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Cube Store
Cube.js pre-aggregation storage layer.
Motivation
Over the past year, we've accumulated feedback around various use-cases with
pre-aggregations and how to store them. We've learned that there are a set of
problems where relational databases as a storage layer has significant
performance and functionality issues.
These problems include:
- Performance issues with high cardinality rollups (1B and more)
- Lack of HyperLogLog support
- Degraded performance for big
UNION ALL
queries - Poor
JOIN
performance across rolled up tables - Table/schema name length issues across different database types
- SQL type differences between source and external database
Over time, we realized that if we try to fix these issues with existing database
engines, we'd end up modifying these databases' codebases in one way or another.
We decided to take another approach and write our own materialized OLAP cache
store, designed solely to store and serve rollup tables at scale.
Approach
To optimize performance as much as possible, we went with a native approach and
are using Rust to develop Cube Store, utilizing a set of technologies like
RocksDB, Apache Parquet, and Arrow that have proven effectiveness in solving
data access problems.
Cube Store is fully open-sourced and released under the Apache 2.0 license.
Plans
We intend to start distributing Cube Store with Cube.js, and eventually make
Cube Store the default pre-aggregation storage layer for Cube.js. Support for
MySQL and Postgres as external databases will continue, but at a lower priority.
We'll also update all documentation regarding pre-aggregations and include usage
and deployment instructions for Cube Store.
Supported architectures and platforms
If your platform/architecture is not supported, you can launch Cube Store
using Docker.
| linux-gnu | linux-musl | darwin | win32 |
---|
x86 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
x86_64 | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
arm64 | ✅ | | ✅[1] | |
[1] It can be launched using Rosetta 2 via the x86_64-apple
binary.
Usage
With Cube.js
Starting with v0.26.48
, Cube.js ships with Cube Store enabled when CUBEJS_DEV_MODE=true
.
You don't need to set up any CUBEJS_EXT_DB_*
environment variables or
externalDriverFactory
inside your cube.js
configuration file.
For versions prior to v0.26.48
, you should upgrade your project to the latest
version and install the Cube Store driver:
yarn add @cubejs-backend/cubestore-driver
After starting up, Cube.js will print a message:
🔥 Cube Store (0.26.64) is assigned to 3030 port.
With Docker
Start Cube Store in a Docker container and bind port 3030
to 127.0.0.1
:
docker run -d -p 3030:3030 cubejs/cubestore:edge
Configure Cube.js to use the above connection for an external database via the
.env
file:
CUBEJS_EXT_DB_TYPE=cubestore
CUBEJS_EXT_DB_HOST=127.0.0.1
With Docker Compose
Create a docker-compose.yml
file with the following content:
version: '2.2'
services:
cubestore:
image: cubejs/cubestore:edge
cube:
image: cubejs/cube:latest
ports:
- 4000:4000
- 3000:3000
env_file: .env
depends_on:
- cubestore
links:
- cubestore
volumes:
- ./schema:/cube/conf/schema
Configure Cube.js to use the above connection for an external database via the
.env
file:
CUBEJS_EXT_DB_TYPE=cubestore
CUBEJS_EXT_DB_HOST=cubestore
Build
docker build -t cubejs/cubestore:latest .
docker run --rm cubejs/cubestore:latest
Development
Check out https://github.com/cube-js/arrow/tree/cubestore-2020-11-06 and put
.cargo/config.toml in the current directory with following contents:
paths = ["../../arrow/rust"]
It should point to checked out Apache Arrow fork and it'll allow you to build
project against locally modified sources.
License
Cube Store is Apache 2.0 licensed.