A newer version of IMDG is available.

View latest

Want to try Hazelcast Platform?

We’ve combined the in-memory storage of IMDG with the stream processing power of Jet to bring you the all new Hazelcast Platform.

Fine-Tuning WAN Replication

WAN Replication will work fine for most use cases with the default settings. However, there are some specific use cases where you might want to change the behavior of WAN Replication to suit your needs. You might also be interested in the details how WAN Replication works. If that is the case, this section is for you.

Batch Size

The maximum size of events that are sent in a single batch can be changed depending on your needs. The batch of events is not sent until this size is reached or enough time has elapsed. The default value for batch size is 500. The batch size can be set for each WAN publisher separately by modifying the related WanBatchPublisherConfig.

Below is the configuration for changing the value of the element:

  • XML

  • YAML

  • Java

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <batch-size>1000</batch-size>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        batch-size: 1000
WanReplicationConfig wanConfig = config.getWanReplicationConfig("london-wan-rep");
WanBatchPublisherConfig publisherConfig = new WanBatchPublisherConfig()
        .setClusterName("london")
        .setBatchSize(1000);
wanConfig.addWanPublisherConfig(publisherConfig);

Batch Maximum Delay

When using the built-in WAN batch replication, if the number of WAN replication events generated does not reach Batch Size, they are sent to the target cluster after a certain amount of time is passed. You can set this duration in milliseconds using this batch maximum delay configuration. Default value of for this duration is 1 second (1000 milliseconds).

Maximum delay can be set for each target cluster by modifying related WanBatchPublisherConfig.

You can change this element using the configuration as shown below.

  • XML

  • YAML

  • Java

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <batch-max-delay-millis>2000</batch-max-delay-millis>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        batch-max-delay-millis: 2000
WanReplicationConfig wanConfig = config.getWanReplicationConfig("london-wan-rep");
WanBatchPublisherConfig publisherConfig = new WanBatchPublisherConfig()
        .setClusterName("london")
        .setBatchMaxDelayMillis(2000);
wanConfig.addWanPublisherConfig(publisherConfig);

Response Timeout

After a replication event is sent to the target cluster, the source member waits for an acknowledgement of the delivery of the event to the target. If the confirmation is not received inside a timeout duration window, the event is resent to the target cluster. Default value of this duration is 60000 milliseconds.

You can change this duration depending on your network latency for each target cluster by modifying related WanBatchPublisherConfig.

Below is an example configuration:

  • XML

  • YAML

  • Java

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <response-timeout-millis>5000</response-timeout-millis>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        response-timeout-millis: 5000
WanReplicationConfig wanConfig = config.getWanReplicationConfig("london-wan-rep");
WanBatchPublisherConfig publisherConfig = new WanBatchPublisherConfig()
        .setClusterName("london")
        .setResponseTimeoutMillis(5000);
wanConfig.addWanPublisherConfig(publisherConfig);

Queue Capacity

For clusters with high data mutation rates or with long expected periods of disrupted connectivity between clusters, you might need to increase the replication queue size. The default queue size for replication queues is 10000. This means, if you have heavy put/update/remove rates or if the target/passive cluster is unavailable for too long, you might exceed the queue size so that the oldest, not yet replicated, updates might get lost. Note that a separate queue is used for each WAN Replication configured for IMap and ICache.

Queue capacity can be set for each target cluster by modifying the related WanBatchPublisherConfig.

You can change this element using the configuration as shown below.

  • XML

  • YAML

  • Java

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <queue-capacity>15000</queue-capacity>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        queue-capacity: 15000
WanReplicationConfig wanConfig = config.getWanReplicationConfig("london-wan-rep");
WanBatchPublisherConfig publisherConfig = new WanBatchPublisherConfig()
        .setClusterName("london")
        .setQueueCapacity(15000);
wanConfig.addWanPublisherConfig(publisherConfig);

Note that you can clear a member’s WAN replication event queue. It can be initiated through Management Center’s Clear Queues action or Hazelcast’s REST API. Below is the URL for its REST call:

http://member_ip:port/hazelcast/rest/wan/clearWanQueues

You need to add the following URL-encoded parameters to the request in the following order separated by "&";

  • Cluster name

  • Cluster password

  • Name of the WAN replication configuration

  • WAN replication publisher ID/target cluster name

This may be useful, for instance, to release the consumed heap if you know that the target cluster is being shut down, decommissioned, put out of use and it will never come back. Or, when a failure happens and queues are not replicated anymore, you could clear the queues using this clearing action.

