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Beyond php - it's not (just) about the code

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Beyond php - it's not (just) about the code

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Most PHP developers focus on writing code. But creating Web applications is about much more than just wrting PHP. Take a step outside the PHP cocoon and into the big PHP ecosphere to find out how small code changes can make a world of difference on servers and network. This talk is an eye-opener for developers who spend over 80% of their time coding, debugging and testing.

Most PHP developers focus on writing code. But creating Web applications is about much more than just wrting PHP. Take a step outside the PHP cocoon and into the big PHP ecosphere to find out how small code changes can make a world of difference on servers and network. This talk is an eye-opener for developers who spend over 80% of their time coding, debugging and testing.

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Beyond php - it's not (just) about the code

  1. 1. Wim Godden Cu.be Solutions @wimgtr Beyond PHP : It's not (just) about the code
  2. 2. Who am I ? Wim Godden (@wimgtr)
  3. 3. Where I'm from
  4. 4. Where I'm from
  5. 5. Where I'm from
  6. 6. Where I'm from
  7. 7. Where I'm from
  8. 8. Where I'm from
  9. 9. My town
  10. 10. My town
  11. 11. Belgium – the traffic
  12. 12. Who am I ? Wim Godden (@wimgtr) Founder of Cu.be Solutions (http://cu.be) Open Source developer since 1997 Developer of PHPCompatibility, PHPConsistent, Nginx SLIC, ... Speaker at PHP and Open Source conferences
  13. 13. Cu.be Solutions ? Open source consultancy PHP-centered (ZF2, Symfony2, Magento, Pimcore, ...) Training courses High-speed redundant network (BGP, OSPF, VRRP) High scalability development Nginx + extensions MySQL Cluster Projects : mostly IT & Telecom companies lots of public-facing apps/sites
  14. 14. Who are you ? Developers ? Anyone setup a MySQL master-slave ? Anyone setup a site/app on separate web and database server ? → How much traffic between them ?
  15. 15. The topic Things we take for granted Famous last words : "It should work just fine" Works fine today → might fail tomorrow Most common mistakes PHP code ↔ PHP ecosystem
  16. 16. It starts with... … code ! First up : database
  17. 17. Database queries – complexity SELECT DISTINCT n.nid, n.uid, n.title, n.type, e.event_start, e.event_start AS event_start_orig, e.event_end, e.event_end AS event_end_orig, e.timezone, e.has_time, e.has_end_date, tz.offset AS offset, tz.offset_dst AS offset_dst, tz.dst_region, tz.is_dst, e.event_start - INTERVAL IF(tz.is_dst, tz.offset_dst, tz.offset) HOUR_SECOND AS event_start_utc, e.event_end - INTERVAL IF(tz.is_dst, tz.offset_dst, tz.offset) HOUR_SECOND AS event_end_utc, e.event_start - INTERVAL IF(tz.is_dst, tz.offset_dst, tz.offset) HOUR_SECOND + INTERVAL 0 SECOND AS event_start_user, e.event_end - INTERVAL IF(tz.is_dst, tz.offset_dst, tz.offset) HOUR_SECOND + INTERVAL 0 SECOND AS event_end_user, e.event_start - INTERVAL IF(tz.is_dst, tz.offset_dst, tz.offset) HOUR_SECOND + INTERVAL 0 SECOND AS event_start_site, e.event_end - INTERVAL IF(tz.is_dst, tz.offset_dst, tz.offset) HOUR_SECOND + INTERVAL 0 SECOND AS event_end_site, tz.name as timezone_name FROM node n INNER JOIN event e ON n.nid = e.nid INNER JOIN event_timezones tz ON tz.timezone = e.timezone INNER JOIN node_access na ON na.nid = n.nid LEFT JOIN domain_access da ON n.nid = da.nid LEFT JOIN node i18n ON n.tnid > 0 AND n.tnid = i18n.tnid AND i18n.language = 'en' WHERE (na.grant_view >= 1 AND ((na.gid = 0 AND na.realm = 'all'))) AND ((da.realm = "domain_id" AND da.gid = 4) OR (da.realm = "domain_site" AND da.gid = 0)) AND (n.language ='en' OR n.language ='' OR n.language IS NULL OR n.language = 'is' AND i18n.nid IS NULL) AND ( n.status = 1 AND ((e.event_start >= '2010-01-31 00:00:00' AND e.event_start <= '2010-03-01 23:59:59') OR (e.event_end >= '2010-01-31 00:00:00' AND e.event_end <= '2010-03-01 23:59:59') OR (e.event_start <= '2010-01-31 00:00:00' AND e.event_end >= '2010-03-01 23:59:59')) ) GROUP BY n.nid HAVING (event_start >= '2010-02-01 00:00:00' AND event_start <= '2010-02-28 23:59:59') OR (event_end >= '2010-02-01 00:00:00' AND event_end <= '2010-02-28 23:59:59') OR (event_start <= '2010-02-01 00:00:00' AND event_end >= '2010-02-28 23:59:59') ORDER BY event_start ASC;
