Implement a buffer for inserting repair items into the queue in a batch.
Part of https://github.com/storj/storj/issues/4727
Change-Id: I718472b2f2b1f4993c3d6f15c44923776407155a
We want to use StreamID/Position to identify injured
segment. As it is hard to alter existing injuredsegments
table we are adding a new table that will replace existing
one. Old table will be dropped later.
Change-Id: I0d3b06522645013178b6678c19378ebafe485c49
We plan to add support for a new Reed-Solomon scheme soon, but our
repair queue orders segments by least number of healthy pieces first.
With a second RS scheme, fewer healthy pieces will not necessarily
correlate to lower health.
This change just adds the new column in a migration. A separate change
will add the new health function.
Right now, since we only support one RS scheme, behavior will not
change. Number of healthy pieces is being inserted as "segment health"
until the new health function is merged.
Segment health is calculated with a new priority function created in
commit 3e5640359. In order to use the function, a new config value is
added, called NodeFailureRate, representing the approximate probability
of any individual node going down in the duration of one checker run.
Change-Id: I51c4202203faf52528d923befbe886dbf86d02f2
Repair workers prioritize the most unhealthy segments. This has the consequence that when we
finally begin to reach the end of the queue, a good portion of the remaining segments are
healthy again as their nodes have come back online. This makes it appear that there are more
injured segments than there actually are.
solution:
Any time the checker observes an injured segment it inserts it into the repair queue or
updates it if it already exists. Therefore, we can determine which segments are no longer
injured if they were not inserted or updated by the last checker iteration. To do this we
add a new column to the injured segments table, updated_at, which is set to the current time
when a segment is inserted or updated. At the end of the checker iteration, we can delete any
items where updated_at < checker start.
Change-Id: I76a98487a4a845fab2fbc677638a732a95057a94
* add monkit stat new_remote_segments_needing_repair, which reports the
number of new unhealthy segments in the repair queue since the previous
checker iteration
Change-Id: I2f10266006fdd6406ece50f4759b91382059dcc3
Add a column to the repair queue table in the satellite db for healthy
piece count. When an item is selected from the repair queue, the least
durable segment that has not been attempted in the past hour should be
selected first. This prevents our repairer from getting stuck doing work
on segments that are close to the repair threshold while allowing
segments that are more unhealthy to degrade further.
The migration also clears the repair queue so that the migration runs
quickly and we can properly account for segment health in future repair
work.
We do not select items off the repair queue that have been attempted in
the past six hours. This was changed from on hour to allow us time to
try a wider variety of segments when the repair queue is very large.
Change-Id: Iaf183f1e5fd45cd792a52e3563a3e43a2b9f410b
* rename pkg/linksharing to linksharing
* rename pkg/httpserver to linksharing/httpserver
* rename pkg/eestream to uplink/eestream
* rename pkg/stream to uplink/stream
* rename pkg/metainfo/kvmetainfo to uplink/metainfo/kvmetainfo
* rename pkg/auth/signing to pkg/signing
* rename pkg/storage to uplink/storage
* rename pkg/accounting to satellite/accounting
* rename pkg/audit to satellite/audit
* rename pkg/certdb to satellite/certdb
* rename pkg/discovery to satellite/discovery
* rename pkg/overlay to satellite/overlay
* rename pkg/datarepair to satellite/repair