Troubleshoot SQL Statements

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If a SQL statement returns an unexpected result or takes longer than expected to process, this page will help you troubleshoot the issue.

Tip:

For a developer-centric overview of optimizing SQL statement performance, see Optimize Statement Performance Overview.

Query issues

Hanging or stuck queries

When you experience a hanging or stuck query and the cluster is healthy (i.e., no unavailable ranges, network partitions, etc), the cause could be a long-running transaction holding write intents or locking reads on the same rows as your query.

Such long-running queries can hold locks for (practically) unlimited durations. If your query tries to access those rows, it must wait for that transaction to complete (by committing or rolling back) before it can make progress. Until the transaction is committed or rolled back, the chances of concurrent transactions internally retrying and throwing a retry error increase.

Refer to the performance tuning recipe for identifying and unblocking a waiting transaction.

If you experience this issue on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, your cluster may be throttled or disabled because you've reached your monthly resource limits.

Identify slow queries

You can identify high-latency SQL statements on the Insights or Statements pages in the DB Console. If these graphs reveal latency spikes, CPU usage spikes, or slow requests, these might indicate slow queries in your cluster.

You can also enable the slow query log to log all queries whose latency exceeds a configured threshold, as well as queries that perform a full table or index scan.

You can collect richer diagnostics of a high-latency statement by creating a diagnostics bundle when a statement fingerprint exceeds a certain latency.

Note:

If you find queries that are consuming too much memory, cancel the queries to free up memory usage. For information on optimizing query performance, see SQL Performance Best Practices.

Visualize statement traces in Jaeger

You can look more closely at the behavior of a statement by visualizing a statement trace in Jaeger. A statement trace contains messages and timing information from all nodes involved in the execution.

Run Jaeger

  1. Start Jaeger:

    icon/buttons/copy
    docker run -d --name jaeger -p 6831:6831/udp -p 16686:16686 jaegertracing/all-in-one:latest
    

    This runs the latest version of Jaeger, and forwards two ports to the container. 6831 is the trace ingestion port, 16686 is the UI port. By default, Jaeger will store all received traces in memory.

Import a trace from a diagnostics bundle into Jaeger

  1. Activate statement diagnostics on the DB Console Statements Page or run EXPLAIN ANALYZE (DEBUG) to obtain a diagnostics bundle for the statement.

  2. Go to http://localhost:16686.

  3. Click JSON File in the Jaeger UI and upload trace-jaeger.json from the diagnostics bundle. The trace will appear in the list on the right.

    Jaeger Trace Upload JSON

  4. Click the trace to view its details. It is visualized as a collection of spans with timestamps. These may include operations executed by different nodes.

    Jaeger Trace Spans

    The full timeline displays the execution time and execution phases for the statement.

  5. Click a span to view details for that span and log messages.

    Jaeger Trace Log Messages

  6. You can troubleshoot transaction contention, for example, by gathering diagnostics on statements with high latency and looking through the log messages in trace-jaeger.json for jumps in latency.

    In the following example, the trace shows that there is significant latency between a push attempt on a transaction that is holding a lock (56.85ms) and that transaction being committed (131.37ms).

    Jaeger Trace Log Messages

Visualize traces sent directly from CockroachDB

This example shows how to configure CockroachDB to route all traces to Jaeger. For details on sending traces from CockroachDB to Jaeger and other trace collectors, see Configure CockroachDB to send traces to a third-party trace collector.

Warning:

Enabling full tracing is expensive both in terms of CPU usage and memory footprint, and is not suitable for high throughput production environments.

  1. Run CockroachDB and set the Jaeger agent configuration:

    SET CLUSTER SETTING trace.jaeger.agent='localhost:6831'
    
  2. Go to http://localhost:16686.

  3. In the Service field, select CockroachDB.

    Jaeger Trace Log Messages

  4. Click Find Traces.

Instead of searching through log messages in an unstructured fashion, the logs are now graphed in a tree format based on how the contexts were passed around. This also traverses machine boundaries so you don't have to look at different flat .log files to correlate events.

Jaeger's memory storage works well for small use cases, but can result in out of memory errors when collecting many traces over a long period of time. Jaeger also supports disk-backed local storage using Badger. To use this, start Jaeger by running the following Docker command:

docker run -d --name jaeger \
-e SPAN_STORAGE_TYPE=badger -e BADGER_EPHEMERAL=false \
-e BADGER_DIRECTORY_VALUE=/badger/data -e BADGER_DIRECTORY_KEY=/badger/key \
-v /mnt/data1/jaeger:/badger \
-p 6831:6831/udp -p 16686:16686 jaegertracing/all-in-one:latest

Queries are always slow

If you have consistently slow queries in your cluster, use the Statement Fingerprint page to drill down to an individual statement and collect diagnostics for the statement. A diagnostics bundle contains a record of transaction events across nodes for the SQL statement.

