storj/cmd/storagenode/main.go

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7.7 KiB
Go
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2019-01-24 20:15:10 +00:00
// Copyright (C) 2019 Storj Labs, Inc.
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
// See LICENSE for copying information.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"sort"
"text/tabwriter"
2019-04-26 06:17:18 +01:00
"time"
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
"github.com/spf13/cobra"
"github.com/zeebo/errs"
"go.uber.org/zap"
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
"storj.io/storj/internal/fpath"
2019-04-26 06:17:18 +01:00
"storj.io/storj/internal/memory"
Add Versioning Server (#1576) * Initial Webserver Draft for Version Controlling * Rename type to avoid confusion * Move Function Calls into Version Package * Fix Linting and Language Typos * Fix Linting and Spelling Mistakes * Include Copyright * Include Copyright * Adjust Version-Control Server to return list of Versions * Linting * Improve Request Handling and Readability * Add Configuration File Option Add Systemd Service file * Add Logging to File * Smaller Changes * Add Semantic Versioning and refuses outdated Software from Startup (#1612) * implements internal Semantic Version library * adds version logging + reporting to process * Advance SemVer struct for easier handling * Add Accepted Version Store * Fix Function * Restructure * Type Conversion * Handle Version String properly * Add Note about array index * Set temporary Default Version * Add Copyright * Adding Version to Dashboard * Adding Version Info Log * Renaming and adding CheckerProcess * Iteration Sync * Iteration V2 * linting * made LogAndReportVersion a go routine * Refactor to Go Routine * Add Context to Go Routine and allow Operation if Lookup to Control Server fails * Handle Unmarshal properly * Linting * Relocate Version Checks * Relocating Version Check and specified default Version for now * Linting Error Prevention * Refuse Startup on outdated Version * Add Startup Check Function * Straighten Logging * Dont force Shutdown if --dev flag is set * Create full Service/Peer Structure for ControlServer * Linting * Straighting Naming * Finish VersionControl Service Layout * Improve Error Handling * Change Listening Address * Move Checker Function * Remove VersionControl Peer * Linting * Linting * Create VersionClient Service * Renaming * Add Version Client to Peer Definitions * Linting and Renaming * Linting * Remove Transport Checks for now * Move to Client Side Flag * Remove check * Linting * Transport Client Version Intro * Adding Version Client to Transport Client * Add missing parameter * Adding Version Check, to set Allowed = true * Set Default to true, testing * Restructuring Code * Uplink Changes * Add more proper Defaults * Renaming of Version struct * Dont pass Service use Pointer * Set Defaults for Versioning Checks * Put HTTP Server in go routine * Add Versioncontrol to Storj-Sim * Testplanet Fixes * Linting * Add Error Handling and new Server Struct * Move Lock slightly * Reduce Race Potentials * Remove unnecessary files * Linting * Add Proper Transport Handling * small fixes * add fence for allowed check * Add Startup Version Check and Service Naming * make errormessage private * Add Comments about VersionedClient * Linting * Remove Checks that refuse outgoing connections * Remove release cmd * Add Release Script * Linting * Update to use correct Values * Move vars private and set minimum default versions for testing builds * Remove VersionedClient * Better Error Handling and naked return removal * Straighten the Regex and string conversion * Change Check to allows testplanet and storj-sim to run without the need to pass an LDFlag * Cosmetic Change to Dashboard * Cleanup Returns and remove commented code * Remove Version Check if no build options are passed in * Pass in Config Values instead of Pointers * Handle missed Error * Update Endpoint URL * Change Type of Release Flag * Add additional Logging * Remove Versions Logging of other Services * minor fixes Change-Id: I5cc04a410ea6b2008d14dffd63eb5f36dd348a8b
2019-04-03 20:13:39 +01:00
"storj.io/storj/internal/version"
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
"storj.io/storj/pkg/cfgstruct"
