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Tuning Database Configuration Parameters with iTuned

Tuning Database Configuration Parameters with iTuned. Vamsidhar Thummala Collaborators: Songyun Duan, Shivnath Babu Duke University. Performance Tuning of Database Systems. Physical design tuning Indexes [SIGMOD’98, VLDB’04] Materialized views [SIGMOD’00, VLDB’04]

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Tuning Database Configuration Parameters with iTuned

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  1. Tuning Database Configuration Parameters with iTuned Vamsidhar Thummala Collaborators: Songyun Duan, Shivnath Babu Duke University

  2. Performance Tuning of Database Systems • Physical design tuning • Indexes [SIGMOD’98, VLDB’04] • Materialized views [SIGMOD’00, VLDB’04] • Partitioning [SIGMOD’82, SIGMOD’88, SIGMOD’89] • Statistics tuning [ICDE’00, ICDE’07] • SQL Query tuning [VLDB’04 ] • Configuration parameter or Server parameter tuning [This talk]

  3. Database Configuration Parameters • Parameters that control • Memory distribution • shared_buffers, work_mem • I/O optimization • wal_buffers, checkpoint_segments, checkpoint_timeout, fsync • Parallelism • max_connections • Optimizer’s cost model • effective_cache_size, random_page_costdefault_statistics_target, enable_indexscan

  4. Need for Automated Configuration Parameter Tuning (1/2)

  5. Need for Automated Configuration Parameter Tuning (2/2) • Number of threads related to configuration parameter tuning vs. other under “PostgreSQL performance” mailing list Recently, there has been some effort from community to summarize the important parameters [PgCon’08]

  6. Typical Approach: Trial and Error 2 Response: All the values seem quite reasonable to me. What about the _costvariables? I guess one or more queries are evaluated using a different execution plan, probably sequential scan instead of index scan, hash join instead of merge join, or something like that. Try to log the "slow" statements - see "log_min_statement_duration". That might give you slow queries (although not necessarily the ones causing problems), and you can analyze them. What is the general I/O activity? Is there a lot of data read/written to the disks, is there a lot of I/O wait? PS: Was the database analyzedrecently? 1 User*: Hi, list. I've just upgraded pgsql from 8.3 to 8.4. I've used pgtune before and everything worked fine for me. And now i have ~93% cpuload. Here's changed values of config: default_statistics_target= 50 maintenance_work_mem = 1GB constraint_exclusion = on checkpoint_completion_target= 0.9 effective_cache_size = 22GB work_mem = 192MB wal_buffers= 8MB checkpoint_segments= 16 shared_buffers = 7680MB max_connections = 80 My box is Nehalem 2xQuad 2.8 with RAM32Gb, and there's only postgresql working on it. What parameters I should give more attention on? *http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-performance/2009-07/msg00323.php, 30th Jul 2009

  7. Doing Experiments to Understand the Underlying Response Surface • TPC-H 4 GB database, 1 GB memory, Query 18

  8. Challenges • Large number of configuration parameters • Total ~ 100 • 10-15 are important depending on OLTP vs. OLAP • Brute-Force will not work • Results in exponential number of experiments • Parameters can have complex interactions • Sometimes non-monotonic and counterintuitive • Limits the one-parameter-at-a-time approach • No holistic configuration tuning tools • Existing techniques focus on specific memory related parameters or recommend default settings

  9. Our Solution: iTuned • Practical tool that uses planned experiments to tune configuration parameters • An adaptive sampling algorithmto plan the sequence of experiments (Planner) • A novel workbench for conducting experiments in enterprise systems (Executor) • Features for scalability like sensitivity analysis and use of parallel experiments to reduce • Total number of experiments • Per experiment running time/cost

  10. Outline of the talk • iTuned Planner • iTuned Executor • Evaluation • Conclusion

  11. Problem Abstraction • Given • A database D and workload W • Configuration Parameter Vector X = <x1, x2, …, xm > • Cost Budget R • Goal: Find high performance setting X* subject to the budget constraint • Problem: Response surface y = (X) is unknown • Solution Approach: • Conduct experiments to learn about the response surface • Each experiment has some cost and gives sample <Xi, yi >

  12. iTuned Planner • Uses an adaptive sampling algorithm Stopping Criteria: Based on cost budget, R 1 2 • Sequential Sampling: • Select NEXT experiment, XNEXT based on previous samples • Calculate the improvement, IP(X) of each candidate sample and select the sample with highest improvement as XNEXT Boot Strapping: Conduct initial set of experiments Latin Hypercube Sampling k-Furthest First

