Happy Tuesday everyone,
Just confirming that whatever is causing the high lag from
vm-lnx-conduit2 is still happening. Also, I noticed today that, in
addition to forecast hours being incomplete, at least one forecast hour
was missing for today's 12 UTC run is completely missing the 78h 1 deg
file (gfs.t12z.pgrb2.1p00.f078) - not sure if it was not sent out at
all, or if the lag caused us to just miss that file?
Anyways, the issue is still ongoing..
Pete
<http://www.weather.com/tv/shows/wx-geeks/video/the-incredible-shrinking-cold-pool>-----
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Jesse Marks - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden>
*Sent:* Friday, September 3, 2021 1:16 PM
*To:* Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden>
*Cc:* Tyle, Kevin R <address@hidden>; address@hidden
<address@hidden>; _NWS NCEP NCO Dataflow <address@hidden>; Anne
Myckow - NOAA Federal <address@hidden>;
address@hidden <address@hidden>
*Subject:* Re: [conduit] 20210830: Re: High CONDUIT latencies from
vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov
Hi All,
We are still actively working this issue. One question - do you know
the specific day this problem first appeared?
Thanks,
Jesse
On Fri, Sep 3, 2021 at 1:55 PM Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>> wrote:
Kevin,
Yes, we are seeing the large lags again, and losing data, I think
because it ages out of our ldm product queue before we process it.
Unidata folks, are your files also incomplete due to the large lags,
or is that specific to us due to a too-small queue? I am looking at
the file sizes for the 0.25 deg runs on motherlode, and just looking
at the file sizes, it appears Unidata also are missing data. Seems
like a complete run should be ~47 Gb, and several are 41, 42, 39Gb..
https://motherlode.ucar.edu/native/grid/NCEP/GFS/Global_0p25deg/
<https://motherlode.ucar.edu/native/grid/NCEP/GFS/Global_0p25deg/>
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210831_0000.grib2 2021-08-30 23:16 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210831_0600.grib2 2021-08-31 05:14 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210831_1200.grib2 2021-08-31 11:14 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210831_1800.grib2 2021-08-31 17:17 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210901_0000.grib2 2021-08-31 23:16 41G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210901_0600.grib2 2021-09-01 05:14 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210901_1200.grib2 2021-09-01 11:14 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210901_1800.grib2 2021-09-01 17:17 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210902_0000.grib2 2021-09-01 23:16 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210902_0600.grib2 2021-09-02 05:14 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210902_1200.grib2 2021-09-02 11:15 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210902_1800.grib2 2021-09-02 17:17 47G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210903_0000.grib2 2021-09-02 23:16 41G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210903_0600.grib2 2021-09-03 05:14 42G
GFS_Global_0p25deg_20210903_1200.grib2 2021-09-03 11:14 39G
If that is the case, that we are both dropping/losing data due to
the lags, the maybe problem is that the product queues on the NCEP
virtual machines are not large enough to handle the feed, does that
seem correct?
My product queue on idd-agg is 78000 Mb (~78 Gb) - but that also
handles other data such as the NEXRAD, NEXRAD2, HDS, etc.. however
GOES16/17 data does NOT flow through that machine, so it doesn't
contribute to the load there.
How big are the product queues on the Unidata CONDUIT ingest
machines? Or on the NCEP source machines? Could a possible solution
to this be to artificially delay the ingest of the GFS grids a bit
to lower the peak amount of data going through? Maybe sleep 20
seconds or a minute or whatever between ingesting each forecast
hour? I'd personally rather get a complete data set a bit later than
an incomplete data set on time.
Here's the graph of lag from conduit.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://conduit.ncep.noaa.gov> to idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu
<http://idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu> from the past two days. When lags get
> 1000 seconds or so, that's the point where we and our downstreams
start dropping/losing data..