You can also use an EXPLAIN ANALYZE statement, which executes a SQL query and returns a physical query plan with execution statistics. You can use query plans to troubleshoot slow queries by indicating where time is being spent, how long a processor (i.e., a component that takes streams of input rows and processes them according to a specification) is not doing work, etc.

Cockroach Labs recommends sending either the diagnostics bundle (preferred) or the EXPLAIN ANALYZE output to our support team for analysis.

Queries are sometimes slow

If the query performance is irregular:

  1. Run SHOW TRACE FOR SESSION for the query twice: once when the query is performing as expected and once when the query is slow.

  2. Contact support to help analyze the outputs of the SHOW TRACE command.

SELECT statements are slow

The common reasons for a sub-optimal SELECT performance are inefficient scans, full scans, and incorrect use of indexes. To improve the performance of SELECT statements, refer to the following documents:

SELECT statements with GROUP BY columns are slow

Suppose you have a slow selection query that

  • Has a GROUP BY clause.
  • Uses an index that has a STORING clause.
  • Where some or all of the columns in the query's GROUP BY clause are part of the index's STORING clause and are not index key columns.

For example:

SELECT
  cnt, organization, concat(os, '-', version) AS bucket
FROM
  (
    SELECT
      count(1)::FLOAT8 AS cnt, organization, os, version
    FROM
      nodes
    WHERE
      lastseen > ($1)::TIMESTAMPTZ AND lastseen <= ($2)::TIMESTAMPTZ
    GROUP BY
      organization, os, version
  )

Arguments:
  $1: '2021-07-27 13:22:09.000058Z'
  $2: '2021-10-25 13:22:09.000058Z'

The columns in the GROUP BY clause are organization, os, and version.

The query plan shows that it is using index nodes_lastseen_organization_storing:


                     distribution         full
                     vectorized           true
render                                                                                                      (cnt float, organization varchar, bucket string)
 │                   estimated row count  3760
 │                   render 0             (concat((os)[string], ('-')[string], (version)[string]))[string]
 │                   render 1             ((count_rows)[int]::FLOAT8)[float]
 │                   render 2             (organization)[varchar]
 └── group                                                                                                  (organization varchar, os string, version string, count_rows int)
      │              estimated row count  3760
      │              aggregate 0          count_rows()
      │              group by             organization, os, version
      └── project                                                                                           (organization varchar, os string, version string)
           └── scan                                                                                         (organization varchar, lastseen timestamptz, os string, version string)
                     estimated row count  2330245
                     table                nodes@nodes_lastseen_organization_storing
                     spans                /2021-07-27T13:22:09.000059Z-/2021-10-25T13:22:09.000058001Z

Here is the table schema for the example query:

CREATE TABLE public.nodes (
    id VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL,
    ampuuid UUID NULL,
    organization VARCHAR(60) NULL,
    created TIMESTAMPTZ NULL DEFAULT now():::TIMESTAMPTZ,
    disabled BOOL NOT NULL DEFAULT false,
    lastseen TIMESTAMPTZ NULL DEFAULT now():::TIMESTAMPTZ,
    os STRING NOT NULL,
    arch STRING NOT NULL,
    autotags JSONB NULL,
    version STRING NOT NULL DEFAULT '':::STRING,
    clone BOOL NOT NULL DEFAULT false,
    cloneof VARCHAR(60) NOT NULL DEFAULT '':::STRING,
    endpoint_type STRING NOT NULL DEFAULT 'amp':::STRING,
    ip INET NULL,
    osqueryversion STRING NOT NULL DEFAULT '':::STRING,
    CONSTRAINT "primary" PRIMARY KEY (id ASC),
    INDEX nodes_organization_ampuuid (organization ASC, ampuuid ASC),
    INDEX nodes_created_asc_organization (created ASC, organization ASC),
    INDEX nodes_created_desc_organization (created DESC, organization ASC),
    INDEX nodes_organization_os_version (organization ASC, os ASC, version ASC),
    INDEX nodes_organization_version (organization ASC, version ASC),
    INDEX nodes_lastseen_organization_storing (lastseen ASC, organization ASC) STORING (os, version),
    FAMILY "primary" (id, ampuuid, organization, created, disabled, lastseen, os, arch, autotags, version, clone, cloneof, endpoint_type, ip, osqueryversion)
);

The nodes_lastseen_organization_storing index has the GROUP BY column organization as an index key column. However, the STORING clause includes the GROUP BY columns os and version.

Solution

Create a new secondary index that has all of the GROUP BY columns as key columns in the index.

CREATE INDEX "nodes_lastseen_organization_os_version" (lastseen, organization, os, version)

This index allows CockroachDB to perform a streaming GROUP BY rather than a hash GROUP BY. After you make this change, you should notice an improvement in the latency of the example query.