  18. 18. Database - indexing 'select id from stock where status = 2 order by qty' → aggregate index on (status, qty) 'select id from stock where status > 2 order by qty' → aggregate index on (status, qty) ? → Depends : - Btree : yes - Hash : range selection stops use of aggregate index → separate index on status and qty (since recent versions)
  19. 19. Database - indexing Indexes make database faster → Let's index everything ! → DON'T : Insert/update/delete → Index modification Each select → evaluation of all indexes "Relational schema design is based on data but index design is based on queries" - Bill Karwin, author of “SQL Antipatterns”
  20. 20. Databases – detecting problematic queries Slow query log → SET GLOBAL slow_query_log = ON; Queries not using indexes → In my.cnf/my.ini : 'log_queries_not_using_indexes' General query log → SET GLOBAL general_log = ON; → Turn it off quickly ! Percona Toolkit pt-query-digest
  21. 21. Databases - pt-query-digest # Profile # Rank Response time Calls R/Call Item # ==== ================ ===== ======= ====== # 1 16526.2542 98.2% 1208 13.6806 SELECT output_option # 2 0.8312 0.0% 6412 0.0001 SELECT poller_output poller_item # 3 0.6811 0.0% 6416 0.0001 SELECT poller_time # 4 0.2805 0.0% 149 0.0019 SELECT wp_terms wp_term_taxonomy wp_term_relationships # 5 0.1999 0.0% 51 0.0039 SELECT UNION wp_pp_daily_summary wp_pp_hourly_summary # 6 0.1956 0.0% 89 0.0022 UPDATE wp_options # MISC 302.8137 1.8% 3853 0.0002 <147 ITEMS>
  22. 22. # Query 2: 0.26 QPS, 0.00x concurrency, ID 0x92F3B1B361FB0E5B at byte 14081299 # This item is included in the report because it matches --limit. # Scores: Apdex = 1.00 [1.0], V/M = 0.00 # Query_time sparkline: | _^ | # Time range: 2011-12-28 18:42:47 to 19:03:10 # Attribute pct total min max avg 95% stddev median # ============ === ======= ======= ======= ======= ======= ======= ======= # Count 1 312 # Exec time 50 4s 5ms 25ms 13ms 20ms 4ms 12ms # Lock time 3 32ms 43us 163us 103us 131us 19us 98us # Rows sent 59 62.41k 203 231 204.82 202.40 3.99 202.40 # Rows examine 13 73.63k 238 296 241.67 246.02 10.15 234.30 # Rows affecte 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # Rows read 59 62.41k 203 231 204.82 202.40 3.99 202.40 # Bytes sent 53 24.85M 46.52k 84.36k 81.56k 83.83k 7.31k 79.83k # Merge passes 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # Tmp tables 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # Tmp disk tbl 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # Tmp tbl size 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # Query size 0 21.63k 71 71 71 71 0 71 # InnoDB: # IO r bytes 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # IO r ops 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # IO r wait 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # pages distin 40 11.77k 34 44 38.62 38.53 1.87 38.53 # queue wait 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # rec lock wai 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 # Boolean: # Full scan 100% yes, 0% no # String: # Databases wp_blog_one (264/84%), wp_blog_tw… (36/11%)... 1 more # Hosts # InnoDB trxID 86B40B (1/0%), 86B430 (1/0%), 86B44A (1/0%)... 309 more # Last errno 0 # Users wp_blog_one (264/84%), wp_blog_two (36/11%)... 1 more # Query_time distribution # 1us # 10us # 100us # 1ms # 10ms ################################################################ # 100ms # 1s # 10s+ # Tables # SHOW TABLE STATUS FROM `wp_blog_one ` LIKE 'wp_options'G # SHOW CREATE TABLE `wp_blog_one `.`wp_options`G
