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- // Copyright 2021 The go-ethereum Authors
- // This file is part of the go-ethereum library.
- //
- // The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
- // it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
- // the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
- // (at your option) any later version.
- //
- // The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- // GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
- //
- // You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
- // along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
- // Package msgrate allows estimating the throughput of peers for more balanced syncs.
- package msgrate
- import (
- "errors"
- "math"
- "sort"
- "sync"
- "time"
- "github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/log"
- )
- // measurementImpact is the impact a single measurement has on a peer's final
- // capacity value. A value closer to 0 reacts slower to sudden network changes,
- // but it is also more stable against temporary hiccups. 0.1 worked well for
- // most of Ethereum's existence, so might as well go with it.
- const measurementImpact = 0.1
- // capacityOverestimation is the ratio of items to over-estimate when retrieving
- // a peer's capacity to avoid locking into a lower value due to never attempting
- // to fetch more than some local stable value.
- const capacityOverestimation = 1.01
- // qosTuningPeers is the number of best peers to tune round trip times based on.
- // An Ethereum node doesn't need hundreds of connections to operate correctly,
- // so instead of lowering our download speed to the median of potentially many
- // bad nodes, we can target a smaller set of vey good nodes. At worse this will
- // result in less nodes to sync from, but that's still better than some hogging
- // the pipeline.
- const qosTuningPeers = 5
- // rttMinEstimate is the minimal round trip time to target requests for. Since
- // every request entails a 2 way latency + bandwidth + serving database lookups,
- // it should be generous enough to permit meaningful work to be done on top of
- // the transmission costs.
- const rttMinEstimate = 2 * time.Second
- // rttMaxEstimate is the maximal round trip time to target requests for. Although
- // the expectation is that a well connected node will never reach this, certain
- // special connectivity ones might experience significant delays (e.g. satellite
- // uplink with 3s RTT). This value should be low enough to forbid stalling the
- // pipeline too long, but large enough to cover the worst of the worst links.
- const rttMaxEstimate = 20 * time.Second
- // rttPushdownFactor is a multiplier to attempt forcing quicker requests than
- // what the message rate tracker estimates. The reason is that message rate
- // tracking adapts queries to the RTT, but multiple RTT values can be perfectly
- // valid, they just result in higher packet sizes. Since smaller packets almost
- // always result in stabler download streams, this factor hones in on the lowest
- // RTT from all the functional ones.
- const rttPushdownFactor = 0.9
- // rttMinConfidence is the minimum value the roundtrip confidence factor may drop
- // to. Since the target timeouts are based on how confident the tracker is in the
- // true roundtrip, it's important to not allow too huge fluctuations.
- const rttMinConfidence = 0.1
- // ttlScaling is the multiplier that converts the estimated roundtrip time to a
- // timeout cap for network requests. The expectation is that peers' response time
- // will fluctuate around the estimated roundtrip, but depending in their load at
- // request time, it might be higher than anticipated. This scaling factor ensures
- // that we allow remote connections some slack but at the same time do enforce a
- // behavior similar to our median peers.
- const ttlScaling = 3
- // ttlLimit is the maximum timeout allowance to prevent reaching crazy numbers
- // if some unforeseen network events shappen. As much as we try to hone in on
- // the most optimal values, it doesn't make any sense to go above a threshold,
- // even if everything is slow and screwy.
- const ttlLimit = time.Minute
- // tuningConfidenceCap is the number of active peers above which to stop detuning
- // the confidence number. The idea here is that once we hone in on the capacity
- // of a meaningful number of peers, adding one more should ot have a significant
- // impact on things, so just ron with the originals.
- const tuningConfidenceCap = 10
- // tuningImpact is the influence that a new tuning target has on the previously
- // cached value. This number is mostly just an out-of-the-blue heuristic that
- // prevents the estimates from jumping around. There's no particular reason for
- // the current value.
- const tuningImpact = 0.25
- // Tracker estimates the throughput capacity of a peer with regard to each data
- // type it can deliver. The goal is to dynamically adjust request sizes to max
- // out network throughput without overloading either the peer or th elocal node.
- //
- // By tracking in real time the latencies and bandiwdths peers exhibit for each
- // packet type, it's possible to prevent overloading by detecting a slowdown on
- // one type when another type is pushed too hard.
- //
- // Similarly, real time measurements also help avoid overloading the local net
- // connection if our peers would otherwise be capable to deliver more, but the
- // local link is saturated. In that case, the live measurements will force us
- // to reduce request sizes until the throughput gets stable.
- //
- // Lastly, message rate measurements allows us to detect if a peer is unusually
- // slow compared to other peers, in which case we can decide to keep it around
- // or free up the slot so someone closer.
- //
- // Since throughput tracking and estimation adapts dynamically to live network
- // conditions, it's fine to have multiple trackers locally track the same peer
- // in different subsystem. The throughput will simply be distributed across the
- // two trackers if both are highly active.
- type Tracker struct {
- // capacity is the number of items retrievable per second of a given type.
- // It is analogous to bandwidth, but we deliberately avoided using bytes
- // as the unit, since serving nodes also spend a lot of time loading data
- // from disk, which is linear in the number of items, but mostly constant
- // in their sizes.
- //
- // Callers of course are free to use the item counter as a byte counter if
- // or when their protocol of choice if capped by bytes instead of items.
- // (eg. eth.getHeaders vs snap.getAccountRange).
- capacity map[uint64]float64
- // roundtrip is the latency a peer in general responds to data requests.
- // This number is not used inside the tracker, but is exposed to compare
- // peers to each other and filter out slow ones. Note however, it only
- // makes sense to compare RTTs if the caller caters request sizes for
- // each peer to target the same RTT. There's no need to make this number
- // the real networking RTT, we just need a number to compare peers with.
- roundtrip time.Duration
- lock sync.RWMutex
- }
- // NewTracker creates a new message rate tracker for a specific peer. An initial
- // RTT is needed to avoid a peer getting marked as an outlier compared to others
- // right after joining. It's suggested to use the median rtt across all peers to
- // init a new peer tracker.
- func NewTracker(caps map[uint64]float64, rtt time.Duration) *Tracker {
- if caps == nil {
- caps = make(map[uint64]float64)
- }
- return &Tracker{
- capacity: caps,
- roundtrip: rtt,
- }
- }
- // Capacity calculates the number of items the peer is estimated to be able to
- // retrieve within the allotted time slot. The method will round up any division
- // errors and will add an additional overestimation ratio on top. The reason for
- // overshooting the capacity is because certain message types might not increase
- // the load proportionally to the requested items, so fetching a bit more might
- // still take the same RTT. By forcefully overshooting by a small amount, we can
- // avoid locking into a lower-that-real capacity.
- func (t *Tracker) Capacity(kind uint64, targetRTT time.Duration) int {
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- // Calculate the actual measured throughput
- throughput := t.capacity[kind] * float64(targetRTT) / float64(time.Second)
- // Return an overestimation to force the peer out of a stuck minima, adding
- // +1 in case the item count is too low for the overestimator to dent
- return roundCapacity(1 + capacityOverestimation*throughput)
- }
- // roundCapacity gives the integer value of a capacity.
- // The result fits int32, and is guaranteed to be positive.
- func roundCapacity(cap float64) int {
- const maxInt32 = float64(1<<31 - 1)
- return int(math.Min(maxInt32, math.Max(1, math.Ceil(cap))))
- }
- // Update modifies the peer's capacity values for a specific data type with a new
- // measurement. If the delivery is zero, the peer is assumed to have either timed
- // out or to not have the requested data, resulting in a slash to 0 capacity. This
- // avoids assigning the peer retrievals that it won't be able to honour.
- func (t *Tracker) Update(kind uint64, elapsed time.Duration, items int) {
- t.lock.Lock()
- defer t.lock.Unlock()
- // If nothing was delivered (timeout / unavailable data), reduce throughput
- // to minimum
- if items == 0 {
- t.capacity[kind] = 0
- return
- }
- // Otherwise update the throughput with a new measurement
- if elapsed <= 0 {
- elapsed = 1 // +1 (ns) to ensure non-zero divisor
- }
- measured := float64(items) / (float64(elapsed) / float64(time.Second))
- t.capacity[kind] = (1-measurementImpact)*(t.capacity[kind]) + measurementImpact*measured
- t.roundtrip = time.Duration((1-measurementImpact)*float64(t.roundtrip) + measurementImpact*float64(elapsed))
- }
- // Trackers is a set of message rate trackers across a number of peers with the
- // goal of aggregating certain measurements across the entire set for outlier
- // filtering and newly joining initialization.
- type Trackers struct {
- trackers map[string]*Tracker
- // roundtrip is the current best guess as to what is a stable round trip time
- // across the entire collection of connected peers. This is derived from the
- // various trackers added, but is used as a cache to avoid recomputing on each
- // network request. The value is updated once every RTT to avoid fluctuations
- // caused by hiccups or peer events.
- roundtrip time.Duration
- // confidence represents the probability that the estimated roundtrip value
- // is the real one across all our peers. The confidence value is used as an
- // impact factor of new measurements on old estimates. As our connectivity
- // stabilizes, this value gravitates towards 1, new measurements havinng
- // almost no impact. If there's a large peer churn and few peers, then new
- // measurements will impact it more. The confidence is increased with every
- // packet and dropped with every new connection.
- confidence float64
- // tuned is the time instance the tracker recalculated its cached roundtrip
- // value and confidence values. A cleaner way would be to have a heartbeat
- // goroutine do it regularly, but that requires a lot of maintenance to just
- // run every now and again.
- tuned time.Time
- // The fields below can be used to override certain default values. Their
- // purpose is to allow quicker tests. Don't use them in production.
- OverrideTTLLimit time.Duration
- log log.Logger
- lock sync.RWMutex
- }
- // NewTrackers creates an empty set of trackers to be filled with peers.
- func NewTrackers(log log.Logger) *Trackers {
- return &Trackers{
- trackers: make(map[string]*Tracker),
- roundtrip: rttMaxEstimate,
- confidence: 1,
- tuned: time.Now(),
- OverrideTTLLimit: ttlLimit,
- log: log,
- }
- }
- // Track inserts a new tracker into the set.
- func (t *Trackers) Track(id string, tracker *Tracker) error {
- t.lock.Lock()
- defer t.lock.Unlock()
- if _, ok := t.trackers[id]; ok {
- return errors.New("already tracking")
- }
- t.trackers[id] = tracker
- t.detune()
- return nil
- }
- // Untrack stops tracking a previously added peer.
- func (t *Trackers) Untrack(id string) error {
- t.lock.Lock()
- defer t.lock.Unlock()
- if _, ok := t.trackers[id]; !ok {
- return errors.New("not tracking")
- }
- delete(t.trackers, id)
- return nil
- }
- // MedianRoundTrip returns the median RTT across all known trackers. The purpose
- // of the median RTT is to initialize a new peer with sane statistics that it will
- // hopefully outperform. If it seriously underperforms, there's a risk of dropping
- // the peer, but that is ok as we're aiming for a strong median.
- func (t *Trackers) MedianRoundTrip() time.Duration {
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- return t.medianRoundTrip()
- }
- // medianRoundTrip is the internal lockless version of MedianRoundTrip to be used
- // by the QoS tuner.
- func (t *Trackers) medianRoundTrip() time.Duration {
- // Gather all the currently measured round trip times
- rtts := make([]float64, 0, len(t.trackers))
- for _, tt := range t.trackers {
- tt.lock.RLock()
- rtts = append(rtts, float64(tt.roundtrip))
- tt.lock.RUnlock()
- }
- sort.Float64s(rtts)
- median := rttMaxEstimate
- if qosTuningPeers <= len(rtts) {
- median = time.Duration(rtts[qosTuningPeers/2]) // Median of our best few peers
- } else if len(rtts) > 0 {
- median = time.Duration(rtts[len(rtts)/2]) // Median of all out connected peers
- }
- // Restrict the RTT into some QoS defaults, irrelevant of true RTT
- if median < rttMinEstimate {
- median = rttMinEstimate
- }
- if median > rttMaxEstimate {
- median = rttMaxEstimate
- }
- return median
- }
- // MeanCapacities returns the capacities averaged across all the added trackers.
- // The purpos of the mean capacities are to initialize a new peer with some sane
- // starting values that it will hopefully outperform. If the mean overshoots, the
- // peer will be cut back to minimal capacity and given another chance.
- func (t *Trackers) MeanCapacities() map[uint64]float64 {
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- return t.meanCapacities()
- }
- // meanCapacities is the internal lockless version of MeanCapacities used for
- // debug logging.
- func (t *Trackers) meanCapacities() map[uint64]float64 {
- capacities := make(map[uint64]float64)
- for _, tt := range t.trackers {
- tt.lock.RLock()
- for key, val := range tt.capacity {
- capacities[key] += val
- }
- tt.lock.RUnlock()
- }
- for key, val := range capacities {
- capacities[key] = val / float64(len(t.trackers))
- }
- return capacities
- }
- // TargetRoundTrip returns the current target round trip time for a request to
- // complete in.The returned RTT is slightly under the estimated RTT. The reason
- // is that message rate estimation is a 2 dimensional problem which is solvable
- // for any RTT. The goal is to gravitate towards smaller RTTs instead of large
- // messages, to result in a stabler download stream.
