noria

Dynamically changing, partially-stateful data-flow for web application backends.

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Noria: data-flow for high-performance web applications

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Noria is a new streaming data-flow system designed to act as a fast
storage backend for read-heavy web applications based on this
paper
from
OSDI'18.
It acts like a database, but precomputes and caches relational query
results so that reads are blazingly fast. Noria automatically keeps cached
results up-to-date as the underlying data, stored in persistent base
tables
, change. Noria uses partially-stateful data-flow to reduce memory
overhead, and supports dynamic, runtime data-flow and query change.

Noria comes with a MySQL
adapter
that implements the
binary MySQL protocol. This lets any application that currently talks to
MySQL or MariaDB switch to Noria with minimal effort. For example,
running a Lobsters-like workload
that issues the equivalent SQL
queries

to the real Lobsters website, Noria improves
throughput supported by 5x:

Noria speeds up Lobsters queries by 5x

At a high level, Noria takes a set of parameterized SQL queries (think
prepared
statements
), and
produces a data-flow
program
that maintains
materialized views
for the output of those queries. Reads now become fast lookups directly
into these materialized views, as if the value had been directly cached
in memcached. The views are then kept up-to-date incrementally through
the data-flow, which yields high write throughput.

Running Noria

Like most databases, Noria follows a server-client model where many
clients connect to a (potentially distributed) server. The server in
this case is the noria-server binary, and must be started before
clients can connect. Noria also uses Apache
ZooKeeper
to announce the location of
its servers, so ZooKeeper must be running.

You (currently) need nightly Rust to build noria-server. This will be
arranged for
automatically
if you're using rustup.rs. To build
noria-server, run

$ cargo build --release --bin noria-server

You may need to install some dependencies for the above to work:

  • clang
  • libclang-dev
  • libssl-dev
  • liblz4-dev

To start a long-running noria-server instance, ensure that ZooKeeper
is running, and then run:

$ cargo r --release --bin noria-server -- --deployment myapp --no-reuse --address 172.16.0.19 --shards 0

myapp here is a deployment. Many noria-server instances can
operate in a single deployment at the same time, and will share the
workload between them. Workers in the same deployment automatically
elect a leader and discovery each other via
ZooKeeper.

Interacting with Noria

There are two primary ways to interact with Noria: through the Rust
bindings
or through the MySQL
adapter
. They both
automatically locate the running worker through ZooKeeper (use -z if
ZooKeeper is not running on localhost:2181).

Rust bindings

The noria crate provides native Rust
bindings to interact with noria-server. See the noria
documentation
for detailed
instructions on how to use the library. You can also take a look at the
example Noria program using Noria's async client
API, or the same example using the synchronous API.
You can also see a self-contained version that embeds noria-server (and
doesn't require ZooKeeper) in this example.

MySQL adapter

We have built a MySQL
adapter
for Noria that accepts
standard MySQL queries and speaks the MySQL protocol to make it easy to
try Noria out for existing applications. Once the adapter is running
(see its README), you should be able to point your application at
localhost:3306 to send queries to Noria. If your application crashes,
this is a bug, and we would appreciate it if you open an
issue
. You may also want to
try to disable automatic re-use (with --no-reuse) or sharding (with
--shards 0) in case those are misbehaving.

CLI and Web UI

You can manually inspect the data stored in Noria using any MySQL client
(e.g., the mysql CLI), or use Noria's own web
interface
.

Noria development

Noria is a large piece of software that spans many sub-crates and
external tools (see links in the text above). Each sub-crate is
responsible for a component of Noria's architecture, such as external
API (noria), mapping SQL to data-flow (noria-server/mir), and
executing data-flow operators (noria-server/dataflow). The code in
noria-server/src/ is the glue that ties these pieces together by
establishing materializations, scheduling data-flow work, orchestrating
Noria program changes, handling failovers, etc.

noria-server/src/lib.rs has a pretty extensive comment at
the top of it that goes through how the Noria internals fit together at
an implementation level. While it occasionally lags behind, especially
following larger changes, it should serve to get you familiarized with
the basic building blocks relatively quickly.

The sub-crates each serve a distinct role:

  • noria/: everything that an external program communicating
    with Noria needs. This includes types used in RPCs as
    arguments/return types, as well as code for discovering Noria workers
    through ZooKeeper, establishing a connection to Noria through
    ZooKeeper, and invoking the various RPC exposed by the Noria
    controller (src/controller/inner.rs).
    The noria sub-crate also contains a number of internal
    data-structures that must be shared between the client and the
    server like DataType (Noria's "value"
    type). These are annotated with #[doc(hidden)], and should be easy
    to spot in noria/src/lib.rs.

  • noria-benchmarks/: a collection of various
    Noria benchmarks. The most frequently used one is vote, which runs
    the vote benchmark from §8.2 of the OSDI paper. You can run it in a
    bunch of different ways (--help should be useful), and with many
    different backends. The localsoup backend is the one that's easiest
    to get up and running with.

  • noria-server/src/: the Noria server, including
    high-level components such as RPC handling, domain scheduling,
    connection management, and all the controller operations (listening
    for heartbeats, handling failed workers, etc.). It contains two
    notable sub-crates:

    • dataflow/: the code that implements the
      internals of the data-flow graph. This includes implementations of
      the different operators (ops/),
      "special" operators like leaf views and sharders
      (node/special/),
      implementations of view storage (state/),
      and the code that coordinates execution of control, data, and
      backfill messages within a thread domain
      (domain/).
    • mir/: the code that implements Noria's
      SQL-to-dataflow mapping. This includes resolving columns and keys,
      creating dataflow operators, and detecting reuse opportunities, and
      triggering migrations to make changes after new SQL queries have
      been added. @ms705 is the primary author of this particular
      subcrate, and it builds largely upon
      nom-sql.
    • common/: data-structures that are shared
      between the various noria-server sub-crates.

To run the test suite, use:

$ cargo test

Build and open the documentation with:

$ cargo doc --open

Once noria-server is running, its API is available on port 6033 at the
specified listen address.

Alternatively, you can discover Noria's REST API listen address and port
through ZooKeeper via this command:

$ cargo run --bin noria-zk -- \
    --show --deployment myapp, grep external, cut -d' ' -f4

A basic graphical UI runs at http://IP:PORT/graph.html and shows
the running data-flow graph. You can also deploy Noria's
more advanced web UI that serves
the REST API endpoints in a human-digestible form and includes the
graph visualization.

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownermit-pdos/noria
Primary LanguageRust
Program languageRust (Language Count: 5)
Platform
License:Apache License 2.0
所有者活动
Created At2016-06-14 22:43:25
Pushed At2021-10-30 01:24:05
Last Commit At2021-10-29 18:23:56
Release Count16
Last Release Namenoria-0.5.0 (Posted on 2020-04-29 13:49:06)
First Release Namewith-bus (Posted on 2016-07-29 15:45:03)
用户参与
Stargazers Count5.1k
Watchers Count112
Fork Count246
Commits Count5.4k
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count79
Issue Open Count43
Pull Requests Count95
Pull Requests Open Count4
Pull Requests Close Count13
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