Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

Heavy Committing: DocValues aka. Column Stride ...

Heavy Committing: DocValues aka. Column Stride Fields in Lucene 4.0

Lucene 4.0 is on its way to deliver a tremendous amount of new features and improvements. Beside Real-Time Search & Flexible Indexing DocValues aka. Column Stride Fields is one of the "next generation" features. DocValues enable Lucene to efficiently store and retrieve type-safe Document & Value pairs in a column stride fashion either entirely memory resident random access or disk resident iterator based without the need to un-invert fields. It's final goal is to provide a independently update-able per document storage for scoring, sorting or even filtering. This talk will introduce the current state of development, implementation details, its features and how DocValues have been integrated into Lucene's Codec API for full extendability.

Simon Willnauer

May 17, 2011
Tweet

More Decks by Simon Willnauer

Other Decks in Programming

Transcript

  1. Simon Willnauer @ Lucene Revolution 2011 PMC Member & Core

    Comitter Apache Lucene [email protected] / [email protected] Column Stride Fields aka. DocValues
  2. 2

  3. Agenda Column Stride Fields aka. DocValues ‣ What is this

    all about? aka. The Problem! ‣ The more native solution ‣ DocValues - current state and future ‣ Questions? 3
  4. What is this all about? - Inverted Index Lucene is

    basically an inverted index - used to find terms QUICKLY! 1 The old night keeper keeps the keep in the town 2 In the big old house in the big old gown. 3 The house in the town had the big old keep 4 Where the old night keeper never did sleep. 5 The night keeper keeps the keep in the night 6 And keeps in the dark and sleeps in the light. term freq Posting list and 1 6 big 2 2 3 dark 1 6 did 1 4 gown 1 2 had 1 3 house 2 2 3 in 5 <1> <2> <3> <5> <6> keep 3 1 3 5 keeper 3 1 4 5 keeps 3 1 5 6 light 1 6 never 1 4 night 3 1 4 5 old 4 1 2 3 4 sleep 1 4 sleeps 1 6 the 6 <1> <2> <3> <4> <5> <6> town 2 1 3 where 1 4 Table with 6 documents TermsEnum IndexWriter
  5. Intersecting posting lists Yet, once we found the right terms

    the game starts.... 5 5 10 11 55 57 59 77 88 1 10 13 44 55 79 88 99 score AND Query What goes into the score? PageRank?, ClickFeedback? Posting Lists (document IDs)
  6. How to store scoring factors? Lucene provides 2 ways of

    storing data • Stored Fields (document to String or Binary mapping) • Inverted Index (term to document mapping) What if we need here is one or more values per document! • document to value mapping Why not use Stored Fields? 6
  7. Using Stored Fields 7 •Stored Fields serve a different purpose

    •loading body or title fields for result rendering / highlighting •very suited for loading multiple values •With Stored Fields you have one indirection per document resulting in going to disk twice for each document •on-disk random access is too slow •remember Lucene could score millions of documents even if you just render the top 10 or 20!
  8. Stored Fields under the hood 8 Field Index (.fdx) Field

    Data (.fdt) Document title: Deutschland title: Germany id: 108232 [...][id:108232title:Deutschlandtitle:Germany][...] [...][...][93438][...] numFields(vint) [ fieldid(vint) length(vint) payload ] absolute file pointers
  9. Stored Fields - accessing a field 9 Field Index (.fdx)

    Field Data (.fdt) [...][id:108232title:Deutschlandtitle:Germany][...] [...][...][93438][...] numFields(vint) [ fieldid(vint) length(vint) payload ] 1 2 Lookup filepointer in .fdx Scan on .fdt until you find the field by ID
  10. Alternatives? Lucene can un-invert a field into FieldCache 10 weight

    5.8 1.0 2.7 2.7 4.3 7.9 1.0 3.2 4.7 7.9 9.0 parse convert to datatype un-invert array per field / segment term freq Posting list 1.0 1 1 6 2.7 1 2 3 3.2 1 7 4.3 1 4 4.7 1 8 5.8 1 0 7.9 1 5 9 9.0 1 10 float 32 string / byte[]
  11. FieldCache - is fast once loaded, once! •Constant time lookup

    DocID to value •Efficient representation •primitive array •low GC overhead •loading can be slow (realtime can be a problem) •must parse values •builds unnecessary term dictionary •always memory resident 11
  12. FieldCache - loading 12 100k Docs 1M Docs 10M Docs

