d7076778e2
This commit removes badger from the deal-making processes, and moves to a new architecture with the dagstore as the cental component on the miner-side, and CARv2s on the client-side. Every deal that has been handed off to the sealing subsystem becomes a shard in the dagstore. Shards are mounted via the LotusMount, which teaches the dagstore how to load the related piece when serving retrievals. When the miner starts the Lotus for the first time with this patch, we will perform a one-time migration of all active deals into the dagstore. This is a lightweight process, and it consists simply of registering the shards in the dagstore. Shards are backed by the unsealed copy of the piece. This is currently a CARv1. However, the dagstore keeps CARv2 indices for all pieces, so when it's time to acquire a shard to serve a retrieval, the unsealed CARv1 is joined with its index (safeguarded by the dagstore), to form a read-only blockstore, thus taking the place of the monolithic badger. Data transfers have been adjusted to interface directly with CARv2 files. On inbound transfers (client retrievals, miner storage deals), we stream the received data into a CARv2 ReadWrite blockstore. On outbound transfers (client storage deals, miner retrievals), we serve the data off a CARv2 ReadOnly blockstore. Client-side imports are managed by the refactored *imports.Manager component (when not using IPFS integration). Just like it before, we use the go-filestore library to avoid duplicating the data from the original file in the resulting UnixFS DAG (concretely the leaves). However, the target of those imports are what we call "ref-CARv2s": CARv2 files placed under the `$LOTUS_PATH/imports` directory, containing the intermediate nodes in full, and the leaves as positional references to the original file on disk. Client-side retrievals are placed into CARv2 files in the location: `$LOTUS_PATH/retrievals`. A new set of `Dagstore*` JSON-RPC operations and `lotus-miner dagstore` subcommands have been introduced on the miner-side to inspect and manage the dagstore. Despite moving to a CARv2-backed system, the IPFS integration has been respected, and it continues to be possible to make storage deals with data held in an IPFS node, and to perform retrievals directly into an IPFS node. NOTE: because the "staging" and "client" Badger blockstores are no longer used, existing imports on the client will be rendered useless. On startup, Lotus will enumerate all imports and print WARN statements on the log for each import that needs to be reimported. These log lines contain these messages: - import lacks carv2 path; import will not work; please reimport - import has missing/broken carv2; please reimport At the end, we will print a "sanity check completed" message indicating the count of imports found, and how many were deemed broken. Co-authored-by: Aarsh Shah <aarshkshah1992@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Dirk McCormick <dirkmdev@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Raúl Kripalani <raul@protocol.ai> Co-authored-by: Dirk McCormick <dirkmdev@gmail.com> |
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.. | ||
composer | ||
dashboards | ||
docker-images | ||
graphsync | ||
lotus-soup | ||
notes | ||
DELVING.md | ||
Makefile | ||
README-old-from-oni.md | ||
README.md |
Testground testplans for Lotus
This directory consists of testplans built to be run on Testground that exercise Lotus on TaaS.
Table of Contents
Testing topics
- storage and retrieval deals:
- end-to-end flows where clients store and retrieve pieces from miners, including stress testing the system.
- payment channels:
- stress testing payment channels via excessive lane creation, excessive payment voucher atomisation, and redemption.
Running the test cases
If you are unfamiliar with Testground, we strongly suggest you read the Testground Getting Started guide in order to learn how to install Testground and how to use it.
You can find various composition files describing various test scenarios built as part of Project Oni at lotus-soup/_compositions
directory.
We've designed the test cases so that you can run them via the local:exec
, local:docker
and the cluster:k8s
runners. Note that Lotus miners are quite resource intensive, requiring gigabytes of memory. Hence you would have to run these test cases on a beafy machine (when using local:docker
and local:exec
), or on a Kubernetes cluster (when using cluster:k8s
).
Here are the basics of how to run the baseline deals end-to-end test case:
Running the baseline deals end-to-end test case
-
Compile and Install Testground from source code.
- See the Getting Started section of the README for instructions.
-
Run a Testground daemon
testground daemon
- Download required Docker images for the
lotus-soup
test plan
make pull-images
Alternatively you can build them locally with
make build-images
- Import the
lotus-soup
test plan into your Testground home directory
testground plan import --from ./lotus-soup
- Run a composition for the baseline deals end-to-end test case
testground run composition -f ./lotus-soup/_compositions/baseline-docker-5-1.toml