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Irmin benchmarking suite

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Sources

irmin-3.5.1.tbz
sha256=cd788a8d3f4a3dd18dc160a153d4aec91eaf6b0fb41ad41464d26c79c304a98e
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README.md.html

README.md

Irmin logo
A Distributed Database Built on the Same Principles as Git





Irmin is an OCaml library for building mergeable, branchable distributed data stores.

Irmin is based on distributed version-control systems (DVCs),
extensively used in software development to enable developers to keep
track of change provenance and expose modifications in the source
code. Irmin applies DVC's principles to large-scale distributed data
and exposes similar functions to Git (clone, push, pull, branch,
rebase). It is highly customizable: users can define their types to
store application-specific values and define custom storage layers (in
memory, on disk, in a remote Redis database, in the browser,
etc.). The Git workflow was initially designed for humans to manage
changes within source code. Irmin scales this to hanlde automatic
programs performing a very high number of operations per second, with
a fully automated handling of update conflicts. Finally, Irmin exposes
an event-driven API to define programmable dynamic behaviours and to
program distributed dataflow pipelines.

Irmin was created at the University of Cambridge in 2013 to be the
default storage layer for MirageOS applications (both to store and
orchestrate unikernel binaries and the data that these unikernels are
using). As such, Irmin is not, strictly speaking, a complete database
engine. Instead, similarly to other MirageOS components, it is a
collection of libraries designed to solve different flavours of the
challenges raised by the CAP Theorem. Each application
can select the right combination of libraries to solve its particular
distributed problem.

Irmin consists of a core of well-defined low-level data structures
that specify how data should be persisted and be shared across
nodes. It defines algorithms for efficient synchronization of those
distributed low-level constructs. It also builds a collection of
higher-level data structures that developers can use without knowing
precisely how Irmin works underneath. Some of these components even
have a formal semantics, including Conflict-free Replicated
Data-Types (CRDT)
. Since it's a part of MirageOS, Irmin does not
make strong assumptions about the OS environment that it runs in. This
makes the system very portable: it works well for in-memory databases
and slower persistent serialization such as SSDs, hard drives, web
browser local storage, or even the Git file format.

Irmin is primarily developed and maintained by Tarides, with
contributions from many contributors from various
organizations. External maintainers and contributors are welcome.

Features

  • Built-in Snapshotting - backup and restore

  • Storage Agnostic - you can use Irmin on top of your own storage layer

  • Custom Datatypes - (de)serialization for custom data types, derivable via
    ppx_irmin

  • Highly Portable - runs anywhere from Linux to web browsers and Xen unikernels

  • Git Compatibility - irmin-git uses an on-disk format that can be
    inspected and modified using Git

  • Dynamic Behavior - allows the users to define custom merge functions,
    use in-memory transactions (to keep track of reads as well as writes) and
    to define event-driven workflows using a notification mechanism

Documentation

API documentation can be found online at https://mirage.github.io/irmin

Installation

Prerequisites

Please ensure to install the minimum opam and ocaml versions. Find the latest
version and install instructions on ocaml.org.

To install Irmin with the command-line tool and all unix backends using opam:

  opam install irmin-cli

A minimal installation containing the reference in-memory backend can be
installed by running:

  opam install irmin

The following packages have are available on opam:

  • irmin - the base package, plus an in-memory storage implementation

  • irmin-chunk - chunked storage

  • irmin-cli - a simple command-line tool

  • irmin-fs - filesystem-based storage using bin_prot

  • irmin-git - Git compatible storage

  • irmin-graphql - GraphQL server

  • irmin-http - a simple REST interface

  • irmin-mirage - mirage compatibility

  • irmin-mirage-git - Git compatible storage for mirage

  • irmin-mirage-graphql - mirage compatible GraphQL server

  • irmin-pack - compressed, on-disk, posix backend

  • ppx_irmin - PPX deriver for Irmin content types (see README_PPX.md)

  • irmin-containers - collection of simple, ready-to-use mergeable data structures

To install a specific package, simply run:

  opam install <package-name>

Development Version

To install the development version of Irmin in your current opam switch, clone
this repository and opam install the packages inside:

  git clone https://github.com/mirage/irmin
  cd irmin/
  opam install .

Usage

Example

Below is a simple example of setting a key and getting the value out of a
Git-based, filesystem-backed store.

open Lwt.Syntax

(* Irmin store with string contents *)
module Store = Irmin_git_unix.FS.KV (Irmin.Contents.String)

(* Database configuration *)
let config = Irmin_git.config ~bare:true "/tmp/irmin/test"

(* Commit author *)
let author = "Example <example@example.com>"

(* Commit information *)
let info fmt = Irmin_git_unix.info ~author fmt

let main =
  (* Open the repo *)
  let* repo = Store.Repo.v config in

  (* Load the main branch *)
  let* t = Store.main repo in

  (* Set key "foo/bar" to "testing 123" *)
  let* () =
    Store.set_exn t ~info:(info "Updating foo/bar") [ "foo"; "bar" ]
      "testing 123"
  in

  (* Get key "foo/bar" and print it to stdout *)
  let+ x = Store.get t [ "foo"; "bar" ] in
  Printf.printf "foo/bar => '%s'\n" x

(* Run the program *)
let () = Lwt_main.run main

The example is contained in examples/readme.ml It can
be compiled and executed with dune:

$ dune build examples/readme.exe
$ dune exec examples/readme.exe
foo/bar => 'testing 123'

The examples directory also contains more advanced examples,
which can be executed in the same way.