    122 ms 348 ms 3161 ms Simple Benchmark • Indexing 100k, 1M and 10M random floats • not analyzed no norms • load field into FieldCache from optimized index Remember, this is only one field! Some apps have many fields to load to FieldCache
  13. FieldCache works fine! - if... •you have enough memory •you

    can afford the loading time •merge is fast enough (for FieldCache you need to index the terms) 13 What if you canʼt? Like when you are in a very restricted environment? • 3 Billion Android installations world wide and growing - 2 MB Heap! • with 100 Million Documents one field takes 30 seconds to load • 2 phase Distributed Search
  14. Summary •Stored Fields are not fast enough for random access

    •FieldCache is fast once loaded •abuses a reverse index •must convert to String and from String •requires fair amount of memory • Lucene is missing native data-structure for primitive per-document values 14
  15. Agenda Column Stride Fields aka. DocValues ‣ What is this

    all about? aka. The Problem! ‣ The more native solution ‣ DocValues - current state and future ‣ Questions? 15
  16. The more native solution - Column Stride Fields •A dense

    column based storage •1 value per document •accepts primitives - no conversion from / to String •int & long •float & double •byte[ ] •each field has a DocValues Type but can still be indexed or stored •Entirely optional 16
  17. Simple Layout - even on disk 17 field: time field:

    id field: page_rank 1288271631431 1 3.2 1288271631531 5 4.5 1288271631631 3 2.3 1288271631732 4 4.44 1288271631832 6 6.7 1288271631932 9 7.8 1288271632032 8 9.9 1288271632132 7 10.1 1288271632233 12 11.0 1288271632333 14 33.1 1288271632433 22 0.2 1288271632533 32 1.4 1288271632637 100 55.6 1288271632737 33 2.2 1288271632838 34 7.5 1288271632938 35 3.2 1288271633038 36 3.4 1288271633138 37 5.6 1288271632333 38 45.0 1 column per field and segment 1 value per document int64 int32 float 32
  18. Numeric Types - Int 18 Random Access Math.max(1, (int) Math.ceil(

    Math.log(1+maxValue)/Math.log(2.0)) ); Number of bit depend on the numeric range in the field: 7 - bit per doc field: id 1 5 3 4 6 9 8 7 12 14 22 32 100 33 34 35 36 37 38 • Integer are stored dense based on PackedInts • Space depends on the value-range per segment Example: [1, 100] maps to [0, 99] requires 7 bit per doc • Floats are stored without compression • either 32 or 64 bit per value
  19. Arbitrary Values - The byte[] variants •Length Variants: •Fixed /

    Variable •Store Variants: •Straight or Referenced 19 data 10/01/2011 12/01/2011 10/04/2011 10/06/2011 10/05/2011 10/01/2011 10/07/2011 10/04/2011 10/04/2011 10/04/2011 data 10/01/2011 12/01/2011 10/04/2011 10/06/2011 10/05/2011 10/01/2011 10/07/2011 offsets 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 20 20 20 fixed / straight fixed / deref Random Access Random Access
  20. DocValues - Memory Requirements •RAM Resident - random access •similar

    to FieldCache •bytes are stored in byte-block pools •currently limited to 2GB per segment •On-Disk - sequential access •almost no JVM heap memory •files should be in FS cache for fast access •possible use MemoryMapped Buffers 20
  21. Lets look at the API - Indexing 21 Adding DocValues

    follows existing patterns, simply use Fieldable Document doc = new Document(); float pageRank = 10.3f; DocValuesField valuesField = new DocValuesField("pageRank"); valuesField.setFloat(pageRank); doc.add(valuesField); writer.addDocument(doc); String titleText = "The quick brown fox"; Field field = new Field("title", titleText , Store.NO, Index.ANALYZED); DocValuesField titleDV = new DocValuesField("title"); titleDV.setBytes(new BytesRef(titleText), Type.BYTES_VAR_DEREF); field.setDocValues(titleDV); Sometimes the field should also be indexed, stored or needs term- vectors
  22. Looking at the API - Search / Retrieve 22 IndexReader

    reader = ...; DocValues values = reader.docValues("pageRank"); DocValuesEnum floatEnum = values.getEnum(); int doc = 0; FloatsRef ref = floatEnum.getFloat(); // values are filled when iterating while((doc = floatEnum.nextDoc()) != DocValuesEnum.NO_MORE_DOCS) { double value = ref.floats[0]; } // equivalent to ... int doc = 0; while((doc = floatEnum.advance(doc+1)) != DocValuesEnum.NO_MORE_DOCS) { double value = ref.floats[0]; } On disk sequential access is exposed through DocValuesEnum DocValuesEnum is based on DocIdSetIterator just like Scorer or DocsEnum
  23. Looking at the API - Search / Retrieve 23 IndexReader