"storj.io/storj/pkg/process"
2018-11-30 13:40:13 +00:00
"storj.io/storj/pkg/storj"
"storj.io/storj/storagenode"
"storj.io/storj/storagenode/storagenodedb"
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
)
// StorageNodeFlags defines storage node configuration
type StorageNodeFlags struct {
EditConf bool `default:"false" help:"open config in default editor"`
SaveAllDefaults bool `default:"false" help:"save all default values to config.yaml file" setup:"true"`
storagenode.Config
}
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
var (
rootCmd = &cobra.Command{
Use: "storagenode",
Short: "StorageNode",
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
}
runCmd = &cobra.Command{
Use: "run",
Short: "Run the storagenode",
RunE: cmdRun,
}
setupCmd = &cobra.Command{
Use: "setup",
Short: "Create config files",
RunE: cmdSetup,
Annotations: map[string]string{"type": "setup"},
}
configCmd = &cobra.Command{
Use: "config",
Short: "Edit config files",
RunE: cmdConfig,
Annotations: map[string]string{"type": "setup"},
}
diagCmd = &cobra.Command{
Use: "diag",
Short: "Diagnostic Tool support",
RunE: cmdDiag,
Annotations: map[string]string{"type": "helper"},
}
dashboardCmd = &cobra.Command{
Use: "dashboard",
Short: "Display a dashbaord",
RunE: cmdDashboard,
Annotations: map[string]string{"type": "helper"},
}
runCfg StorageNodeFlags
setupCfg StorageNodeFlags
diagCfg storagenode.Config
dashboardCfg struct {
2019-03-22 13:27:59 +00:00
Address string `default:"127.0.0.1:7778" help:"address for dashboard service"`
}
defaultDiagDir string
confDir string
identityDir string
useColor bool
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
)
const (
defaultServerAddr = ":28967"
defaultPrivateServerAddr = "127.0.0.1:7778"
)
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
func init() {
defaultConfDir := fpath.ApplicationDir("storj", "storagenode")
defaultIdentityDir := fpath.ApplicationDir("storj", "identity", "storagenode")
defaultDiagDir = filepath.Join(defaultConfDir, "storage")
cfgstruct.SetupFlag(zap.L(), rootCmd, &confDir, "config-dir", defaultConfDir, "main directory for storagenode configuration")
cfgstruct.SetupFlag(zap.L(), rootCmd, &identityDir, "identity-dir", defaultIdentityDir, "main directory for storagenode identity credentials")
defaults := cfgstruct.DefaultsFlag(rootCmd)
rootCmd.PersistentFlags().BoolVar(&useColor, "color", false, "use color in user interface")
rootCmd.AddCommand(runCmd)
rootCmd.AddCommand(setupCmd)
rootCmd.AddCommand(configCmd)
rootCmd.AddCommand(diagCmd)
rootCmd.AddCommand(dashboardCmd)
cfgstruct.Bind(runCmd.Flags(), &runCfg, defaults, cfgstruct.ConfDir(confDir), cfgstruct.IdentityDir(identityDir))
cfgstruct.BindSetup(setupCmd.Flags(), &setupCfg, defaults, cfgstruct.ConfDir(confDir), cfgstruct.IdentityDir(identityDir))
cfgstruct.BindSetup(configCmd.Flags(), &setupCfg, defaults, cfgstruct.ConfDir(confDir), cfgstruct.IdentityDir(identityDir))
cfgstruct.Bind(diagCmd.Flags(), &diagCfg, defaults, cfgstruct.ConfDir(confDir), cfgstruct.IdentityDir(identityDir))
cfgstruct.Bind(dashboardCmd.Flags(), &dashboardCfg, defaults, cfgstruct.ConfDir(defaultDiagDir))
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
}
func databaseConfig(config storagenode.Config) storagenodedb.Config {
return storagenodedb.Config{
Storage: config.Storage.Path,
Info: filepath.Join(config.Storage.Path, "piecestore.db"),
Info2: filepath.Join(config.Storage.Path, "info.db"),
2019-03-19 09:10:23 +00:00
Pieces: config.Storage.Path,
Kademlia: config.Kademlia.DBPath,
}
}
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
func cmdRun(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) (err error) {
// inert constructors only ====
ctx := process.Ctx(cmd)
log := zap.L()
identity, err := runCfg.Identity.Load()
if err != nil {
zap.S().Fatal(err)
}
if err := runCfg.Verify(log); err != nil {
log.Sugar().Error("Invalid configuration: ", err)
return err
}
db, err := storagenodedb.New(log.Named("db"), databaseConfig(runCfg.Config))
if err != nil {
2019-01-24 20:28:06 +00:00
return errs.New("Error starting master database on storagenode: %+v", err)
}
defer func() {
err = errs.Combine(err, db.Close())
}()
peer, err := storagenode.New(log, identity, db, runCfg.Config, version.Build)
2019-01-24 20:28:06 +00:00