Command-line

The same thing can also be accomplished using irmin, the command-line
application installed with irmin-cli, by running:

$ echo "root: ." > irmin.yml
$ irmin init
$ irmin set foo/bar "testing 123"
$ irmin get foo/bar
testing 123

irmin.yml allows for irmin flags to be set on a per-directory basis. You
can also set flags globally using $HOME/.irmin/config.yml. Run
irmin help irmin.yml for further details.

Also see irmin --help for list of all commands and either
irmin <command> --help or irmin help <command> for more help with a
specific command.

Context

Irmin's initial desing is directly inspired from
XenStore, with:

  • the need for efficient optimistic concurrency control features to be
    able to let thousands of virtual machine concurrently access and
    modify a central configuration database (the Xen stack uses XenStore
    as an RPC mechanism to setup VM configuration on boot). Very early
    on, the initial focus was to specify and handle potential
    conflicts
    when the
    optimistic assumptions do not usually work so well.

  • the need for a convenient way to debug and audit possible issues
    that might happen in that system. Our initial
    experiments

    showed that it was possible to design a reliable system using Git as
    backend to persist configuation data reliably (to safely restart
    after a crash), while making system debugging easy and go really
    fast, thanks to efficient merging strategy.

In 2014, the first release of Irmin was announced part of the MirageOS
2.0 release here. Since
then, several projects started using and improving Irmin. These can
roughly be split into 3 categories: (i) use Irmin as a portable,
structured key-value store (with expressive, mergeable types); (ii)
use Irmin as distributed database (with a customizable consistency
semantics) and (iii) an event-driven dataflow engine.

Irmin as a portable and efficient structured key-value store
  • XenStored
    is an information storage space shared between all the Xen virtual
    machines running in the same host. Each virtual machines gets its
    own path in the store. When values are changed in the store, the
    appropriate drivers are notified. The initial OCaml implementation
    was later extended to use Irmin
    here. More
    details
    here.

  • Jitsu is an experimental
    orchestrator for unikernels. It uses Irmin to store the unikernel
    configuration (and manage dynamic DNS entries). See more details
    here.

  • Cuekeeper is a web-based GTD
    (a fancy TODO list) that runs entirely in the browser. It uses Irmin
    in the browser to store data locally, with support for structured
    concurrent editing and snapshot export and import. More details
    here.

  • Canopy and
    Unipi both use Irmin to serve
    static websites pull from Git repositories and deployed as
    unikernels.

  • Caldav is using Irmin to store
    calendar entries and back them into a Git repository. More
    information here.

  • Datakit was developed at Docker
    and provided a 9p interface to the Irmin API. It was used to manage
    the configuration of Docker for Desktop, with merge policies on
    upgrade, full auditing, and snapshot/rollback capabilites.

  • Tezos started using Irmin in 2017
    to store the
    ledger state. The first prototype used irmin-git before switching to
    irmin-lmdb and irmin-leveldb (and now irmin-pack). More details
    here.

Irmin as a distributed store
  • An IMAP server using
    Irmin to store emails. More details
    here. The
    goal of that project was both to use Irmin to store emails (so using
    Irmin as a local key-value store) but also to experiment with
    replacing the IMAP on-wire protocol by an explicit Git push/pull
    mechanism.

  • irmin-ARP uses Irmin to
    store and audit ARP configuration. It's using Irmin as a local
    key-value store for very low-level information (which are normally
    stored very deep in the kernel layers), but the main goal was really
    to replace the broadcasting on-wire protocol by point-to-point
    pull/push synchronisation primitives, with a full audit log of ARP
    operations over a network. More details
    here.

  • Banyan uses Irmin to
    implement a distributed cache over a geo-replicated cluster. It's
    using Cassandra as a
    storage backend. More information
    here.

  • irmin-fdb implements an
    Irmin store backed by
    FoundationDB. More details
    here.

Irmin as a dataflow scheduler
  • Datakit CI is a
    continuous integration service that monitors GitHub project and
    tests each branch, tag and pull request. It displays the test
    results as status indicators in the GitHub UI. It keeps all of its
    state and logs in DataKit, rather than a traditional relational
    database, allowing review with the usual Git tools. The core of the
    project is a scheduler that manage dataflow pipelines across Git
    repositories. It was used for a few years as the CI system test
    Docker for Desktop on bare-metal and virtual machines, as well as
    all the new opam package submissions to ocaml/opam-repository. More
    details
    here.

  • Causal RPC implements an
    RPC framework using Irmin as a network substrate. More details
    here.

  • CISO is an experimental
    (distributed) Continuous Integration engine for OPAM. It was
    designed as a replacement of Datakit-CI and finally turned into
    ocurrent.

Issues

Feel free to report any issues using the GitHub bugtracker.

License

See the LICENSE file.

Acknowledgements

Development of Irmin was supported in part by the EU FP7 User-Centric Networking
project, Grant No. 611001.