I was very excited about the Windows 10 Anniversary Update (AU), mainly because of the new Bash on Ubuntu on Windows stuff! My experience has been generally positive, but with any major upgrade comes risk. I ran into a couple of problems. One of them was with some missing DLL files, not related to Couchbase Server. But the other one is related to Couchbase Server. Short story: we’re aware, and we’re working on it.
Longer Story
Couchbase Server uses a tool called TCMalloc, which is part of gperftools (originally called Google Performance Tools).
Based on my limited understanding of low-level programming, somewhere in TCMalloc, there is some code being called that’s not technically part of the public interface.
Windows 10 Anniversary Update comes along, and suddenly that piece of code doesn’t work like it’s supposed to anymore. This causes the memcached portion of Couchbase to crash over and over. Whoops. Couchbase engineers are hard at work on this issue, and I would expect this to be fixed soon.
If you’re interested in tracking this issue more, here are some places to go for more information:
Recommendations
In the meantime, if you are using Couchbase Server on Windows 10, here are some recommendations:
- Hold off on upgrading to AU
- Or use a VM or Windows Azure instance to develop
- Or use another machine on your local network (this is what I’m doing)
- Or it may be possible to back off of the AU update.
And keep an eye on MB-20519 to watch the progess.
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