[Openstack] Discussion / proposal: deleted column marker

Doug Hellmann doug.hellmann at dreamhost.com
Wed Oct 3 13:31:46 UTC 2012


On Wed, Oct 3, 2012 at 9:08 AM, Day, Phil <philip.day at hp.com> wrote:

> I *think* deleted flavours used to be needed as there could still be
> instances running against them and the flavour definition was used by the
> quota calculations.  Not sure if this is still the case, or if the data now
> comes straight from the instances table.    Some aspects of a flavour (e.g.
> rxtx_factor) could be useful to a scheduler, and that data currently isn't
> saved into the instance.
>
> I guess the usage audit type functionality (i.e. tell me about all
> instances that have run sometime in this audit period) may be another case
> where deleted instances are required at the moment.
>

That data is being gathered by ceilometer now, so maybe we can do away with
it in the nova database during Grizzly.

Doug


>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: openstack-bounces+philip.day=hp.com at lists.launchpad.net [mailto:
> openstack-bounces+philip.day=hp.com at lists.launchpad.net] On Behalf Of
> Pitucha, Stanislaw Izaak
> Sent: 03 October 2012 13:09
> To: openstack at lists.launchpad.net
> Subject: Re: [Openstack] Discussion / proposal: deleted column marker
>
> Hi Johannes,
> I know the names collide here, but since this technique is known as
> soft-deletes... We need more namespaces :)
>
> Thanks for the idea of grepping for read_deleted. Fortunately I think the
> situation isn't as bad as it would seem. Let me group the places which
> change read_deleted in the code (many results from grep are comments).
> Reading only deleted entries, or all:
>
> - xenserver (instance) - cleanup tool - I don't do xen, so I'm not sure
> how useful is it. Anyone?
> - tests - can be ignored - if there is no functionality, tests can be
> killed
> - sqlalchemy api (instance) - fixed ip can reference a deleted instance
> (tricky situation; from the commit message: "It adds a test  to verify that
> the code works with a duplicate deleted floating_ip" - this seems very
> wrong...)
> - sqlalchemy api (iscsi) - getting deleted iscsi targets which are still
> referenced by volume
> - sqlalchemy api (various) - instance migration, s3image, bandwidth,
> storage manager, flavors (only available from nova-manage)
> - compute manager (instance) - reaping deleted instances - I can't see why
> the same logic wouldn't apply if the rows are actually missing (needs
> analysis, maybe there's a reason)
> - compute instance_types (flavour) - apparently flavours are usually read
> even if they're deleted
> - network manager (instance) - making sure that ips/networks can be
> removed even if the instance is already deleted
>
> So here's what I can see: pretty much all the usage is about deleting
> instances or making sure parts connected to instances go away if the
> instance is deleted earlier. It doesn't seem right, but could be
> progressively fixed. It looks like another "state" of the instance, which
> could be integrated into the other state fields.
>
> Nothing else uses the deleted column explicitly (unless I missed something
> - possible). Ips, networks, keys, anything that actually goes away
> permanently (and doesn't involve a big chain of cleanup events) is never
> read back once it's marked as deleted.
> So maybe a better approach is not to remove the deleted column completely,
> but to start stripping it from places where it's not needed (fixed,
> floating ips, networks, ssh keys being good candidates). This could be done
> by creating a new layer over NovaBase and removing the "deleted" marker
> from NovaBase itself. Or maybe even by creating a SoftDeleteMixin and
> applying it to all current models, then removing it where unnecessary? That
> would keep the current behaviour where it's currently needed, but at the
> same time it would provide a known migration path to get rid of it.
> We could start stripping the new layer then table by table and adding
> unique constraints where they make sense, before trying to tackle the
> really tricky parts (for instances table, maybe the marker actually makes
> sense? maybe not? - it's definitely not going to be an easy decision/fix)
>
> Regards,
> Stanisław Pitucha
> Cloud Services
> Hewlett Packard
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: openstack-bounces+stanislaw.pitucha=hp.com at lists.launchpad.net
> [mailto:openstack-bounces+stanislaw.pitucha=hp.com at lists.launchpad.net] On
> Behalf Of Johannes Erdfelt
> Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2012 6:12 PM
> To: openstack at lists.launchpad.net
> Subject: Re: [Openstack] Discussion / proposal: deleted column marker
>
> On Tue, Oct 02, 2012, Pitucha, Stanislaw Izaak <stanislaw.pitucha at hp.com>
> wrote:
> > Does anyone know why soft-delete is still in place?
> > Are there any reasons it can't / shouldn't be removed at this time?
> > If it's possible to remove it, would you miss it?
>
> I'm certainly not a fan of the database soft-delete for many of the same
> reasons you've described, but there are some places where removing it would
> require code changes.
>
> Off the top of my head would be pretty much anywhere a context sets
> read_deleted to 'yes' or 'only', which is a surprising number of places now
> that I've done a grep.
>
> I suspect at least a handful of those cases don't need the functionality
> and
> others probably use it as a crutch around other problems.
>
> JE
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> Post to     : openstack at lists.launchpad.net
> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
>
> _______________________________________________
> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> Post to     : openstack at lists.launchpad.net
> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~openstack
> More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack/attachments/20121003/cf4f18be/attachment.html>


More information about the Openstack mailing list