Unlocking the Power of Numbers: Log Compression via Numeric Token Parsing

Parser-based log compressors have been widely explored in recent years because the explosive growth of log volumes makes the compression performance of general-purpose compressors unsatisfactory. These parser-based compressors preprocess logs by grouping the logs based on the parsing result and then...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE/ACM International Conference on Automated Software Engineering : [proceedings] pp. 919 - 930
Main Authors Yu, Siyu, Wu, Yifan, Li, Ying, He, Pinjia
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published ACM 27.10.2024
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ISSN2643-1572
DOI10.1145/3691620.3695474

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Summary:Parser-based log compressors have been widely explored in recent years because the explosive growth of log volumes makes the compression performance of general-purpose compressors unsatisfactory. These parser-based compressors preprocess logs by grouping the logs based on the parsing result and then feed the preprocessed files into a general-purpose compressor. However, parser-based compressors have their limitations. First, the goals of parsing and compression are misaligned, so the inherent characteristics of logs were not fully utilized. In addition, the performance of parser-based compressors depends on the sample logs and thus it is very unstable. Moreover, parser-based compressors often incur a long processing time. To address these limitations, we propose Denum, a simple, general log compressor with high compression ratio and speed. The core insight is that a majority of the tokens in logs are numeric tokens (i.e. pure numbers, tokens with only numbers and special characters, and numeric variables) and effective compression of them is critical for log compression. Specifically, Denum contains a Numeric Token Parsing module, which extracts all numeric tokens and applies tailored processing methods (e.g. store the differences of incremental numbers like timestamps), and a String Processing module, which processes the remaining log content without numbers. The processed files of the two modules are then fed as input to a general-purpose compressor and it outputs the final compression results. Denum has been evaluated on 16 log datasets and it achieves an 8.7% − 434.7% higher average compression ratio and 2.6×− 37.7× faster average compression speed (i.e. 26.2 MB/S) compared to the baselines. Moreover, integrating Denum's Numeric Token Parsing module into existing log compressors can provide a 11.8% improvement in their average compression ratio and achieve 37% faster average compression speed.CCS CONCEPTS* Computer systems organization → Availability; * Software and its engineering → Software maintenance tools.
ISSN:2643-1572
DOI:10.1145/3691620.3695474