From 9c9de088aa13e715a92ff3b5b398f549d182bfa8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nathan VanBenschoten Date: Mon, 1 Nov 2021 01:56:27 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] hlc: document properties and uses of Hybrid Logical Clocks This commit adds a `doc.go` file to the `pkg/util/hlc package` that details that properties and the uses of Hybrid Logical Clocks throughout the system. It is meant to capture an overview of the ways in which HLCs benfit CockroachDB and to exhaustively enumerate the (few) places in which the HLC is a key component to the correctness of different subsystems. This was inspired by #72121, which is once again making me feel uneasy about how implicit most interactions with the HLC clock are. Specifically, the uses of the HLC for causality tracking are subtle and underdocumented. The typing changes made in #58349 help to isolate timestamps used for causality tracking from any other timestamps in the system, but until we remove the escape hatch of dynamically casting a `Timestamp` back to a `ClockTimestamp` with `TryToClockTimestamp()`, it is still too difficult to understand when and why clock signals are being passed between HLCs on different nodes, and where doing so is necessary for correctness. I'm looking to make that change and I'm hoping that documenting this first (with help from the reviewers!) will set that up to be successful. Some of this was adapted from section 4 of the SIGMOD 2020 paper. --- pkg/kv/kvclient/kvcoord/txn_coord_sender.go | 6 +- pkg/util/hlc/BUILD.bazel | 1 + pkg/util/hlc/doc.go | 253 ++++++++++++++++++++ pkg/util/hlc/hlc.go | 4 - 4 files changed, 257 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) create mode 100644 pkg/util/hlc/doc.go diff --git a/pkg/kv/kvclient/kvcoord/txn_coord_sender.go b/pkg/kv/kvclient/kvcoord/txn_coord_sender.go index b201d985cf59..41577e2cee56 100644 --- a/pkg/kv/kvclient/kvcoord/txn_coord_sender.go +++ b/pkg/kv/kvclient/kvcoord/txn_coord_sender.go @@ -586,9 +586,9 @@ func (tc *TxnCoordSender) Send( // transactions are guaranteed to start with higher timestamps, regardless // of the gateway they use. This ensures that all causally dependent // transactions commit with higher timestamps, even if their read and writes -// sets do not conflict with the original transaction's. This obviates the -// need for uncertainty intervals and prevents the "causal reverse" anamoly -// which can be observed by a third, concurrent transaction. +// sets do not conflict with the original transaction's. This prevents the +// "causal reverse" anomaly which can be observed by a third, concurrent +// transaction. // // For more, see https://www.cockroachlabs.com/blog/consistency-model/ and // docs/RFCS/20200811_non_blocking_txns.md. diff --git a/pkg/util/hlc/BUILD.bazel b/pkg/util/hlc/BUILD.bazel index 630ed7223789..83a0b713ab03 100644 --- a/pkg/util/hlc/BUILD.bazel +++ b/pkg/util/hlc/BUILD.bazel @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ load("@io_bazel_rules_go//go:def.bzl", "go_library", "go_test") go_library( name = "hlc", srcs = [ + "doc.go", "hlc.go", "hlc_clock_device_linux.go", "hlc_clock_device_stub.go", diff --git a/pkg/util/hlc/doc.go b/pkg/util/hlc/doc.go new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..87e246199b41 --- /dev/null +++ b/pkg/util/hlc/doc.go @@ -0,0 +1,253 @@ +// Copyright 2021 The Cockroach Authors. +// +// Use of this software is governed by the Business Source License +// included in the file licenses/BSL.txt. +// +// As of the Change Date specified in that file, in accordance with +// the Business Source License, use of this software will be governed +// by the Apache License, Version 2.0, included in the file +// licenses/APL.txt. + +/* +Package hlc implements the Hybrid Logical Clock outlined in "Logical Physical +Clocks and Consistent Snapshots in Globally Distributed Databases", available +online at http://www.cse.buffalo.edu/tech-reports/2014-04.pdf. + +Each node within a CockroachDB cluster maintains a hybrid logical clock (HLC), +which provides timestamps that are a combination of physical and logical time. +Physical time is based on a node’s coarsely-synchronized system clock, and +logical time is based on Lamport’s clocks. + +Hybrid-logical clocks provide a few important properties: + +Causality tracking + +HLCs provide causality tracking through their logical component upon each +inter-node exchange. Nodes attach HLC timestamps to each message that they send +and use HLC timestamps from each message that they receive to update their local +clock. + +There are three channels through which HLC timestamps