This makes working with systems like Kubernetes difficult. rqlite should
probably never have worked liked this. If IP addresses are still
perferred they can be passed in explicitly as command line arguments.
When true, skips syncing freelist to disk. This improves the database write performance under normal operation, but requires a full database re-sync during recovery.# Please enter the commit message for your changes.
This PR introduces new node-discovery integration with Consul and etcd. By using one of those systems with rqlite, automatic clustering of rqlite is much easier.
There is no point waiting for join operations to complete before
starting the HTTP server. In the event the join fails it just introduces
delays due to join-retrys. The HTTP API service is meant to be robust in
the face of a non-ready underlying Store anyway.
This is a breaking change. However this feature hasn't been tested and
allows end-users to break the system too easily. Low-level control over
the SQLite database is better done with PRAGMA commands where possible.
With this change, rqlite nodes running in "on-disk" mode build the database in memory first, and move it to the disk just before the Raft system starts. This means that on-disk nodes now initialize almost as quickly as in-memory nodes.
rqlite used to work like this, but suffered a regression due to a change in how Hashicorp Raft worked. The manner it changed in was not public, so relying on it was always fragile.
This PR changes Raft Log Entry encoding from JSON to Protobuf. Furthermore, larger Raft commands (which can result from batching SQL statements, or individually long SQL statements) are compressed before encoding.
This primary reason for this change is to reduce IO load since that is one of the largest performance bottlenecks. It will also reduce internode traffic.
Legacy JSON-encoded commands are still handled by this code, so this change is backwards-compatible with previous releases in the v5 series.
A non-voting node doesn't participate in Raft consensus, but does
subscribe to the committed log entries originating with the leader.
This means a non-voting node keeps up-to-date with the state machine,
without impacting write-latency. These non-voting nodes can provide
read scalability for the cluster.
With this change the cluster metadata (arbitrary key-value data associated with each node) is now broadcast across the cluster using the standard consensus mechanism. Specifically the use case for this metadata is to allow all nodes know the HTTP API address of all other nodes, for the purpose of redirecting requests to the leader.
This change removed the need for multiplexing two logical connections
over the single Raft TCP connection, which greatly simplifies the
networking code generally.
Original PR https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite/pull/434
The -http-ca-cert and -node-ca-cert options allow the user to specify
trusted X.509 root CA certificates as an alternative to the
-http-no-verify and -node-no-verify options. This behavior is analogous
to the rqlite client -ca-cert option.