- func (t *Trackers) TargetRoundTrip() time.Duration {
- // Recalculate the internal caches if it's been a while
- t.tune()
- // Caches surely recent, return target roundtrip
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- return time.Duration(float64(t.roundtrip) * rttPushdownFactor)
- }
- // TargetTimeout returns the timeout allowance for a single request to finish
- // under. The timeout is proportional to the roundtrip, but also takes into
- // consideration the tracker's confidence in said roundtrip and scales it
- // accordingly. The final value is capped to avoid runaway requests.
- func (t *Trackers) TargetTimeout() time.Duration {
- // Recalculate the internal caches if it's been a while
- t.tune()
- // Caches surely recent, return target timeout
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- return t.targetTimeout()
- }
- // targetTimeout is the internal lockless version of TargetTimeout to be used
- // during QoS tuning.
- func (t *Trackers) targetTimeout() time.Duration {
- timeout := time.Duration(ttlScaling * float64(t.roundtrip) / t.confidence)
- if timeout > t.OverrideTTLLimit {
- timeout = t.OverrideTTLLimit
- }
- return timeout
- }
- // tune gathers the individual tracker statistics and updates the estimated
- // request round trip time.
- func (t *Trackers) tune() {
- // Tune may be called concurrently all over the place, but we only want to
- // periodically update and even then only once. First check if it was updated
- // recently and abort if so.
- t.lock.RLock()
- dirty := time.Since(t.tuned) > t.roundtrip
- t.lock.RUnlock()
- if !dirty {
- return
- }
- // If an update is needed, obtain a write lock but make sure we don't update
- // it on all concurrent threads one by one.
- t.lock.Lock()
- defer t.lock.Unlock()
- if dirty := time.Since(t.tuned) > t.roundtrip; !dirty {
- return // A concurrent request beat us to the tuning
- }
- // First thread reaching the tuning point, update the estimates and return
- t.roundtrip = time.Duration((1-tuningImpact)*float64(t.roundtrip) + tuningImpact*float64(t.medianRoundTrip()))
- t.confidence = t.confidence + (1-t.confidence)/2
- t.tuned = time.Now()
- t.log.Debug("Recalculated msgrate QoS values", "rtt", t.roundtrip, "confidence", t.confidence, "ttl", t.targetTimeout(), "next", t.tuned.Add(t.roundtrip))
- t.log.Trace("Debug dump of mean capacities", "caps", log.Lazy{Fn: t.meanCapacities})
- }
- // detune reduces the tracker's confidence in order to make fresh measurements
- // have a larger impact on the estimates. It is meant to be used during new peer
- // connections so they can have a proper impact on the estimates.
- func (t *Trackers) detune() {
- // If we have a single peer, confidence is always 1
- if len(t.trackers) == 1 {
- t.confidence = 1
- return
- }
- // If we have a ton of peers, don't drop the confidence since there's enough
- // remaining to retain the same throughput
- if len(t.trackers) >= tuningConfidenceCap {
- return
- }
- // Otherwise drop the confidence factor
- peers := float64(len(t.trackers))
- t.confidence = t.confidence * (peers - 1) / peers
- if t.confidence < rttMinConfidence {
- t.confidence = rttMinConfidence
- }
- t.log.Debug("Relaxed msgrate QoS values", "rtt", t.roundtrip, "confidence", t.confidence, "ttl", t.targetTimeout())
- }
- // Capacity is a helper function to access a specific tracker without having to
- // track it explicitly outside.
- func (t *Trackers) Capacity(id string, kind uint64, targetRTT time.Duration) int {
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- tracker := t.trackers[id]
- if tracker == nil {
- return 1 // Unregister race, don't return 0, it's a dangerous number
- }
- return tracker.Capacity(kind, targetRTT)
- }
- // Update is a helper function to access a specific tracker without having to
- // track it explicitly outside.
- func (t *Trackers) Update(id string, kind uint64, elapsed time.Duration, items int) {
- t.lock.RLock()
- defer t.lock.RUnlock()
- if tracker := t.trackers[id]; tracker != nil {
- tracker.Update(kind, elapsed, items)
- }
- }
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