Queue Full Behavior

You can also configure the policy to be applied when the WAN Replication event queues are full. The following policies are supported:

  • DISCARD_AFTER_MUTATION: If you select this option, the new WAN events generated by the member are dropped and not replicated to the target cluster when the WAN event queues are full.

  • THROW_EXCEPTION: If you select this option, the WAN queue size is checked before each supported mutating operation (like IMap.put(), ICache.put()). If one the queues of target cluster is full, WanReplicationQueueFullException is thrown and the operation is not allowed.

  • THROW_EXCEPTION_ONLY_IF_REPLICATION_ACTIVE: Its effect is similar to that of THROW_EXCEPTION. But, it throws exception only when WAN replication is active. It discards the new events if WAN replication is stopped.

The following is an example configuration:

  • XML

  • YAML

  • Java

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <queue-full-behavior>DISCARD_AFTER_MUTATION</queue-full-behavior>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        queue-full-behavior: DISCARD_AFTER_MUTATION
WanReplicationConfig wanConfig = config.getWanReplicationConfig("london-wan-rep");
WanBatchPublisherConfig publisherConfig = new WanBatchPublisherConfig()
        .setClusterName("london")
        .setQueueFullBehavior("DISCARD_AFTER_MUTATION");
wanConfig.addWanPublisherConfig(publisherConfig);
queue-full-behavior configuration is optional. Its default value is DISCARD_AFTER_MUTATION.

Acknowledgment Types

WAN replication supports different acknowledgment (ACK) types for each target cluster. You can choose from two different acknowledgement types depending on your consistency and performance requirements. The following ACK types are supported:

  • ACK_ON_RECEIPT: A batch of replication events is considered successfully replicated as soon as it is received by the target cluster. This option does not guarantee that the received update is actually applied but it is faster.

  • ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE: This option guarantees that the event is received by the target cluster and it is applied. It is more time consuming but it ensures that the updates have been successfully applied by the target cluster before sending the next batch of events.

The following is an example configuration:

  • XML

  • YAML

  • Java

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <acknowledge-type>ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE</acknowledge-type>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        acknowledge-type: ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE
WanReplicationConfig wanConfig = config.getWanReplicationConfig("london-wan-rep");
WanBatchPublisherConfig publisherConfig = new WanBatchPublisherConfig()
        .setClusterName("london")
        .setAcknowledgeType("ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE");
wanConfig.addWanPublisherConfig(publisherConfig);
acknowledge-type configuration is optional. Its default value is ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE.

Key-based Coalescing

By default, WAN Replication will replicate all of the updates on map and cache entries. If you are updating a single "hot" entry multiple times, WAN Replication will send an update event for every entry update. If you don’t need to have all updates replicated and would like to simply replicate the latest update for a certain entry, you can turn on key-based coalescing, thus saving on amounts of data replicated between clusters.

The following is an example configuration:

  • XML

  • YAML

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <snapshot-enabled>true</snapshot-enabled>
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        snapshot-enabled: true
snapshot-enabled is optional. Its default value is false.

Achieving Lower Latencies and Higher Throughput

The WAN replication mechanism allows tuning for lower latencies of replication and higher throughput. In most cases, WAN replication is sufficient with out-of-the-box settings which cause WAN replication to replicate the map and cache events with little overhead. However, there might be some use cases where the latency between a map/cache mutation on one cluster and its visibility on the other cluster must be kept within some bounds. To achieve such demands, you can first try tuning the WAN replication mechanism using the following publisher elements:

  • batch-size

  • batch-max-delay-millis

  • idle-min-park-ns

  • idle-max-park-ns

To understand the implications of these elements, let’s first dive into how WAN replication works.

