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Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 1
Parallel DBMS
Slides by Joe Hellerstein, UCB, with some material from Jim Gray, Microsoft
Research, and some modifications of mine. See also:
http://www.research.microsoft.com/research/BARC/Gray/PDB95.ppt
Chapter 22, Sections 22.1–22.6
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 2
Why Parallel Access To Data?
1 Terabyte
10 MB/s
At 10 MB/s
1.2 days to scan
1 Terabyte
1,000 x parallel
1.5 minute to scan.
Parallelism:
divide a big problem
into many smaller ones
to be solved in parallel.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 3
Parallel DBMS: Introduction
 Centralized DBMSs assume that
– Processing of individual transactions is sequential
– Control and/or data are maintained at one single site
 These assumptions have been relaxed in recent decades:
– Parallel DBMSs:
 Use of parallel evaluation techniques; parallelization of various operations
such as data loading, index construction, and query evaluations.
 Data may still be centralized; distribution dictated solely by performance
considerations
– Distributed DBMSs:
 Use of both control and data distribution; data and control are dispersed
and stored across several sites
 Data distribution also dictated by considerations of increased availability
and local ownership
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 6
Architectures for Parallel Databases
Shared Memory
(SMP)
Shared Disk Shared Nothing
(network)
CLIENTS CLIENTS
CLIENTS
Memory
Processors
Easy to program
Expensive to build
Difficult to scaleup
Hard to program
Cheap to build
Easy to scaleup
Sequent, SGI, Sun VMScluster, Sysplex Tandem, Teradata, SP2
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 7
Some Parallelism Terminology
 Speed-Up
– For a given amount of data,
more resources (CPUs)
means proportionally more
transactions processed per
second.
 Scale-Up with DB size
– If resources increased in
proportion to increase in
data size, # of trans./sec.
remains constant.
# of CPUs
#
of
trans./sec.
(throughput)
Ideal
# of CPUS, DB size
#
of
trans./sec.
(throughput)
Ideal
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 8
Some Parallelism Terminology
 Scale-Up
– If resources increased in
proportion to increase in
# of trans./sec., response
time remains constant.
# of CPUS, # trans./sec.
#
of
sec./Trans.
(response
time)
Ideal
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 9
What Systems Work Which Way ?
Shared Nothing
Teradata: 400 nodes
Tandem: 110 nodes
IBM / SP2 / DB2: 128 nodes
Informix/SP2 48 nodes
ATT & Sybase ? nodes
Shared Disk
Oracle 170 nodes
DEC Rdb 24 nodes
Shared Memory
Informix 9 nodes
RedBrick ? nodes
CLIENTS
Memory
Processors
CLIENTS
CLIENTS
(as of 9/1995)
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 10
Different Types of DBMS Parallelisms
 Intra-operator parallelism
– get all machines working to compute a given
operation (scan, sort, join)
 Inter-operator parallelism
– each operator may run concurrently on a different
site (exploits pipelining)
 Inter-query parallelism
– different queries run on different sites
 We’ll focus on intra-operator parallelism
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 11
Automatic Data Partitioning
Partitioning a table:
Range Hash Round Robin
Shared disk and memory less sensitive to partitioning,
Shared nothing benefits from "good" partitioning
A...E F...J K...N O...S T...Z A...E F...J K...N O...S T...Z A...E F...J K...N O...S T...Z
Good for equijoins,
range queries,
Selections, group-by
Good for equijoins Good to spread load
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 12
Parallelizing Existing Code for
Evaluating a Relational Operator
 How to readily parallelize existing code to enable
sequential evaluation of a relational operator?
– Idea: use parallel data streams
– Details:
 MERGE streams from different disks or the output of
other operators to provide input streams for an operator
 SPLIT output of an operator to parallelize subsequent
processing
 A parallel evaluation plan is a dataflow network
of relational, merge, and split operators.
– Merge and split should have buffering capabilities
– They should regulate the output of relational operators
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 13
Parallel Scanning and Bulk Loading
 Scanning
– Pages of a relation are read in parallel, and, if the
relation is partitioned across many disks, retrieved
tuples are merged.
– Selection of tuples matching some condition may
not require all sites if range or hash partitioning is
used.
 Bulk loading:
– Indexes can be built at each partition.
– Sorting of data entries required for building the
indexes during bulk loading can be done in
parallel.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 14
Parallel Sorting
 Simple idea:
– Let each CPU sorts the portion of
the relation located on its local disk;
– then, merge the sorted sets of tuples
 Better idea:
– First scan in parallel and redistribute the relation by range-
partitioning all tuples; then each processor sorts its tuples:
 The CPU collects tuples until memory is full
 It sorts the in-memory tuples and writes out a run, until all incoming
tuples have been written to sorted runs on disk
 The runs on disk are then merged to get the sorted version of the
portion of the relation assigned to the CPU
 Retrieve the entire sorted relation by visiting the CPUs in the range-
order to scan the tuples.
