Slashdot Posting Bug Infuriates Haggard Admins
Last night we crossed over 16,777,216 comments in the database. The wise amongst you might note that this number is 2^24, or in MySQLese an unsigned mediumint. Unfortunately, like 5 years ago we changed our primary keys in the comment table to unsigned int (32 bits, or 4.1 billion) but neglected to change the index that handles parents. We're awesome! Fixing is a simple ALTER TABLE statement... but on a table that is 16 million rows long, our system will take 3+ hours to do it, during which time there can be no posting. So today, we're disabling threading and will enable it again later tonight. Sorry for the inconvenience. We shall flog ourselves appropriately. Update: 11/10 12:52 GMT by J : It's fixed.
*Clap clap clap*
Curiosity was framed; ignorance killed the cat. -- Author unknown
... roll over to be a last post?
Anyone could have made the mistake.. good to keep us all in the loop though :)
And let this be a reminder to the kids - RTFM, twice!
welcome our 2 to the power of X overlords.
Last post!
Alright, who's the joker who posted the 16,777,216th comment?
:D
Thanks for breaking slashdot, jerk
LegendMUD
Its like y2k, only worse!
Does this mean that comment id#16777215 has the longest thread in history?
Can anyone actually find it to see - I tried but could only get to 16777217, its likely to be in a journal or just a reply to an older article.
liqbase
As if a thousand geeks all made the same damn "last post!" joke at once. . . . . .
I wonder who posted comment #16777216. That person should win some sort of "I borked Slashdot!" award.
Slashdot Burying Stories About Slashdot Media Owned
...why wasn't this problem discovered on the dev system in advance?
"I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
"2^24 comments ought to be enough for anyone" -- CmdrTaco
Some of you are asking which comment it was that got the cid 16,777,216. The answer is that none did. For redundancy, Slashdot is now running multiple-master replication which skips values for auto-increment. Our db-1 assigns odd-numbered primary key IDs, and db-2 assigns even-numbered. Right now writes are going to db-1 so newly created rows will have only odd IDs.
The comment that got 2**24-1 was this one, if anyone cares :)
Sorry about the inconvenience, everyone.
That's cool, I'll just pretend I'm on Digg, with its 1981 Commodore 64 BBS-style threading.
Wait..sorry Commodore fans. I know it had better threading than Digg.
Haggard admins? Does this mean that the Admins will go buy some meth and get a massage?
... should have been enough for anyone.
We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
-- Anais Nin
No threading? Welcome to Farkdot.
Lars T.
To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck
Dupe! I TOTALLY posted this story like, last WEEK man! (I laugh, but I betcha someone might post this in seriousness)
USE colorful confetti ON heavily-armed clown
I used to work at Comair. Remember, that airline that stranded about 10,000 people in the airport a couple of Christmases ago? Same deal. Program was capable of handling only a certain number of changes. Hopefully your president won't have to resign.
Give a 2^0-year Slashdot subscription to the guy who hit the limit and one to the the first non-administrator guy who successfully posted after the fix.
If you can find the first guy who COULDN'T reply due to the limit, give him one too. He deserves something for his trouble.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Any thoughts on making the DB publicly accessable other than through teh Dot? Not sure what I'd do with all that data, but I'm sure these's a grad student somewhere who'd love the opportunity...
If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
Brillant!
I always wondered where Paula Bean ended up...
mod parent up
The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
Take all the time you need, I'm more than willing to refrain from posting durin.... Oh shit!
poot_rootbeer asks why all the comments are in one table, when the data access pattern is such that 90% of our hits are on only the most recent entries in that table.
The answer is that we used to do it this way but it's a huge pain. In 2000 we converted from having two tables for 'stories', recent and archived, and merged them together. The performance hit was not big, and it made the code so much simpler it was a no-brainer.
It's the database's job to cache properly whether we split the table or not, and the database does that just fine. The only performance problem could be when there is a rush of inserts, or updates to the same sets of rows, spanning both newer and older portions of the table, and that just doesn't happen.
If we did want to do this we wouldn't split the tables manually; the code complexity is too high a price to pay. In MySQL 5.0 we would use a MERGE engine, which has issues of its own but would involve smaller changes to our code. That's still not worth it for us. What we're probably going to do is wait for MySQL 5.1 to get out of beta and then do some performance testing on tables partitioned by date and see if that gains us anything. For example, a SELECT on our comments table could be limited with a WHERE clause to only retrieve rows with a date >= the discussion object's date, which for 90% of our queries MySQL 5.1 could optimize to only look at the most recent partition. If the gains turn out to be significant, then since partitioning involves very limited code changes, we'll probably do that. Generally speaking, though, database performance is not a problem for us. So far our main bottlenecks have been CPU and RAM on the webheads. As long as we don't do anything stupid our database performance has been fine, though, as today proves, we are quite capable of being stupid.
[ Parent ]
Would not have happened if Slashdot used PostgreSQL.
Let the flamewars begin...
Unthreaded flame wars are much less enjoyable.
The number 2^24 is of interest to digital computer artists, as that is the number of unique colors combined in the commonly implemented "True Color" RGB8 space. That color space is looking pretty limiting in some respects, but that is truly a lot of unique colors when you think about it. A 16 megapixel image does not need to repeat any color used.
If all slashdot posts from the history of Slashdot were sorted into color bins,Once that were done, people could simply post their replies as a reference to existing posts. "Hey, #938D3A to you, buddy!" "Know what I think of that? #F2C2A9!"
[
One day, Cmdr Taco is designing his database, and he sits down at a table with three integers on it. First, he tries the baby bear's integer, but exclaims "2 meager bytes is way too small for my appetite."
Next, he tries Papa bear's integer, but proclaims "4 bytes is way too big for my little site, I'd just end up wasting so much."
Finally, he tries Mama bear's integer, and extols "3 bytes is just right," not noticing it was really the same as Papa Bear's bowl in disquise.
This
Get your mod points ready, this is off topic, but considering the current state of discussion anyway, I don't feel so bad about it.
/. admins won't (and shouldn't) consider releasing a copy of the /. DB to the public, something occurred to me.
/. are owned by the poster, according to that one line that shows up on all the comment pages (specifically, "The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.") At the same time, though, /. doesn't provide a method for having comments you've made removed from the DB.
/. from displaying them in future? Or is there some kind of implicit license in posting on /.? Did I clicksign an agreement covering this when I joined (this was getting on towards a decade ago, so I really don't remember the joining process at all)?
Regardless, while writing this post regarding why the
Comments on
If I own the copyright on the comments I've made, shouldn't I be able to rescind publication rights on them, and prevent
Or are publication rights, once granted, irrevocable?
Of course, I suppose asking questions when there's no way for people to hit reply is a specific form of vague insanity...still, I'm curious.
Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...