    reader = ...; DocValues values = reader.docValues("pageRank"); Source source = values.getSource(); double value = source.getFloat(x); // still allows iterating over the RAM resident values DocValuesEnum floatEnum = source.getEnum(); int doc; FloatsRef ref = floatEnum.getFloat(); while((doc = floatEnum.nextDoc()) != DocValuesEnum.NO_MORE_DOCS) { value = ref.floats[0]; } RAM Resident API is very similar to FieldCache DocValuesEnum still available on RAM Resident API
  24. Can I add my own DocValues Implementation? •DocValues are integrated

    into Flexible Indexing •IndexWriter / IndexReader write and read DocValues via a Codec •DocValues Types are fixed (int, float32, float64 etc.) but implementations are Codec specific •A Codec provides access to DocValuesComsumer and DocValuesProducer •allows implementing application specific serialzation •customize compression techniques 24
  25. Quick detour - Codecs 26 IndexWriter IndexReader Flex API Codec

    DocValuesProducer DocValuesConsumer write read
  26. Remember the loading FieldCache benchmark? 27 Simple Benchmark • Indexing

    100k, 1M and 10M random floats • not analyzed no norms • loading field into FieldCache from optimized index vs. loading DocValues field 100k Docs 1M Docs 10M Docs FieldCache 122 ms 348 ms 3161 ms DocValues 7 ms 10 ms 90 ms Loading is 100 x faster - no un-inverting, no string parsing
  27. QPS - FieldCache vs. DocValues 28 Task QPS DocValues QPS

    FieldCache % change AndHighHigh 3.51 3.41 2.9% PKLookup 46.06 44.87 2.7% AndHighMed 37.09 36.48 1.7% Fuzzy2 17.70 17.50 1.1% Fuzzy1 27.15 27.21 -0.2% Phrase 4.12 4.13 -0.2% SpanNear 2.00 2.01 -0.5% SloppyPhrase 1.98 2.02 -2.0% Term 35.29 36.05 -2.1% OrHighMed 4.73 4.93 -4.1% OrHighHigh 3.99 4.18 -4.5% Wildcard 12.97 13.60 -4.6% Prefix3 15.86 16.70 -5.0% IntNRQ 2.72 2.91 -6.5% 6 Search Threads 20 JVM instances, 5 instances per task run 50 times on 12 core Xeon / 24 GB RAM - all queries wrapped with a CustomScoreQuery
  28. Agenda Column Stride Fields aka. DocValues ‣ What is this

    all about? aka. The Problem! ‣ The more native solution ‣ DocValues - current state and future ‣ Questions? 29
  29. DocValues - current state •Currently still in a branch •Some

    minor JavaDoc issues •needs some cleanups •Landing on trunk very soon •issue is already opened and active 30
  30. DocValues - current features •Fully customizable via Codecs •User can

    control memory usage per field •Suitable for environments where memory is tight •Compact and native representation on disk and in RAM •Fast Loading times •Comparable to FieldCache (small overhead) •Direct value access even when on disk (single seek) 31
  31. DocValues - what is next? •the ultimate goal for DocValues

    is to be update-able •changing a per-document values without reindexing •users can replace existing values directly for each document •each field by itself will be update-able •Will be available in Lucene 4.0 once released ;) 32
  32. DocValues - Updates •Lucene has write-once policy for files •Changing

    in place is not a good idea - Consistency / Corruption! •Problem is comparable to norms or deleted docs •updating norms requires re-writing the entire norms array (1 byte per Document with in memory copy-on-write) •same is true for deleted docs while cost is low (1 bit per document) •DocValues will use a stacked-approach instead 33
  33. DocValues - Updates 34 docID field: permission 0 777 1

    707 2 644 3 644 4 777 5 664 6 664 (id: 5, value: 777) (id: 6, value: 777) (id: 5, value: 644) DocValues store update stack IndexWriter (id: 3, value: 777) update merge docID field: permission 0 777 1 707 2 644 3 777 4 777 5 644 6 777 ... n coalesced store
  34. Use-Cases •Scoring based on frequently changing values •click feedback •iterative

    algorithms like page rank •user ratings •Restricted environments like Android •Realtime Search (fast loading times) •frequently changing fields •if the fields content is not searched! •fast field fetching / alternative to stored fields (Distributed Search) 35