As someone who has run production serving systems on top of Hadoop, I think this is risky. We've had substantial planned and unplanned downtime on the cluster (which is to be expected) and it would be bad for a pageview API to be impacted.

-Toby

On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 9:46 AM, Andrew Otto <aotto@wikimedia.org> wrote:
I think we could add Impala in storage technologies to assess.
I think we don’t want to build the pageview API on top of the Analytics Cluster.




On Jun 12, 2015, at 05:37, Joseph Allemandou <jallemandou@wikimedia.org> wrote:

I think we could add Impala in storage technologies to assess.
It allows reading / computing straight from HDFS and should be fast enough for not too bad UEx.
Maybe ?


On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 11:11 PM, Marcel Ruiz Forns <mforns@wikimedia.org> wrote:
This thread seems to have paused for 1 or 2 days now.

So summarizing, the following storage technologies have been mentioned:
  • PostgreSQL
  • MySQL
  • Cassandra
  • Voldemort
And the following concerns have been raised on using something that:
  • We're already familiar with
  • Permits meta-analytics
  • Is queriable for json/tsv with little user setup
  • Withstands high throughput bulk inserts
  • Is queriable for slice and dice, even if we need to precompute those
It seems that there aren't many candidates and that the discussion focused on SQL vs NoSQL, so what about choosing 2 stores instead of 3, one of each type, say PostgreSQL and Cassandra?

Or, anyone with more thoughts or suggestions?


On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 1:24 PM, Marcel Ruiz Forns <mforns@wikimedia.org> wrote:
If we are going to completely denormalize the data sets for anonymization,
and we expect just slice and dice queries to the database,
I think we wouldn't take much advantage of a relational DB,
because it wouldn't need to aggregate values, slice or dice,
all slices and dices would be precomputed, right?

It seems to me that the nature of this denormalized/anonymized data sets is more like a key-value store. That's why I suggested Voldemort at first (which, they say, has a slightly faster read than Cassandra), but I see the preference for Cassandra for it being a known tool inside WMF.
So, +1 for Cassandra!

However, if we foresee the need of adding more data sets to the same DB, or querying them in a different way, key-value store would be a limitation.


On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 1:01 AM, Dan Andreescu <dandreescu@wikimedia.org> wrote:


On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 5:23 PM, Gabriel Wicke <gwicke@wikimedia.org> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 9, 2015 at 11:53 AM, Dan Andreescu <dandreescu@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Eric, I think we should allow arbitrary querying on any dimension for that first data block.  We could pre-aggregate all of those combinations pretty easily since the dimensions have very low cardinality. 

Are you thinking about something like /{project|all}/{agent|all}/{day}/{hour}, or will there be a lot more dimensions?

only one more right now, called "agent_type".  But this is just the first "cube" and we're planning a geo cube with more dimensions and are probably going to try and release data split up by access method (mobile, desktop, etc.) and other dimensions as people need them.  This will be tricky as we try to protect privacy but that aside, the number of dimensions per endpoint, right now, seems to hover around 4 or 5.
 
 
For the article-level data, no, we'd want just basic timeseries querying.

Thanks Gabriel, if you could point us to an example of these secondary RESTBase indices, that'd be interesting.


very cool, thx. 

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--
Joseph Allemandou
Data Engineer @ Wikimedia Foundation
IRC: joal
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