  23. 23. Databases – next step : explain explain <query> "How will MySQL execute the query"
  24. 24. Databases – next step : explain +-----------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+--------+-------------+ | TABLE | TYPE | possible_keys | KEY | key_len | REF | ROWS | Extra | +-----------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+--------+-------------+ | employees | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 299809 | USING WHERE | +-----------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+--------+-------------+ +------------+-------+-------------------------------+---------+---------+-------+------+-------+ | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra | +------------+-------+-------------------------------+---------+---------+-------+------+-------+ | itdevice | const | PRIMARY,fk_device_devicetype1 | PRIMARY | 4 | const | 1 | | | devicetype | const | PRIMARY | PRIMARY | 4 | const | 1 | | +------------+-------+-------------------------------+---------+---------+-------+------+-------+
  25. 25. Databases – next step : explain Type of lookup 'system', 'const' and 'ref' = good 'ALL' = bad Extra info Using index = good Using filesort = usually bad
  26. 26. Databases – covering indexes mysql> explain select * from product where category=5 and stock=1; +----+-------+---------------+---------------+---------+------+------------+ | id | TYPE | possible_keys | KEY | key_len | ROWS | Extra | +----+-------+---------------+---------------+---------+------+------------+ | 1 | ref | categorystock | categorystock | 8 | 1 | | ●+----+-------+---------------+---------------+---------+------+------------+ +--------------+---------------+------+-----+------------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra | +--------------+---------------+------+-----+------------+----------------+ | id | int(11) | NO | PRI | NULL | auto_increment | | category | int(11) | YES | MUL | NULL | | | stock | int(11) | YES | MUL | NULL | | | description | varchar(255) | YES | | NULL | | ... mysql> show index from product; +----------+------------+---------------------+--------------+---------------| | Table | Non_unique | Key_name | Seq_in_index | Column_name | +----------+------------+---------------------+--------------+---------------+ | product | 0 | PRIMARY | 1 | id | | product | 1 | categorystock | 1 | category | | product | 1 | categorystock | 2 | stock | ...
  27. 27. Databases – covering indexes mysql>explain select category, stock, id from product where category=5 and stock=1; +----+-------+---------------+---------------+---------+-----+-------------+ | id | TYPE | possible_keys | KEY | key_len | ROWS| Extra | +----+-------+---------------+---------------+---------+-----+-------------+ | 1 | ref | categorystock | categorystock | 8 | 1 | Using index | +----+-------+---------------+---------------+---------+-----+-------------+ +--------------+---------------+------+-----+------------+----------------+ | Field | Type | Null | Key | Default | Extra | +--------------+---------------+------+-----+------------+----------------+ | id | int(11) | NO | PRI | NULL | auto_increment | | category | int(11) | YES | MUL | NULL | | | stock | int(11) | YES | MUL | NULL | | | description | varchar(255) | YES | | NULL | | ... mysql> show index from product; +----------+------------+---------------------+--------------+---------------| | Table | Non_unique | Key_name | Seq_in_index | Column_name | +----------+------------+---------------------+--------------+---------------+ | product | 0 | PRIMARY | 1 | id | | product | 1 | categorystock | 1 | category | | product | 1 | categorystock | 2 | stock | ...
