fuse
litestream
fuse | litestream | |
---|---|---|
7 | 165 | |
1,555 | 10,026 | |
0.7% | - | |
0.0 | 7.5 | |
5 months ago | 14 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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fuse
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FUSE Filesystem
For this first implementation I used Go. After a reviewing some solutions I decided to use https://github.com/bazil/fuse. It seemed to be the easiest way to prototype.
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Introducing LiteFS
Often, the SQLite database would fit in RAM, and reads would be served straight from the page cache, with no overhead.
Disclaimer: I wrote the FUSE framework LiteFS uses, https://bazil.org/fuse -- and I also have some pending performance-related work to finish, there...
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I just upgraded to 13.1-RELEASE
I'd love to upgrade but I rely on mounting my Google Drive via /dev/fuse and rclone. There was a post yesterday saying that is broken in 13.1-RELEASE and linking to a FreeBSD bug which links to a rclone bug which links to a bazil bug which seems to have no traction. Someone mentioned a commandline utility that can interact with gdrive but this seems like a pretty bad replacement. IIUC the FreeBSD devs' theory is that a new async system call path exposed a bug in rclone and the blame is there. Anyway, I'm still on 13.0 for now, unfortunately.
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Just updated to 13.1-Release, some sort of rclone/fuse issue
This was also reported to rclone where someone pointed out that the problem is with fuse lib on FreeBSD and as such is a FreeBSD fuse lib porting problem.
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Distributed Systems Shibboleths
> 'failed' state and the process itself leaving the accounting tables.
Once again, that cannot be done until the parent process consumes the exit status. That's what the zombie is there for. Zombies don't take up much space.
> Stuck mounts have a half solution (lazy unmounts) but even _that_ interface really also needs a timeout value after which operations on the target should be assumed to fail rather than return correctly.
These days most NFS etc mounts are "soft mounts", that is operations will eventually time out.
Lazy unmount doesn't really apply here, it makes the mountpoint disappear from the global namespace, but all existing open files remain untouched, and the mount lives as long as anything is still using it; it just removes the "entry point" to the mount.
On today's Linux, it's up to each filesystem to provide abort/timeout mechanism. For timeouts, this is the right design, as demonstrated by macOS complications with FUSE. I do wish there was a common way to make things abort.
There was a patch in circulation a long time ago, that could seamlessly switch all open FDs of any given mountpoint into a whole different filesystem named badfs. badfs would just return an error on any operation. As far as I know, that patch never got merged, probably because nobody ever got it working 100%.
That kind of a DoS would require a local attacker, and then the victim to access a mountpoint owned by the attacker. Using FUSE, you could get a lot of processes hanging like that, for sure. I guess you could trap a mail delivery agent, if you still had a system where mail was delivered to users' home directories.
However, forcibly aborting any FUSE mount is a single `echo 1 >/sys/fs/fuse/connection/NNNN/abort`, the only challenge is finding the right ID. (See https://github.com/bazil/fuse/blob/fb710f7dfd05053a3bc9516dd...)
litestream
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Ask HN: SQLite in Production?
I have not, but I keep meaning to collate everything I've learned into a set of useful defaults just to remind myself what settings I should be enabling and why.
Regarding Litestream, I learned pretty much all I know from their documentation: https://litestream.io/
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How (and why) to run SQLite in production
This presentation is focused on the use-case of vertically scaling a single server and driving everything through that app server, which is running SQLite embedded within your application process.
This is the sweet-spot for SQLite applications, but there have been explorations and advances to running SQLite across a network of app servers. LiteFS (https://fly.io/docs/litefs/), the sibling to Litestream for backups (https://litestream.io), is aimed at precisely this use-case. Similarly, Turso (https://turso.tech) is a new-ish managed database company for running SQLite in a more traditional client-server distribution.
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SQLite3 Replication: A Wizard's Guide🧙🏽
This post intends to help you setup replication for SQLite using Litestream.
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Ask HN: Time travel" into a SQLite database using the WAL files?
I've been messing around with litestream. It is so cool. And, I either found a bug in the -timestamp switch or don't understand it correctly.
What I want to do is time travel into my sqlite database. I'm trying to do some forensics on why my web service returned the wrong data during a production event. Unfortunately, after the event, someone deleted records from the database and I'm unsure what the data looked like and am having trouble recreating the production issue.
Litestream has this great switch: -timestamp. If you use it (AFAICT) you can time travel into your database and go back to the database state at that moment. However, it does not seem to work as I expect it to:
https://github.com/benbjohnson/litestream/issues/564
I have the entirety of the sqlite database from the production event as well. Is there a way I could cycle through the WAL files and restore the database to the point in time before the records I need were deleted?
Will someone take sqlite and compile it into the browser using WASM so I can drag a sqlite database and WAL files into it and then using a timeline slider see all the states of the database over time? :)
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Ask HN: Are you using SQLite and Litestream in production?
We're using SQLite in production very heavily with millions of databases and fairly high operations throughput.
But we did run into some scariness around trying to use Litestream that put me off it for the time being. Litestream is really cool but it is also very much a cool hack and the risk of database corruption issues feels very real.
The scariness I ran into was related to this issue https://github.com/benbjohnson/litestream/issues/510
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Pocketbase: Open-source back end in 1 file
Litestream is a library that allows you to easily create backups. You can probably just do analytic queries on the backup data and reduce load on your server.
https://litestream.io/
- Litestream – Disaster recovery and continuous replication for SQLite
- Litestream: Replicated SQLite with no main and little cost
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Why you should probably be using SQLite
One possible strategy is to have one directory/file per customer which is one SQLite file. But then as the user logs in, you have to look up first what database they should be connected to.
OR somehow derive it from the user ID/username. Keeping all the customer databases in a single directory/disk and then constantly "lite streaming" to S3.
Because each user is isolated, they'll be writing to their own database. But migrations would be a pain. They will have to be rolled out to each database separately.
One upside is, you can give users the ability to take their data with them, any time. It is just a single file.
[0]. https://litestream.io/
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Monitor your Websites and Apps using Uptime Kuma
Upstream Kuma uses a local SQLite database to store account data, configuration for services to monitor, notification settings, and more. To make sure that our data is available across redeploys, we will bundle Uptime Kuma with Litestream, a project that implements streaming replication for SQLite databases to a remote object storage provider. Effectively, this allows us to treat the local SQLite database as if it were securely stored in a remote database.
What are some alternatives?
litefs - FUSE-based file system for replicating SQLite databases across a cluster of machines
rqlite - The lightweight, distributed relational database built on SQLite.
pocketbase - Open Source realtime backend in 1 file
fuse-filesystem - In memory filesystem of top of FUSE
realtime - Broadcast, Presence, and Postgres Changes via WebSockets
libfuse - The reference implementation of the Linux FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) interface
k8s-mediaserver-operator - Repository for k8s Mediaserver Operator project
tigerbeetle - A distributed financial accounting database designed for mission critical safety and performance. [Moved to: https://github.com/tigerbeetledb/tigerbeetle]
sqlcipher - SQLCipher is a standalone fork of SQLite that adds 256 bit AES encryption of database files and other security features.
flyctl - Command line tools for fly.io services