.

Start Recording

After configuration, please simply run python record.py.

Replay

Prerequisites

  • Go 1.4
  • PyMongo 2.9.x (earlier 2.x versions may work. 3.x does NOT currently work)

Installation

$ go get github.com/ParsePlatform/flashback/cmd/flashback

Command

Required options:

flashback \
    --style=[real|stress] \
    --ops_filename=<file_name> \ # Operations file, such as generated by the Record tool

To use a specific host/port and/or to use authentication, specify a mongodb:// url:

flashback \
    --url=mongodb://myuser:[email protected]:27017
    ... 

For a full list of options:

flashback --help

Misc

pcap_converter

pcap_converter is an experimental way to build a recorded ops file from a pcap of mongo traffic.

Note: 'getmore' operations are not yet supported by pcap_converter

$ go get github.com/ParsePlatform/flashback/cmd/pcap_converter
$ tcpdump -i lo0 -w some_mongo_cap.pcap 'tcp and dst port 27017'
$ pcap_converter -f some_mongo_cap.pcap -o ops_filename.bson

# Packages

No description provided by the author

# Functions

We only support handful op types.
GetElem is a helper to fetch a specific key from bson.D The second return value indicates whether or not the key exists.
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NewLogger creates a new logger.
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# Constants

Contains a list of mongo op types.
Contains a list of mongo op types.
Contains a list of mongo op types.
Contains a list of mongo op types.
Contains a list of mongo op types.
Percentiles.
Percentiles.
Percentiles.
Percentiles.
Percentiles.
Contains a list of mongo op types.
Contains a list of mongo op types.
Contains a list of mongo op types.

# Variables

AllOpTypes specifies all supported op types.
No description provided by the author

# Structs

ByLineOpsReader reads ops from a json file that is exported from python's json_util module, where each line is a json-represented op.
No description provided by the author
ExecutionStatus encapsulates the aggregated information for the execution.
Logger provides a way to send different types of log messages to stderr/stdout.
Op represents an op generated by the record utility It must (currently) be massaged a little before handing off to the executor.
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# Interfaces

OpsReader Reads the ops from a source and present a interface for consumers to fetch these ops sequentially.

# Type aliases

Document represents the json-like infromation of an op.
OpType is the name of mongo op type.