I recently presented at the InfluxDB San Francisco Meetup, on InfluxDB and the Raft consensus protocol. My talk was about the fundamental problems of distributed systems, and how InfluxDB uses Raft to solve these issues.
Tag Archives: go
Designing a search system for log data — part 3
This is the last part of a 3-part series “Designing and building a search system for log data”. Be sure to check out part 1 and part 2.
In the last post we examined the design and implementation of Ekanite, a system for indexing log data, and making that data available for search in near-real-time. Is this final post let’s see Ekanite in action.
Continue reading Designing a search system for log data — part 3
Designing a search system for log data — part 2
This is the second part of a 3-part series “Designing and building a search system for log data”. Be sure to check out part 1. Part 3 follows this post.
In the previous post I outlined some of the high-level requirements for a system that indexed log data, and makes that data available for search, all in near-real-time. Satisfying these requirements involves making trade-offs, and sometimes there are no easy answers.
Continue reading Designing a search system for log data — part 2
Designing a search system for log data — part 1
This is the first part of a 3-part series “Designing and building a search system for log data”. Part 2 is here, and part 3 is here.
For the past few years, I’ve been building indexing and search systems, for various types of data, and often at scale. It’s fascinating work — only at scale does O(n) really come alive. Developing embedded systems teaches you how computers really work, but working on search systems and databases teaches you that algorithms really do matter.
Continue reading Designing a search system for log data — part 1
Contributing to InfluxDB
When you’d like to contribute to an open-source project it can be difficult to know where to start. Check out my latest post for the InfluxDB blog, explaining how we on the Core team have curated a set of issues, hopefully making it easy for potential contributors to start.
Testing InfluxDB Storage Engines
Another post for the InfluxDB blog — on testing the storage engines within InfluxDB.
You can check it out here.
Building a distributed key-value store using Raft
Hashicorp provide a nice implementation of the Raft consensus protocol, and it’s at the heart of InfluxDB (amongst other systems). I wanted to experiment with a simple system built using this particular Raft implementation, so was inspired by raftd to built hraftd.
Continue reading Building a distributed key-value store using Raft
Coding like it’s 1999
“Run into an obstacle in what you’re working on? Hmm, I wonder what’s new online. Better check.”
If you haven’t already, you should start reading Paul Graham’s essays. In one on philosophy, Graham believes that many of the answers provided by philosophy are useless because “…of how little effect they have”. By that standard another of his essays is of high utility because it has affected the way I program. John Stuart Mill would be pleased.
Who watches the watchers?
I’ve written my first post for the InfluxDB blog. In it I discuss the new statistics and monitoring system built into InfluxDB, starting with the 0.9.4 release. Functionality like this is critical when it comes to running a distributed database like InfluxDB.
You can check it out here.
400 days of Go
It’s been 418 days since my first Github commit of Go code. In that time I’ve written a Syslog-to-Kafka producer, a Raft-based distributed SQLite database, a near real-time log search system, and become a core developer of InfluxDB.