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Redstream

Using redis streams to keep your primary database in sync with secondary datastores (e.g. elasticsearch).

Build Status

Installation

First, install redis. Then, add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'redstream'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install redstream

Reference Docs

The reference docs can be found at https://www.rubydoc.info/github/mrkamel/redstream/master.

Usage

Include Redstream::Model in your model and add a call to redstream_callbacks.

class MyModel < ActiveRecord::Base
  include Redstream::Model

  # ...

  redstream_callbacks

  # ...
end

redstream_callbacks adds after_save, after_touch, after_destroy and, most importantly, after_commit callbacks which write messages, containing the record id, to a redis stream. A background worker can then fetch those messages and update secondary datastores.

In a background process, you need to run a Redstream::Consumer, Redstream::Delayer and a Redstream::Trimmer:

Redstream::Consumer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, name: "consumer").run do |messages|
  # Update seconday datastore
end

# ...

Redstream::Delayer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, delay: 5.minutes).run

# ...

trimmer = RedStream::Trimmer.new(
  stream_name: Product.redstream_name,
  consumer_names: ["indexer", "cacher"],
  interval: 30
)

trimmer.run

As all of them are blocking, you should run them in individual threads. But as none of them must be stopped gracefully, this can be as simple as:

Thread.new do
  Redstream::Consumer.new("...").run do |messages|
    # ...
  end
end

More concretely, after_save, after_touch and after_destroy only write "delay" messages to an additional redis stream. Delay message are like any other messages, but they get processed by a Redstream::Delayer and the Delayer will wait for some (configurable) delay/time before processing them. As the Delayer is neccessary to fix inconsistencies, the delay must be at least as long as your maximum database transaction time. Contrary, after_commit writes messages to a redis stream from which the messages can be fetched immediately to keep the secondary datastores updated in near-realtime. The reasoning of all this is simple: usually, i.e. by using only one way to update secondary datastores, namely after_save or after_commit, any errors occurring in between after_save and after_commit result in inconsistencies between your primary and secondary datastore. By using these kinds of "delay" messages triggered by after_save and fetched after e.g. 5 minutes, errors occurring in between after_save and after_commit can be fixed when the delay message get processed.

Any messages are fetched in batches, such that e.g. elasticsearch can be updated using its bulk API. For instance, depending on which elasticsearch ruby client you are using, the reindexing code regarding elasticsearch will look similar to:

Thread.new do
  Redstream::Consumer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, name: "indexer").run do |messages|
    ids = messages.map { |message| message.payload["id"] }

    ProductIndex.import Product.where(id: ids)
  end
end

Thread.new do
  Redstream::Delayer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, delay: 5.minutes).run
end

Thread.new do
  RedStream::Trimmer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, consumer_names: ["indexer"], interval: 30).run
end

You should run a consumer per (stream_name, name) tuple on multiple hosts for high availability. They'll use a redis based locking mechanism to ensure that only one consumer is consuming messages per tuple while the others are hot-standbys, i.e. they'll take over in case the currently active instance dies. The same stands for delayers and trimmers.

Please note: if you have multiple kinds of consumers for a single model/topic, then you must use distinct names. Assume you have an indexer, which updates a search index for a model and a cacher, which updates a cache store for a model:

Redstream::Consumer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, name: "indexer").run do |messages|
  # ...
end

Redstream::Consumer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, name: "cacher").run do |messages|
  # ...
end

Consumer, Delayer, Trimmer, Producer

A Consumer fetches messages that have been added to a redis stream via after_commit or by a Delayer, i.e. messages that are available for immediate retrieval/reindexing/syncing.

  Redstream::Consumer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, name: "indexer").run do |messages|
    ids = messages.map { |message| message.payload["id"] }

    ProductIndex.import Product.where(id: ids)
  end

A Delayer fetches messages that have been added to a second redis stream via after_save, after_touch and after_destroy to be retrieved after a certain configurable amount of time (5 minutes usually) to fix inconsistencies. The amount of time must be longer than your maximum database transaction time at least.

  Redstream::Delayer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, delay: 5.minutes).run

A Trimmer is responsible to finally remove messages from redis streams. Without a Trimmer messages will fill up your redis server and redis will finally crash due to out of memory errors. To be able to trim a stream, you must pass an array containing all consumer names reading from the respective stream. The Trimmer then continously checks how far each consumer already processed the stream and trims the stream up to the committed minimum. Contrary, if there is nothing to trim, the Trimmer will sleep for a specified interval.

  RedStream::Trimmer.new(stream_name: Product.redstream_name, consumer_names: ["indexer"], interval: 30).run

A Producer adds messages to the concrete redis streams, and you can actually pass a concrete Producer instance via redstream_callbacks:

class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
  include Redstream::Model

  # ...

  redstream_callbacks producer: Redstream::Producer.new("...")

  # ...
end

As you might recognize, Redstream::Model is of course only able to send messages to redis streams for model lifecyle callbacks. This is however not the case for #update_all:

Product.where(on_stock: true).update_all(featured: true)

To capture those updates as well, you need to change:

Product.where(on_stock: true).update_all(featured: true)

to

RedstreamProducer = Redstream::Producer.new

Product.where(on_stock: true).find_in_batches do |products|
  RedstreamProducer.bulk products do
    Product.where(id: products.map(&:id)).update_all(featured: true)
  end
end

The Producer will write a message for every matched record into the delay stream before update_all is called and will write another message for every record to the main stream after update_all is called - just like it is done within the model lifecycle callbacks.

The #bulk method must ensure that the same set of records is used for the delay messages and the instant messages. Thus, you better directly pass an array of records to Redstream::Producer#bulk, like shown above. If you pass an ActiveRecord::Relation, the #bulk method will convert it to an array, i.e. load the whole result set into memory.

Sharding

When you want to attach multiple consumers to a single stream, you maybe want to add sharding. This can be accomplished by specifying a dynamic stream name where you compute the shard key by hashing the primary key.

class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
  include Redstream::Model

  NUM_SHARDS = 4

  def self.redstream_name(shard)
    "products-#{shard}"
  end

  def redstream_name
    self.class.redstream_name(Digest::SHA1.hexdigest(id.to_s)[0, 4].to_i(16) % NUM_SHARDS)
  end
end

The sharding via hashing the primary key is neccessary, because we want each change of a specific object to end up in the same stream. Otherwise the order of changes for a specific object gets mixed up. Subsequently, you can add consumers, etc for each individual stream name.

Namespacing

In case you are using a shared redis, where multiple appications read/write from the same redis server using Redstream, key conflicts could occur. To avoid that, you want to use namespacing:

Redstream.namespace = 'my_app'

such that every application will have its own namespaced Redstream keys.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/mrkamel/redstream

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.