* [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors @ 2003-05-15 13:50 leon j. breedt 2003-05-15 14:32 ` Teo ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: leon j. breedt @ 2003-05-15 13:50 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev hi, call me crazy, but wouldn't this be more efficient: mounting /usr/portage on a loopback filesystem... with /usr/portage/distfiles obviously mounted out of the loopback file, or a symlink to somewhere else :) emerge sync does an unmount of this filesystem, rsyncs it with the server's copy of the file, and then remounts it. only one file to diff, which in my mind should be more efficient. no more waiting for the 40000 file list to arrive. or is there a reason this is a stupid idea? :) leon -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 13:50 [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors leon j. breedt @ 2003-05-15 14:32 ` Teo 2003-05-15 15:32 ` rob holland 2003-05-15 16:26 ` Stanislav Brabec 2003-05-16 10:35 ` Chris Bainbridge 2 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Teo @ 2003-05-15 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On Thursday 15 May 2003 15:50, leon j. breedt wrote: > emerge sync does an unmount of this filesystem, rsyncs > it with the server's copy of the file, and then remounts > it. It would be a bad idea, because you would have to download the whole tree every time! -- icemaze@tiscalinet.it -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 14:32 ` Teo @ 2003-05-15 15:32 ` rob holland 2003-05-15 16:16 ` Teo 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: rob holland @ 2003-05-15 15:32 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 322 bytes --] --On Thursday, May 15, 2003 16:32:46 +0200 Teo <icemaze@tiscalinet.it> wrote: > It would be a bad idea, because you would have to download the whole tree > every time! No you wouldn't...rsync would copy just the differences....thats the whole point of rsync :/ -- robh@gentoo.org / robh:irc.freenode.net [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 15:32 ` rob holland @ 2003-05-15 16:16 ` Teo 0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Teo @ 2003-05-15 16:16 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On Thursday 15 May 2003 17:32, rob holland wrote: > No you wouldn't...rsync would copy just the differences....thats the whole > point of rsync :/ Sorry, didn't knew that ^_^' Anyway, I don't think that the performance gain would justify the greater complexity. In fact, the performance you gain when rsyncing a user this way, is lost when an ebuild is submit (the FS must be mounted, the ebuild added/modified/deleted and the FS unmounted, all this without being able to accept users' requests). I think that there is not an easy way to get sync operations quicker. Maybe with the use of some sort of database. Instead, it would be nice to have a list of the packages available. The ebuilds could be fetched only on merge/update. "emerge sync" would upgrade only the list, and "emerge world -u" would send the world file to the server which would reply with up-to-date ebuilds. Would this be feasible? -- icemaze@tiscalinet.it -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 13:50 [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors leon j. breedt 2003-05-15 14:32 ` Teo @ 2003-05-15 16:26 ` Stanislav Brabec 2003-05-15 17:10 ` Björn Lindström 2003-05-16 10:35 ` Chris Bainbridge 2 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Stanislav Brabec @ 2003-05-15 16:26 UTC (permalink / raw To: leon j. breedt; +Cc: gentoo-dev On Thu, May 15, 2003 at 02:50:13PM +0100, leon j. breedt wrote: > hi, > > call me crazy, but wouldn't this be more efficient: > ... Much more efficient and convenient seems to be incremental xdelta patches on tarred repository. Delta set file size should be typically nearly less than "Total transferred file size" via rsync. Once you download "official tar.gz" (you have to have identical bit image; or tar set - to be more patient to machines with few memory) and later download only incremetal deltas. We could have, for example, hourly patches, six-hourly patches, daily patches, weekly patches etc. - so anybody should be able to upgrade from any version to latest using, say, up to 10-15 incremental delta sets. There is another way, how to serve portage tree much faster as is - use reiserfs (in tail mode) or tmpfs for tree. This is also good way to download sources over slow lines, if you have previous version. For simple implementation see example "deltaserver" at: http://www.penguin.cz/~utx/ (unusable for Gentoo, because it reconstructs byte-by-byte identical .tar, but not .tar.gz or .tar.bz2, but it can be solved.) Typical delta size for standard version update is less than 1/10 of tarball. -- Stanislav Brabec -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 16:26 ` Stanislav Brabec @ 2003-05-15 17:10 ` Björn Lindström 2003-05-15 19:48 ` Stanislav Brabec 2003-05-15 23:39 ` Evan Powers 0 siblings, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Björn Lindström @ 2003-05-15 17:10 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev Stanislav Brabec <utx@gentoo.org> writes: > Once you download "official tar.gz" (you have to have identical bit image; or > tar set - to be more patient to machines with few memory) and later download > only incremetal deltas. Wouldn't this still break pretty easily as soon as you change anything in your local portage copy? It wouldn't bother me since I use PORTAGE_OVERLAY for all that stuff, but I understand