Hi All,
Can some one help me find the best solution to smoke testing Flink ? Note: I'm using Flink 1.3 and the Flink Web UI to visualize the metrics.Also my PC have a 12Go RAM and 8 Core CPU. |
Hi Sadok,
it would be helpful if you could tell us a bit more about your job. E.g. a skewed key distribution where keys are only sent to one third of your operators can not use your CPUs full capabilities. The latency tracking interval is in milliseconds. Can you try if 1000 would fix your problem? I could not find an open issue describing your problem. Maybe more information about your environment can help. How are you executing your Flink application? Are you using a parallelism of 8? Regards, Timo Am 11/22/17 um 9:49 AM schrieb Ladhari Sadok:
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Thanks Timo for your answer. I have tried to setLatencyTrackingInterval(1000) but I have got the same result ( latency : NaN )My Flink Job is a geofencing pattern :
In my stress test I'm using data that always send notifications (condition always matched). So I want to measure the latency of my implementation. I'm working with parallelism of 8 , all tasks are working and notifications are correctly generated but when testing I have noticed that the latency metric don't work (take a look at the screen-shot in attach). All other metrics are working. Please help me finding the best way to do the stress testing correctly. Regards, Sadok 2017-11-22 14:52 GMT+01:00 Timo Walther <[hidden email]>:
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At a first glance I would say that your
data size is very small. Flink is able to process millions of
records on a single machine. It might be that the records are
produced to quickly to be used for latency measuring.
Is you data generator never-ending? Am 11/22/17 um 4:13 PM schrieb Ladhari Sadok:
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Normally it should return 0ms in case of no latency not NaN, and my real data size is 1kb, but for now I'm using 200 bytes, I will try it with the real size later. For the data generator, it is an infinite for loop. Thanks.2017-11-22 18:11 GMT+01:00 Timo Walther <[hidden email]>:
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Yes, I agree that this looks like a
bug. You can open an issue about that. Maybe with a small
reproduceble example to give others the chance to fix it.
Am 11/22/17 um 10:18 PM schrieb Ladhari Sadok:
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Thanks Timo for your answer. Can any one else confirm the bug ?2017-11-23 9:26 GMT+01:00 Timo Walther <[hidden email]>:
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Hi,
This is a known issue: the latency metrics are reported in a format that the web dashboard does not understand. This is the Jira issue for fixing it: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLINK-7608 Best, Aljoscha
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Thanks Aljoscha, as I see it is not fixed yet (
In Progress ) can you give me another solution to visualize the latency or exporting them to a file , ... I want to get the latency in any way: file, graph, ... just to get idea of the latency. Regards. 2017-11-27 13:17 GMT+01:00 Aljoscha Krettek <[hidden email]>:
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The most reliable way to see the
latency metric is configure a metric
reporter.
However, only some reporters can properly work with the latency metric (about to change with FLINK-7608 though!). The JMXReporter in particular will be pretty good. The slf4jReporter should work as well. On 27.11.2017 16:03, Ladhari Sadok wrote:
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It is working with FLINK-7608 , but just to know : how to implement it with slf4jReporter ? I didn't find an example ! 2017-11-27 17:33 GMT+01:00 Chesnay Schepler <[hidden email]>:
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