etcd-rb | A Ruby etcd client | Key Value Database library

 by   iconara Ruby Version: v1.0.0.pre1 License: No License

kandi X-RAY | etcd-rb Summary

kandi X-RAY | etcd-rb Summary

etcd-rb is a Ruby library typically used in Database, Key Value Database, Ruby On Rails applications. etcd-rb has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities and it has low support. You can download it from GitHub.

A Ruby etcd client
Support
    Quality
      Security
        License
          Reuse

            kandi-support Support

              etcd-rb has a low active ecosystem.
              It has 36 star(s) with 15 fork(s). There are 3 watchers for this library.
              OutlinedDot
              It had no major release in the last 12 months.
              There are 5 open issues and 4 have been closed. On average issues are closed in 16 days. There are no pull requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of etcd-rb is v1.0.0.pre1

            kandi-Quality Quality

              etcd-rb has 0 bugs and 0 code smells.

            kandi-Security Security

              etcd-rb has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.
              etcd-rb code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.
              There are 0 security hotspots that need review.

            kandi-License License

              etcd-rb does not have a standard license declared.
              Check the repository for any license declaration and review the terms closely.
              OutlinedDot
              Without a license, all rights are reserved, and you cannot use the library in your applications.

            kandi-Reuse Reuse

              etcd-rb releases are available to install and integrate.
              Installation instructions, examples and code snippets are available.

            Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA

            kandi has reviewed etcd-rb and discovered the below as its top functions. This is intended to give you an instant insight into etcd-rb implemented functionality, and help decide if they suit your requirements.
            • Get information about the given node .
            • Create a new Client instance .
            • Get information about a specific key
            • Start the watcher
            • Calls the given handler for the given key
            • Get a value for a key .
            • Start the heartbeat thread
            • Gets a watcher for a given prefix .
            • Update the status of the node
            • Set the value for a key
            Get all kandi verified functions for this library.

            etcd-rb Key Features

            No Key Features are available at this moment for etcd-rb.

            etcd-rb Examples and Code Snippets

            Example: Automatic Failover
            Rubydot img1Lines of Code : 35dot img1no licencesLicense : No License
            copy iconCopy
            # start with
            # $ sh/c to have ClusterController available :)
            seed_uris = ["http://127.0.0.1:4001", "http://127.0.0.1:4002", "http://127.0.0.1:4003"]
            client = Etcd::Client.connect(:uris => seed_uris)
            
            
            ## set some values
            client.set("foo", "bar")
            cl  
            Example: Heartbeating
            Rubydot img2Lines of Code : 19dot img2no licencesLicense : No License
            copy iconCopy
            $ sh/c
            # ensure we have a cluster with 3 nodes
            ClusterController.start_cluster
            client = Etcd::Client.test_client(:heartbeat_freq => 5)
            
            # your block can get value, key and info of the change, that you are observing
            client.observe('/foo') do |v,k,i  
            Example: Observers
            Rubydot img3Lines of Code : 17dot img3no licencesLicense : No License
            copy iconCopy
            $ sh/c
            # ensure we have a cluster with 3 nodes
            ClusterController.start_cluster
            # test_client method is only sugar for local development
            client = Etcd::Client.test_client
            
            # your block can get value, key and info of the change, that you are observing
              

            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            Laravel how to "properly" store & retrieve models in a Redis hash
            Asked 2021-Jul-08 at 17:02

            I'm developing a Laravel application & started using Redis as a caching system. I'm thinking of caching the data of all of a specific model I have, as a user may make an API request that this model is involved in quite often. Would a valid solution be storing each model in a hash, where the field is that record's unique ID, and the values are just the unique model's data, or is this use case too complicated for a simple key value database like Redis? I"m also curious as to how I would create model instances from the hash, when I retrieve all the data from it. Replies are appreciated!

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jul-08 at 17:02

            Short answer: Yes, you can store a model, or collections, or basically anything in the key-value caching of Redis. As long as the key provided is unique and can be retraced. Redis could even be used as a primary database.

            Long answer

            Ultimately, I think it depends on the implementation. There is a lot of optimization that can be done before someone can/should consider caching all models. For "simple" records that involve large datasets, I would advise to first optimize your queries and code and check the results. Examples:

            1. Select only data you need, not entire models.
            2. Use the Database Query Builder for interacting with the database when targeting large records, rather than Eloquent (Eloquent is significantly slower due to the Active Record pattern).
            3. Consider using the toBase() method. This retrieves all data but does not create the Eloquent model, saving precious resources.
            4. Use tools like the Laravel debugbar to analyze and discover potential long query loads.

