On 9/9/19 11:38 AM, Chris Hoge wrote:
In my personal experience, running Nova on a four core machine without limiting the number of database connections will easily exhaust the available connections to MySQL/MariaDB. Keep in mind that the limit applies to every instance of a service, so if Nova starts 'm' services replicated for 'n' cores with 'd' possible connections you'll be up to ‘m x n x d' connections. It gets big fast.
The default setting of '0' (that is, unlimited) does not make for a good first-run experience, IMO.
We don't default to 0. We default to 5: https://docs.openstack.org/oslo.db/stein/reference/opts.html#database.max_po...
This issue comes up every few years or so, and the consensus previously is that 200-2000 connections is recommended based on your needs. Your database has to be configured to handle the load and looking at the configuration value across all your services and setting them consistently and appropriately is important.
http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2015-April/061808.html
Thanks, I did not recall that discussion. If I'm reading it correctly, Jay is suggesting that for MySQL we should just disable connection pooling. As I noted earlier, I don't think we expose the ability to do that in oslo.db (patches welcome!), but setting max_pool_size to 1 would get you pretty close. Maybe we should add that to the help text for the option in oslo.db?
On Sep 6, 2019, at 7:34 AM, Ben Nemec <openstack@nemebean.com> wrote:
Tagging with oslo as this sounds related to oslo.db.
On 9/5/19 7:37 PM, Albert Braden wrote:
After more googling it appears that max_pool_size is a maximum limit on the number of connections that can stay open, and max_overflow is a maximum limit on the number of connections that can be temporarily opened when the pool has been consumed. It looks like the defaults are 5 and 10 which would keep 5 connections open all the time and allow 10 temp. Do I need to set max_pool_size to 0 and max_overflow to the number of connections that I want to allow? Is that a reasonable and correct configuration? Intuitively that doesn't seem right, to have a pool size of 0, but if the "pool" is a group of connections that will remain open until they time out, then maybe 0 is correct?
I don't think so. According to [0] and [1], a pool_size of 0 means unlimited. You could probably set it to 1 to minimize the number of connections kept open, but then I expect you'll have overhead from having to re-open connections frequently.
It sounds like you could use a NullPool to eliminate connection pooling entirely, but I don't think we support that in oslo.db. Based on the error message you're seeing, I would take a look at connection_recycle_time[2]. I seem to recall seeing a comment that the recycle time needs to be shorter than any of the timeouts in the path between the service and the db (so anything like haproxy or mysql itself). Shortening that, or lengthening intervening timeouts, might get rid of these disconnection messages.
0: https://docs.openstack.org/oslo.db/stein/reference/opts.html#database.max_po... 1: https://docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/13/core/pooling.html#sqlalchemy.pool.QueuePoo... 2: https://docs.openstack.org/oslo.db/stein/reference/opts.html#database.connec...
*From:* Albert Braden <Albert.Braden@synopsys.com> *Sent:* Wednesday, September 4, 2019 10:19 AM *To:* openstack-discuss@lists.openstack.org *Cc:* Gaëtan Trellu <gaetan.trellu@incloudus.com> *Subject:* RE: Nova causes MySQL timeouts We’re not setting max_pool_size nor max_overflow option presently. I googled around and found this document: https://docs.openstack.org/keystone/stein/configuration/config-options.html <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__docs.openstack.org_keystone_stein_configuration_config-2Doptions.html&d=DwMGaQ&c=DPL6_X_6JkXFx7AXWqB0tg&r=XrJBXYlVPpvOXkMqGPz6KucRW_ils95ZMrEmlTflPm8&m=3eF4Bv1HRQW6gl7II12rTTSKj_A9_LDISS6hU0nP-R0&s=0EGWx9qW60G1cxoPFCIv_G1-iXX20jKcC5-AwlCWk8g&e=> Document says: [api_database] connection_recycle_time = 3600 (Integer) Timeout before idle SQL connections are reaped. max_overflow = None (Integer) If set, use this value for max_overflow with SQLAlchemy. max_pool_size = None (Integer) Maximum number of SQL connections to keep open in a pool. [database] connection_recycle_time = 3600 (Integer) Timeout before idle SQL connections are reaped. min_pool_size = 1 (Integer) Minimum number of SQL connections to keep open in a pool. max_overflow = 50 (Integer) If set, use this value for max_overflow with SQLAlchemy. max_pool_size = None (Integer) Maximum number of SQL connections to keep open in a pool. If min_pool_size is >0, would that cause at least 1 connection to remain open until it times out? What are the recommended values for these, to allow unused connections to close before they time out? Is “min_pool_size = 0” an acceptable setting? My settings are default: [api_database]: #connection_recycle_time = 3600 #max_overflow = <None> #max_pool_size = <None> [database]: #connection_recycle_time = 3600 #min_pool_size = 1 #max_overflow = 50 #max_pool_size = 5 It’s not obvious what max_overflow does. Where can I find a document that explains more about these settings? *From:* Gaëtan Trellu <gaetan.trellu@incloudus.com <mailto:gaetan.trellu@incloudus.com>> *Sent:* Tuesday, September 3, 2019 1:37 PM *To:* Albert Braden <albertb@synopsys.com <mailto:albertb@synopsys.com>> *Cc:* openstack-discuss@lists.openstack.org <mailto:openstack-discuss@lists.openstack.org> *Subject:* Re: Nova causes MySQL timeouts Hi Albert, It is a configuration issue, have a look to max_pool_size and max_overflow options under [database] section. Keep in mind than more workers you will have more connections will be opened on the database. Gaetan (goldyfruit) On Sep 3, 2019 4:31 PM, Albert Braden <Albert.Braden@synopsys.com <mailto:Albert.Braden@synopsys.com>> wrote: It looks like nova is keeping mysql connections open until they time out. How are others responding to this issue? Do you just ignore the mysql errors, or is it possible to change configuration so that nova closes and reopens connections before they time out? Or is there a way to stop mysql from logging these aborted connections without hiding real issues? Aborted connection 10726 to db: 'nova' user: 'nova' host: 'asdf' (Got timeout reading communication packets)