if err != nil {
return err
2019-01-24 20:28:06 +00:00
}
2019-01-23 19:58:44 +00:00
// okay, start doing stuff ====
err = peer.Version.CheckVersion(ctx)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err := process.InitMetricsWithCertPath(ctx, nil, runCfg.Identity.CertPath); err != nil {
zap.S().Error("Failed to initialize telemetry batcher: ", err)
}
err = db.CreateTables()
if err != nil {
return errs.New("Error creating tables for master database on storagenode: %+v", err)
}
runError := peer.Run(ctx)
closeError := peer.Close()
return errs.Combine(runError, closeError)
}
func cmdSetup(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) (err error) {
setupDir, err := filepath.Abs(confDir)
if err != nil {
return err
}
valid, _ := fpath.IsValidSetupDir(setupDir)
if !valid {
return fmt.Errorf("storagenode configuration already exists (%v)", setupDir)
}
err = os.MkdirAll(setupDir, 0700)
if err != nil {
return err
}
overrides := map[string]interface{}{
"log.level": "info",
}
serverAddress := cmd.Flag("server.address")
if !serverAddress.Changed {
overrides[serverAddress.Name] = defaultServerAddr
}
serverPrivateAddress := cmd.Flag("server.private-address")
if !serverPrivateAddress.Changed {
overrides[serverPrivateAddress.Name] = defaultPrivateServerAddr
}
configFile := filepath.Join(setupDir, "config.yaml")
if setupCfg.SaveAllDefaults {
err = process.SaveConfigWithAllDefaults(cmd.Flags(), configFile, overrides)
} else {
err = process.SaveConfig(cmd.Flags(), configFile, overrides)
}
if err != nil {
return err
}
if setupCfg.EditConf {
return fpath.EditFile(configFile)
}
return err
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
2018-07-24 17:08:28 +01:00
}
func cmdConfig(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) (err error) {
setupDir, err := filepath.Abs(confDir)
if err != nil {
return err
}
//run setup if we can't access the config file
conf := filepath.Join(setupDir, "config.yaml")
if _, err := os.Stat(conf); err != nil {
return cmdSetup(cmd, args)
}
return fpath.EditFile(conf)
}
func cmdDiag(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) (err error) {
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ctx := process.Ctx(cmd)
diagDir, err := filepath.Abs(confDir)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// check if the directory exists
_, err = os.Stat(diagDir)
if err != nil {
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fmt.Println("storage node directory doesn't exist", diagDir)
return err
}
db, err := storagenodedb.New(zap.L().Named("db"), databaseConfig(diagCfg))
if err != nil {
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return errs.New("Error starting master database on storage node: %v", err)
}
defer func() {
err = errs.Combine(err, db.Close())
}()
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summaries, err := db.Bandwidth().SummaryBySatellite(ctx, time.Time{}, time.Now())
if err != nil {
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fmt.Printf("unable to get bandwidth summary: %v\n", err)
return err
}
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satellites := storj.NodeIDList{}
for id := range summaries {
satellites = append(satellites, id)
}
sort.Sort(satellites)
w := tabwriter.NewWriter(os.Stdout, 0, 0, 3, ' ', tabwriter.AlignRight|tabwriter.Debug)
defer func() { err = errs.Combine(err, w.Flush()) }()
fmt.Fprint(w, "Satellite\tTotal\tPut\tGet\tDelete\tAudit Get\tRepair Get\tRepair Put\n")
for _, id := range satellites {
summary := summaries[id]
fmt.Fprintf(w, "%v\t%v\t%v\t%v\t%v\t%v\t%v\t%v\n",
id,
memory.Size(summary.Total()),
memory.Size(summary.Put),
memory.Size(summary.Get),
memory.Size(summary.Delete),
memory.Size(summary.GetAudit),
memory.Size(summary.GetRepair),
memory.Size(summary.PutRepair),
)
}
return nil
}
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
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func main() {
process.Exec(rootCmd)