            For large datasets that do not change often or optimization is not possible anymore: caching is the way to go!

            There is no right answer here, but maybe this helps you on your way! There are plenty of packages that implement similar behaviour.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/68305332

            QUESTION

            Can compacted Kafka topic be used as key-value database?
            Asked 2020-Nov-25 at 01:12

            In many articles, I've read that compacted Kafka topics can be used as a database. However, when looking at the Kafka API, I cannot find methods that allow me to query a topic for a value based on a key.

            So, can a compacted Kafka topic be used as a (high performance, read-only) key-value database?

            In my architecture I want to feed a component with a compacted topic. And I'm wondering whether that component needs to have a replica of that topic in its local database, or whether it can use that compacted topic as a key value database instead.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Nov-25 at 01:12

            Compacted kafka topics themselves and basic Consumer/Producer kafka APIs are not suitable for a key-value database. They are, however, widely used as a backstore to persist KV Database/Cache data, i.e: in a write-through approach for instance. If you need to re-warmup your Cache for some reason, just replay the entire topic to repopulate.

            In the Kafka world you have the Kafka Streams API which allows you to expose the state of your application, i.e: for your KV use case it could be the latest state of an order, by the means of queriable state stores. A state store is an abstraction of a KV Database and are actually implemented using a fast KV database called RocksDB which, in case of disaster, are fully recoverable because it's full data is persisted in a kafka topic, so it's quite resilient as to be a source of the data for your use case.

            Imagine that this is your Kafka Streams Application architecture:

            To be able to query these Kafka Streams state stores you need to bundle an HTTP Server and REST API in your Kafka Streams applications to query its local or remote state store (Kafka distributes/shards data across multiple partitions in a topic to enable parallel processing and high availability, and so does Kafka Streams). Because Kafka Streams API provides the metadata for you to know in which instance the key resides, you can surely query any instance and, if the key exists, a response can be returned regardless of the instance where the key lives.

            With this approach, you can kill two birds in a shot:

            1. Do stateful stream processing at scale with Kafka Streams
            2. Expose its state to external clients in a KV Database query pattern style

            All in a real-time, highly performant, distributed and resilient architecture.

            The images were sourced from a wider article by Robert Schmid where you can find additional details and a prototype to implement queriable state stores with Kafka Streams.

            Notable mention:

            If you are not in the mood to implement all of this using the Kafka Streams API, take a look at ksqlDB from Confluent which provides an even higher level abstraction on top of Kafka Streams just using a cool and simple SQL dialect to achieve the same sort of use case using pull queries. If you want to prototype something really quickly, take a look at this answer by Robin Moffatt or even this blog post to get a grip on its simplicity.

            While ksqlDB is not part of the Apache Kafka project, it's open-source, free and is built on top of the Kafka Streams API.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/64996101

            Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network

            Vulnerabilities

            No vulnerabilities reported

            Install etcd-rb

            See the full API documentation for more. All core features are supported, including test-and-set, TTL, watches -- as well as a few convenience features like continuous watching.

            Support

            Fork the repository, make your changes in a topic branch that branches off from the right place in the history (HEAD isn't necessarily always right), make your changes and finally submit a pull request. Follow the style of the existing code, make sure that existing tests pass, and that everything new has good test coverage. Put some effort into writing clear and concise commit messages, and write a good pull request description. It takes time to understand other people's code, and even more time to understand a patch, so do as much as you can to make the maintainers' work easier. Be prepared for rejection, many times a feature is already planned, or the proposed design would be in the way of other planned features, or the maintainers' just feel that it will be faster to implement the features themselves than to try to integrate your patch. Feel free to open a pull request before the feature is finished, that way you can have a conversation with the maintainers' during the development, and you can make adjustments to the design as you go along instead of having your whole feature rejected because of reasons such as those above. If you do, please make it clear that the pull request is a work in progress, or a request for comment. Always remember that the maintainers' work on this project in their free time and that they don't work for you, or for your benefit. They have no obligation to do what you think is right -- but if you're nice they might anyway.
            Find more information at:

            Find, review, and download reusable Libraries, Code Snippets, Cloud APIs from over 650 million Knowledge Items

            Find more libraries
            CLONE
          • HTTPS

            https://github.com/iconara/etcd-rb.git

          • CLI

            gh repo clone iconara/etcd-rb

          • sshUrl

            git@github.com:iconara/etcd-rb.git

          • Stay Updated

            Subscribe to our newsletter for trending solutions and developer bootcamps

            Agree to Sign up and Terms & Conditions

            Share this Page

            share link