  28. 28. Databases – when to use / not to use Good at : Fetching data Storing data Searching through data Bad at : select `name` from `room` where ceiling(`avgNoOfPeople`) = 8 → full table scan → creates temporary table select `name` from `room` where avgNoOfPeople >= 7 and avgNoOfPeople <= 8 → Avoid functions that run across every row → Avoid functions in where statement
  29. 29. For / foreach (N+1 problem) $customers = CustomerQuery::create() ->filterByState('MN') ->find(); foreach ($customers as $customer) { $contacts = ContactsQuery::create() ->filterByCustomerid($customer->getId()) ->find(); foreach ($contacts as $contact) { doSomestuffWith($contact); } }
  30. 30. Joins $contacts = mysql_query(" select contacts.* from customer join contact on contact.customerid = customer.id where state = 'MN' "); while ($contact = mysql_fetch_array($contacts)) { doSomeStuffWith($contact); } (or the ORM equivalent)
  31. 31. Better... 10001 → 1 query Sadly : people still produce code with query loops Usually : Growth not anticipated Internal app → Public app
  32. 32. The origins of this talk Customers : Projects we built Projects we didn't build, but got pulled into Fixes Changes Infrastructure migration 15 years of 'how to cause mayhem with a few lines of code'
  33. 33. Client X Jobs search site Monitor job views : Daily hits Weekly hits Monthly hits Which user saw which job
  34. 34. Client X Originally : when user viewed job details Now : when job is in search result Search for 'php' → 50 jobs = 50 jobs to be updated → 50 updates for shown_today → 50 updates for shown_week → 50 updates for shown_month → 50 inserts for shown_user = 200 queries for 1 search !
  35. 35. Client X : the code foreach ($jobs as $job) { $db->query(" insert into shown_today( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_week( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_month( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_user( jobId, userId, when ) values ( " . $job['id'] . ", " . $user['id'] . ", now() ) "); }
  36. 36. Client X : the graph
  37. 37. Client X : the numbers 600-1000 inserts/sec (peaks up to 1600) 400-1000 updates/sec (peaks up to 2600) 16 core machine
  38. 38. Client X : panic ! Mail : "MySQL slave is more than 5 minutes behind master" We set it up → who did they blame ? Wait a second !
  39. 39. Client X : what's causing those peaks ?
  40. 40. Client X : possible cause ? Code changes ? → According to developers : none Action : turn on general log, analyze with pt-query-digest → 50+-fold increase in 4 queries → Developers : 'Oops we did make a change' After 3 days : 2,5 days behind Every hour : 50 min extra lag
  41. 41. Client X : But why is the slave lagging ? Master Slave File : master-bin-xxxx.log File : master-bin-xxxx.logSlave I/O thread Binlog dump thread Slave SQL thread
  42. 42. Client X : Master
  43. 43. Client X : Slave
  44. 44. Client X : fix ? foreach ($jobs as $job) { $db->query(" insert into shown_today( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_week( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_month( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_user( jobId, userId, when ) values ( " . $job['id'] . ", " . $user['id'] . ", now() ) "); }
  45. 45. Client X : the code change insert into shown_today values (5, 1), (8, 1), (12, 1), (18, 1), … on duplicate key … ; insert into shown_week values (5, 1), (8, 1), (12, 1), (18, 1), … on duplicate key … ; insert into shown_month values (5, 1), (8, 1), (12, 1), (18, 1), … on duplicate key … ; insert into shown_user values (5, 23, "2015-10-12 12:01:00"), (8, 23, "2015-10-12 12:01:00"), … ;
  46. 46. Client X : the code change $todayQuery = " insert into shown_today( jobId, number ) values "; foreach ($jobs as $job) { $todayQuery .= "(" . $job['id'] . ", 1),"; } $todayQuery = substr($todayQuery, 0, strlen($todayQuery) - 1); $todayQuery .= " on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "; $db->query($todayQuery);
  47. 47. Client X : the chosen solution $db->autocommit(false); foreach ($jobs as $job) { $db->query(" insert into shown_today( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_week( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_month( jobId, number ) values( " . $job['id'] . ", 1 ) on duplicate key update number = number + 1 "); $db->query(" insert into shown_user( jobId, userId, when ) values ( " . $job['id'] . ", " . $user['id'] . ", now() ) "); } $db->commit();
  48. 48. Client X : conclusion For loops are bad (we already knew that) Add master/slave and it gets much worse Use transactions : it will provide huge performance increase Better yet : use MariaDB 10 or higher → slave_parallel_threads Result : slave caught up 5 days later
  49. 49. Database → Network Customer Y Top 10 site in Belgium Growing rapidly At peak traffic : Unexplicable latency on database Load on webservers : minimal Load on database servers : acceptable
  50. 50. Client Y : the network
  51. 51. Client Y : the network 60GB 700GB 700GB
  52. 52. Client Y : network overload Cause : Drupal hooks → retrieving data that was not needed Only load data you actually need Don't know at the start ? → Use lazy loading Caching : Same story Memcached/Redis are fast But : data still needs to cross the network
  53. 53. Network trouble : more than just traffic Customer Z 150.000 visits/day News ticker : XML feed from other site (owned by same customer) Cached for 15 min
  54. 54. Customer Z – fetching the feed if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { unlink(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml'); file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', file_get_contents('http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml') ); } $xmlfeed = ParseXmlFeed(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml'); What's wrong with this code ?
