Oak (Off-heap Allocated Keys) is a scalable, concurrent, in-memory Key-Value (KV) map.
OakMap is a concurrent Key-Value Map that keeps all keys and values off-heap. This allows storing more data (up to 3 times more data) compare to using the standard JVM heap management, albeit using the same memory footprint. OakMap implements the industry-standard Java8 ConcurrentNavigableMap API. It provides strong (atomic) semantics for read, write, and read-modify-write operations, as well as (non-atomic) range query (scan) operations, both forward and backward. OakMap is optimized for big keys and values, in particular, for incremental maintenance of objects (update in-place). It is faster and scales better with additional CPU cores than the popular Java ConcurrentNavigableMap ConcurrentSkipListMap.
- OakMap provides great performance: it employs fine-grain synchronization, and thus scales well with numbers of threads; it also achieves cache-friendliness by avoiding memory fragmentation (see performance evaluation).
- OakMap takes keys and the data off-heap, and thus allows working with a huge heap (RAM) -- even more than 50G -- without JVM GC overheads.
- To support off-heap, OakMap has embedded, efficient, epoch-based memory management that mostly eliminates JVM GC overheads.
- OakMap provides a rich API for atomic accesses to data. For example, OakMap supports atomic compute() -- in place computations on existing keys -- whereas the current Java ConcurrentSkipListMap implementation does not guarantee the atomicity of
compute()
. OakMap’s update operations (such as put and compute) take user-provided lambda functions for easy integration in diverse use cases. - Descending Scans: OakMap expedites descending scans without additional complexity. In our experiments, OakMap’s descending scans are 4.8x faster than ConcurrentSkipListMap’s, and perform similarly to their ascending counterparts (see performance evaluation).
- OakMap consists of an on-heap index to off-heap keys and values. OakMap's index is structured as a list of contiguous chunks of memory; this speeds up searches through the index due to access locality and cache-friendliness. Read more about OakMap design.
- OakMap's keys and values are copied and stored in self-managed off-heap byte arrays.
To efficiently manage its content, OakMap requires that the user define two auxiliary tools: an OakSerializer and an OakComparator; both are passed during construction.
- OakSerializer: Both keys and values need to provide a (1) serializer, (2) deserializer, and (3) serialized size calculator. All three are parts of OakSerializer.
- For boosting performance, OakMap allocates space for a given key/value and then uses the given serializer to write the key/value directly to the allocated space. OakMap uses the appropriate size calculator to deduce the amount of space to be allocated. Note that both keys and values are variable-sized.
- OakComparator: To compare the internally-kept serialized keys with the deserialized key provided by the API, OakMap requires a (key) comparator. The comparator compares two keys, each of which may be provided either as a deserialized object or as a serialized one, determining whether they are equal, and if not, which is bigger.
OakMap is a library. After downloading Oak, compile it using mvn install package
to compile and install. Then update your project's pom.xml file dependencies, as follows:
<dependency>
<groupId>oak</groupId>
<artifactId>oak</artifactId>
<version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>
Finally, import the relevant classes and use OakMap according to the description below.
To build OakMap
, the user should first create the builder, and then use it to construct OakMap
:
OakMapBuilder<K,V> builder = ... // create a builder; details provided below
OakMap<K,V> oak = builder.build();
OakMap requires multiple parameters to be defined for the builder, as shall be explained below. When constructing off-heap OakMap, the memory capacity (per OakMap instance) needs to be specified. OakMap allocates the off-heap memory with the requested capacity at construction time and later manages this memory.
As explained above, OakMap<K, V>
is given key K
and value V
, which are requested to come with a serializer, deserializer, and size calculator. OakMap user needs to implement the following interface that can be found in the Oak project.
public interface OakSerializer<T> {
// serializes the data
void serialize(T data, OakScopedWriteBuffer serializedData);
// deserializes the data
T deserialize(OakScopedReadBuffer serializedData);
// returns the number of bytes needed for serializing the given data
int calculateSize(T data);
}
Note 1: Oak use dedicated objects to access off-heap memory: OakScopedReadBuffer
and OakScopedWriteBuffer
.
See Oak Buffers for more information.
Note 2: OakScopedReadBuffer
and OakScopedWriteBuffer
should not be stored for future use.
They are valid only in the context of these methods (serialize()
/deserialize()
).
Using these buffers outside their intended context may yield unpredicted results.
