The Indexer is an optional and experimental feature. Its memory management system is still under development and will be significantly enhanced in later releases.
The Apache Druid Indexer process is an alternative to the MiddleManager + Peon task execution system. Instead of forking a separate JVM process per-task, the Indexer runs tasks as separate threads within a single JVM process.
The Indexer is designed to be easier to configure and deploy compared to the MiddleManager + Peon system and to better enable resource sharing across tasks.
Configuration
For Apache Druid Indexer Process Configuration, see Indexer Configuration.
HTTP endpoints
The Indexer process shares the same HTTP endpoints as the MiddleManager.
Running
org.apache.druid.cli.Main server indexer
Task resource sharing
The following resources are shared across all tasks running inside an Indexer process.
Query resources
The query processing threads and buffers are shared across all tasks. The Indexer will serve queries from a single endpoint shared by all tasks.
If query caching is enabled, the query cache is also shared across all tasks.
Server HTTP threads
The Indexer maintains two equally sized pools of HTTP threads.
One pool is exclusively used for task control messages between the Overlord and the Indexer (“chat handler threads”). The other pool is used for handling all other HTTP requests.
The size of the pools are configured by the druid.server.http.numThreads
configuration (e.g., if this is set to 10, there will be 10 chat handler threads and 10 non-chat handler threads).
In addition to these two pools, 2 separate threads are allocated for lookup handling. If lookups are not used, these threads will not be used.
Memory sharing
The Indexer uses the druid.worker.globalIngestionHeapLimitBytes
configuration to impose a global heap limit across all of the tasks it is running.
This global limit is evenly divided across the number of task slots configured by druid.worker.capacity
.
To apply the per-task heap limit, the Indexer will override maxBytesInMemory
in task tuning configs (i.e., ignoring the default value or any user configured value). maxRowsInMemory
will also be overridden to an essentially unlimited value: the Indexer does not support row limits.
By default, druid.worker.globalIngestionHeapLimitBytes
is set to 1/6th of the available JVM heap. This default is chosen to align with the default value of maxBytesInMemory
in task tuning configs when using the MiddleManager/Peon system, which is also 1/6th of the JVM heap.
The peak usage for rows held in heap memory relates to the interaction between the maxBytesInMemory
and maxPendingPersists
properties in the task tuning configs. When the amount of row data held in-heap by a task reaches the limit specified by maxBytesInMemory
, a task will persist the in-heap row data. After the persist has been started, the task can again ingest up to maxBytesInMemory
bytes worth of row data while the persist is running.
This means that the peak in-heap usage for row data can be up to approximately maxBytesInMemory
* (2 + maxPendingPersists
). The default value of maxPendingPersists
is 0, which allows for 1 persist to run concurrently with ingestion work.
The remaining portion of the heap is reserved for query processing and segment persist/merge operations, and miscellaneous heap usage.
Concurrent segment persist/merge limits
To help reduce peak memory usage, the Indexer imposes a limit on the number of concurrent segment persist/merge operations across all running tasks.
By default, the number of concurrent persist/merge operations is limited to (druid.worker.capacity
/ 2), rounded down. This limit can be configured with the druid.worker.numConcurrentMerges
property.
Current limitations
Separate task logs are not currently supported when using the Indexer; all task log messages will instead be logged in the Indexer process log.
The Indexer currently imposes an identical memory limit on each task. In later releases, the per-task memory limit will be removed and only the global limit will apply. The limit on concurrent merges will also be removed.
The Indexer does not work properly with index_realtime task types. Therefore, it is not compatible with Tranquility. If you are using Tranquility, consider migrating to Druid’s builtin Apache Kafka or Amazon Kinesis ingestion options.
In later releases, per-task memory usage will be dynamically managed. Please see https://github.com/apache/druid/issues/7900 for details on future enhancements to the Indexer.