## cloudant-dbcore ### Overview Cloudant-dbcore is a highly available, fault-tolerant, clustered, fully api-compliant version of [Apache CouchDB][1]. While it appears to the end-user as one CouchDB instance, it is in fact one or more nodes in an elastic cluster, acting in concert to store and retrieve documents, index and serve views, and serve CouchApps. Dbcore has been developed and is continually maintained by [Cloudant][2] who offer hosted CouchDB as a service. Clusters behave according to concepts outlined in [Amazon's Dynamo paper][4], namely that each node can accept requests, data is placed on partitions based on a consistent hashing algorithm, and quorum protocols are for read/write operations. ### Contents * README.md this file * LICENSE open-source license governing dbcore ### Getting Started #### Prerequisites Cloudant-dbcore has the same dependencies as CouchDB: * Erlang (R13B03 or higher) * ICU (4.2 is preferable) * Spidermonkey (1.9.2 preferable, [https://launchpad.net/~commonjs/+archive/ppa/][6]) * LibCurl * OpenSSL * make * Python (2.4 or higher) #### Installing prerequisites on Ubuntu sudo apt-get install erlang libicu42 libcurl-openssl-dev To install Spidermonkey 1.9.2 from PPA: sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 74EE6429 sudo bash -c 'echo "deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/commonjs/ppa/ubuntu karmic main" >> /etc/apt/sources.list' sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install libmozjs-1.9.2 sudo ln -s /usr/lib/libmozjs-1.9.2.so /usr/lib/libmozjs.so #### Installing prerequisites on Mac OS X with [Homebrew][7] brew install erlang icu4c spidermonkey brew ln icu4c #### Building and installing dbcore `$CLOUDANT_SRC` is the directory holding your downloaded source files, while `$PREFIX` is the prefix to which the software is installed (defaults to `/opt/dbcore`): cd $CLOUDANT_SRC ./configure -p $PREFIX make sudo make install `sudo` is only necessary when installing to a prefix which is not user-writeable. In any case, the installer tries to chown the database directory and logfile to the user who configured dbcore. #### Starting dbcore $PREFIX/bin/dbcore Now, visit http://localhost:5984/_utils in a browser to verify the CouchDB node is operational. dbcore listens on two ports. Defaults and explanations: * 5984 - front door, cluster-aware port, appears as a standalone CouchDB. * 5986 - back door, single-node port, used for admin functions Note: see the rel/sv/README file for information on using runit to stop/start dbcore. #### Joining a new node to the cluster Each dbcore node has a local `nodes` database, accessible through the backend interface on port 5986. Documents in the `nodes` DB name nodes in the cluster. To add a new node, create a document with that node's name as the ID. For example curl -X PUT http://foo.example.com:5986/nodes/dbcore@bar.example.com -d {} Everything else should be automatic, provided the machines can ping each other and the nodes set the same magic cookie. You are advised to change the magic cookie from the default in `rel/etc/vm.args` when on a public network. #### Local development cluster The `make dev` target will build a three-node cluster under the rel/ directory. Get the nodes running, like above, by doing the following (in separate terminals): ./rel/dev1/bin/dbcore ./rel/dev2/bin/dbcore ./rel/dev3/bin/dbcore These development nodes listen on ports 15984/15986 (dev1), 25984/25986 (dev2), and 35984/35986 (dev3). Now, once the nodes are started, join the dev2 node by sending this PUT to dev1's listening backend port: curl -X PUT http://127.0.0.1:15986/nodes/dev2@127.0.0.1 -d {} To verify the two-node cluster has been linked properly, on either node (via proper frontend port), try: curl http://127.0.0.1:15984/_membership You should see something similar to this: {"all_nodes":["dev1@127.0.0.1","dev2@127.0.0.1"],"cluster_nodes":["dev1@127.0.0.1","dev2@127.0.0.1"]} Add node 3 to the cluster by sending a similar PUT to either of the first two nodes. #### Now What? If the above steps were successful, you should have a running dbcore cluster that looks just like a standalone CouchDB. You may interact with it the same way you would a standalone CouchDB, via the HTTP REST interface. Because every node can handle requests equally, you may want to put a load balancer in front of the cluster and set up a round-robin strategy for distributing incoming requests across all of your cluster's nodes. ##### Create a database: curl -X PUT http://loadbalancer:5984/test_db Also note that 'q' and 'n' are query string arguments that may be specified. These are Cloudant-specific options, and their values and defaults are discussed in the Configuration section below. Ex: &q=12 or &n=4. ##### Create a document: curl -X PUT http://loadbalancer:5984/test_db/doc_1 -d '{"a":1,"b":2}' You may also provide 'r' and 'w' on the GET and PUT/POST document operations respectively. Their values and defaults are discussed in the Configuration section below. Ex: &r=3 for high consistency reads, or &w=1 for higher throughput writes. ##### Check out Futon, CouchDB's web UI: * [http://loadbalancer:5984/_utils][5] ### Configuration #### Cluster constants _Q_ - number of partitions per database. Q is specified in the default.ini file, but may be provided as a URL parameter when creating a database. Default value is 8, query parameter is &q=12 or similar. _N_ - replication constant. N defaults to 3, but can vary by database just as Q can vary. N copies of each document will be written to the data store, on N different nodes. _R_ - read quorum constant. N writes have occurred for each document, as noted above. When reads are requested, N reads are sent to the N nodes that store the particular document. The system will return to the requesting client with the document when R successful reads have returned, and agree on versioning. R defaults to 2. Lower R values often result in faster reads at the expense of consistency. Higher R values usually result in slower reads, but more consistent, or agreed-upon data values returning. _W_ - write quorum constant. When writing the N copies, the data store will respond to the write client after W successful writes have completed. The remaining N-W writes are still being attempted in the background, but the client receives a 201 Created status and can resume execution. W defaults to 2. Lower W values mean more write throughput, and higher W values mean more data durability. ### Troubleshooting #### `make install` fails with "read file info /usr/lib/erlang/man/man5/modprobe.d.5 failed" You can fix this by removing that file: `sudo rm /usr/lib/erlang/man/man5/modprobe.d.5` #### Dbcore fails on startup with a "Can't set long node name!" error Cloudant-dbcore requires that your system be set up with a fully qualified domain name. Make sure that the command `hostname -f` outputs a full hostname. If not, add the full hostname of your server to the `/etc/hosts` file. ### Contact Cloudant folks are usually hanging out in IRC. Freenode, channel #cloudant. We may also be reached: * [http://cloudant.com][2] * [info@cloudant.com][3] ---- [1]: http://couchdb.apache.org [2]: http://cloudant.com [3]: mailto:info@cloudant.com [4]: http://www.allthingsdistributed.com/2007/10/amazons_dynamo.html [5]: http://loadbalancer:5984/_utils [6]: https://launchpad.net/~commonjs/+archive/ppa/ [7]: http://mxcl.github.com/homebrew/