For example, the implementation of key serializer for an application that use integer as keys might look like this:
public class MyAppKeySerializer implements OakSerializer<Integer> {
void serialize(Integer key, OakScopedWriteBuffer serializedKey) {
// We store the value at the first position of the off-heap buffer.
serializedKey.putInt(0, value);
}
Integer deserialize(OakScopedReadBuffer serializedKey) {
return serializedKey.getInt(0);
}
int calculateSize(Integer key) {
// We only store one integer
return Integer.BYTES;
}
}
public class MayAppValueSerializer implements OakSerializer<V>
{...}
OakMap requires a minimal key that can represent negative infinity according to the user-defined comparison among the keys. The requested minimal key is of type K
and is considered by the given comparator to be smaller than every other key (serialized or not). The minimal key is passed as a parameter during builder creation.
After a Key-Value pair is inserted into OakMap, it is kept in a serialized (buffered) state. However, OakMap's API gets the input key as an object, the serialization of which is deferred until it proves to be required. Thus, while searching through the map, OakMap might compare between two keys in their Object and Serialized modes. OakMap provides the following interface for such a comparator:
public interface OakComparator<K> {
int compareKeys(K key1, K key2);
int compareSerializedKeys(OakScopedReadBuffer serializedKey1, OakScopedReadBuffer serializedKey2);
int compareSerializedKeyAndKey(OakScopedReadBuffer serializedKey1, K key2);
}
Note 1: Oak use dedicated objects to access off-heap memory: OakScopedReadBuffer
and OakScopedWriteBuffer
.
See Oak Buffers for more information.
Note 2: OakScopedReadBuffer
and OakScopedWriteBuffer
should not be stored for future use.
They are valid only in the context of these methods (compareKeys()
/compareSerializedKeys()/compareSerializedKeyAndKey()
).
Using these buffers outside their intended context may yield unpredicted results.
For example, the implementation of a key comparator for an application that uses integer as keys might look like this:
public class MyAppKeyComparator implements OakComparator<Integer>
{
int compareKeys(Integer key1, Integer key2) {
return Integer.compare(key1, key2);
}
int compareSerializedKeys(OakReadBuffer serializedKey1, OakReadBuffer serializedKey2) {
return Integer.compare(serializedKey1.getInt(0), serializedKey2.getInt(0));
}
int compareSerializedKeyAndKey(OakReadBuffer serializedKey1, Integer key2) {
return Integer.compare(serializedKey1.getInt(0), key2);
}
}
We provide an example of how to create OakMapBuilder and OakMap. For a more comprehensive code example please refer to the Usage section.
OakMapBuilder<K,V> builder = new OakMapBuilder()
.setKeySerializer(new MyAppKeySerializer())
.setValueSerializer(new MyAppValueSerializer())
.setMinKey(...)
.setKeysComparator(new MyAppKeyComparator())
.setMemoryCapacity(...);
OakMap<K,V> oak = builder.build();
OakMap's API implements the ConcurrentNavigableMap interface. For improved performance, it offers additional non-standard zero-copy API methods that are discussed below.
You are welcome to take a look at the OakMap's full API. For a more comprehensive code example please refer to the usage section.
Oak uses dedicated buffer objects to access off-heap memory. These buffers cannot be instantiated by the user and are always supplied to the user by Oak. Their interfaces are:
Buffer Access Usage ------------------------ ---------- ------------------------------ OakBuffer read-only base class for all the buffers ├── OakScopedReadBuffer read-only attached to a specific scope ├── OakScopedWriteBuffer read/write attached to a specific scope └── OakUnscopedBuffer read-only can be used in any scope
These buffers may represent either a key or a value.
They mimic the standard interface of Java's ByteBuffer
, for example, int getInt(int index)
, char getChar(int index)
, capacity()
, etc.
The scoped buffers (OakScopedReadBuffer
and OakScopedWriteBuffer
) are attached to the scope of the callback method they were first introduced to the user. The behavior of these buffers outside their attached scope is undefined.
Such a callback method might be the application's serializer and comparator, or a lambda function that can read/store/update the data.
This access reduces unnecessary copies and deserialization of the underlying data.
In their intended context, the user does not need to worry about concurrent accesses and memory management.
Using these buffers outside their intended context may yield unpredicted results, e.g., reading non-consistent data and/or irrelevant data.
The un-scoped buffer (OakUnscopedBuffer
) is detached from any specific scope, i.e., it may be stored for future use.
The zero-copy methods of OakMap
return this buffer to avoid copying the data and instead the user can access the underlying memory buffer directly (lazy evaluation).
While the scoped buffers' data accesses are synchronized, when using OakUnscopedBuffer
, the same memory might be access by concurrent update operations.
Thus, the reader may encounter different values -- and even value deletions -- when accessing OakUnscopedBuffer
multiple times.
Specifically, when trying to access a deleted mapping via an OakUnscopedBuffer
, ConcurrentModificationException
will be thrown.
This is of course normal behavior for a concurrent map that avoids copying.