  55. 55. Customer Z – no feed without the source Feed source
  56. 56. Customer Z – no feed without the source Feed source
  57. 57. Customer Z : timeout default_socket_timeout : 60 sec by default Each visitor : 60 sec wait time People keep hitting refresh → more load More active connections → more load Apache hits maximum connections → entire site down
  58. 58. Customer Z – fetching the feed if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { unlink(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml'); file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', file_get_contents('http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml') ); } $xmlfeed = ParseXmlFeed(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml');
  59. 59. Customer Z : timeout fix $context = stream_context_create( array( 'http' => array( 'timeout' => 5 ) ) ); if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { unlink(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml'); file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', file_get_contents( 'http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml', false, $context ) ); } $xmlfeed = ParseXmlFeed(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml');
  60. 60. Customer Z : don't delete from cache $context = stream_context_create( array( 'http' => array( 'timeout' => 5 ) ) ); if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { unlink(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml'); file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', file_get_contents( 'http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml', false, $context ) ); } $xmlfeed = ParseXmlFeed(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml');
  61. 61. Customer Z : don't delete from cache $context = stream_context_create( array( 'http' => array( 'timeout' => 5 ) ) ); if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', file_get_contents( 'http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml', false, $context ) ); } $xmlfeed = ParseXmlFeed(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml');
  62. 62. Customer Z : don't delete from cache $context = stream_context_create( array( 'http' => array( 'timeout' => 5 ) ) ); if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { $feed = file_get_contents( 'http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml', false, $context ); if ($feed !== false) { file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', $feed ); } } $xmlfeed = ParseXmlFeed(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml');
  63. 63. Customer Z : process early $context = stream_context_create( array( 'http' => array( 'timeout' => 5 ) ) ); if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { $feed = file_get_contents( 'http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml', false, $context ); if ($feed !== false) { file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', ParseXmlFeed($feed) ); } }
  64. 64. Customer Z : file_[get|put]_contents atomicity if (filectime(APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml') < time() - 900) { $feed = file_get_contents( 'http://www.scrambledsitename.be/xml/feed.xml', false, $context ); if ($feed !== false) { file_put_contents( APP_DIR . '/tmp/cacheFile.xml', ParseXmlFeed($feed) ); } } Relying on user → concurrent requests → possible data corruption Better : run every 15min through cronjob
  65. 65. Network resources Use timeouts for all : fopen curl SOAP … Data source trusted ? → setup a webservice → let them push updates when their feed changes → less load on data source → no timeout issues Add logging → early detection
  66. 66. Logging Logging = good Logging in PHP using fopen → bad idea : locking issues → Use monolog : file, syslog, mail, Pushover, HipChat, Graylog, Rollbar, ElasticSearch (and 50 more) For Firefox : FirePHP (add-on for Firebug) Debug logging = bad on production Watch your logs ! Don't log on slow disks → I/O bottlenecks
  67. 67. File system : I/O bottlenecks Causes : Excessive writes (database updates, logfiles, swapping, …) Excessive reads (non-indexed database queries, swapping, small file system cache, …) How to detect ? top iostat See iowait ? Stop worrying about php, fix the I/O problem ! Cpu(s): 0.2%us, 3.0%sy, 0.0%ni, 61.4%id, 35.5%wa, 0.0%hi avg-cpu: %user %nice %system %iowait %steal %idle 0.10 0.00 0.96 53.70 0.00 45.24 Device: tps Blk_read/s Blk_wrtn/s Blk_read Blk_wrtn sda 120.40 0.00 123289.60 0 616448 sdb 2.10 0.00 4378.10 0 18215 dm-0 4.20 0.00 36.80 0 184 dm-1 0.00 0.00 0.00 0 0
  68. 68. File system Worst of all : NFS PHP files → lstat calls Templates → same Sessions → locking issues → corrupt data → store sessions in database, Memcached, Redis, ...
