Apache Geode CHANGELOG

Understanding High Availability for Partitioned Regions

With high availability, each member that hosts data for the partitioned region gets some primary copies and some redundant (secondary) copies.

With redundancy, if one member fails, operations continue on the partitioned region with no interruption of service:

  • If the member hosting the primary copy is lost, Geode makes a secondary copy the primary. This might cause a temporary loss of redundancy, but not a loss of data.
  • Whenever there are not enough secondary copies to satisfy redundancy, the system works to recover redundancy by assigning another member as secondary and copying the data to it.

Note: You can still lose cached data when you are using redundancy if enough members go down in a short enough time span.

You can configure how the system works to recover redundancy when it is not satisfied. You can configure recovery to take place immediately or, if you want to give replacement members a chance to start up, you can configure a wait period. Redundancy recovery is also automatically attempted during any partitioned data rebalancing operation. Use the gemfire.MAX_PARALLEL_BUCKET_RECOVERIES system property to configure the maximum number of buckets that are recovered in parallel. By default, up to 8 buckets are recovered in parallel any time the system attempts to recover redundancy.

Without redundancy, the loss of any of the region’s data stores causes the loss of some of the region’s cached data. Generally, you should not use redundancy when your applications can directly read from another data source, or when write performance is more important than read performance.

Controlling Where Your Primaries and Secondaries Reside

By default, Geode places your primary and secondary data copies for you, avoiding placement of two copies on the same physical machine. If there are not enough machines to keep different copies separate, Geode places copies on the same physical machine. You can change this behavior, so Geode only places copies on separate machines.

You can also control which members store your primary and secondary data copies. Geode provides two options:

  • Fixed custom partitioning. This option is set for the region. Fixed partitioning gives you absolute control over where your region data is hosted. With fixed partitioning, you provide Geode with the code that specifies the bucket and data store for each data entry in the region. When you use this option with redundancy, you specify the primary and secondary data stores. Fixed partitioning does not participate in rebalancing because all bucket locations are fixed by you.
  • Redundancy zones. This option is set at the member level. Redundancy zones let you separate primary and secondary copies by member groups, or zones. You assign each data host to a zone. Then Geode places redundant copies in different redundancy zones, the same as it places redundant copies on different physical machines. You can use this to split data copies across different machine racks or networks, This option allows you to add members on the fly and use rebalancing to redistribute the data load, with redundant data maintained in separate zones. When you use redundancy zones, Geode will not place two copies of the data in the same zone, so make sure you have enough zones.

Running Processes in Virtual Machines

By default, Geode stores redundant copies on different machines. When you run your processes in virtual machines, the normal view of the machine becomes the VM and not the physical machine. If you run multiple VMs on the same physical machine, you could end up storing partitioned region primary buckets in separate VMs, but on the same physical machine as your secondaries. If the physical machine fails, you can lose data. When you run in VMs, you can configure Geode to identify the physical machine and store redundant copies on different physical machines.

Reads and Writes in Highly-Available Partitioned Regions

Geode treats reads and writes differently in highly-available partitioned regions than in other regions because the data is available in multiple members:

  • Write operations (like put and create) go to the primary for the data keys and then are distributed synchronously to the redundant copies. Events are sent to the members configured with subscription-attributes interest-policy set to all.
  • Read operations go to any member holding a copy of the data, with the local cache favored, so a read intensive system can scale much better and handle higher loads.

In this figure, M1 is reading W, Y, and Z. It gets W directly from its local copy. Since it doesn’t have a local copy of Y or Z, it goes to a cache that does, picking the source cache at random.