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HdrHistogram: A High Dynamic Range (HDR) Histogram
[excerpt from the Histogram JavaDoc]

HdrHistogram supports the recording and analyzing sampled data value
counts across a configurable integer value range with configurable value
precision within the range. Value precision is expressed as the number of
significant digits in the value recording, and provides control over value
quantization behavior across the value range and the subsequent value
resolution at any given level.

For example, a Histogram could be configured to track the counts of
observed  integer values between 0 and 3,600,000,000 while maintaining a
value precision of 3 significant digits across that range. Value
quantization within the range will thus be no larger than 1/1,000th
(or 0.1%) of any value. This example Histogram could be used to track and
analyze the counts of observed response times ranging between 1 microsecond
and 1 hour in magnitude, while maintaining a value resolution of 1
microsecond up to 1 millisecond, a resolution of 1 millisecond (or better)
up to one second, and a resolution of 1 second (or better) up to 1,000
seconds. At it's maximum tracked value (1 hour), it would still maintain a
resolution of 3.6 seconds (or better).

The HdrHistogram package includes the Histogram implementation, which tracks
value counts in long fields, and is expected to be the commonly used
Histogram form. IntHistogram and ShortHistogram, which track value counts in
int and short fields respectively, are provided for use cases where smaller
count ranges are practical and smaller overall storage is beneficial.

HDR Histogram is designed for recoding histograms of value measurements in
latency and performance sensitive applications. Measurements show value
recording times as low as 3-6 nanoseconds on modern (circa 2012) Intel CPUs.
AbstractHistogram maintains a fixed cost in both space and time. A
Histogram's memory footprint is constant, with no allocation operations
involved in recording data values or in iterating through them. The memory
footprint is fixed regardless of the number of data value samples recorded,
and depends solely on the dynamic range and precision chosen. The amount of
work involved in recording a sample is constant, and directly computes
storage index locations such that no iteration or searching is ever involved
in recording data values.

A combination of high dynamic range and precision is useful for collection
and accurate post-recording analysis of sampled value data distribution in
various forms. Whether it's calculating or plotting arbitrary percentiles,
iterating through and summarizing values in various ways, or deriving mean
and standard deviation values, the fact that the recorded data information
is kept in high resolution allows for accurate post-recording analysis with
low [and ultimately configurable] loss in accuracy when compared to
performing the same analysis directly on the potentially infinite series of
sourced data values samples.

Internally, AbstractHistogram data is maintained using a concept somewhat
similar to that of floating point number representation: Using a an
exponent a (non-normalized) mantissa to support a wide dynamic range at a
high but varying (by exponent value) resolution. AbstractHistogram uses
exponentially increasing bucket value ranges (the parallel of the exponent
portion of a floating point number) with each bucket containing a fixed
number (per bucket) set of linear sub-buckets (the parallel of a
non-normalized mantissa portion of a floating point number). Both dynamic
range and resolution are configurable, with highestTrackableValue
controlling dynamic range, and numberOfSignificantValueDigits controlling
resolution.

An common use example of an HDR Histogram would be to record response times
in units of microseconds across a dynamic range stretching from 1 usec to
over an hour, with a good enough resolution to support later performing
post-recording analysis on the collected data. Analysis can including
computing, examining, and reporting of distribution by percentiles, linear
or logarithmic value buckets, mean and standard deviation, or by any other
means that can can be easily added by using the various iteration techniques
supported by the Histogram.
In order to facilitate the accuracy needed for various post-recording
analysis techniques, this example can maintain where a resolution of ~1 usec
or better for times ranging to ~2 msec in magnitude, while at the same time
maintaining a resolution of ~1 msec or better for times ranging to ~2 sec,
and a resolution of ~1 second or better for values up to 2,000 seconds.
This sort of example resolution can be thought of as "always accurate to 3
decimal points." Such an example Histogram would simply be created with a
highestTrackableValue of 3,600,000,000, and a numberOfSignificantValueDigits
of 3, and would occupy a fixed, unchanging memory footprint of around 185KB
(see "Footprint estimation" below).

Synchronization and concurrent access

In the interest of keeping value recording cost to a minimum,
AbstractHistogram and it's direct implementations are NOT internally
synchronized, and do NOT use atomic variables. Callers wishing to make
potentially concurrent, multi-threaded updates or queries against Histogram
objects should take care to externally synchronize and/or order their access.