– Problem: how to avoid skew in range-partition!
– Solution: “sample” the data at start and sort the sample to
determine partition points (splitting vector).
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 16
Parallel Joins: Range-Partition
 Assumptions: A and B are initially distributed across
many processors, and k processors are availoable.
 Algorithm to join relations A and B on attribute age:
1. At each processor where there are subsets of A and/or B,
divide the range of age into k disjoint subranges and place
partition A and B tuples into partitions corresponding to
the subranges.
2. Assign each partition to a processor to carry out a local
join. Each processor joins the A and B tuples assigned to it.
3. Tuples scanned from each processor are split, with a split
operator, into output streams, depending on how many
processors are available for parallel joins.
4. Each join process receives input streams of A and B tuples
from several processors, with merge operators merging all
inputs streams from A and B, respectively.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 17
Parallel Joins: Hash-Partitions
 Algorithm for hash-partition: Step 1 on
previous slide changes to:
1. At each processor where there are subsets of A and/or B,
all local tuples are retrieved and hashed on the age
attribute into k disjoint partitions, with the same hash
function h used at all sites.
 Using range partitioning leads to a parallel
version of Sort-Merge Join.
 Using hash partitioning leads to a parallel
version of Hash Join.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 18
Parallel Hash Join
 In first phase, partitions get distributed to
different sites:
– A good hash function automatically distributes
work evenly!
 Do second phase at each site.
 Almost always the winner for equi-join.
Original Relations
(R then S)
OUTPUT
2
B main memory buffers Disk
Disk
INPUT
1
hash
function
h
B-1
Partitions
1
2
B-1
. . .
Phase
1
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 19
Dataflow Network for Parallel Join
 Good use of split/merge makes it easier to
build parallel versions of sequential join code.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 20
Improved Parallel Hash Join
 Assumptions:
 A and B are very large, which leads to the size of
each partition still being too large, which in turns
leads to high local cost for processing the
“smaller” joins.
 k partitions, n processors and k=n.
 Idea: Execute all smaller joins of Ai and Bi,
i=1,…,k, one after the other, with each join
executed in parallel using all processors.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 21
Improved Parallel Hash Join (Cont’d)
 Algorithm:
1. At each processor, apply hash function h1 to
partition A and B into partitions i=1,…,k . Suppose
|A|<|B|. Then choose k such sum of all k partitions
of A fits into aggregate memory of all n processors.
2. For i=1,…,k , process join of i-th partitions of A and B
by doing this at every site:
1. Apply 2nd hash function h2 to all Ai tuples to determine
where they should be joined send t to site h2(t).
2. Add in-coming Ai tuples to an in-memory hash table.
3. Apply h2 to all Bi tuples to determine where they should be
joined send t to site h2(t).
4. Probe the in-memory hash table with in-coming Bi tuples.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 22
Parallel Query Optimization
 Complex Queries: Inter-Operator parallelism
– Pipelining between operators:
 note that sort and phase 1 of hash-join block the
pipeline!!
– Bushy Trees
A B R S
Sites 1-4 Sites 5-8
Sites 1-8
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 23
Parallel Query Optimization (Cont’d)
 Common approach: 2 phases
– Pick best sequential plan (System R algorithm)
– Pick degree of parallelism based on current
system parameters.
 “Bind” operators to processors
– Take query tree, “decorate” as in previous picture.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 24
Parallel DBMS Summary
 Parallelism natural to query processing:
– Both pipeline and partition parallelism!
 Shared-Nothing vs. Shared-Mem
– Shared-disk too, but less standard
– Shared-mem easy, costly. Doesn’t scaleup.
– Shared-nothing cheap, scales well, harder to
implement.
 Intra-op, Inter-op, & Inter-query parallelism
all possible.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 25
Parallel DBMS Summary (Cont’d)
 Data layout choices important!
 Most DB operations can be done with
partition-parallelism
– Sort.
– Sort-merge join, hash-join.
 Complex plans.
– Allow for pipeline-parallelism, but sorts, hashes
block the pipeline.
– Partition parallelism achieved via bushy trees.
Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 26
Parallel DBMS Summary (Cont’d)
 Hardest part of the equation: optimization.
– 2-phase optimization simplest, but can be
ineffective.
– More complex schemes still at the research stage.
 We haven’t said anything about transactions,
logging.
