Pinterest Druid Holiday Load Testing

Pinterest Engineering
Pinterest Engineering Blog
9 min readDec 9, 2021

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Isabel Tallam | Senior Software Engineer; Jian Wang | Senior Software Engineer; Jiaqi Gu| Senior Software Engineer; Yi Yang | Senior Software Engineer; and Kapil Bajaj | Engineering Manager, Real-timeAnalytics team

Like many companies, Pinterest sees an increase in traffic in the last three months of the year. We need to make sure our systems are ready for this increase in traffic so we don’t run into any unexpected problems. This is especially important as Pinners come to Pinterest at this time for holiday planning and shopping. Therefore, we do a yearly exercise of testing our systems with additional load. During this time, we verify that our systems are able to handle the expected traffic increase. On Druid we look at several checks to verify:

  • Queries: We make sure the service is able to handle the expected increase in QPS while at the same time supporting the P99 Latency SLA our clients need.
  • Ingestion: We verify that the real-time ingestion is able to handle the increase in data.
  • Increase in Data size: We confirm that the storage system has sufficient capacity to handle the increased data volume.

In this post, we’ll provide details about how we run the holiday load test and verify Druid is able to handle the expected increases mentioned above.

Graph showing September through December with Pinterest traffic increases at the end of the year. Pins on the graph show users looking for inspiration for fall and winter holidays.
Pinterest traffic increases as users look for inspiration for holidays.

How We Run Load Tests

As mentioned above, the areas our teams focus on are:

  • Can the system handle increased query traffic?
  • Can the system handle the increase in data ingestion?
  • Can the system handle the increase in data volume?

Can the System Handle Increased Query Traffic?

Testing query traffic and SLA is a main goal during holiday load testing. We have two different options for load testing in our Druid system. The first option generates queries based on the current data set in the Druid data and then runs these queries in Druid. The other option captures real production queries and re-runs these queries in Druid. Both of these options have their advantages and disadvantages.

Sample Versus Production Queries

The first option — using generated queries — is fairly simple to run anytime and does not require preparation like capturing queries. However, this type of testing may not accurately show how the system will behave in production scenarios. A real production query may look different and touch different data, query types, and timeframes than what is tested using generated queries. Additionally, any corner cases would be ignored in this type of testing.

The second option has the advantage of having real production queries that would be very similar to what we expect to see during any future traffic. The disadvantage here, however, is that setting up the tests is more involved, as production queries need to be captured and potentially need to be updated to match the new timeline when holiday testing is performed. In Druid, running the same query today versus one week from today may give different latency results, as data will move through different host stages in which data is supported by faster high-memory hosts in the first days/weeks versus slower disk stages for older data.

We decided to move ahead with real production queries because one of our priorities was to replicate production use cases as closely as possible. We made use of a Druid native feature that automatically logs any query that is being sent to a Druid broker host (broker hosts handle all the query work in a Druid cluster).

Test Environment Setup

Holiday testing is not done in the production environment, as this could adversely impact the production traffic. However, the test needs an environment setup as similar to the production environment as possible. Therefore, we created a copy of the production environment that is short-lived and solely used for testing. To test query traffic, the only stages required are brokers, historical stages, and coordinators. We have several tiers of historical stages in the production environment and we replicated the same setup in the test environment as well. We also made sure to use the same host machine types, configurations, pool size, etc.

The data we used for testing was copied over from production. We used a simple MySQL dump to create a copy of all the segments stored in the production environment. Once the dump is added to the MySQL instance in the test environment, the coordinator will automatically trigger the data to be replicated in the historical stages of the test environment.

Before initiating the copy, however, we needed to identify what data is required. This will depend on the client team and on the timeframe their queries request. In some cases, it may not be necessary to copy all data, but only the most recent days, weeks, or months.

Flow chart showing the test environment set up with the same configuration and hosts as the Prod environment. Historical Nodes and Broker hosts are mirrored on the Test environment. The deep storage is shared between both environments.
Test environment is set up with the same configuration and hosts as Prod environment.

Our test system first connects to the broker hosts on the test environment, then loads the queries from the log file and sends them to the broker hosts. We use a multi-threaded implementation to increase the QPS being sent to the broker nodes. First, we run tests to identify how many threads are needed as a baseline that matches production traffic — for example, 300 QPS. Based on that, we can define how many threads we need to use for testing expected holiday traffic (two, three, or more times the standard traffic).

In our use case, we had loaded the data received up to a specific date (e.g. October 1st). At this point, we were re-running the captured log files on the same date or the day before, to match production behavior. Our test script also was able to update the timeframe in a query to match either the current time or a predefined time to allow running any log file and translating it to the data available on the test environment.

Evaluating the Results

To determine the health of our system, we used our existing metrics to compare QPS and P99 latency on brokers and historical nodes, as well as determining system health via indicators like CPU usage of the brokers. These metrics help us identify any bottlenecks.

