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Sub-second replication lag throttling

gh-ost is able to utilize sub-second replication lag measurements.

At GitHub, small replication lag is crucial, and we like to keep it below 1s at all times.

gh-ost will do sub-second throttling when --max-lag-millis is smaller than 1000, i.e. smaller than 1sec. Replication lag is measured on:

  • The "inspected" server (the server gh-ost connects to; replica is desired but not mandatory)
  • The throttle-control-replicas list

In both cases, gh-ost uses an internal heartbeat mechanism. It injects heartbeat events onto the utility changelog table, then reads those entries on replicas, and compares times. This measurement is on by default and by definition supports sub-second resolution.

You can explicitly define how frequently will gh-ost inject heartbeat events, via heartbeat-interval-millis. You should set heartbeat-interval-millis <= max-lag-millis. It still works if not, but loses granularity and effect.

In earlier versions, the --throttle-control-replicas list was subjected to 1 second resolution or to 3rd party heartbeat injections such as pt-heartbeat. This is no longer the case. The argument --replication-lag-query has been deprecated and is no longer needed.

Our production migrations use sub-second lag throttling and are able to keep our entire fleet of replicas well below 1sec lag. We use --heartbeat-interval-millis=100 on our production migrations with a --max-lag-millis value of between 300 and 500.