that some people like to be able to put in temporary changes in /usr/portage directly. Also, you would have to deal with distfiles, which could of course not be part of this tar.gz. -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 17:10 ` Björn Lindström @ 2003-05-15 19:48 ` Stanislav Brabec 2003-05-15 23:39 ` Evan Powers 1 sibling, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Stanislav Brabec @ 2003-05-15 19:48 UTC (permalink / raw To: Björn Lindström; +Cc: gentoo-dev Björn Lindström wrote: > Stanislav Brabec <utx@gentoo.org> writes: > > > Once you download "official tar.gz" (you have to have identical bit image; or > > tar set - to be more patient to machines with few memory) and later download > > only incremetal deltas. > > Wouldn't this still break pretty easily as soon as you change anything > in your local portage copy? > You must have originally packed tarball, which you will never delete. It is nearly impossible to restore it from portage tree. -- Stanislav Brabec http://www.penguin.cz/~utx -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 17:10 ` Björn Lindström 2003-05-15 19:48 ` Stanislav Brabec @ 2003-05-15 23:39 ` Evan Powers 1 sibling, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Evan Powers @ 2003-05-15 23:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On Thursday 15 May 2003 01:10 pm, Björn Lindström wrote: > Stanislav Brabec <utx@gentoo.org> writes: > > Once you download "official tar.gz" (you have to have identical bit > > image; or tar set - to be more patient to machines with few memory) and > > later download only incremetal deltas. > > Wouldn't this still break pretty easily as soon as you change anything > in your local portage copy? Yeah, I'll second this viewpoint. Managing generation and storage of these xdeltas on the server side and their application on the client side would be more pain than it's worth, in my opinion. I have a more interesting problem to pose, however. I haven't actually worked out the math to see if it's a practical problem (and I couldn't without real-world numbers), but it's still sufficiently interesting to post. Practically, would switching to xdelta result in /greater/ server load? The summary of the following is that rsync has a certain overhead p, while the overhead of xdelta depends on the minimum period between each xdelta--the greater the time separation, the smaller the overhead. But people want to sync with a certain frequency, and /have to/ sync with another frequency. Presumably the greatest achievable efficiency with xdelta isn't too much greater than the greatest achievable efficiency with rsync (based on what I know of the rsync algorithm). Therefore it's quite possible that xdelta has more overhead at the "want to" and "have to" frequencies than rsync. Let's say we have a portage tree A, the official one, and B, some user's. Let t be time. A(t) is constantly changing, and the user wants his B(t) to always be approximately equal to A(t) within some error factor. Let Dr(A(ta),B(tb)) be the amount of data transferred by rsync between A and B's locations, and let Dx be defined similarly for xdelta. Lets further make the simplifying assumption that Dr=(1+p)*Dx, where p has some constant value when averaged over all users syncing their trees (p stands for percentage). To accomplish his within-some-error goal, the user periodically synchronizes his B(t) with the value of A(t) at that moment. Before the synchronization, B(tb) = A(t0), where t0 is the present and tb < t0. Consider rsync. He starts up one rsync connection, which computes some delta Dr(A(t0),B(tb)) and transfers it. Now B(t0) = A(t0) with some very small error, since A(t) constantly evolves. Taken in aggregate, the server "spends" 1 connection per sync per person and Dr bytes of bandwidth. Consider xdelta. Say xdeltas are made periodically every T1 and T2 units of time. If you last synced longer than T2 units of time ago, you have to download the entire portage tree again. He downloads the delta list from somewhere (1 connection). Several things can now happen: * 0 < t0-tb < T1 he must download on average N1 new T1 xdeltas, at average size S1 * T1 < t0-tb < T2 he must revert some of his T1 xdeltas download 1 new T2 delta at average size S2 download N2 new T1 deltas * T2 < t0-tb he must download 1 new portage tree at average size S3 Okay, so the server spends either * 1+N1 connections and N1*S1 bytes * 2+N2 connections and N2*S1+S2 bytes * 2 connection and S3 bytes (ignoring the size of the delta list) Say the probabilities of each of these three situations with an arbitrary user are P1, P2, and P3 respectively. Taken in aggregate, the server spends P1*N1+P2*(1+N2)+P3 connections per sync per person and Dx_r = P1*N1*S1+P2*(N2*S1+S2)+P3*S3 bytes of bandwidth per sync per person. (Dx_r stands for Dx realized). So, when is Dr < Dx_r? The trivial solutions: 1) Disk space is "worth" a lot on the servers. (More under #3.) 2) Connections are "worth" a lot to the servers. 3) Appropriately chosen values of P1, P2, and P3 can make Dr < Dx_r. The solution is to add a T3, T4, ..., Tn until Pn is sufficiently small. But this might not be feasible, since additional levels of deltas increase the size of the data each portage tree server must store considerably. (It ought to be exponential with the number of levels, but I haven't worked that out.) This probably isn't a major problem, you could store the larger deltas only on the larger servers. The fascinating solution: 4) Note that Dx_r != Dx, and in fact might be considerably greater. The reason is that if I change something in the tree and then T1 time later change the same thing again, there's overlap in two deltas. 