We compare query P99 latency with normal traffic and after 2x increase on basic system setup. On the left side P99 latency is measured between 250 to 500ms. On the right side after the 2x traffic bump the P99 latency increases to 400 to 800ms.
Query response time with normal traffic and 2x increase on basic system setup.

Typical bottlenecks can include the historical nodes or the broker nodes.

The historical nodes may show a higher latency for increased QPS, which will in turn increase the overall latency. To resolve this, we would add mirror hosts and increase the number of replicas of the data to support a better latency under higher load. This step is something that will take time to implement, as hosts need to be added and data needs to be loaded, which can take several hours depending on the data size. Therefore, this is something that should be completed before traffic increases on the production system.

If the broker nodes are no longer able to handle the incoming query traffic, the size of the broker pool needs to be increased. If this is seen in the test environment, or even production environment, it is much faster to increase the pool size and can potentially be done ad-hoc as well.

Testing with an increased data size on the test environment helps us determine which steps are needed to support the expected holiday traffic changes. We can make these configuration changes in advance, and we can make the support team aware of changes and of the maximum traffic the system is able to handle within the specified SLA (QPS and P99 latency requirements from the client teams).

Can the system handle the increase in data ingestion?

Testing the capacity for real-time data ingestion is similar to testing query performance. It is possible to start with making an estimate of the supported ingestion rate based on the dimensions/cardinality of the ingested data. However, this is only a guideline, and for some high-priority use cases it is a good idea to test early on.

We set up a test environment that has the same capacity, configuration, etc. as the production environment. However, in this step, some help from client teams may be required as we also need to test with increased data from the ingestion source like Kafka topic.

When reviewing the ingestion test, we focused on several key metrics. The ingestion lag should be low, and the number of both successful and rejected events (due to rejection window exceeded) should be closely similar to comparable values in the production environment. We also include validation of ingested data and general system health of overlord and middle manager stages — the stages handling ingestion of real time data.

Three graphs showing sample metrics to review the number of successfully ingested events, rejected events and overall kafka ingestion lag.
Sample metrics for successfully ingested events, rejected events and kafka ingestion lag.
Three graphs showing sample metrics to review the number of successfully ingested events, rejected events and overall kafka ingestion lag.
Sample metrics for successfully ingested events, rejected events and kafka ingestion lag.
Three graphs showing sample metrics to review the number of successfully ingested events, rejected events and overall kafka ingestion lag.
Sample metrics for successfully ingested events, rejected events and kafka ingestion lag.

Can the system handle the increase in data volume?

Evaluating if the system can handle the increase in data volume is probably the simplest and quickest check, though just as important as the previous steps. For this, we take a look at the coordinator UI: here we can see all historical stages, the pool size, and at what capacity they are currently running. Once clients provide details on the expected increase in data volume, it is a fairly simple process to calculate the amount of additional data that needs to be stored over the holiday period and potentially some period after that.

Combined bar graphs showing the disk space for historical stages as they can be seen on the coordinator UI. A usage of 60 to 70% allows for some growth over high traffic periods.
The space is at a healthy percentage (~70%) allowing for some growth.

Results

In the tests we ran this year, we found that our historical stages are in a very good state and are able to handle the additional traffic expected during the holiday time. We did see, however, that the broker pool may need some additional hosts if traffic meets a certain threshold. We have been sure to keep this communication visible with the client teams and support teams so team members are aware and know that the pool size may need to be increased.

Learnings

Timing is very critical with holiday testing. This project has a fixed end date by which all changes need to be completed in the systems before any traffic increases, and the teams need to make sure to have all the pieces in place before results are due. As is true of many projects as well as this one, we need to leave additional buffer time for unexpected changes in timeline and requirements.

Druid is a backend service, which is not always top of mind for many client teams as long as it is performing well. Therefore, is it a good idea to reach out to client teams before testing starts to get their estimation of expected Holiday traffic increases. Some of our clients reached out to us on their own; however, the due date for any capacity increase requests to governance teams would have already passed. In these cases, or where client teams are not sure yet, it is a good practice to make a general estimation on traffic increase and start testing with those numbers.

Keeping track of holiday planning and applied changes for each year is also a good practice. Having a history of changes every year and keeping track of the actual increase versus the original estimates made beforehand will help to make educated estimates on what traffic increases may be expected in the following year.

Knowing the details on the capacity of brokers and historical stages before the holiday updates makes it easier for teams to evaluate what capacities to reduce the clusters after the holidays as well as considering organic growth on a per-month basis.

Future Work

In this year’s use case, we chose the option of capturing broker logs to retrieve the queries we wanted to re-play back to Druid. This option worked for us at this time, though we are planning to look into other options for capturing queries going forward. The log files option works well for a one-off need, but it would be useful to have continuous logging of queries and storing these in Druid. This can help with debugging issues and identifying high-latency queries that may need some tweaking to get performance improvements.

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