This is the starter code for the SurfStore project
Before you get started, make sure you understand the following 2 things about Go. (These will also be covered in class and in discussions)
-
Interfaces: They are named collections of method signatures. Here are some good resources to understand interfaces in Go: a. https://gobyexample.com/interfaces b. https://jordanorelli.com/post/32665860244/how-to-use-interfaces-in-go
-
gRPC: You should know how to write gRPC servers and clients in Go. The gRPC official documentation of the grpc is a good resource.
The starter code defines the following protocol buffer message type in SurfStore.proto
:
message Block {
bytes blockData = 1;
int32 blockSize = 2;
}
message FileMetaData {
string filename = 1;
int32 version = 2;
repeated string blockHashList = 3;
}
...
SurfStore.proto
also defines the gRPC service:
service BlockStore {
rpc GetBlock (BlockHash) returns (Block) {}
rpc PutBlock (Block) returns (Success) {}
rpc HasBlocks (BlockHashes) returns (BlockHashes) {}
}
service MetaStore {
rpc GetFileInfoMap(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (FileInfoMap) {}
rpc UpdateFile(FileMetaData) returns (Version) {}
rpc GetBlockStoreAddr(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (BlockStoreAddr) {}
}
You need to generate the gRPC client and server interfaces from our .proto service definition. We do this using the protocol buffer compiler protoc with a special gRPC Go plugin (The gRPC official documentation introduces how to install the protocol compiler plugins for Go).
protoc --proto_path=. --go_out=. --go_opt=paths=source_relative --go-grpc_out=. --go-grpc_opt=paths=source_relative pkg/surfstore/SurfStore.proto
Running this command generates the following files in the pkg/surfstore
directory:
SurfStore.pb.go
, which contains all the protocol buffer code to populate, serialize, and retrieve request and response message types.SurfStore_grpc.pb.go
, which contains the following:- An interface type (or stub) for clients to call with the methods defined in the SurfStore service.
- An interface type for servers to implement, also with the methods defined in the SurfStore service.
SurfstoreInterfaces.go
also contains interfaces for the BlockStore and the MetadataStore:
type MetaStoreInterface interface {
// Retrieves the server's FileInfoMap
GetFileInfoMap(ctx context.Context, _ *emptypb.Empty) (*FileInfoMap, error)
// Update a file's fileinfo entry
UpdateFile(ctx context.Context, fileMetaData *FileMetaData) (*Version, error)
// Get the the BlockStore address
GetBlockStoreAddr(ctx context.Context, _ *emptypb.Empty) (*BlockStoreAddr, error)
}
type BlockStoreInterface interface {
// Get a block based on blockhash
GetBlock(ctx context.Context, blockHash *BlockHash) (*Block, error)
// Put a block
PutBlock(ctx context.Context, block *Block) (*Success, error)
// Given a list of hashes “in”, returns a list containing the
// subset of in that are stored in the key-value store
HasBlocks(ctx context.Context, blockHashesIn *BlockHashes) (*BlockHashes, error)
}
BlockStore.go
provides a skeleton implementation of the BlockStoreInterface
and MetaStore.go
provides a skeleton implementation of the MetaStoreInterface
You must implement the methods in these 2 files which have panic("todo")
as their body.
cmd/SurfstoreServerExec/main.go
also has a method startServer
which you must implement. Depending on the service type specified, it should register a MetaStore
, BlockStore
, or Both
and start listening for connections from clients.
SurfstoreRPCClient.go
provides the gRPC client stub for the surfstore gRPC server. You must implement the methods in this file which have panic("todo")
as their body. (Hint: one of them has been implemented for you)
SurfstoreUtils.go
also has the following method which you need to implement for the sync logic of clients:
/*
Implement the logic for a client syncing with the server here.
*/
func ClientSync(client RPCClient) {
panic("todo")
}
- Run your server using this:
go run cmd/SurfstoreServerExec/main.go -s <service> -p <port> -l -d (BlockStoreAddr*)
Here, service
should be one of three values: meta, block, or both. This is used to specify the service provided by the server. port
defines the port number that the server listens to (default=8080). -l
configures the server to only listen on localhost. -d
configures the server to output log statements. Lastly, (BlockStoreAddr*) is the BlockStore address that the server is configured with. If service=both
then the BlockStoreAddr should be the ip:port
of this server.
- Run your client using this:
go run cmd/SurfstoreClientExec/main.go -d <meta_addr:port> <base_dir> <block_size>
go run cmd/SurfstoreServerExec/main.go -s both -p 8081 -l localhost:8081
This starts a server that listens only to localhost on port 8081 and services both the BlockStore and MetaStore interface.
Run the commands below on separate terminals (or nodes)
> go run cmd/SurfstoreServerExec/main.go -s block -p 8081 -l
> go run cmd/SurfstoreServerExec/main.go -s meta -l localhost:8081
The first line starts a server that services only the BlockStore interface and listens only to localhost on port 8081. The second line starts a server that services only the MetaStore interface, listens only to localhost on port 8080, and references the BlockStore we created as the underlying BlockStore. (Note: if these are on separate nodes, then you should use the public ip address and remove -l
)
- From a new terminal (or a new node), run the client using the script provided in the starter code (if using a new node, build using step 1 first). Use a base directory with some files in it.
> mkdir dataA
> cp ~/pic.jpg dataA/
> go run cmd/SurfstoreClientExec/main.go server_addr:port dataA 4096
This would sync pic.jpg to the server hosted on server_addr:port
, using dataA
as the base directory, with a block size of 4096 bytes.
- From another terminal (or a new node), run the client to sync with the server. (if using a new node, build using step 1 first)
> mkdir dataB
> go run cmd/SurfstoreClientExec/main.go server_addr:port dataB 4096
> ls dataB/
pic.jpg index.txt
We observe that pic.jpg has been synced to this client.
We also provide a make file for you to run the BlockStore and MetaStore servers.
- Run both BlockStore and MetaStore servers (listens to localhost on port 8081):
make run-both
- Run BlockStore server (listens to localhost on port 8081):
make run-blockstore
- Run MetaStore server (listens to localhost on port 8080):
make run-metastore
On gradescope, only a subset of test cases will be visible, so we highly encourage you to come up with different scenarios like the one described above. You can then match the outcome of your implementation to the expected output based on the theory provided in the writeup.