2*S1 > S2. Moreover, this sort of overhead is intrinsic: one delta between two times far apart is always smaller than many deltas between two times far apart. You want to compute xdeltas as infrequently as possible, but you don't have that option--the minimum error between A(t0) and B(t0) can't be too great. Rsync's algorithm can always manage Dr=p*Dx, irregardless of the size of the time difference tb-t0. (Remember Dx is the optimal delta size for that time difference.) To achieve very small errors, you have to make lots of xdeltas with small time differences. But as the time differences increase, the amount of overlap increases. So Dx_r becomes a better approximation for Dx as the time difference tb-t0 increases, and as tb-t0 decreases it becomes increasingly likely that Dr < Dx_r. Stratifying your deltas (i.e., times T1, T2, etc.) can mitigate this disadvantage, but you pay for that mitigation in nonlinear growth in the amount of data you have to store on the server as the maximum period of your deltas increases. So, in summary, there's /always/ at least one zero to the rsync overhead minus xdelta overhead function. Rsync is always better for some regions of real world situations, and xdelta is always better for others. The question is, which region is Gentoo in? I don't think that question has an obvious answer. It depends on many things, one of them being whether xdelta is dramatically better than rsync for the kinds of modifications people make to portage, and another being how much the disk space on and connections to the portage mirrors are really "worth". Evan -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-15 13:50 [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors leon j. breedt 2003-05-15 14:32 ` Teo 2003-05-15 16:26 ` Stanislav Brabec @ 2003-05-16 10:35 ` Chris Bainbridge 2003-05-16 10:37 ` rob holland 2 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: Chris Bainbridge @ 2003-05-16 10:35 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On Thursday 15 May 2003 13:50, leon j. breedt wrote: > > only one file to diff, which in my mind should be more > efficient. no more waiting for the 40000 file list to > arrive. > > or is there a reason this is a stupid idea? :) > > leon > > -- > gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list I once did some tests with rsyncing tar files rather than individual files, see http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=10108 The conclusion was that using tar archives gave around 85%-90% improvement for general sources (think rsyncing distfiles) and 35% improvement for the portage tree. Of course theres no fundamental reason for this, messing about with rsync options (block size, etc.) might give similar improvements. -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-16 10:35 ` Chris Bainbridge @ 2003-05-16 10:37 ` rob holland 2003-05-16 13:29 ` Chris Bainbridge 0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread From: rob holland @ 2003-05-16 10:37 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 602 bytes --] --On Friday, May 16, 2003 10:35:26 +0000 Chris Bainbridge <C.J.Bainbridge@ed.ac.uk> wrote: >> only one file to diff, which in my mind should be more >> efficient. no more waiting for the 40000 file list to >> arrive. Seeing as no-one else has piped up yet... :) The main problem with using a loopback fs is that we'd then need to require kernel support for it. The main problem with using a tar file and rsyncing that is that we have to tar/untar the whole portage tree each time. That takes a while (and quite a lot of space) :/ -- robh@gentoo.org / robh:irc.freenode.net [-- Attachment #2: Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors 2003-05-16 10:37 ` rob holland @ 2003-05-16 13:29 ` Chris Bainbridge 0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread From: Chris Bainbridge @ 2003-05-16 13:29 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-dev On Friday 16 May 2003 10:37, rob holland wrote: > --On Friday, May 16, 2003 10:35:26 +0000 Chris Bainbridge > > <C.J.Bainbridge@ed.ac.uk> wrote: > >> only one file to diff, which in my mind should be more > >> efficient. no more waiting for the 40000 file list to > >> arrive. > > Seeing as no-one else has piped up yet... :) > > The main problem with using a loopback fs is that we'd then need to require > kernel support for it. > > The main problem with using a tar file and rsyncing that is that we have to > tar/untar the whole portage tree each time. That takes a while (and quite a > lot of space) :/ Agreed, I came to the conclusion that cvsup was probably most bandwidth efficient for portage, and rgzip/rsync combo for updating distfiles (this would be a godsend for modem users when something like kde gets updated). -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2003-05-16 12:32 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 11+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2003-05-15 13:50 [gentoo-dev] speeding up emerge sync...and being nice to the mirrors leon j. breedt 2003-05-15 14:32 ` Teo 2003-05-15 15:32 ` rob holland 2003-05-15 16:16 ` Teo 2003-05-15 16:26 ` Stanislav Brabec 2003-05-15 17:10 ` Björn Lindström 2003-05-15 19:48 ` Stanislav Brabec 2003-05-15 23:39 ` Evan Powers 2003-05-16 10:35 ` Chris Bainbridge 2003-05-16 10:37 ` rob holland 2003-05-16 13:29 ` Chris Bainbridge
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