INSERT and UPDATE statements are slow

Use the Statements page to identify the slow SQL statements.

Refer to the following pages to improve INSERT and UPDATE performance:

Cancel running queries

See Cancel long-running queries.

Low throughput

Throughput is affected by the disk I/O, CPU usage, and network latency. Use the DB Console to check the following metrics:

Query runs out of memory

If your query returns the error code SQLSTATE: 53200 with the message ERROR: root: memory budget exceeded, follow the guidelines in memory budget exceeded.

Transaction retry errors

Messages with the error code 40001 and the string restart transaction are known as transaction retry errors. These indicate that a transaction failed due to contention with another concurrent or recent transaction attempting to write to the same data. The transaction needs to be retried by the client.

In most cases, the correct actions to take when encountering transaction retry errors are:

  1. Under SERIALIZABLE isolation, update your application to support client-side retry handling when transaction retry errors are encountered. Follow the guidance for the specific error type.

  2. Take steps to minimize transaction retry errors in the first place. This means reducing transaction contention overall, and increasing the likelihood that CockroachDB can automatically retry a failed transaction.

Unsupported SQL features

CockroachDB has support for most SQL features.

Additionally, CockroachDB supports the PostgreSQL wire protocol and the majority of its syntax. This means that existing applications can often be migrated to CockroachDB without changing application code.

However, you may encounter features of SQL or the PostgreSQL dialect that are not supported by CockroachDB. For example, the following PostgreSQL features are not supported:

For more information about the differences between CockroachDB and PostgreSQL feature support, see PostgreSQL Compatibility.

For more information about the SQL standard features supported by CockroachDB, see SQL Feature Support.

Node issues

Single hot node

A hot node is one that has much higher resource usage than other nodes. To determine if you have a hot node in your cluster, access the DB Console and check the following:

Solution

  • If you have a small table that fits into one range, then only one of the nodes will be used. This is expected behavior. However, you can split your range to distribute the table across multiple nodes.

  • If the SQL Connections graph shows that one node has a higher number of SQL connections and other nodes have zero connections, check if your app is set to talk to only one node.

  • Check load balancer settings.

  • Check for transaction contention.

  • If you have a monotonically increasing index column or primary Key, then your index or primary key should be redesigned. For more information, see Unique ID best practices.

  • If a range has significantly higher QPS on a node, there may be a hot spot on the range that needs to be reduced. For more information, see Hot spots.

  • If you have a monotonically increasing index column or primary key, then your index or primary key should be redesigned. See Unique ID best practices for more information.

Per-node queries per second (QPS) is high

If a cluster is not idle, it is useful to monitor the per-node queries per second. CockroachDB will automatically distribute load throughout the cluster. If one or more nodes is not performing any queries there is likely something to investigate. See exec_success and exec_errors which track operations at the KV layer and sql_{select,insert,update,delete}_count which track operations at the SQL layer.

Increasing number of nodes does not improve performance

See Why would increasing the number of nodes not result in more operations per second?

bad connection and closed responses

A response of bad connection or closed normally indicates that the node to which you are connected has terminated. You can check this by connecting to another node in the cluster and running cockroach node status.

Once you find the node, you can check its logs (stored in cockroach-data/logs by default).

Because this kind of behavior is unexpected, you should file an issue.

Log queries executed by a specific node

If you are testing CockroachDB locally and want to log queries executed by a specific node, you can either pass a CLI flag at node startup or execute a SQL function on a running node.

Using the CLI to start a new node, use the --vmodule flag with the cockroach start command. For example, to start a single node locally and log all client-generated SQL queries it executes, run:

$ cockroach start --insecure --listen-addr=localhost --vmodule=exec_log=2 --join=<join addresses>
Tip:

To log CockroachDB-generated SQL queries as well, use --vmodule=exec_log=3.

From the SQL prompt on a running node, execute the crdb_internal.set_vmodule() function:

icon/buttons/copy
> SELECT crdb_internal.set_vmodule('exec_log=2');

This will result in the following output:

  crdb_internal.set_vmodule
+---------------------------+
                          0
(1 row)

Once the logging is enabled, all client-generated SQL queries executed by the node will be written to the DEV logging channel, which outputs by default to the primary cockroach log file in /cockroach-data/logs. Use the symlink cockroach.log to open the most recent log.

I180402 19:12:28.112957 394661 sql/exec_log.go:173  [n1,client=127.0.0.1:50155,user=root] exec "psql" {} "SELECT version()" {} 0.795 1 ""

Configure CockroachDB to send traces to a third-party trace collector

You can configure CockroachDB to send traces to a third-party collector. CockroachDB supports Jaeger, Zipkin, and any trace collector that can ingest traces over the standard OTLP protocol. Enabling tracing also activates all the log messages, at all verbosity levels, as traces include the log messages printed in the respective trace context.