It would really be helpful to get this resolved, whether it is a fix
for whatever's causing the large lags at NCEP, or us acquiring an
ingest machine with enough memory to handle a larger product queue
(if the issue is us and not the upstream product queues at NCEP), or
something other than the CONDUIT data feed to distribute this data,
or ?? It has come to the point where we can't rely on this data for
plotting maps or doing analysis for classes, initializing local
models, etc, because it has become so reliably incomplete, for the
GFS runs in particular.
Pete
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu>
<http://www.weather.com/tv/shows/wx-geeks/video/the-incredible-shrinking-cold-pool>-----
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Tyle, Kevin R <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>
*Sent:* Friday, September 3, 2021 12:06 PM
*To:* Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>; Jesse Marks - NOAA Affiliate
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>;
address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden> <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>
*Cc:* _NWS NCEP NCO Dataflow <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>; Anne Myckow - NOAA Federal
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>;
address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>
<address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>
*Subject:* RE: [conduit] 20210830: Re: High CONDUIT latencies from
vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov <http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>
Hi all,
After a few good days, we are once again not receiving all GFS
forecast hours, starting with today’s 0000 UTC cycle. Pete, do you
note the usual pattern of increasing latency from NCEP?
Cheers,
Kevin
_________________________________________________
Kevin Tyle, M.S.; Manager of Departmental Computing
NSF XSEDE Campus Champion
Dept. of Atmospheric & Environmental Sciences
UAlbany ETEC Bldg – Harriman Campus
1220 Washington Avenue, Room 419
Albany, NY 12222
address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden> | 518-442-4578 | @nywxguy
| he/him/his
_________________________________________________
*From:* conduit <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>> *On Behalf Of *Pete
Pokrandt via conduit
*Sent:* Tuesday, August 31, 2021 12:47 PM
*To:* Jesse Marks - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>; address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
*Cc:* _NWS NCEP NCO Dataflow <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>; Anne Myckow - NOAA Federal
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>;
address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>;
address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>
*Subject:* Re: [conduit] 20210830: Re: High CONDUIT latencies from
vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov <http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>
Thanks for the update, Jesse. I can confirm that we are seeing
smaller lags originating from conduit2, and since yesterday's 18 UTC
run, I don't think we have missed any data here at UW-Madison.
Kevin Tyle, how's your reception been at Albany since the 18 UTC run
yesterday?
Pete
-----
Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
608-262-3086 - address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:*Jesse Marks - NOAA Affiliate <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>
*Sent:* Tuesday, August 31, 2021 10:26 AM
*To:* address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden> <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>
*Cc:* Pete Pokrandt <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>; Anne Myckow - NOAA Federal
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>;
address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>;
address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>
<address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>; _NWS NCEP NCO Dataflow
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>
*Subject:* Re: 20210830: Re: High CONDUIT latencies from
vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov <http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>
Thanks for the quick reply, Tom. Looking through our conduit2 logs,
we began seeing sends of product from our conduit2 to conduit1
machine after we restarted the LDM server on conduit2 yesterday. It
appears latencies improved fairly significantly at that time:
However we still do not see direct sends from conduit2 to external
LDMs. Our server team is currently looking into the TCP service
issue that appears to be causing this problem.
Thanks,
Jesse
On Mon, Aug 30, 2021 at 7:49 PM Tom Yoksas <address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>> wrote:
Hi Jesse,
On 8/30/21 5:16 PM, Jesse Marks - NOAA Affiliate wrote:
> Quick question: how are you computing these latencies?
Latency in the LDM/IDD context is the time difference between when a
product is first put into an LDM queue for redistribution and
the time
it is received by a downstream machine. This measure of latency, of
course, requires that the clocks on the originating and receiving
machines be maintained accurately.
re:
> More
> specifically, how do you determine which conduit machine the
data is
> coming from?