WAN replication runs in a separate thread and tries to send map and cache mutation events in batches to the target endpoints for higher throughput. The target endpoints are usually members in a target Hazelcast cluster but different WAN implementations may have different target endpoints. The event batch is collected by iterating over the WAN queues for different partitions and, different maps and caches. WAN replication tries and collects a batch of a size which can be configured using the batch-size element.

If enough time has passed and the WAN replication thread hasn’t collected enough events to fill a batch, it sends what it has collected nevertheless. This is controlled by the batch-max-delay-millis element. The "enough time" precisely means that more than the configured amount of milliseconds has passed since the time the last batch was sent to any target endpoint.

If there are no events in any of the WAN queues, the WAN replication thread goes into the idle state by parking the WAN replication thread. The minimum park time can be defined using the idle-min-park-ns element and the maximum park time can be controlled using the idle-max-park-ns element. If a WAN event is enqueued while the WAN replication thread is in the idle state, the latency for replication of that WAN event increases.

An example WAN replication configuration using the default values of the above elements is shown below.

  • XML

  • YAML

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep-batch">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <batch-size>500</batch-size>
            <batch-max-delay-millis>1000</batch-max-delay-millis>
            <idle-min-park-ns>10000000</idle-min-park-ns> <!-- 10 ms -->
            <idle-max-park-ns>250000000</idle-max-park-ns> <!-- 250 ms -->
            ...
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        batch-size: 500
        batch-max-delay-millis: 1000
        idle-min-park-ns: 10000000
        idle-max-park-ns: 250000000

We will now discuss tuning these elements. Unfortunately, the exact tuning parameters heavily depend on the load, mutation rate, latency between the source and target clusters and even use cases. We will thus discuss some general approaches and pointers.

When tuning for low latency, the first thing you might want to do is lower the idle-min-park-ns and idle-max-park-ns element values. This will affect the latencies that you see when having a low number of operations per second, since this is when the WAN replication thread will be mostly in idle state. Try lowering both elements but keep in mind that the lower the element value, the more time the WAN replication thread will spend consuming CPU in a quiescent state - when there is no mutation on the maps or caches.

The next element you might lower is the batch-max-delay-millis. If you have a strict upper bound on the latency for WAN replication, this element must be below that limit. Setting this value too low might adversely affect the performance: in that case the WAN replication thread might send smaller batches than what it would if the element was higher and it had waited for some more time. You can even try setting this element to zero which instructs the WAN replication thread to send batches as soon as it is able to collect any events; but keep in mind this will result in many smaller batches instead of less bigger event batches.

When tuning for lower latencies, configuring the batch-size usually has little effect, especially at lower mutation rates. At a low number of operations per second, the event batches will usually be very small since the WAN replication thread will not be able to collect the full batch and respect the required latencies for replication. The batch-size element might have more effect at higher mutation rates. Here, you will probably want to use bigger batches to avoid paying for the latencies when sending lots of smaller batches, so try increasing the batch size and benchmarking at high load.

There are a couple of other configuration values that you might try changing but it depends on your use case. The first one is adding a separate configuration for a WAN replication executor. Collecting of WAN event batches and processing the responses from the target endpoints are done on a shared executor. This executor is shared between the other parts of the Hazelcast system and all of the WAN replication publishers will use the same executor. In some cases, you might want to create a dedicated executor for all WAN replication publishers. The name of this executor is hz:wan. Below is an example of a concrete, dedicated executor for WAN replication. See the Configuring Executor Service section for more information on the configuration options of the executor.

  • XML

  • YAML

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <executor-service name="hz:wan">
        <pool-size>16</pool-size>
    </executor-service>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  executor-service:
    hz-wan:
      pool-size: 16

The last two elements that you might want to change are acknowledge-type and max-concurrent-invocations. Changing these elements allow you to get a greater throughput at the expense of event ordering. This means that these elements may only be changed if your application can tolerate WAN events to be received out-of-order. For instance, if you are updating or removing the existing map or cache entries, an out-of-order WAN event delivery would mean that the event for the entry removal or update might be processed by the target cluster before the event is received to create that entry. This does not causes exceptions but it causes the clusters to fall out-of-sync. In these cases, you most probably will not be able to use these elements. On the other hand, if you are only creating new, immutable entries (which are then removed by the expiration mechanism), you can use these elements to achieve a greater throughput.