are passed between nodes +in a cluster: + + - Raft (unidirectional): proposers of Raft commands (i.e. leaseholders) attach + clock readings to these command, which are later consumed by followers when + commands are applied to their Raft state machine. + + - BatchRequest API (bidirectional): clients and servers of the KV BatchRequest + API will attach HLC clock readings on requests and responses (successes and + errors). + + - DistSQL flows (unidirectional): leaves of a DistSQL flow will pass clock + readings back to the root of the flow. Currently, this only takes place on + errors, and relates to the "Transaction retry errors" interaction detailed + below. + +Capturing causal relationships between events on different nodes is critical for +enforcing invariants within CockroachDB. What follows is an enumeration of each +of the interactions in which causality passing through an HLC is necessary for +correctness. It is intended to be exhaustive. + + - Cooperative lease transfers. During a cooperative lease transfer from one + replica of a range to another, the outgoing leaseholder revokes its lease + before its expiration time and consults its clock to determine the start + time of the next lease. It then proposes this new lease through Raft (see + the raft channel above) with a clock reading attached that is >= the new + lease's start time. Upon application of this Raft entry, the incoming + leaseholder forwards its HLC to this clock reading, transitively ensuring + that its clock is >= the new lease's start time. + + - Observed timestamps. During the lifetime of a transaction, its coordinator + issues BatchRequests to other nodes in the cluster. Each time a given + transaction visits a node for the first time, it captures an observation from + the node's HLC. Separately, when a leaseholder on a given node serves a + write, it ensures that the node's HLC clock is >= the timestamp of the write. + As a result, these "observed timestamps" captured during the lifetime of a + transaction can be used to make a claim about values that could not have been + written on their node yet at the time that the transaction first visited the + node, and by extension, at the time that the transaction began. This allows + the transaction to avoid uncertainty restarts in some circumstances. For + more, see pkg/kv/kvserver/observedts/doc.go. + + - Non-transactional requests. Most operations in CockroachDB are transactional + and receive their read timestamps from their client. They use an uncertainty + interval (see below) to avoid stale reads in the presence of clock skew. + However, the KV API also exposes the option to send a single-range, strongly + consistent, "non-transaction" request. These requests do not carry + uncertainty intervals, so to avoid stale reads, they receive their read + timestamp on the server. Specifically, because these requests can not cross + ranges, they receive their timestamp on the leaseholder of the range that + they are querying. As mentioned before, when a leaseholder on a node serves a + write, it ensures that the node's HLC clock is >= the timestamp of the write. + This ensures that any later non-transactional read receives a timestamp >= + all writes served previously. + + TODO(nvanbenschoten): this mechanism is currently broken for future-time + writes. We either need to give non-transactional requests uncertainty + intervals or remove them. See https://github.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/issues/58459. + + - Transaction retry errors: TODO(nvanbenschoten/andreimatei): is this a real + case where passing a remote clock signal through the local clock is + necessary? The DistSQL channel and its introduction in 72fa944 seem to imply + that it is, but I don't really see it, because we don't use the local clock + to determine which timestamp to restart the transaction at. Maybe we were + just concerned about a transaction restarting at a timestamp above the local + clock back then because we had yet to separate the "clock timestamp" domain + from the "transaction timestamp" domain. + +Strict monotonicity + +HLCs provide strict monotonicity within and across restarts on a single node. +Within a continuous process, providing this property is trivial. Across +restarts, this property is enforced by waiting out the maximum clock offset upon +process startup before serving any requests in ensureClockMonotonicity. The +cluster setting server.clock.persist_upper_bound_interval also provides +additional protection here by persisting the wall time of the clock +periodically, although this protection is disabled by default. + +Strictly