Epidemic Broadcast Trees
This module is loosely based on plumtree Epidemic Broadcast Trees
EBT paper, but adapted to also replicate logs, and optimized
to achive a minimal overhead (the cost of the protocol is linear with
the number of messages to be sent)
It's a algorithm that combines the robustness of a flooding epidemic
gossip broadcast, with the efficiency of a tree model. It's intended
for implementing realtime protocols (such as chat, scuttlebutt, also
radio/video) over networks with random topology - or networks where
otherwise peers may be unable to all connect to each other or to a
central hub.
Although the primary motivation for this module is to use it in secure
scuttlebutt, it's intended to be decoupled sufficiently to use for
other applications.
Example
implement a simple in memory log replicator.
var clocks = {}
var logs = {}
function append (msg, cb) {
var log = logs[msg.author] || {}
if(msg.sequence != Object.keys(log).length + 1)
cb(new Error('out of order, found:'+msg.sequence+', expected:'+log.length))
else {
log[msg.sequence] = msg
ebt.onAppend(msg)
cb()
}
}
var ebt = EBT({
id: 'alice',
getClock: function (id, cb) {
cb(null, clocks[id] || {})
},
setClock: function (id, clock) {
clocks[id] = clock
},
getAt: function (pair, cb) {
if(!logs[pair.id] || !logs[pair.id][pair.sequence])
cb(new Error('not found'))
else
cb(null, logs[pair.id][pair.sequence])
},
append: append
})
ebt.append({
author: 'alice', sequence: 1, content: {}
}, function () {})
ebt.request('alice', true)
ebt.request('bob', true)
var stream = ebt.createStream('bob', version=3, isClient = true)
stream.pipe(remote_stream).pipe(stream)
note about push-stream: push-stream is only new, so you'll probably
need to convert this to a pull-stream to connect stream to a network
io stream and serialization
var pushToPull = require('push-stream-to-pull-stream')
var stream = pushToPull(ebt.createStream(remote_id, 3, isCient = true))
pull(stream, remote_pull_stream, stream)
API
EBT(opts) => ebt
where opts provides the necessary things to connect ebt
to your system.
opts = {
id: string,
timeout: 3000, //default,
getClock: function (id, cb),
setClock: function (id, clock),
getAt: function ({id:string, sequence:number}, cb),
append: function (msg, cb),
isFeed: function (id),
isMsg: function(data),
getMsgAuthor: function(msg),
getMsgSequence: function(msg)
}
Create a new EBT instance. id
is a unique identifier of the current
peer. In secure-scuttlebutt this is a
ed25519 public key.
getClock(id, cb)
and setClock(id, clock)
save a peer's clock
object. This is used to save bandwidth when reconnecting to a peer
again.
getAt({id, sequence}, cb)
retrives a message in a feed and an
sequence. messages must have {author, sequence, content}
fields.
append(msg, cb)
append a particular message to the log.
timeout
is used to decide when to switch a feed to another peer.
This is essential to detecting when a peer may have stalled.
isFeed(id)
is a validation function that returns true if id
is a
valid feed identifier. If not, it is ignored'
optional for backwards compatibility
isMsg(data)
is a validation function used to distinguish between data
messages and status messages. A message must contain an author
field
that corresponds to the feed identifier and a sequence
field.
getMsgAuthor(msg)
is a function that given a message returns the
author.
getMsgSequence(msg)
is a function that given a message returns the
sequence.
ebt.onAppend (msg)
When a message is appended to the database, tell ebt about it. this
must be called whenever a message is successfully appended to the
database.
ebt.createStream(id, version, isClient) => PushStream
Create a stream for replication. returns a push-stream. The current
version is 3, and isClient
must be either true or false. On the
client side stream, it will wait for the server to send their vector
clock, before replying. This means that if the server doesn't actually
support this api, you give them a change to send back an error before
sending a potentially large vector clock.
ebt.request(id, follow)
Tell ebt to replicate a particular feed. id
is a feed id, and
follow
is a boolean
. If follow
is false
, but previously was
called with true, ebt will stop replicating that feed.
ebt.progress()
returns an object which represents the current replication progress.
an example object output looks like this, all values are integers >= 0.