  13. Improvement of an Experiment • Improvement IP(X) is defined as: • y(X*) – y(X) if y(X) < y(X*) • 0 otherwise • Issue: IP(X) is known only after y(X) is known, i.e., an experiment has to be conducted at X to measure y(X) • We estimate IP(X) by calculating the Expected Improvement, EIP(X) • To calculate EIP(X), we need to approximate Improvement at each configuration setting Probability density function of (Uncertainty estimate)

  14. EIP(X) Conducting Experiment at XNEXT using Expected Improvement   Projection on 1D Conduct NEXT experiment here

  15. Generating pdf through Gaussian Process • We estimate the performance as • Where is a regression model, is the residual of the model, captured through Gaussian Process • Gaussian Process, captures the uncertainty of the surface • is specified by mean and covariance functions • We use zero-mean Gaussian process • Covariance is a kernel function that inversely depends on the distance between two samples Xi and Xj • Residuals at nearby points exhibit higher correlation

  16. Calculating Expected Improvement using Gaussian Process • Lemma: Gaussian Process models as a uni-variate Gaussian with mean and variance as • Theorem: There exists a closed form for EIP(X) • [See paper for proof and details]

  17. Tradeoff between Exploration vs. Exploitation • Settings X with high EIP are either • Close to known good settings • Assists in exploitation • In highly uncertain regions • Assists in exploration EIP(X) Gaussian Process tries to achieve the balance between exploration vs. exploitation

  18. Outline of the talk • iTuned Planner • iTuned Executor • Evaluation • Conclusion

  19. Goal of the Executor • To conduct experiments • Without impacting production system • As close to real production runs as possible • Traditional choices • Production system itself • May impact running applications • Test system • Hard to replicate exact production settings • Manual set-up

  20. iTuned Executor • Exploits the underutilized resources to conduct experiments • Production systems, Stand-by systems, Test systems, On the cloud • Design: • Mechanisms: Home & garage containers, efficient snapshots of data • Policies: Specified by admins • If CPU, memory, disk utilization is below 20% for the past 10 minutes, then 70% resources can be taken for experiments

  21. Home Apply WAL DBMS Example Mechanism set-up on Stand-by System using ZFS, Solaris, and PITR Clients Clients Clients Standby Environment ProductionEnvironment Standby Machine Home Garage Middle Tier Apply WAL continuously Workbench for conducting experiments Write Ahead Log shipping DBMS DBMS DBMS Database Copy on Write Database Policy Manager Interface Experiment Planner & Scheduler Engine

  22. Outline of the talk • iTuned Planner • iTuned Executor • Evaluation • Conclusion

  23. Empirical Evaluation (1) • Two database systems, PostgreSQL v8.2 and MySQL v5.0 • Cluster of machines with 2GHz processor and 3GB RAM • Mixture of workloads • OLAP: Mixes of TPC-H queries • Varying #queries, #query_types, and MPL • Varying scale factors (SF = 1 to SF = 10) • OLTP: TPC-W and RuBIS • Number of parameters varied: up to 30

  24. Empirical Evaluation (2) • Techniques compared • Default parameter settings shipped (D) • Manual rule-based tuning (M) • Smart Hill Climbing (S) • State-of-the-art technique • Brute-Force search (B) • Run many experiments to find approximation to optimal setting • iTuned (I) • Evaluation metrics • Quality: workload running time after tuning • Efficiency: time needed for tuning

  25. Comparison of Tuning Quality Simple Workload with one TPC-H Query (Q1) Complex Workload with mix of TPC-H Queries (Q1+Q18)

  26. iTuned’s Efficiency and Scalability • Run experiments in parallel • Abort low-utility experiments early

  27. iTuned’s Sensitivity Analysis • Identify important parameters quickly • Use Sensitivity Analysis to reduce experiments

  28. Related work • Parameter tuning • Focus on specific classes of parameters (mainly memory related buffer pools) [ACM TOS’08, VLDB’06] • Statistical Approach for Ranking Parameters [SMDB’08] • Brute force approach to experiment design • Tools like DB2 Configuration advisor and pg_tune recommend default settings • Adaptive approaches to sampling [SIGMETRICS’06] • Work related to iTuned’s executor • Oracle SQL Performance Analyzer [SIGMOD’09, ICDE’09] • Virtualization, snapshots, suspend-resume

  29. Conclusion • iTuned automates the tuning process by adaptively conducting experiments • Our initial results are promising • Future work • Apply database-specific knowledge to keep optimizer in loop for end-to-end tuning • Query plan information • Workload compression • Experiments in cloud

  30. Questions? • Thank You

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