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61 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
61 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
## IRCd Database
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The database here is a strictly schematized key-value grid built from the primitives of
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`column`, `cell` and `row`. We use the database as both a flat-object store (matrix
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event db) using cells, columns and rows; as well as binary data block store (matrix
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media db) using just a single column.
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#### Columns
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A column is a key-value store. We specify columns in the database descriptors when
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opening the database and (though technically somewhat possible) don't change them
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during runtime. The database must be opened with the same descriptors in properly
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aligned positions every single time. All keys and values in a column can be iterated.
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Columns can also be split into "domains" of keys (see: `db/index.h`) based on the
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key's prefix, allowing a seek and iteration isolated to just one domain.
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In practice we create a column to present a single property in a JSON object. There
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is no recursion and we also must know the name of the property in advance to specify
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a descriptor for it. In practice we create a column for each property in the Matrix
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event object and then optimize that column specifically for that property.
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```
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{
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"origin_server_ts": 15373977384823,
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"content": {"msgtype": "m.text", "body": "hello"}
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}
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```
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For the above example consider two columns: first `origin_server_ts` is optimized for
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timestamps by having values which are fixed 8 byte signed integers; next the content
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object is stored in whole as JSON text in the content column. Recursion is not yet
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supported but theoretically we can create more columns to hold nested properties
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if we want further optimizations.
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#### Rows
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Since `columns` are technically independent key-value stores (they have their own
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index), when an index key is the same between columns we call this a `row`. In
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the Matrix event example, each property of the same event is sought together in a
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`row`. A row seek is optimized and the individual cells are queried concurrently and
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iterated in lock-step together.
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#### Cells
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A `cell` is a gratuitious interface representing of a single value in a `column` with
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a common key that should be able to form a `row` between columns. A `row` is comprised
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of cells.
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### Important notes
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!!!
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The database system is plugged into the userspace context system to facilitate IO. This means
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that an expensive database call (mostly on the read side) that has to do disk IO will suspend
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your userspace context. Remember that when your userspace context resumes on the other side
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of the call, the state of IRCd and even the database itself may have changed. We have a suite
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of tools to mitigate this.
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!!!
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* While the database schema is modifiable at runtime (we can add and remove columns on
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the fly) the database is very picky about opening the exact same way it last closed.
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This means, for now, we have the full object schema explicitly specified when the DB
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is first opened. All columns exist for the lifetime of the DB, whether or not you have
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a handle to them.
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