I have two collections in a db page and pagearchive I am trying to clean up. I noticed that new documents were being created in the pagearchive instead of adding values to embedded documents as intended. So essentially what this script is doing is going through every document in page and then finding all copies of that document in pagearchive and moving data I want into a single document and deleted the extras.

The problem is there is only 200K documents in pagearchive and based on the count variable I am printing at the bottom, it's taking anywhere from 30min to 60+ min to iterate through 1000 records. This is extremely slow. The largest count in duplicate docs I have seen is 88. But for the most part when I query in pageArchive on uu, I see 1-2 duplicate documents.

mongodb is on a single instance 64 bit machine with 16GB of RAM. The uu key that is being iterating on the pageArchive collection is a string. I made sure there was an index on that field db.pagearchive.ensureIndex({uu:1}) I also did a mongod --repair for good measure.

My guess is the problem is with my sloppy python code (not very good at it) or perhaps something I am missing that is necessary for mongodb. Why is it going so slow or what can I do to speed it up dramatically?

I thought maybe because the uu field is a string it's causing a bottleneck, but that's the unique property in the document (or will be once I clean up this collection). On top of that, when I stop the process and restart it, it speeds up to about 1000 records a second. Until it starts finding duplicates again in the collection, then it goes dog slow again (deleting about 100 records every 10-20 minutes)

from pymongo import Connection
import datetime


def match_dates(old, new):
    if old['coll_at'].month == new['coll_at'].month and old['coll_at'].day == new['coll_at'].day and old['coll_at'].year == new['coll_at'].year:
        return False

    return new

connection = Connection('dashboard.dev')


db = connection['mydb']

pageArchive = db['pagearchive']
pages = db['page']

count = 0
for page in pages.find(timeout=False):

    archive_keep = None
    ids_to_delete = []
    for archive in pageArchive.find({"uu" : page['uu']}):

        if archive_keep == None:
            #this is the first record we found, so we will store data from duplicate records with this one; delete the rest
            archive_keep = archive
        else:
            for attr in archive_keep.keys():
                #make sure we are dealing with an embedded document field
                if isinstance(archive_keep[attr], basestring) or attr == 'updated_at':
                    continue
                else:
                    try:
                        if len(archive_keep[attr]) == 0:
                            continue
                    except TypeError:
                        continue
                    try:
                        #We've got our first embedded doc from a property to compare against
                        for obj in archive_keep[attr]:
                            if archive['_id'] not in ids_to_delete:
                                ids_to_delete.append(archive['_id'])
                            #loop through secondary archive doc (comparing against the archive keep)
                            for attr_old in archive.keys():
                                #make sure we are dealing with an embedded document field
                                if isinstance(archive[attr_old], basestring) or attr_old == 'updated_at':
                                    continue
                                else:
                                    try:
                                        #now we know we're dealing with a list, make sure it has data
                                        if len(archive[attr_old]) == 0:
                                            continue
                                    except TypeError:
                                        continue
                                    if attr == attr_old:
                                        #document prop. match; loop through embedded document array and make sure data wasn't collected on the same day
                                        for obj2 in archive[attr_old]:
                                            new_obj = match_dates(obj, obj2)
                                            if new_obj != False:
                                                archive_keep[attr].append(new_obj)
                    except TypeError, te:
                        'not iterable'
        pageArchive.update({
                            '_id':archive_keep['_id']}, 
                           {"$set": archive_keep}, 
                           upsert=False)
        for mongoId in ids_to_delete:
            pageArchive.remove({'_id':mongoId})
        count += 1
        if count % 100 == 0:
            print str(datetime.datetime.now()) + ' ### ' + str(count) 
link|improve this question

1  
the first thing that catches the eye ids_to_delete = [] and then if archive['_id'] not in ids_to_delete. Consider using set. Lookup in sets is O(1). – reclosedev Feb 11 at 15:33
1  
Another slowdown may came from for page in pages.find(). If your pages are big, and you are using only uu key, maybe limit results to uu key with fields argument? – reclosedev Feb 11 at 15:44
You mean by just doing from set import Set and redefining ids_to_delete = Set([]) ? – Hallik Feb 11 at 15:45
1  
No, I mean builtin set. ids_to_delete = set(); ids_to_delete.add(archive['_id']) – reclosedev Feb 11 at 15:49
1  
match_dates returns False. I'd make it return None and change if new_obj != False: to if new_obj is not None. It will check reference, and will not call object __ne__ or __nonzero__ – reclosedev Feb 11 at 15:58
show 17 more comments
feedback

1 Answer

up vote 1 down vote accepted

I'd make following changes to code:

  • in match_dates return None instead False and do if new_obj is not None: it will check reference, without calling object __ne__ or __nonzero__.

  • for page in pages.find(timeout=False): If only uu key is used and pages are big, fields=['uu'] parameter to find should speedup queries.

  • archive_keep == None to archive_keep is None

  • archive_keep[attr] is called 4 times. It will be little faster to save keep_obj = archive_keep[attr] and then use keep_obj.

  • change ids_to_delete = [] to ids_to_delete = set(). Then if archive['_id'] not in ids_to_delete: will be O(1)

link|improve this answer
It is much much faster now. Between your suggestions and deleting the bad records, it's processing & 10K records a minute now. It would go even faster if I had it on more than one machine sharded right? – Hallik Feb 11 at 18:50
1  
@Hallik, not sure about that. I think Python CPU usage in this script is big. – reclosedev Feb 11 at 19:04
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.