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Bring in new changes from upstream for all the packages. Important ones include - gorilla/mux - logrus - jwt |
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README.md | ||
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galois.go | ||
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gentables.go | ||
matrix.go | ||
reedsolomon.go | ||
streaming.go |
README.md
Reed-Solomon
Reed-Solomon Erasure Coding in Go, with speeds exceeding 1GB/s/cpu core implemented in pure Go.
This is a golang port of the JavaReedSolomon library released by Backblaze, with some additional optimizations.
For an introduction on erasure coding, see the post on the Backblaze blog.
Package home: https://github.com/klauspost/reedsolomon
Godoc: https://godoc.org/github.com/klauspost/reedsolomon
Installation
To get the package use the standard:
go get github.com/klauspost/reedsolomon
Usage
This section assumes you know the basics of Reed-Solomon encoding. A good start is this Backblaze blog post.
This package performs the calculation of the parity sets. The usage is therefore relatively simple.
First of all, you need to choose your distribution of data and parity shards. A 'good' distribution is very subjective, and will depend a lot on your usage scenario. A good starting point is above 5 and below 257 data shards (the maximum supported number), and the number of parity shards to be 2 or above, and below the number of data shards.
To create an encoder with 10 data shards (where your data goes) and 3 parity shards (calculated):
enc, err := reedsolomon.New(10, 3)
This encoder will work for all parity sets with this distribution of data and parity shards. The error will only be set if you specify 0 or negative values in any of the parameters, or if you specify more than 256 data shards.
The you send and receive data is a simple slice of byte slices; [][]byte
. In the example above, the top slice must have a length of 13.
data := make([][]byte, 13)
You should then fill the 10 first slices with equally sized data, and create parity shards that will be populated with parity data. In this case we create the data in memory, but you could for instance also use mmap to map files.
// Create all shards, size them at 50000 each
for i := range input {
data[i] := make([]byte, 50000)
}
// Fill some data into the data shards
for i, in := range data[:10] {
for j:= range in {
in[j] = byte((i+j)&0xff)
}
}
To populate the parity shards, you simply call Encode()
with your data.
err = enc.Encode(data)
The only cases where you should get an error is, if the data shards aren't of equal size. The last 3 shards now contain parity data. You can verify this by calling Verify()
:
ok, err = enc.Verify(data)
The final (and important) part is to be able to reconstruct missing shards. For this to work, you need to know which parts of your data is missing. The encoder does not know which parts are invalid, so if data corruption is a likely scenario, you need to implement a hash check for each shard. If a byte has changed in your set, and you don't know which it is, there is no way to reconstruct the data set.
To indicate missing data, you set the shard to nil before calling Reconstruct()
:
// Delete two data shards
data[3] = nil
data[7] = nil
// Reconstruct the missing shards
err := enc.Reconstruct(data)
The missing data and parity shards will be recreated. If more than 3 shards are missing, the reconstruction will fail.
So to sum up reconstruction:
- The number of data/parity shards must match the numbers used for encoding.
- The order of shards must be the same as used when encoding.
- You may only supply data you know is valid.
- Invalid shards should be set to nil.
For complete examples of an encoder and decoder see the examples folder.
Splitting/Joining Data
You might have a large slice of data. To help you split this, there are some helper functions that can split and join a single byte slice.
bigfile, _ := ioutil.Readfile("myfile.data")
// Split the file
split, err := enc.Split(bigfile)
This will split the file into the number of data shards set when creating the encoder and create empty parity shards.
An important thing to note is that you have to keep track of the exact input size. If the size of the input isn't diviable by the number of data shards, extra zeros will be inserted in the last shard.
To join a data set, use the Join()
function, which will join the shards and write it to the io.Writer
you supply:
// Join a data set and write it to io.Discard.
err = enc.Join(io.Discard, data, len(bigfile))
Streaming/Merging
It might seem like a limitation that all data should be in memory, but an important property is that as long as the number of data/parity shards are the same, you can merge/split data sets, and they will remain valid as a separate set.
// Split the data set of 50000 elements into two of 25000
splitA := make([][]byte, 13)
splitB := make([][]byte, 13)
// Merge into a 100000 element set
merged := make([][]byte, 13)
for i := range data {
splitA[i] = data[i][:25000]
splitB[i] = data[i][25000:]
// Concencate it to itself
merged[i] = append(make([]byte, 0, len(data[i])*2), data[i]...)
merged[i] = append(merged[i], data[i]...)
}
// Each part should still verify as ok.
ok, err := enc.Verify(splitA)
if ok && err == nil {
log.Println("splitA ok")
}
ok, err = enc.Verify(splitB)
if ok && err == nil {
log.Println("splitB ok")
}
ok, err = enc.Verify(merge)
if ok && err == nil {
log.Println("merge ok")
}
This means that if you have a data set that may not fit into memory, you can split processing into smaller blocks. For the best throughput, don't use too small blocks.
This also means that you can divide big input up into smaller blocks, and do reconstruction on parts of your data. This doesn't give the same flexibility of a higher number of data shards, but it will be much more performant.
Streaming API
There has been added a fully streaming API, to help perform fully streaming operations, which enables you to do the same operations, but on streams. To use the stream API, use NewStream
function to create the encoding/decoding interfaces. You can use NewStreamC
to ready an interface that reads/writes concurrently from the streams.
Input is delivered as []io.Reader
, output as []io.Writer
, and functionality corresponds to the in-memory API. Each stream must supply the same amount of data, similar to how each slice must be similar size with the in-memory API.
If an error occurs in relation to a stream, a StreamReadError
or StreamWriteError
will help you determine which stream was the offender.
There is no buffering or timeouts/retry specified. If you want to add that, you need to add it to the Reader/Writer.
For complete examples of a streaming encoder and decoder see the examples folder.
Performance
Performance depends mainly on the number of parity shards. In rough terms, doubling the number of parity shards will double the encoding time.
Here are the throughput numbers with some different selections of data and parity shards. For reference each shard is 1MB random data, and 2 CPU cores are used for encoding.
Data | Parity | Parity | MB/s | SSSE3 MB/s | SSSE3 Speed | Rel. Speed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | 2 | 40% | 576,11 | 2599,2 | 451% | 100,00% |
10 | 2 | 20% | 587,73 | 3100,28 | 528% | 102,02% |
10 | 4 | 40% | 298,38 | 2470,97 | 828% | 51,79% |
50 | 20 | 40% | 59,81 | 713,28 | 1193% | 10,38% |
If runtime.GOMAXPROCS()
is set to a value higher than 1, the encoder will use multiple goroutines to perform the calculations in Verify
, Encode
and Reconstruct
.
Example of performance scaling on Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-2600 CPU @ 3.40GHz - 4 physical cores, 8 logical cores. The example uses 10 blocks with 16MB data each and 4 parity blocks.
Threads | MB/s | Speed |
---|---|---|
1 | 1355,11 | 100% |
2 | 2339,78 | 172% |
4 | 3179,33 | 235% |
8 | 4346,18 | 321% |
asm2plan9s
asm2plan9s is used for assembling the AVX2 instructions into their BYTE/WORD/LONG equivalents.
Links
- Backblaze Open Sources Reed-Solomon Erasure Coding Source Code.
- JavaReedSolomon. Compatible java library by Backblaze.
- go-erasure. A similar library using cgo, slower in my tests.
- rsraid. A similar library written in Go. Slower, but supports more shards.
- Screaming Fast Galois Field Arithmetic. Basis for SSE3 optimizations.
License
This code, as the original JavaReedSolomon is published under an MIT license. See LICENSE file for more information.