Skip to content
/ trr Public

TRR: Time-Series of gorilla algorithm with Raft RPC Server/Client in Golang

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

kkdai/trr

Repository files navigation

TRR: A Key-Value time-series with gorilla algorithm using in Raft consistency RPC Server

GoDoc Build Status

What is TRR

TRR (Time-series Raft RPC client/server) is a package to help you hosted a simple KV value with time-series data under raft consensus algorithm. (implement by CoreOS/etcd).

It provide a basic RPC Client/Server for K/V(Key Value) storage service.

Features

  • raft consensus algorithm
  • Key/Value base usage, easy to Get/Set time-series data.
  • Based on Gorilla algorithm which could reduce data size to 12X.
  • RPC entry point, easy to use.

What is Raft

Raft is a consensus algorithm that is designed to be easy to understand. It's equivalent to Paxos in fault-tolerance and performance. The difference is that it's decomposed into relatively independent subproblems, and it cleanly addresses all major pieces needed for practical systems. We hope Raft will make consensus available to a wider audience, and that this wider audience will be able to develop a variety of higher quality consensus-based systems than are available today. (quote from here)

How to use etcd/raft in your project

  1. Refer code from raftexample
  2. Get file listener.go, kvstore.go, raft.go.
  3. Do your modification for your usage.

note

  • raft.transport need an extra http port for raft message exchange. MUST add this in your code. (which is peer info in example code)

Installation and Usage

Install

go get github.com/kkdai/trr

Usage

Server Example(1) Single Server:

package main
    
import (
	"fmt"
    
	. "github.com/kkdai/trr"
)
    
func main() {
	forever := make(chan int)

	//RPC addr
	rpcAddr := "127.0.0.1:1234"
	srv := StartServer(rpcAddr, 1)

	<-forever
}

Server Example(2) Cluster Server:

package main
    
import (
	"fmt"
    
	. "github.com/kkdai/raftrpc"
)
    
func main() {
	forever := make(chan int)
	
	//Note there are two address and port.
	//
	// "127.0.0.1:1234" is RPC access point
	// "http://127.0.0.1:12379" is raft message access point which use http
	
	var raftMsgSrvList []string
	raftMsgSrvList = append(raftMsgSrvList, "http://127.0.0.1:12379")
	raftMsgSrvList = append(raftMsgSrvList, "http://127.0.0.1:22379")

	srv1 := StartClusterServers("127.0.0.1:1234", 1, raftMsgSrvList)
	srv2 := StartClusterServers("127.0.0.1:1235", 2, raftMsgSrvList)
	
	<-forever
}

Client Example

Assume a server exist on 127.0.0.1:1234.

package main
    
import (
	"fmt"
    "log"
    
	. "github.com/kkdai/raftrpc"
)
    
func main() {
	client := MakeClerk("127.0.0.1:1234")
	t0, _ := time.ParseInLocation("Jan _2 2006 15:04:05", "Mar 24 2015 02:00:00", time.Local)
	t0unix := uint32(t0.Unix())

	srv := StartServer("127.0.0.1:1230", 1)

	client := MakeClerk("127.0.0.1:1230")
	client.PutTimeData("t1", t0unix, 10)

	t1unix := t0unix + 62
	client.PutTimeData("t1", t1unix, 12)

	t2unix := t1unix + 62
	client.PutTimeDataBack("t1", t2unix, 14)
	
	tt, vv, err := client.GetTimeData("t1")
	if err != nil || tt != t0unix || vv != 10 {
		log.Println("Simple time get error", tt, vv, err)
	}
}	

Inspired By

Project52

It is one of my project 52.

License

etcd is under the Apache 2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for details.

About

TRR: Time-Series of gorilla algorithm with Raft RPC Server/Client in Golang

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages