Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
228 lines (150 loc) · 7.21 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

228 lines (150 loc) · 7.21 KB

Presentation

Beefy Dashboard is an opinionated multi-chain blockchain data importer that tracks user investment value over time.

Functional features:

  • imports all beefy products data
  • auto-discover new products are they are added
  • exposes historical data through an api
  • optimized for low manual maintenance and low hardware requirements
  • aim is to deliver raw historical data, not a full analysis

Technical features:

  • low level, reusable building blocks
  • fine grained request batching
  • fine grained RPC limits handling (to configure batching)
  • support for multiple RPC endpoint per chain
  • remembers already imported ranges with no data
  • retries failed requests automatically
  • ability to add new projects as needed or products

Installation

Requirements

To install and use this project, you will need to have the following software installed on your computer:

Steps

Switch to the proper node version:

nvm use $(cat .nvmrc)

Then, run the following command to install the necessary dependencies:

npm install

Then, create an .env file in the root directory:

cp .env.sample .env

Then, fill in the .env file with the appropriate values. Plz find the configuration details in the src/utils/config.ts file.

Map local volumes to docker volumes

mkdir -p ${PWD}/data/db/timescaledb
docker volume create --driver local --opt type=none --opt device=${PWD}/data/db/timescaledb --opt o=bind beefy_timescaledb_data_directory
mkdir -p ${PWD}/data/db/grafana
docker volume create --driver local --opt type=none --opt device=${PWD}/data/db/grafana --opt o=bind beefy_grafana_data_directory
mkdir -p ${PWD}/data/db/grafana_plugins
docker volume create --driver local --opt type=none --opt device=${PWD}/data/db/grafana_plugins --opt o=bind beefy_grafana_plugins_directory

Depending on your docker setup, you might need to set the right permissions on those folders:

chmod <permission> ${PWD}/data/db/timescaledb
chmod <permission> ${PWD}/data/db/grafana
chmod <permission> ${PWD}/data/db/grafana_plugins

Start the docker containers (db, redis, etc):

npm run infra:start

Finally, apply db migrations:

npm run db:migrate

Database migrations refer to the process of managing and transforming the structure and/or data of a database. This is often done as part of the development process for a software application, where changes to the underlying database are required to accommodate new features or to fix bugs. Migrations typically involve writing code to modify the structure of the database, such as by adding new tables or columns, and to move or transform data from one format to another. The goal of database migrations is to ensure that the database is kept in a consistent and correct state, and that changes to the database are managed in a way that is safe and reversible.

Usage

Indexer

Finally, run an import command:

LOG_LEVEL=trace node -r ts-node/register ./src/script/run.ts beefy:run --task recent --chain ethereum

More command and option doc available:

node -r ts-node/register ./src/script/run.ts --help
node -r ts-node/register ./src/script/run.ts beefy:run --help

API

Start the API:

LOG_LEVEL=trace npx ts-node ./src/api/server.ts

Then, you can access the API at http://localhost:3001.

Since the API is heavily using redis as a cache, you might want to clear redis cache before running the api again.

npm run redis:clear; LOG_LEVEL=trace npx ts-node ./src/api/server.ts

Common actions

Run unit tests

Unit tests use Jest. To run the unit tests, run the following command:

npm run test

npm run test -t 'multiplex' --watch

Add a new RPC

Making a new RPC available for the importer means we add it to the rpc-limitations.json file:

LOG_LEVEL=debug node -r ts-node/register -r dotenv/config ./src/script/find-out-rpc-limitations.ts -c optimism -r https://optimism-mainnet.infura.io/v3/xxxxxx -w true -d true
LOG_LEVEL=debug node -r ts-node/register -r dotenv/config ./src/script/find-out-rpc-limitations.ts --help

You might also want to update the src/utils/rpc/remove-secrets-from-rpc-url.ts and src/utils/rpc/remove-secrets-from-rpc-url.test.ts to avoid committing any secret.

How to add a new chain?

  • Update the chain enum in the src/types/chain.ts file
  • Run
    • npx ncu --upgrade blockchain-addressbook
    • npx ncu --upgrade viem
    • and npm install to get the wtoken address and latest viem chain config
  • Run npm run build and solve any remainning typescript error
  • Add a new RPC using the above guide
  • Run npm run db:migrate to apply db migrations
  • detect ms per block LOG_LEVEL=trace npx ts-node ./src/script/show-estimated-ms-per-block.ts -c <chain>
  • check contract creation block works LOG_LEVEL=trace npx ts-node ./src/script/show-contract-creation-infos.ts -a 0xcA11bde05977b3631167028862bE2a173976CA11 -c <chain>
  • Configure import scripts in deploy/docker-compose.yml

Update a grafana dashboard

Grafana dashboards are stored in the deploy/db/dashboards folder. To update a dashboard, import it in grafana, make the changes you want, then export it and replace the existing dashboard file.

Build the docker image locally

docker build -t beefy-data-importer -f ./deploy/import/Dockerfile ./

Grafana get locked out of his own db

When the db returns too much data, the sqlite db gets locked. https://community.grafana.com/t/database-is-locked-unable-to-use-grafana-anymore/16557

docker exec --user root -it deploy-grafana-1 apk add sqlite3
docker exec -it -w /var/lib/grafana deploy-grafana-1 /bin/sh

sqlite3 grafana.db '.clone grafana-new.db'
mv grafana.db grafana-old.db
mv grafana-new.db grafana.db

docker compose -f deploy/docker-compose.yml restart grafana

Internals

Moving parts

Import/indexing:

User facing

Operations

  • grafana: ingestion monitoring, quick prototyping

FAQ

Why is this using typescript?

  • Types definitions are our first layer of tests
  • More difficult to read/write, but less stupid mistakes

Why is this using rxjs?

  • It's a tradeoff, the code is more complex but it makes creating reusable building blocks way easier. And we can fine tune batching, throttling, etc.
  • Think of rxjs as a stream++ lib (it's not, but it's easier to think of it that way)

Where are db migrations?

  • Not implemented yet

Why timescaledb?

  • It's a time series database, it's made for this kind of data
  • Since we are optimizing for cost (running and maintenance) it's a good fit compared to vendor specific solutions
  • It's postgresql based, so we're in a familiar territory

Contributing

If you would like to contribute to the project, please fork this repository and make any desired changes. Then, submit a pull request and we will review your changes.

Thank you for your interest in contributing to the Blockchain Product Index!