As a follow up comment.
If I understand correctly the main problems are a) databases are growing too big to be stored in single instances and b) query complexity is growing.
a) the growth of the data is not going away as the major drivers for the growth are automated edits from Wikidata and Structured data on Commons. They are generating new data with increasing speed faster than humans ever could. So the longer term answer is to store the data to separate instances and use something like federated queries. This is how the access to the commonwiki replica was originally done when toolserver moved to toollabs in 2014.[1] Another long term solution to make databases smaller is to replicate only the current state of the wikidata/commonswiki and leave for example the revision history out.
b) a major factor for query complexity which affects the query execution times is afaik the actor migration and the data sanitization which executes the queries through the multiple views.[2,3] I have no idea how bad the problem currently is, but one could think that replication could be implemented with lighter sanitation by leaving some of the problematic data out altogether from replication.
Anyway, my question is, are there more detailed plans for the *Wiki Replicas 2020 Redesign *than what is on the wikipage[4] or tickets linked from it? I guess there is if the plan is to buy new hardware in October and now we are in the implementation phase? Also is there information on the actual bottlenecks at table level? I.e., which tables (in which databases) are the too big ones, hard to keep up in replication and slow in terms of query time?
[1] https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Labs/Tool_Labs/Migration_of_Toolser... ? [2] https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/News/Actor_storage_changes_on_the_Wiki_R... [3] https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T215445 [4] https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/News/Wiki_Replicas_2020_Redesign
Br, -- Kimmo Virtanen, Zache
On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 8:51 AM Kimmo Virtanen kimmo.virtanen@gmail.com wrote:
Maarten: Having 6 servers with each one having a slice + s4 (Commons) +
s8 (Wikidata) might be a good compromise.
Martin: Another idea is to have the database structured as-planned, but
add a server with *all* databases that would be slower/less stable, but will provide a solution for those who really need cross database joins
From the point of view of a person who is using cross database joins on both tools and analysis queries I would say that both ideas would be suitable. I think that 90% of my crosswiki queries are written against *wiki + wikidata/commons. However, I would not say that it is only for those who really need it but more like that cross database joins are an awesome feature for everybody and it is a loss if it will be gone.
In older times we had also ability to do joins between user databases and replica databases, which was removed in 2017 if I googled correctly.[1] My guess is that one reason for the increasing query complexity is that there is no possibility for creating tmp tables or joining to preselected data so everything is done in single queries. In any case, if the solution is what Martin suggests to move cross joinable databases to a single server and the original problem was that it was hard to keep in sync multiple servers then we could reintroduce the user database joins as well.
[1] https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/phame/post/view/70/new_wiki_replica_server...
Br, -- Kimmo Virtanen, Zache
On Fri, Nov 13, 2020 at 2:17 AM Martin Urbanec < martin.urbanec@wikimedia.cz> wrote:
+1 to Marteen
Another idea is to have the database structured as-planned, but add a server with *all* databases that would be slower/less stable, but will provide a solution for those who really need cross database joins
Martin
pá 13. 11. 2020 v 0:31 odesílatel Maarten Dammers maarten@mdammers.nl napsal:
I recall some point in time (Toolserver maybe?) when all the slices (overview at https://tools-info.toolforge.org/?listmetap ) were at different servers, but the Commons slice (s4) was on every server. At some point new fancy database servers were introduced with all the slices on all servers. Having 6 servers with each one having a slice + s4 (Commons) + s8 (Wikidata) might be a good compromise. On 12-11-2020 00:58, John wrote:
I’ll throw my hat in this too. Moving it to the application layer will make a number of queries just not feasible any longer. It might make sense from the administration side, but from the user perspective it beaks one of the biggest features that toolforge has.
On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 6:40 PM Martin Urbanec < martin.urbanec@wikimedia.cz> wrote:
MusikAnimal is right, however, Wikidata and Commons either have a sui generis slice, or they share it with a few very large wikis. Tools that do any kind of crosswiki analysis would instantly break, as most of them utilise joining by Wikidata items at the very least.
I second Maarten here. This would mean a lot of things that currently require a (relatively simple) SQL query would need a full script, which would do the join at the application level.
I fully understand the reasoning, but there needs to be some replacement. Intentionally introduce breaking changes while providing no "new standard" is a bad pattern in a community environment.
Martin
On Wed, Nov 11, 2020, 10:31 PM MusikAnimal musikanimal@gmail.com wrote:
Technically, cross-wiki joins aren't completely disallowed, you just have to make sure each of the db names are on the same slice/section, right?
~ MA
On Wed, Nov 11, 2020 at 4:11 PM Maarten Dammers maarten@mdammers.nl wrote:
Hi Joaquin, On 10-11-2020 21:26, Joaquin Oltra Hernandez wrote:
TLDR: Wiki Replicas' architecture is being redesigned for stability and performance. Cross database JOINs will not be available and a host connection will only allow querying its associated DB. See [1] https://wikitech.wikimedia.org/wiki/News/Wiki_Replicas_2020_Redesign for more details.
If you only think of Wikipedia, not a lot will break probably, but if you take into account Commons and Wikidata a lot will break. A quick grep in my folder with Commons queries returns 123 lines with cross database joins. So yes, stuff will break and tools will be abandoned. This follows the practice that seems to have become standard for the WMF these days: Decisions are made with a small group within the WMF without any community involved. Only after the decision has been made, it's announced.
Unhappy and disappointed,
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