  69. 69. Step-by-step : most common issues Using NFS ? Get rid of it ;-) iowait on database server I/O reads (use iostat) → missing/wrong indexes → too many queries → select * I/O writes → no transactions → too many queries → bad DB engine settings iowait on webserver (logs ? static files ?) CPU on database server (missing/wrong/too many indexes) CPU on webserver (PHP)
  70. 70. Much more than code DB server Webserver User Network XML feed
  71. 71. Look beyond PHP (or Perl, Ruby, Python, ...) !
  72. 72. Questions ?
  73. 73. Questions ?
  74. 74. Contact Twitter @wimgtr Slides http://www.slideshare.net/wimg E-mail wim@cu.be Thanks ! Please provide feedback through Joind.in : https://joind.in/15535

Notes de l'éditeur

  • 5kbit/sec or 100Mbit/sec ?
  • Let&amp;apos;s talk about code
    Without : we don&amp;apos;t exist
    What are most common mistakes in ecosystem
    Let&amp;apos;s start with the database
  • time spent per query pattern
    how many queries of that query pattern
  • Get back to what I said
    Lots of people use ORM
    - easier
    - don&amp;apos;t need to write queries
    - object-oriented
    but people start doing this
    Imagine 10000 customers → 10001 queries
  • Not best code
    Uses deprecated mysql extension
    no error handling
  • Master : 16 CPU cores
    12 cores for SQL
    1 core for binlog dump
    rest for system
    Slave : 16 CPU cores
    1 core for slave I/O
    1 core for slave SQL
  • Grouping
    Works fine, but :
    maximum size of string ?
    PHP = no limit
    MySQL = max_allowed_packet
  • Grouping
    Works fine, but :
    maximum size of string ?
    PHP = no limit
    MySQL = max_allowed_packet
  • All in a single commit
    Note : transaction has max. size
    Possible : combination with previous solution
  • took few moments to figure out
    No network monitoring
    → iptraf
    → 100Mbit/sec limit
    → packets dropped
    → connections dropped
    Customer : upgrade switch
    Us : why 100Mbit/sec ?
  • Databases → network
    What other network related issues ?
  • Server on which feed located : crashed
    Fine for few minutes (cache)
    15 minutes : file_get_contents uses default_socket_timeout
  • Better, not perfect.
    What else is wrong ?
    Multiple visitors hit expiring cache
    → file delete
    → xml feed hit a lot
  • Better, not perfect.
    What else is wrong ?
    Multiple visitors hit expiring cache
    → file delete
    → xml feed hit a lot
  • Better, not perfect.
    What else is wrong ?
    Multiple visitors hit expiring cache
    → file delete
    → xml feed hit a lot
  • Better, not perfect.
    What else is wrong ?
    Multiple visitors hit expiring cache
    → file delete
    → xml feed hit a lot
  • Better, not perfect.
    What else is wrong ?
    Multiple visitors hit expiring cache
    → file delete
    → xml feed hit a lot
  • Better, not perfect.
    What else is wrong ?
    Multiple visitors hit expiring cache
    → file delete
    → xml feed hit a lot
  • How do you treat your data :
    - where do you get it
    - how long did you have to wait to get it
    - how is it transported
    - how is it processed
    minimize the amount of data :
    retrieved
    transported
    processed,
    sent to db and users

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