We are actually studying how NiFi's Content Repository Archiving works.
We got information from the following webpage : https://community.hortonworks.com/articles/82308/understanding-how-nifis-content-repository-archivi.html
Unfortunately, we still have questions and I need some help getting their answers :
- Are there still "content claims" if archiving is disabled?
- If archiving is disabled, does this mean that the purge mechanism of the content of the flowfiles will not occur?
- Does the archiving mechanism have an impact on disks (I/O) and therefore on performance? So, if we unable it, will we have a significant gain?
Until now, the archiving mechanism is enabled.
Then I need to adapt the parameters for my usage : We are using NIFI for a single use case, with an estimated target throughput of 50000 msg/s.
We have 3 nodes => each node process nearly 17000 msg/s per Node
Each message is sized about 810 bytes. With the help of the "record" type processors, we build flowfiles composed of 1000 messages, very early in the workflow that we have.
So Each flowfile is size 810 KB.
17000 msg/s per Node = 17 flowfiles/s per Node = nearly 14 Mo/s per Node.
We know that we need to change the following parameters :
nifi.content.claim.max.appendable.size=10 MB (default value) nifi.content.claim.max.flow.files=100 (default value)
But my questions are : What's the best values for our use case? Is there a way to determine the right values? to calculate them?
I have the feeling that if I put low values, there will be more I/O. If I put higher values, the data resides in queue inside NIFI, waiting for the content claim to fill up. So the memory usage (maybe the swap) will increase...