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Fragment Allocation and Workload Distribution

Given a partitioned database consisting of disjoint fragments/partitions. Each fragment has a size. Given a set of queries, classified by the fragments they access. Each query accounts for a workload share, derived by query costs and frequency.

We want to load balance queries to multiple processing nodes in a way that balances the load evenly while minimizing the overall memory consumption of the accessed fragments at each node.

For our research, we use the TPC-H, TPC-DS, and a real-world workload as reproducible examples. For the real-world workload, we have anonymized metadata, which allows to directly derive the model inputs. For TPC-H and TPC-DS, we obtain model inputs in the following way

Fragment Sizes

Fragment/column sizes are derived from the database catalog. For PostgreSQL, we use the function pg_column_size(). In case there is a single column index on an attribute, i.e., the attribute is part of a primary key, the according fragment size is increased by the index size. We use the command pg_table_size(index name) to calculate index sizes. Fragment sizes depend, for example, on the scale factor, encoding scheme, and used database system. Hence, there may be multiple versions for the same workload in the repository.

Query Costs

We modeled query costs as average processing time for a query with random template parameters. Query costs depend, for example, on the hardware and used database system. Hence, there may be multiple versions for the same workload in the repository.

TPC-H

TPC-H fragment sizes

The TPC-H benchmark consists of 22 queries. 20 of 22 TPC-H queries could be executed without a timeout (120 s). TPC-H execution costs (A '0' indicates a timeout, i.e., the omission of the query).

TPC-DS

TPC-DS fragment sizes

The TPC-DS benchmark consists of 99 queries. 80 of 99 TPC-DS queries could be executed. TPC-DS execution costs (A '0' indicates a timeout, i.e., the omission of the query).

TPC-DS for EDBT 2021

TPC-DS model input

The TPC-DS benchmark consists of 99 queries. 94 of 99 TPC-H queries could be executed without a timeout (120 s).

Real-World Workload

Anonymized model input of a real-world workload, consisting of 4461 queries accessing subsets of 344 fragments:

  • fragment sizes a_i, i=1,...,344
  • query costs c_j, j=1,...4461
  • query frequencies f_j, j=1,...4461
  • accessed fragments per query q_j, j=1,...4461

Reproducibility of Paper Results

Fragment Allocations for Partially Replicated Databases Considering Data Modifications and Changing Workloads

Run python reproduce_modification_reallocation.py to generate the content of latex tables and the figures' plotted data.

Dynamic Query-Based Load-Balancing

A terminal application using curses to visualize the load-balancing in database clusters on a query level. Logged query queue events are stored in the sqlite3 database file example17.db and in csv-format results_1571561461.csv.

Run python visualize_load_balancing.py for an example. The visualisation requires some space (see screenshot below). Please, ensure that you terminal width is at least 170 and height about 50.

Screenshot of the curses application

Index Selection

TPC-DS

Model input for index selection:

  • 8343 index candidates i with one, two, or three attributes
  • query costs c_j(i) (third column) for query j (first column) and index i (second column) if index lowers the costs (i=0 specifies query costs without applying indexes)
  • index sizes m_i, i=0,...,8343