– Easy in shared-memory architecture.
– Takes some care in shared-nothing.

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Parallel Database description in database management

  • 1. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 1 Parallel DBMS Slides by Joe Hellerstein, UCB, with some material from Jim Gray, Microsoft Research, and some modifications of mine. See also: http://www.research.microsoft.com/research/BARC/Gray/PDB95.ppt Chapter 22, Sections 22.1–22.6
  • 2. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 2 Why Parallel Access To Data? 1 Terabyte 10 MB/s At 10 MB/s 1.2 days to scan 1 Terabyte 1,000 x parallel 1.5 minute to scan. Parallelism: divide a big problem into many smaller ones to be solved in parallel.
  • 3. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 3 Parallel DBMS: Introduction  Centralized DBMSs assume that – Processing of individual transactions is sequential – Control and/or data are maintained at one single site  These assumptions have been relaxed in recent decades: – Parallel DBMSs:  Use of parallel evaluation techniques; parallelization of various operations such as data loading, index construction, and query evaluations.  Data may still be centralized; distribution dictated solely by performance considerations – Distributed DBMSs:  Use of both control and data distribution; data and control are dispersed and stored across several sites  Data distribution also dictated by considerations of increased availability and local ownership
  • 4. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 6 Architectures for Parallel Databases Shared Memory (SMP) Shared Disk Shared Nothing (network) CLIENTS CLIENTS CLIENTS Memory Processors Easy to program Expensive to build Difficult to scaleup Hard to program Cheap to build Easy to scaleup Sequent, SGI, Sun VMScluster, Sysplex Tandem, Teradata, SP2
  • 5. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 7 Some Parallelism Terminology  Speed-Up – For a given amount of data, more resources (CPUs) means proportionally more transactions processed per second.  Scale-Up with DB size – If resources increased in proportion to increase in data size, # of trans./sec. remains constant. # of CPUs # of trans./sec. (throughput) Ideal # of CPUS, DB size # of trans./sec. (throughput) Ideal
  • 6. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 8 Some Parallelism Terminology  Scale-Up – If resources increased in proportion to increase in # of trans./sec., response time remains constant. # of CPUS, # trans./sec. # of sec./Trans. (response time) Ideal
  • 7. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 9 What Systems Work Which Way ? Shared Nothing Teradata: 400 nodes Tandem: 110 nodes IBM / SP2 / DB2: 128 nodes Informix/SP2 48 nodes ATT & Sybase ? nodes Shared Disk Oracle 170 nodes DEC Rdb 24 nodes Shared Memory Informix 9 nodes RedBrick ? nodes CLIENTS Memory Processors CLIENTS CLIENTS (as of 9/1995)
  • 8. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 10 Different Types of DBMS Parallelisms  Intra-operator parallelism – get all machines working to compute a given operation (scan, sort, join)  Inter-operator parallelism – each operator may run concurrently on a different site (exploits pipelining)  Inter-query parallelism – different queries run on different sites  We’ll focus on intra-operator parallelism
  • 9. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 11 Automatic Data Partitioning Partitioning a table: Range Hash Round Robin Shared disk and memory less sensitive to partitioning, Shared nothing benefits from "good" partitioning A...E F...J K...N O...S T...Z A...E F...J K...N O...S T...Z A...E F...J K...N O...S T...Z Good for equijoins, range queries, Selections, group-by Good for equijoins Good to spread load
  • 10. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 12 Parallelizing Existing Code for Evaluating a Relational Operator  How to readily parallelize existing code to enable sequential evaluation of a relational operator? – Idea: use parallel data streams – Details:  MERGE streams from different disks or the output of other operators to provide input streams for an operator  SPLIT output of an operator to parallelize subsequent processing  A parallel evaluation plan is a dataflow network of relational, merge, and split operators. – Merge and split should have buffering capabilities – They should regulate the output of relational operators
  • 11. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 13 Parallel Scanning and Bulk Loading  Scanning – Pages of a relation are read in parallel, and, if the relation is partitioned across many disks, retrieved tuples are merged. – Selection of tuples matching some condition may not require all sites if range or hash partitioning is used.  Bulk loading: – Indexes can be built at each partition. – Sorting of data entries required for building the indexes during bulk loading can be done in parallel.
  • 12. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 14 Parallel Sorting  Simple idea: – Let each CPU sorts the portion of the relation located on its local disk; – then, merge the sorted sets of tuples  Better idea: – First scan in parallel and redistribute the relation by range- partitioning all tuples; then each processor sorts its tuples:  The CPU collects tuples until memory is full  It sorts the in-memory tuples and writes out a run, until all incoming tuples have been written to sorted runs on disk  The runs on disk are then merged to get the sorted version of the portion of the relation assigned to the CPU  Retrieve the entire sorted relation by visiting the CPUs in the range- order to scan the tuples. – Problem: how to avoid skew in range-partition! – Solution: “sample” the data at start and sort the sample to determine partition points (splitting vector).
