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20 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
20 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
# Profiling Meilisearch
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Search engine technologies are complex pieces of software that require thorough profiling tools. We chose to use [Puffin](https://github.com/EmbarkStudios/puffin), which the Rust gaming industry uses extensively. You can export and import the profiling reports using the top bar's _File_ menu options.
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![An example profiling with Puffin viewer](assets/profiling-example.png)
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## Profiling the Indexing Process
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When you enable the `profile-with-puffin` feature of Meilisearch, a Puffin HTTP server will run on Meilisearch and listen on the default _0.0.0.0:8585_ address. This server will record a "frame" whenever it executes the `IndexScheduler::tick` method.
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Once your Meilisearch is running and awaits new indexation operations, you must [install and run the `puffin_viewer` tool](https://github.com/EmbarkStudios/puffin/tree/main/puffin_viewer) to see the profiling results. I advise you to run the viewer with the `RUST_LOG=puffin_http::client=debug` environment variable to see the client trying to connect to your server.
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Another piece of advice on the Puffin viewer UI interface is to consider the _Merge children with same ID_ option. It can hide the exact actual timings at which events were sent. Please turn it off when you see strange gaps on the Flamegraph. It can help.
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## Profiling the Search Process
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We still need to take the time to profile the search side of the engine with Puffin. It would require time to profile the filtering phase, query parsing, creation, and execution. We could even profile the Actix HTTP server.
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The only issue we see is the framing system. Puffin requires a global frame-based profiling phase, which collides with Meilisearch's ability to accept and answer multiple requests on different threads simultaneously.
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