The acknowledge-type element controls at which time the target cluster will send a response for the received WAN event batch. The default value is ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE which will ensure that all events are processed before the response is sent to the source cluster. The value ACK_ON_RECEIPT instructs the target cluster to send a response as soon as it has received the WAN event batch but before it has been processed. This has two implications. One is that events can now be processed out-of-order (see the previous paragraph) and the other is that the exceptions thrown on processing the WAN event batch will not be received by the source cluster and the WAN event batch will not be retried. As such, some events might get lost in case of errors and the clusters may fall out-of-sync. WAN sync can help bring those clusters in-sync. The benefit of the ACK_ON_RECEIPT value is that now the source cluster can send a new batch sooner, without waiting for the previous batch to be processed fully.

WAN synchronization strategies (neither the default nor the advanced-features.adoc#delta-wan-synchronization) don’t synchronize the deletions since they are not yet tracked under WAN.

The max-concurrent-invocations element controls the maximum number of WAN event batches being sent to the target cluster concurrently. Setting this element to anything less than 2 will only allow a single batch of events to be sent to each target endpoint and will maintain causality of events for a single partition (events are not received out-of-order). Setting this element to 2 or higher will allow multiple batches of WAN events to be sent to each target endpoint. Since this allows reordering of batches due to the network conditions, causality and ordering of events for a single partition is lost and batches for a single partition are now sent randomly to any available target endpoint. This, however, does present a faster WAN replication for certain scenarios such as replicating immutable, independent map entries which are only added once and where ordering, when these entries are added, is not necessary. Keep in mind that if you set this element to a value which is less than the target endpoint count, you will lose performance as not all target endpoints will be used at any point in time to process the WAN event batches. So, for instance, if you have a target cluster with 3 members (target endpoints) and you want to use this element, it only makes sense to set it to a value higher than 3. Otherwise, you can simply disable it by setting it to less than 2 in which case WAN will use the default replication strategy and adapt to the target endpoint count while maintaining causality.

An example WAN replication configuration using the default values of the aforementioned elements is shown below.

  • XML

  • YAML

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep-batch">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <acknowledge-type>ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE</acknowledge-type>
            <max-concurrent-invocations>-1</max-concurrent-invocations>
            ...
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep-batch:
      cluster-name: london
      acknowledge-type: ACK_ON_OPERATION_COMPLETE
      max-concurrent-invocations: -1

Finally, as we’ve mentioned, the exact values which will give you the optimal performance depend on your environment and use case. Please benchmark and try out different values to find out the right values for you.

Discovery Period

When using WAN Replication with Discovery SPI, you can set the period in seconds in which WAN tries to discover new target endpoints and reestablish connections to failed endpoints using the discovery-period-seconds property. The default value is 10 seconds.

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep-batch">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <discovery-period-seconds>20</discovery-period-seconds>
            ...
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>

Maximum Number of Target Endpoints

When using WAN Replication with Discovery SPI, you can set the maximum number of endpoints that WAN connects to at any point using the max-target-endpoints property. This element has no effect when static endpoint addresses are defined using target-endpoints. Default is Integer.MAX_VALUE.

  • XML

  • YAML

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep-batch">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <max-target-endpoints>5</max-target-endpoints>
            ...
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep-batch:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        max-target-endpoints: 5

Use Endpoint Private Address

When using WAN Replication with Discovery SPI, you can set whether the WAN connection manager should connect to the endpoint on the private address returned by the Discovery SPI using the use-endpoint-private-address property. By default this element is false which means the WAN connection manager always uses the public address.

  • XML

  • YAML

<hazelcast>
    ...
    <wan-replication name="london-wan-rep-batch">
        <batch-publisher>
            <cluster-name>london</cluster-name>
            <use-endpoint-private-address>true</use-endpoint-private-address>
            ...
        </batch-publisher>
    </wan-replication>
    ...
</hazelcast>
hazelcast:
  wan-replication:
    london-wan-rep-batch:
      batch-publisher:
        cluster-name: london
        use-endpoint-private-address: true