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The following settings are available in the Connectivity tab:

SettingDescription
Bucket Configuration

Bucket Name

Enter the bucket that you want to access in Couchbase in this field.

Bucket UserEnter the user who has access rights to the bucket.

User Password

Enter the password for the user who has access to the bucket.

ParameterizedWhen enabled, here you may enter parameterized bucket configuration. 
Cluster Connectivity

Operation Timeout (ms)

Enter the number of milliseconds after which you want Couchbase "CRUD" operations, that is, create, read, update, and delete, to timeout. Setting a lower value than the default 1000 ms may have a positive impact on throughput performance. However, if the value is set too low, indicated by a large number of operation timeouts errors in the EC/ECSA logs, a lower throughput can be expected.

As mentioned, this value is used for timing out CRUD operations in Couchbase. This means that sends a request towards Couchbase and if an answer is not returned in time, the operation fails, and is no longer waiting for an answer.

Retry Interval Time (ms)

Enter the time interval, in milliseconds, that you want to wait before trying to read the cluster configuration again after a failed attempt. In other words, in case a request sent to Couchbase returns an unsuccessful answer, the number specified here is the time that waits before retrying the same request.

Max Number Of Retries

Enter the maximum number of retries. This is the number of retries does before treating the Couchbase operation as failed

Cluster Nodes

Cluster Nodes

In this section, add IP addresses/hostnames of at least one of the nodes in the cluster. This address information is used by the Couchbase profile to connect to the cluster at workflow start, and to retrieve the IP addresses of the other nodes in the cluster.

If the first node in the list cannot be accessed, the Couchbase profile will attempt to connect to the next one in order. This is repeated until a successful connection can be established. Hence it is not necessary to add all the nodes, but it is good practice to do so for a small cluster. For example, if there are just three nodes, you should add all of them.


Tip
titleHint!

The Operation Timeout, Retry Interval Time, and Max Number Of Retries settings together with the Advanced tab setting mz.cb.lock.timeout.in.secs, work jointly. To understand how, see the following explanation.

If you for example use the lookup function with transaction, a LOCK ERROR means that the lookup failed because there was already a transaction lock held on the object that the lookup was trying to get from Couchbase. That is, the lookup was not able to get a lock on the object.

What is most important here is how the communication between and Couchbase works.

In case you use the lookup function it works like this:

  1. The lookup function with transaction ID tries to get an object from Couchbase with a lock.
  2. sends a request to Couchbase to get an object and lock it.
  3. If the object exists and is not locked, Couchbase creates a lock and sends the answer back with a successful result code and the data. Alternatively, if the object is locked, Couchbase immediately sends an answer with the result LOCK_ERROR. Couchbase does not wait to answer until the lock is released.

This is why the Operation Timeout parameter does not play a crucial role here.

The Operation Timeout parameter is only used when Couchbase is stalling and does not send an answer for a long time.

Assuming that the object is locked and received answer with LOCK_ERROR, will wait for the amont of time specified in Retry Interval Time and then retry the request towards Couchbase.

This process is repeated until Max Number Of Retries is exhausted or the answer contains a successful result code and the object is retrieved from Couchbase.

So, if you for example set Retry Interval Time to 100 ms and Max Number of Retries to 10, you get 100 ms * 10 retries = 1000 ms. However, from a MZ perspective, the timeout of 1000 ms is just for a single lookup attempt and not for the whole lookup operation.

To clarify, if you get a failed lookupMany with LOCK_ERROR in the system log, it means that the lookup failed because it tried to get an object with a lock but failed after Max Number Of Retries. That is, some other process (or thread) was holding a lock on that particular object for longer than 1000 ms. This is possible if the Advanced tab setting mz.cb.lock.timeout.in.secs is larger than 1000 ms.

In other words, you need to decide what is more important - that the operation succeeds or that the operation is fast.

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The following settings are available in the Management tab:

SettingDescription

Admin User Name

If you want to create a new bucket that does not exist in your Couchbase cluster, enter the user name that you stated when installing Couchbase in this field.

Admin Password

If you want to create a new bucket that does not exist in your Couchbase cluster, enter the password that you stated when installing Couchbase in this field.

ParameterizedWhen enabled, here you may enter parameterized cluster management settings. 

Bucket Size (MB)

Enter the size of the bucket you want to create, in MB.

Number of Replicas

Enter the number of replicas you want to have.

Monitoring - Active

Frequency (ms)

Obsolete

Failure Count

Obsolete

If the bucket you want to access in Couchbase does not exist, the Couchbase profile can be used for creating the bucket in runtime for you, provided that the Admin User Name and Admin Password for your Couchbase cluster have been entered in the Management tab. If the bucket you want to access already exists in your cluster, these two fields do not have to be filled in.

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