  • 13. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 16 Parallel Joins: Range-Partition  Assumptions: A and B are initially distributed across many processors, and k processors are availoable.  Algorithm to join relations A and B on attribute age: 1. At each processor where there are subsets of A and/or B, divide the range of age into k disjoint subranges and place partition A and B tuples into partitions corresponding to the subranges. 2. Assign each partition to a processor to carry out a local join. Each processor joins the A and B tuples assigned to it. 3. Tuples scanned from each processor are split, with a split operator, into output streams, depending on how many processors are available for parallel joins. 4. Each join process receives input streams of A and B tuples from several processors, with merge operators merging all inputs streams from A and B, respectively.
  • 14. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 17 Parallel Joins: Hash-Partitions  Algorithm for hash-partition: Step 1 on previous slide changes to: 1. At each processor where there are subsets of A and/or B, all local tuples are retrieved and hashed on the age attribute into k disjoint partitions, with the same hash function h used at all sites.  Using range partitioning leads to a parallel version of Sort-Merge Join.  Using hash partitioning leads to a parallel version of Hash Join.
  • 15. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 18 Parallel Hash Join  In first phase, partitions get distributed to different sites: – A good hash function automatically distributes work evenly!  Do second phase at each site.  Almost always the winner for equi-join. Original Relations (R then S) OUTPUT 2 B main memory buffers Disk Disk INPUT 1 hash function h B-1 Partitions 1 2 B-1 . . . Phase 1
  • 16. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 19 Dataflow Network for Parallel Join  Good use of split/merge makes it easier to build parallel versions of sequential join code.
  • 17. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 20 Improved Parallel Hash Join  Assumptions:  A and B are very large, which leads to the size of each partition still being too large, which in turns leads to high local cost for processing the “smaller” joins.  k partitions, n processors and k=n.  Idea: Execute all smaller joins of Ai and Bi, i=1,…,k, one after the other, with each join executed in parallel using all processors.
  • 18. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 21 Improved Parallel Hash Join (Cont’d)  Algorithm: 1. At each processor, apply hash function h1 to partition A and B into partitions i=1,…,k . Suppose |A|<|B|. Then choose k such sum of all k partitions of A fits into aggregate memory of all n processors. 2. For i=1,…,k , process join of i-th partitions of A and B by doing this at every site: 1. Apply 2nd hash function h2 to all Ai tuples to determine where they should be joined send t to site h2(t). 2. Add in-coming Ai tuples to an in-memory hash table. 3. Apply h2 to all Bi tuples to determine where they should be joined send t to site h2(t). 4. Probe the in-memory hash table with in-coming Bi tuples.
  • 19. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 22 Parallel Query Optimization  Complex Queries: Inter-Operator parallelism – Pipelining between operators:  note that sort and phase 1 of hash-join block the pipeline!! – Bushy Trees A B R S Sites 1-4 Sites 5-8 Sites 1-8
  • 20. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 23 Parallel Query Optimization (Cont’d)  Common approach: 2 phases – Pick best sequential plan (System R algorithm) – Pick degree of parallelism based on current system parameters.  “Bind” operators to processors – Take query tree, “decorate” as in previous picture.
  • 21. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 24 Parallel DBMS Summary  Parallelism natural to query processing: – Both pipeline and partition parallelism!  Shared-Nothing vs. Shared-Mem – Shared-disk too, but less standard – Shared-mem easy, costly. Doesn’t scaleup. – Shared-nothing cheap, scales well, harder to implement.  Intra-op, Inter-op, & Inter-query parallelism all possible.
  • 22. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 25 Parallel DBMS Summary (Cont’d)  Data layout choices important!  Most DB operations can be done with partition-parallelism – Sort. – Sort-merge join, hash-join.  Complex plans. – Allow for pipeline-parallelism, but sorts, hashes block the pipeline. – Partition parallelism achieved via bushy trees.
  • 23. Database Management Systems, 2nd Edition. Raghu Ramakrishnan and Johannes Gehrke 26 Parallel DBMS Summary (Cont’d)  Hardest part of the equation: optimization. – 2-phase optimization simplest, but can be ineffective. – More complex schemes still at the research stage.  We haven’t said anything about transactions, logging. – Easy in shared-memory architecture. – Takes some care in shared-nothing.