To allow complex, multi-value atomic operations on the data, OakUnscopedBuffer
provides a transform()
method that allows the user to apply a transformation function atomically on a read-only, scoped version of the buffer (OakScopedReadBuffer
).
See the Data Retrieval for more information.
For performance and backward compatibility with applications that are already based on the use of ByteBuffer
, Oak's buffers also implement a dedicated unsafe interface OakUnsafeDirectBuffer
.
This interface allows high-performance access to the underlying data of Oak.
To achieve that, it sacrifices safety, so it should be used only if you know what you are doing.
Misuse of this interface might result in corrupted data, a crash or a deadlock.
Specifically, the developer should be concerned with two issues:
- Concurrency: using this interface inside the context of
serialize()
,compute(),
compare()and
transform()is thread-safe. In other contexts (e.g.,
get()` output), the developer should ensure that there is no concurrent access to this data. Failing to ensure that might result in corrupted data. - Data boundaries: when using this interface, Oak will not alert the developer regarding any out of boundary access.
Thus, the developer should use
getOffset()
andgetLength()
to obtain the data boundaries and carefully access the data. Writing data out of these boundaries might result in corrupted data, a crash, or a deadlock.
To use this interface, the developer should cast Oak's buffer (OakScopedReadBuffer
or OakScopedWriteBuffer
) to this interface,
similarly to how Java's internal DirectBuffer is used. For example:
int foo(OakScopedReadBuffer b) {
OakUnsafeDirectBuffer ub = (OakUnsafeDirectBuffer) b;
ByteBuffer bb = ub.getByteBuffer();
return bb.getInt(ub.getOffset());
}
Note 1: in the above example, the following will throw a ReadOnlyBufferException
because the buffer mode is read-only:
bb.putInt(ub.getOffset(), someInteger);
Note 2: the user should never change the buffer's state, namely the position and limit (bb.limit(i)
or bb.position(i)
).
Changing the buffer's state will make some data inaccessible to the user in the future.
-
For best performance of data retrieval,
OakMap
supplies aZeroCopyMap
interface of the map:ZeroCopyMap<K, V> zc()
The
ZeroCopyMap
interface provides the following four methods for data retrieval, whose result is presented as anOakUnscopedBuffer
:OakUnscopedBuffer get(K key)
Collection<OakUnscopedBuffer> values()
Set<Map.Entry<OakUnscopedBuffer, OakUnscopedBuffer>> entrySet()
Set<OakUnscopedBuffer> keySet()
Set<OakUnscopedBuffer> keyStreamSet()
Collection<OakUnscopedBuffer> valuesStream()
Set<Map.Entry<OakUnscopedBuffer, OakUnscopedBuffer>> entryStreamSet()
Note that in addition to the
ConcurrentNavigableMap
style sets, we introduce a new type of stream sets. When a stream-set is iterated it gives a "stream" view of the elements, meaning only one element can be observed at a time. It is preferred to use the stream iterators when possible as they instantiate significantly fewer objects, which improve performance. -
Without
ZeroCopyMap
,OakMap
's data can be directly retrieved via the following four methods:V get(Object key)
Collection<V> values()
Set<Map.Entry<K, V>> entrySet()
NavigableSet<K> keySet()
However, these direct methods return keys and/or values as Objects by applying deserialization (copy). This is costly, and we strongly advise to use
ZeroCopyMap
to operate directly on the internal data representation. -
For examples of direct data manipulations, please refer to the usage section.
- Data can be ingested via the standard
ConcurrentNavigableMap
API. - For improved performance, data can be also ingested and updated via the following five methods provided by the
ZeroCopyMap
interface:void put(K key, V value)
boolean putIfAbsent(K key, V value)
void remove(K key)
boolean computeIfPresent(K key, Consumer<OakScopedWriteBuffer> computer)
boolean putIfAbsentComputeIfPresent(K key, V value, Consumer<OakScopedWriteBuffer> computer)
- In contrast to the
ConcurrentNavigableMap
API, the zero-copy methodvoid put(K key, V value)
does not return the value previously associated with the key, if key existed. Likewise,void remove(K key)
does not return a boolean indicating whether key was actually deleted, if key existed. boolean computeIfPresent(K key, Consumer<OakScopedWriteBuffer> computer)
gets the user-defined computer function. The computer is invoked in case the key exists. The computer is provided with a mutableOakScopedWriteBuffer
, representing the serialized value associated with the key. The computer's effect is atomic, meaning either all updates are seen by concurrent readers, or none are. Thecompute()
functionality offers theOakMap
user an efficient zero-copy update-in-place, which allowsOakMap
users to focus on business logic without dealing with the hard problems that data layout and concurrency control present.- Additionally,
OakMap
supports an atomicboolean putIfAbsentComputeIfPresent(K key, V value, Consumer<OakScopedWriteBuffer> computer)
interface, (which is not part ofConcurrentNavigableMap
). This API looks for a key. If the key does not exist, it adds a new Serialized key --> Serialized value mapping. Otherwise, the value associated with the key is updated withcomputer(old value)
. This interface works concurrently with other updates and requires only one search traversal. This interface returns true if a new key was added, false otherwise.