Warning:

Enabling full tracing is expensive both in terms of CPU usage and memory footprint, and is not suitable for high throughput production environments.

You can configure the CockroachDB tracer to route to the OpenTelemetry tracer, with OpenTelemetry being supported by all observability tools. In particular, you can configure CockroachDB to output traces to:

  • A collector that uses the OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP).
  • The OpenTelemetry (OTEL) collector, which can in turn route them to other tools. The OTEL collector is a canonical collector, using the OTLP protocol, that can buffer traces and perform some processing on them before exporting them to Jaeger, Zipkin, and other OTLP tools.
  • Jaeger or Zipkin using their native protocols. This is implemented by using the Jaeger and Zipkin dedicated "exporters" from the OTEL SDK.

The following cluster settings are supported:

SettingTypeDefaultDescription
trace.opentelemetry.collectorstringThe address of an OpenTelemetry trace collector to receive traces using the OTEL gRPC protocol, as <host>:<port>. If no port is specified, 4317 is used.
trace.jaeger.agentstringThe address of a Jaeger agent to receive traces using the Jaeger UDP Thrift protocol, as <host>:<port>. If no port is specified, 6381 is used.
trace.zipkin.collectorstringThe address of a Zipkin instance to receive traces, as <host>:<port>. If no port is specified, 9411 is used.

Troubleshoot SQL client application problems

High client CPU load, connection pool exhaustion, or increased connection latency when SCRAM Password-based Authentication is enabled

Overview

When SASL/SCRAM-SHA-256 Secure Password-based Authentication (SCRAM Authentication) is enabled on a cluster, some additional CPU load is incurred on client applications, which are responsible for handling SCRAM hashing. It's important to plan for this additional CPU load to avoid performance degradation, CPU starvation, and connection pool exhaustion on the client. For example, the following set of circumstances can exhaust the client application's resources:

  1. SCRAM Authentication is enabled on the cluster (the server.user_login.password_encryption cluster setting is set to scram-sha-256).
  2. The client driver's connection pool has no defined maximum number of connections, or is configured to close idle connections eagerly.
  3. The client application issues transactions concurrently.

In this situation, each new connection uses more CPU on the client application server than connecting to a cluster without SCRAM Authentication enabled. Because of this additional CPU load, each concurrent transaction is slower, and a larger quantity of concurrent transactions can accumulate, in conjunction with a larger number of concurrent connections. In this situation, it can be difficult for the client application server to recover.

Some applications may also see increased connection latency. This can happen because SCRAM incurs additional round trips during authentication which can add latency to the initial connection.

For more information about how SCRAM works, see SASL/SCRAM-SHA-256 Secure Password-based Authentication.

Mitigation steps while keeping SCRAM enabled

To mitigate against this situation while keeping SCRAM authentication enabled, Cockroach Labs recommends that you:

  • Test and adjust your workloads in batches when migrating to SCRAM authentication.
  • Start by enabling SCRAM authentication in a testing environment, and test the performance of your client application against the types of workloads you expect it to handle in production before rolling the changes out to production.
  • Limit the maximum number of connections in the client driver's connection pool.
  • Limit the maximum number of concurrent transactions the client application can issue.

If the above steps don't work, you can try lowering the default hashing cost and reapplying the password as described below.

Lower default hashing cost and reapply the password

To decrease the CPU usage of SCRAM password hashing while keeping SCRAM enabled:

  1. Set the server.user_login.password_hashes.default_cost.scram_sha_256 cluster setting to 4096:

    icon/buttons/copy
    SET CLUSTER SETTING server.user_login.password_hashes.default_cost.scram_sha_256 = 4096;
    
  2. Make sure the server.user_login.rehash_scram_stored_passwords_on_cost_change.enabled cluster setting is set to true (the default).

Tip:

When lowering the default hashing cost, we recommend that you use strong, complex passwords for SQL users.

If you are still seeing higher connection latencies than before, you can downgrade from SCRAM authentication.

Downgrade from SCRAM authentication

As an alternative to the mitigation steps listed above, you can downgrade from SCRAM authentication to bcrypt as follows:

  1. Set the server.user_login.password_encryption cluster setting to crdb-bcrypt:

    icon/buttons/copy
    SET CLUSTER SETTING server.user_login.password_encryption = 'crdb-bcrypt';
    
  2. Ensure the server.user_login.downgrade_scram_stored_passwords_to_bcrypt.enabled cluster setting is set to true:

    icon/buttons/copy
    SET CLUSTER SETTING server.user_login.downgrade_scram_stored_passwords_to_bcrypt.enabled = true;
    

Something else?

Try searching the rest of our docs for answers:

Or try using our other support resources, including:


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