captplanet (#159) * captplanet I kind of went overboard this weekend. The major goal of this changeset is to provide an environment for local development where all of the various services can be easily run together. Developing on Storj v3 should be as easy as running a setup command and a run command! To do this, this changeset introduces a new tool called captplanet, which combines the powers of the Overlay Cache, the PointerDB, the PieceStore, Kademlia, the Minio Gateway, etc. Running 40 farmers and a heavy client inside the same process forced a rethinking of the "services" that we had. To avoid confusion by reusing prior terms, this changeset introduces two new types: Providers and Responsibilities. I wanted to avoid as many merge conflicts as possible, so I left the existing Services and code for now, but if people like this route we can clean up the duplication. A Responsibility is a collection of gRPC methods and corresponding state. The following systems are examples of Responsibilities: * Kademlia * OverlayCache * PointerDB * StatDB * PieceStore * etc. A Provider is a collection of Responsibilities that share an Identity, such as: * The heavy client * The farmer * The gateway An Identity is a public/private key pair, a node id, etc. Farmers all need different Identities, so captplanet needs to support running multiple concurrent Providers with different Identities. Each Responsibility and Provider should allow for configuration of multiple copies on its own so creating Responsibilities and Providers use a new workflow. To make a Responsibility, one should create a "config" struct, such as: ``` type Config struct { RepairThreshold int `help:"If redundancy falls below this number of pieces, repair is triggered" default:"30"` SuccessThreshold int `help:"If redundancy is above this number then no additional uploads are needed" default:"40"` } ``` To use "config" structs, this changeset introduces another new library called 'cfgstruct', which allows for the configuration of arbitrary structs through flagsets, and thus through cobra and viper. cfgstruct relies on Go's "struct tags" feature to document help information and default values. Config structs can be configured via cfgstruct.Bind for binding the struct to a flagset. Because this configuration system makes setup and configuration easier *in general*, additional commands are provided that allow for easy standup of separate Providers. Please make sure to check out: * cmd/captplanet/farmer/main.go (a new farmer binary) * cmd/captplanet/hc/main.go (a new heavy client binary) * cmd/captplanet/gw/main.go (a new minio gateway binary) Usage: ``` $ go install -v storj.io/storj/cmd/captplanet $ captplanet setup $ captplanet run ``` Configuration is placed by default in `~/.storj/capt/` Other changes: * introduces new config structs for currently existing Responsibilities that conform to the new Responsibility interface. Please see the `pkg/*/config.go` files for examples. * integrates the PointerDB API key with other global configuration via flags, instead of through environment variables through viper like it's been doing. (ultimately this should also change to use the PointerDB config struct but this is an okay shortterm solution). * changes the Overlay cache to use a URL for database configuration instead of separate redis and bolt config settings. * stubs out some peer identity skeleton code (but not the meat). * Fixes the SegmentStore to use the overlay client and pointerdb clients instead of gRPC client code directly * Leaves a very clear spot where we need to tie the object to stream to segment store together. There's sort of a "golden spike" opportunity to connect all the train tracks together at the bottom of pkg/miniogw/config.go, labeled with a bunch of TODOs. Future stuff: * I now prefer this design over the original pkg/process.Service thing I had been pushing before (sorry!) * The experience of trying to have multiple farmers configurable concurrently led me to prefer config structs over global flags (I finally came around) or using viper directly. I think global flags are okay sometimes but in general going forward we should try and get all relevant config into config structs. * If you all like this direction, I think we can go delete my old Service interfaces and a bunch of flags and clean up a bunch of stuff. * If you don't like this direction, it's no sweat at all, and despite how much code there is here I'm not very tied to any of this! Considering a lot of this was written between midnight and 6 am, it might not be any good! * bind tests
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}