As explained above, when constructing off-heap OakMap
, the memory capacity (per OakMap
instance) needs to be specified. OakMap
allocates the off-heap memory with the requested capacity at construction time, and later manages this memory.
This memory (the entire given capacity) needs to be released later, thus OakMap
implements AutoClosable
. Be sure to use it within try-statement or better invoke OakMap.close()
method when OakMap
is no longer in use.
Please pay attention that multiple Oak sub-maps can reference the same underlying memory of OakMap
. The memory will be released only when the last of those sub-maps are closed.
However, note that each sub-map is in particular an OakMap
and thus AutoCloseable
and needs to be closed (explicitly or implicitly). Again, close()
can be invoked on different objects referring to the same underlying memory, but the final release will happen only once.
An Integer to Integer build example can be seen in Code Examples. Here we illustrate individual operations.
We show some examples of Oak ZeroCopyMap
interface usage below. These examples assume OakMap<Integer, Integer> oak
is defined and constructed as described in the Builder section.
oak.put(10,100);
Integer i = oak.get(10);
oak.zc().remove(11);
OakUnscopedBuffer buffer = oak.zc().get(10);
if(buffer != null) {
try {
int get = buffer.getInt(0);
} catch (ConcurrentModificationException e) {
}
}
Integer[] targetBuffer = new Integer[oak.size()]; // might not be correct with multiple threads
Iterator<Integer> iter = oak.values().iterator();
int i = 0;
while (iter.hasNext()) {
targetBuffer[i++] = iter.next();
}
Consumer<OakScopedWriteBuffer> func = buf -> {
Integer cnt = buf.getInt(0); // read integer from position 0
buf.putInt(0, (cnt+1)); // accumulate counter, position back to 0
};
oak.zc().computeIfPresent(10, func);
Consumer<OakScopedWriteBuffer> func = buf -> {
if (buf.getInt(0) == 0) { // check integer at position 0
buf.putInt(1); // position in the buffer is promoted
buf.putInt(1);
}
};
oak.zc().computeIfPresent(10, func);
Iterator<Integer> iterator = oak.keySet().iterator();
while (iter.hasNext()) {
Integer i = iter.next();
}
try (OakMap<Integer, Integer> oakDesc = oak.descendingMap()) {
Iterator<Integer, Integer>> iter = oakDesc.entrySet().iterator();
while (iter.hasNext()) {
Map.Entry<Integer, Integer> e = iter.next();
}
}
Integer from = (Integer)4;
Integer to = (Integer)6;
try (OakMap sub = oak.subMap(from, false, to, true)) {
Iterator<Integer> iter = sub.values().iterator();
while (iter.hasNext()) {
Integer i = iter.next();
}
}
Function<OakScopedReadBuffer, String> intToStrings = e -> String.valueOf(e.getInt(0));
Iterator<String> iter = oak.zc().values().stream().map(v -> v.transform(intToStrings)).iterator();
while (iter.hasNext()) {
String s = iter.next();
}
Function<OakScopedReadBuffer, String> intToStringsDirect = b -> {
OakUnsafeDirectBuffer ub = (OakUnsafeDirectBuffer) b;
ByteBuffer bb = ub.getByteBuffer();
return bb.getInt(ub.getOffset());
};
Iterator<String> iter = oak.zc().values().stream().map(v -> v.transform(intToStringsDirect)).iterator();
while (iter.hasNext()) {
String s = iter.next();
}
Oak support accessing its keys/values using direct memory address.
DirectUtils
can be used to access the memory address data.
Function<OakScopedReadBuffer, String> intToStringsDirect = b -> {
OakUnsafeDirectBuffer ub = (OakUnsafeDirectBuffer) b;
return DirectUtils.getInt(ub.getAddress());
};
Iterator<String> iter = oak.zc().values().stream().map(v -> v.transform(intToStringsDirect)).iterator();
while (iter.hasNext()) {
String s = iter.next();
}
Note: in the above example, the following will not throw any exception even if the buffer mode is read-only:
DirectUtils.putInt(ub.getAddress(), someInteger);
Please refer to the contributing file for information about how to get involved. We welcome issues, questions, and pull requests.
This project is licensed under the terms of the Apache 2.0 open source license.