monotonic timestamp allocation ensures that two causally dependent +transactions originating from the same node are given timestamps that reflect +their ordering in real time. It also underpins the causality tracking +applications detailed above. + +Self-stabilization + +HLCs provide self-stabilization in the presence of isolated transient clock skew +fluctuations. As stated above, a node forwards its HLC upon its receipt of a +network message. The effect of this is that given sufficient intra-cluster +communication, HLCs across nodes tend to converge and stabilize even if their +individual physical clocks diverge. This provides no strong guarantees but can +mask clock synchronization errors in practice. + +Bounded skew + +HLCs within a CockroachDB deployment are configured with a maximum allowable +offset between their physical time component and that of other HLCs in the +cluster. This is referred to as the MaxOffset. The configuration is static and +must be identically configured on all nodes in a cluster, which is enforced by +the HeartbeatService. + +The notion of a maximum clock skew at all times between all HLCs in a cluster is +a foundational assumption used in different parts of the system. What follows is +an enumeration of the interactions that assume a bounded clock skew, along with +a discussion for each about the consequences of that assumption being broken and +the maximum clock skew between two nodes in the cluster exceeding the configured +limit. + + - Transaction uncertainty intervals. The single-key linearizability property is + satisfied in CockroachDB by tracking an uncertainty interval for each + transaction, within which the causal ordering between two transactions is + indeterminate. Upon its creation, a transaction is given a provisional commit + timestamp commit_ts from the transaction coordinator’s local HLC and an + uncertainty interval of [commit_ts, commit_ts + max_offset]. + + When a transaction encounters a value on a key at a timestamp below its + provisional commit timestamp, it trivially observes the value during reads + and overwrites the value at a higher timestamp during writes. This alone + would satisfy single-key linearizability if transactions had access to a + perfectly synchronized global clock. + + Without global synchronization, the uncertainty interval is needed because it + is possible for a transaction to receive a provisional commit timestamp up to + the cluster’s max_offset earlier than a transaction that causally preceded + this new transaction in real time. When a transaction encounters a value on a + key at a timestamp above its provisional commit timestamp but within its + uncertainty interval, it performs an uncertainty restart, moving its + provisional commit timestamp above the uncertain value but keeping the upper + bound of its uncertainty interval fixed. + + This corresponds to treating all values in a transaction’s uncertainty window + as past writes. As a result, the operations on each key performed by + transactions take place in an order consistent with the real time ordering of + those transactions. + + HAZARD: If the maximum clock offset is exceeded, it is possible for a + transaction to serve a stale read that violates single-key linearizability. + For example, it is possible for a transaction A to write to a key and commit + at a timestamp t1, then for its client to hear about the commit. The client + may then initiate a second transaction B on a different gateway that has a + slow clock. If this slow clock is more than max_offset from other clocks in + the system, it is possible for transaction B's uncertainty interval not to + extend up to t1 and therefore for a read of the key that transaction A wrote + to be missed. Notably, this is a violation of consistency (linearizability) + but not of isolation (serializability) — transaction isolation has no clock + dependence. + + - Non-cooperative lease transfers. In the happy case, range leases move from + replica to replica using a coordinated handoff. However, in the unhappy case + where a leaseholder crashes or otherwise becomes unresponsive, other replicas + are able to attempt to acquire a new lease for the range as soon as they + observe the old lease expire. In this case, the max_offset plays a role in + ensuring that two replicas do not both consider themselves the leaseholder + for a range at the same (wallclock) time. This is ensured by designating a + "stasis" period equal in size to the max_offset at the end of each lease, + immediately before its expiration, as unusable. By preventing a lease from + being used within this