{
start: S,
current: C,
total: T
}
this follows a common pattern used across ssbc modules for
representing progress, used for example here:
https://github.com/ssbc/scuttlebot/blob/master/lib/progress.js
ebt.state
The state of the replication is available at ebt.state
. Read only
access is okay, but updating should only be done via ebt methods.
{
id: <id>, //our id,
clock: {<id>: <seq>}, //our local clock,
follows: {<id>: <boolean>}, //who we replicate, true if we replicate.
blocks: {<id>: {<id>: <boolean>}}, //who blocks who, true if they are blocked.
peers: { //currently connected peers
<id>: {
clock: {<id>: <seq|-1>}, //feeds that we KNOW the peer is up to. -1 if they do not replicate that feed.
msgs: [<msg>], //queue of messages waiting to be sent.
retrive: [<id>], //ids of feeds ready for the next message to be retrived.
notes: null || {<id>: <encoded_seq>}, //notes object (encoded vector clock to be sent)
replicating: { //feeds being replicated to peer.
<id>: {
rx: <boolean>, //true if we have asked to recieve this feed
tx: <boolean>, //true if we have been asked to send this feed
sent: <seq|-1|null>, //sequence number of message we have sent.
requested: <seq|-1|null> //sequence number the remote peer asked for, and thus we know they have.
}
}
}
},
receive: [<msg>] //queue of incoming messages
}
notes: <X>
is a value type.
<id>
is a "feed id" value that opts.isFeed(id) === true
. (note,
this doesn't actually need to be an ssb feed id, this module can be
used for other things too)
<seq>
is an positive integer or zero. -1 is used to represent if the
are explicitly not replicating that feed.
<msg>
is a message where opts.isMsg(id) === true
.
Replication overview
The state of other peers are stored outside this module in the SSB-EBT
module. See getClock
& setClock
.
Notes (aka the vector clock) are stored as { feed: (seq === -1 ? -1 :
seq << 1 | !rx) } (= * 2 + 1?). The sequence can be extracted using
getSequence
and rx/tx using getReceive
(is even). -1 means do not
replicate.
When peers connect, the server (that received the request) is expected
to send their vector clock (notes) first. It should use a local cache
as the last known status of the client. The notes should only contain
feeds changed since their last exchange (see "request skipping"). This
ensures that the vectors clocks sent are as small as possible.
When connecting to multiple peers, only request new messages using rx
for a feed from one of the nodes. See test/multiple.js
.
Following and blocking are handled in EBT. Following acts as the
signal of what feeds to replicate. EBT won't connect to someone that
has been blocked. It will not send messages of a peer (including self)
to another peer if the first peer blocks the second.
The tests are very readable because they use a simulator where a trace
of the run is saved and pretty printed. See test/two.js
for a good
example.
Comparison to plumtree
I had an idea for a gossip protocol that avoided retransmitting
messages by putting unneeded connections into standby mode (which can
be brought back into service when necessary) and then was pleasantly
surprised to discover it was not a new idea, but had already been
described in a paper - and there is an EBT implementation in erlang
of that paper.
There are some small differences, mainly because I want to send
messages in order, which makes it easy to represent what messages have
not been seen using just a incrementing sequence number per feed.
But plumbtree is solely a broadcast protocol, not an eventually
consistent replication protocol. Since we are replicating logs it's
also necessary to send a handshake to request the feeds from the right
points. If you are replicating thousands of feeds the size of the
handshake is significant, so we introduce an algorithm for "request
skipping" that avoids sending unnecessary requests, and saves a lot of
bandwidth compared to just requesting all feeds each connection.
Related work
Brisa also describes a broadcast protocal that at first glace looks
very close to the EBT paper. It is modelled using two components:
tree construction/maintenance and peer sampling. Peer sampling is in
SSB terminology where SSB conn is used. Brisa uses HyParView,
written by the same authors as the EBT paper for peer
sampling. Compared to EBT, Brisa does not depend on lazy mode between
peers where only the sequence information is maintained, instead it
depends on HyParView to detect failures. This has the advantage that
it does not need a timer, that is highly latency sensitive. It also
has a nice property in how messages are disseminated in that they are
piggybacked with information about the tree that allows the parent
selection to make better choices as it has a better view of the
network. The sequence numbers are an important part of the protocol
implemented here because they, as described earlier, are used to
ensure that messages are disseminated in a eventually consistent
manor.
TODO
License
MIT