10th June 2008

Cheap SSD Drive for my Laptop

A couple of weeks ago I wrote about problems trying to get my SSD drive working in my laptop. Since then I’ve done some experimentation and figured out the issues.

Initially I bought a RiData 32GB CF card (266x speed) and a SYBA SY-SATA2CF CF to SATA Adapter. It wasn’t working (would hang in Windows setup or boot) but I couldn’t tell which component was at fault. Since then I noticed that Sans Digital has the CS2T CF adapter which is shaped like a 2.5″ drive and accepts two CF cards. Its a lot more expensive than the Syba adapter ($99 vs. $18), but it works and $18 isn’t a bargain for a card that I just couldn’t get work right.

Having the Sans Digital be shaped like a normal drive is also a huge help. With laptops you often need to insert the thing way back into the case and they all pretty much assume the standard drive form factor. The Syba was a big pain to get in but the Sans Digital fits into my Dell laptop easily. Once I could tell it worked I bought a second RiData 32GB card and was able to just insert it and expand my volume in Windows- Presto! 64GB SSD drive for $290. It runs Vista great and I’ve installed Voyager (flight planning software) so I should be able to use it in the airplane.

I should mention that I’ve bought several products from Sans Digital so far- I’ve also gotten both of their 4-drive SATA external enclosures, the USB TR4U and the eSATA TR4M. Both work great and are inexpensive and easy to manage ways to add massive storage to your computers.

posted in Technology, Hardware | 0 Comments

9th June 2008

Microsoft Velocity and Memcache

Just saw a post about Microsoft Velocity, Microsoft’s answer to memcache. I’m looking forward to checking this out soon- we have had a ton of success using memcache on the LAMP platform and it was a missing piece in the .NET world. I understand why it was a bit hard to see its importance in that environment- Unlike PHP, .NET can persist things in memory in between requests. PHP really needs memcache quickly since you can’t really save anything from request to request so you go to the database very quickly. But as your system grows Memcache fills an even more important role because of how easily you can scale out adding more caching servers.

Memcache (at least the standard one) has a few problem scenarios all revolving around how it so easily shares the load between servers. The coolest thing about memcache is how simple of a mechanism it is- no complex configuration to tune (there are a few things to tune), maintain, debug. You simply configure N memcache servers on all your web server, and when you save or retrieve an object, it takes the ‘key’ (an arbitrary string), hashes it and uses the hash to pick one of the memcache servers (in effect it does H(key)%N where H is the hashing function and N is the number of servers). In effeect you automatically get a smooth distribution of your keys across your caching servers.

However, if you add or remove memcache servers from the array, it changes the hash, so all of the sudden your keys are on different servers. Now, if your site is under low load, this isn’t that big a deal- you just dumped your whole cache and it will build back up and be fine. But if you are running memcache because you really need it, your site just went down as all the web-servers just started pounding directly on the database with every request. Right now DeepRockDrive has a pretty unique situation where we get huge spikes of traffic (that are mostly predictable- showtime) during which the memcache servers really save our bacon, and most of the time we can clear them out more or less safely, but most big sites are going to have a more consistent traffic pattern and would have a harder time with this.

This also means that if you a memcache server goes down you can’t just pull it out of your configuration (at least under normal load). You really really need to replace it. The easiest (although resource intensive) way to do this is to just have a hot-spare server or two in your track. If one of your memcache servers goes down, you map that spare to the same IP and bring it up. You just lost a portion of your cache (10% if you have 10 servers, etc..), but its way better than losing the whole thing. A more complicated setup would be to run multiple instances of memcache on every machine. So if you have 10 memcache machines, you run each with 3 IPs and it looks like your whole array is 30 “servers”. If one goes down, you bring those 3 IPs up on 3 of the other machines distributing some of its load to those machines.

We hadn’t had a chance to fully work out the scalability of the standard memcached running with multiple instances on the same box so far. We have played with it some and on our 8-core boxes even with the right threading libraries we haven’t gotten close to maxing it out with a single instance of memcache. It looks like there may be some I/O limits but I can’t be sure about what is actually going on, still the notion of running multiple instances on the same box seems like a fairly reasonable one for scalability and these fail-over flexibility cases.

The other tricky issue is that memcache gives you a balanced distribution of keys but does not necessarily give you a balanced distribution of access. Lets say you had some runtime configuration information that you wanted to persist on your site. The easy thing to do would be to save it in a key called ‘config’ and just retrieve that key on every request.

What you have accomplished here is to just introduce a nice hard-scalability limit into your system. Memcache isn’t actually that much faster than MySql is for basic queries. If MySql can cache the query well (as it would be able to for a query on a simple table that just gets hit over and over), the performance of the two will be pretty similar. Where memcache shines is that because of how its keys and the hashing thing work, it can transparently distribute that load over the multiple servers. So the person building the app with the ‘config’ key will have something that looks great as its small and on one caching server and then when they try to apply it to a high load site with multiple servers. All the traffic still just goes to the one memcache server (since its one key that gets hashed the same every time) and they will typically be stumped why the performance isn’t better.

The way around this is to generate keys that look something like-

‘config-’.rand(0,9)

(php syntax)

At first this is counter-intuitive. I’m storing the same thing in 10 keys? That means that when they expire I’m going to have to go back and do 10x the initial loading of this object (whether from the database or config files or whatnot). However, at the cost of a very small # of those database queries (they only happen once every 5 or 60 minutes right), I’m spreading my keys out across my memcache array and the result is that the load gets spread smoothly across my whole array. I can even do a couple of slick extra things like every time I refresh the config data write to all 10 keys at once, resulting in no extra load on the database (except for a race condition I’ll cover in a future post) and just a small amount of occasional load on one web server.

I started this post mentioning Microsoft Velocity and then went into memcache- looping back to Velocity, in typical Microsoft fashion it looks like its a much more complicated solution, but it also automatically deals with some of the above issues. As far as I can tell from a few architecture diagrams the servers maintain knowledge of a cluster (memcache servers have no idea about each other) and I’d assume they automatically deal with some of the fail-over and “add a server” cases. It also has a more explicit concurrency model- although memcache supports building things with much of the same concurrency behavior you need to manage it a bunch more yourself.

Looking forward to checking out velocity more later. In particular I’m interested in when the protocol to talk to the servers will be published and whether there will be support for PHP/Python clients talking to these servers.

posted in Technology, Microsoft, Developers, Software | 4 Comments

3rd June 2008

Airlines

From the Church of the Customer blog about how a crew on Southwest treated a passenger’s birthday with a “cake” and some singing. JetBlue and Alaska Airlines are a bit less goofy, but still have a great focus on customer service too. I haven’t flown Virgin American yet, but I’m looking forward to it.

Meanwhile the big old guys that treat you like crap are begging for more government handouts and protection. These guys made $6 billion profits last year, but still they want us to cover over any rough spots for them (while they treat us like crap). This would be a great time to let the economic principle of “creative destruction” play out. Business failures are painful, but with every business failure is an opening in the market for a new more capable player to really do well.

posted in Travel, Aviation | 0 Comments