stasis period, two replicas will never think that they + hold a valid lease at the same time, even if the outgoing leaseholder has a + slow clock and the incoming leaseholder has a fast clock (within bounds). For + more, see LeaseState_UNUSABLE. + + Note however that it is easy to overstate the salient point here if one is + not careful. Lease start and end times operate in the MVCC time domain, and + any two leases are always guaranteed to cover disjoint intervals of MVCC + time. Leases entitle their holder to serve reads at any MVCC time below their + expiration and to serve writes at any MVCC time at or after their start time + and below their expiration. Additionally, the lease sequence is attached to + all writes and checked during Raft application, so a stale leaseholder is + unable to perform a write after it has been replaced (in "consensus time"). + This combines to mean that even if two replicas believed that they hold the + lease for a range at the same time, they can not perform operations that + would be incompatible with one another (e.g. two conflicting writes). Again, + transaction isolation has no clock dependence. + + HAZARD: If the maximum clock offset is exceeded, it is possible for two + replicas to both consider themselves leaseholders at the same time. This can + not lead to stale reads for transactional requests, because a transaction + with an uncertainty interval that extends past a lease's expiration will not + be able to use that lease to perform a read. However, because some + non-transactional requests receive their timestamp on the server and do not + carry an uncertainty interval, they would be susceptible to stale reads + during this period. This is equivalent to the hazard for operations that do + use uncertainty intervals, but the mechanics differ slightly. + + TODO(nvanbenschoten): is that really it? It's the only thing I've ever been + able to come up with when asking this question. + + - "Linearizable" transactions. By default, transactions in CockroachDB provide + single-key linearizability and guarantee that as long as clock skew remains + below the configured bounds, transactions will not serve stale reads. + However, by default, transactions do not provide strict serializability, as + they are susceptible to the "causal reverse" anomaly. + + However, CockroachDB does supports a stricter model of consistency through + its COCKROACH_EXPERIMENTAL_LINEARIZABLE environment variable. When in + "linearizable" mode (also known as "strict serializable" mode), all writing + transactions (but not read-only transactions) must wait ("commit-wait") an + additional max_offset after committing to ensure that their commit timestamp + is below the current HLC clock time of any other node in the system. In doing + so, all causally dependent transactions are guaranteed to start with higher + timestamps, regardless of the gateway they use. This ensures that all + causally dependent transactions commit with higher timestamps, even if their + read and writes sets do not conflict with the original transaction's. This + prevents the "causal reverse" anomaly which can be observed by a third, + concurrent transaction. + + HAZARD: If the maximum clock offset is exceeded, it is possible that even + after a transaction commit-waits for the full max_offset, a causally + dependent transaction that evaluates on a different gateway node receives and + commits with an earlier timestamp. This resuscitates the possibility of the + causal reverse anomaly, along with the possibility for stale reads, as + detailed above. + + - SQL descriptor leases. TODO(nvanbenschoten): learn how this works and whether + this relies on bounded clock skew of liveness or for safety. May need to talk + to Andrew about it. See LeaseManager.timeRemaining. + + HAZARD: ??? + +To reduce the likelihood of stale reads, nodes periodically measure their +clock’s offset from other nodes. This best-effort validation is done in the +RemoteClockMonitor. If any node exceeds the configured maximum offset by more +than 80% compared to a majority of other nodes, it self-terminates. +*/ +package hlc diff --git a/pkg/util/hlc/hlc.go b/pkg/util/hlc/hlc.go index b83ade25f4dd..794ec7b753d6 100644 --- a/pkg/util/hlc/hlc.go +++ b/pkg/util/hlc/hlc.go @@ -8,10 +8,6 @@ // by the Apache License, Version 2.0, included in the file // licenses/APL.txt. -// Package hlc implements the Hybrid Logical Clock outlined in -// "Logical Physical Clocks and Consistent Snapshots in Globally -// Distributed Databases", available online at -// http://www.cse.buffalo.edu/tech-reports/2014-04.pdf. package hlc import (