The machine on which the product is inserted into the LDM queue is
available in the LDM transaction. We provide an website where users
can create graphs of things like feed latencies:
Unidata HomePage
https://www.unidata.ucar.edu <https://www.unidata.ucar.edu>
IDD Operational Status
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/rtstats/
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/rtstats/>
Real-time IDD Statistics -> Statistics by Host
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex>
The variety of measures of feed quality for the Unidata machine that
is REQUESTing the CNODUIT feed from the NCEP cluster can be
found in:
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex?conduit.unidata.ucar.edu
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex?conduit.unidata.ucar.edu>
The latencies being reported by the Unidata machine that is
being fed
from the NCEP cluster is:
CONDUIT latencies on conduit.conduit.unidata.ucar.edu
<http://conduit.conduit.unidata.ucar.edu>:
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+conduit.unidata.ucar.edu
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+conduit.unidata.ucar.edu>
As you can see, the traces are color color coded, and the label
at the
top identifies the source machines for products.
re:
> The reason I ask is because I am not seeing any sends of
> product from conduit2 in the last several days of logs both
to our local
> conduit1 machine and to any distant end users.
Hmm... we are.
re:
> Also, we have isolated what is likely the issue and will have
our team
> take a closer look in the morning. I'm hopeful they'll be
able to
> resolve this soon.
Excellent! We are hopeful that the source of the high latencies
will
be identified and fixed.
Cheers,
Tom
> On Mon, Aug 30, 2021 at 5:24 PM Anne Myckow - NOAA Federal
> <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
<mailto:address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>> wrote:
>
> Pete,
>
> Random aside, can you please update your doco to say that
> Dataflow's email list is now address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>
> <mailto:address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>> ? I'm CC'ing it here. That other
> email address is going to get turned off within the next
year.
>
> Thanks,
> Anne
>
> On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 4:02 PM Pete Pokrandt
<address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
> <mailto:address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>>>
wrote:
>
> Dear Anne, Dustin and all,
>
> Recently we have noticed fairly high latencies on the
CONDUIT
> ldm data feed originating from the machine
> vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>
> <http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>>. The feed originating
> from vm-lnx-conduit1.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://vm-lnx-conduit1.ncep.noaa.gov>
> <http://vm-lnx-conduit1.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://vm-lnx-conduit1.ncep.noaa.gov>> does not have the high
> latencies. Unidata and other top level feeds are
seeing similar
> high latencies from vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>
> <http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov
<http://vm-lnx-conduit2.ncep.noaa.gov>>.
>
> Here are some graphs showing the latencies that I'm
seeing:
>
> From
>
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu>
>
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu <https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/iddstats_nc?CONDUIT+idd-agg.aos.wisc.edu>> -
> latencies for CONDUIT data arriving at our UW-Madison
AOS ingest
> machine
>
>
>
> From
>
https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex?conduit.unidata.ucar.edu
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex?conduit.unidata.ucar.edu>
>
<https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex?conduit.unidata.ucar.edu <https://rtstats.unidata.ucar.edu/cgi-bin/rtstats/siteindex?conduit.unidata.ucar.edu>> (latencies
> at Unidata)
>
>
>
> At least here at UW-Madison, these latencies are
causing us to
> lose some data during the large GFS/GEFS periods.
>
> Any idea what might be causing this?
>
> Pete
>
>
>
>
>
<http://www.weather.com/tv/shows/wx-geeks/video/the-incredible-shrinking-cold-pool <http://www.weather.com/tv/shows/wx-geeks/video/the-incredible-shrinking-cold-pool>>-----
> Pete Pokrandt - Systems Programmer
> UW-Madison Dept of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
> 608-262-3086 - address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden> <mailto:address@hidden
<mailto:address@hidden>>
>
>
>
> --
> Anne Myckow
> Dataflow Team Lead
> NWS/NCEP/NCO
>
>
>
> --
> Jesse Marks
> Dataflow Analyst
> NCEP Central Operations
> 678-896-9420
--
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
* Tom Yoksas UCAR Unidata
Program *
* (303) 497-8642 (last resort) P.O.
Box 3000 *
* address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>
Boulder, CO 80307 *
* Unidata WWW Service http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/
<http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/> *
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
--
Jesse Marks
Dataflow Analyst
NCEP Central Operations
678-896-9420
--
Jesse Marks
Dataflow Analyst
NCEP Central Operations
678-896-9420