Iteration

Histograms supports multiple convenient forms of iterating through the
histogram data set, including linear, logarithmic, and percentile iteration
mechanisms, as well as means for iterating through each recorded value or
each possible value level. The iteration mechanisms are accessible through
the HistogramData available through getHistogramData().
Iteration mechanisms all provide HistogramIterationValue data points along
the histogram's iterated data set, and are available for the default
(corrected) histogram data set via the following HistogramData methods:

  percentiles: An Iterable<HistogramIterationValue> through the histogram
                using a PercentileIterator
  linearBucketValues: An Iterable<HistogramIterationValue> through the
                histogram using a LinearIterator
  logarithmicBucketValues: An Iterable<HistogramIterationValue> through
                the histogram using a LogarithmicIterator
  recordedValues: An Iterable<HistogramIterationValue> through the
                histogram using a RecordedValuesIterator
  allValues: An Iterable<HistogramIterationValue> through the histogram
                using a AllValuesIterator

Iteration is typically done with a for-each loop statement. E.g.:

 for (HistogramIterationValue v :
      histogram.getHistogramData().percentiles(ticksPerHalfDistance)) {
     ...
 }

 or

 for (HistogramIterationValue v :
      histogram.getRawHistogramData().linearBucketValues(unitsPerBucket)) {
     ...
 }

The iterators associated with each iteration method are resettable, such
that a caller that would like to avoid allocating a new iterator object for
each iteration loop can re-use an iterator to repeatedly iterate through
the histogram. This iterator re-use usually takes the form of a traditional
for loop using the Iterator's hasNext() and next() methods:

 to avoid allocating a new iterator object for each iteration loop:

 PercentileIterator iter =
    histogram.getHistogramData().percentiles().iterator(ticksPerHalfDistance<);
 ...
 iter.reset(percentileTicksPerHalfDistance);
 for (iter.hasNext() {
     HistogramIterationValue v = iter.next();
     ...
 }


Equivalent Values and value ranges

Due to the finite (and configurable) resolution of the histogram, multiple
adjacent integer data values can be "equivalent". Two values are considered
"equivalent" if samples recorded for both are always counted in a common
total count due to the histogram's resolution level. Histogram provides
methods for determining the lowest and highest equivalent values for any
given value, as we as determining whether two values are equivalent, and
for finding the next non-equivalent value for a given value (useful when
looping through values, in order to avoid double-counting count).

Corrected vs. Raw recordValue()calls

In order to support a common use case needed when histogram values are used
to track response time distribution, Histogram provides for the recording
of corrected histogram value by supporting an optional
expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples parameter to the recordValue() method.
This form is useful in [common load generator] scenarios where response
times may exceed the expected interval between issuing requests, leading to
"dropped" response time measurements that would typically correlate with
"bad" results.

When a value recorded in the histogram exceeds the
expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples parameter (when provided), recorded
histogram data will reflect an appropriate number of additional values,
linearly decreasing in steps of expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples, down
to the last value that would still be higher than
expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples.

To illustrate why this corrective behavior is critically needed in order
to accurately represent value distribution when large value measurements
may lead to missed samples, imagine a system for which response times
samples are taken once every 10 msec to characterize response time
distribution. The hypothetical system behaves "perfectly" for 100 seconds
(10,000 recorded samples), with each sample showing a 1msec response time
value. At each sample for 100 seconds (10,000 logged samples at 1 msec
each). The hypothetical system then encounters a 100 sec pause during which
only a single sample is recorded (with a 100 second value).
The raw data histogram collected for such a hypothetical system (over the
200 second scenario above) would show ~99.99% of results at 1 msec or below,
which is obviously "not right". The same histogram, corrected with the
knowledge of an expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples of 10msec will correctly
represent the response time distribution. Only ~50% of results will be at
1 msec or below, with the remaining 50% coming from the auto-generated value
records covering the missing increments spread between 10msec and 100 sec.

Data sets recorded with and without an expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples
parameter will differ only if at least one value recorded with the recordValue
method was greater than it's associated expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples
parameter.
Data sets recorded with an expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples parameter will
be identical to ones recorded without it if all values recorded via the
recordValue calls were smaller than their associated (and optional)
expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples parameters.

When used for response time characterization, the recording with the optional
expectedIntervalBetweenValueSamples parameter will tend to produce data sets
that would much more accurately reflect the response time distribution that a
random, uncoordinated request would have experienced.

Footprint estimation

Due to it's dynamic range representation, Histogram is relatively efficient
in memory space requirements given the accuracy and dynamic range it covers.
Still, it is useful to be able to estimate the memory footprint involved
for a given highestTrackableValue and numberOfSignificantValueDigits
combination. Beyond a relatively small fixed-size footprint used for internal
fields and stats (which can be estimated as "fixed at well less than 1KB"),
the bulk of a Histogram's storage is taken up by it's data value recording
counts array. The total footprint can be conservatively estimated by:

     largestValueWithSingleUnitResolution =
            2 * (10 ^ numberOfSignificantValueDigits);
     subBucketSize =
            roundedUpToNearestPowerOf2(largestValueWithSingleUnitResolution);

     expectedHistogramFootprintInBytes = 512 +
          ({primitive type size} / 2) *
          (log2RoundedUp((highestTrackableValue) / subBucketSize) + 2) *
          subBucketSize


A conservative (high) estimate of a Histogram's footprint in bytes is
available via the getEstimatedFootprintInBytes() method.

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A High Dynamic Range (HDR) Histogram

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