The new home of data_fabric can be found at github.com/bpot/data_fabric
DataFabric provides flexible database connection switching for ActiveRecord.
We needed two features to scale our mysql database: application-level sharding and master/slave replication. Sharding is the process of splitting a dataset across many independent databases. This often happens based on geographical region (e.g. craigslist) or category (e.g. ebay). Replication provides a near-real-time copy of a database which can be used for fault tolerance and to reduce load on the master node. Combined, you get a scalable database solution which does not require huge hardware to scale to huge volumes. Or: DPAYEIOB - don’t put all your eggs in one basket. :-)
gem install data_fabric
then in config/environment.rb, add a config.gem entry:
Rails::Initializer.run do |config| ... config.gem 'data_fabric'
or add data_fabric to your Gemfile:
gem 'data_fabric'
data_fabric has been tested with Rails 2.3.10 and 3.0.7.
You describe the topology for your database infrastructure in your model(s).
Different models can use different topologies.
class MyHugeVolumeOfDataModel < ActiveRecord::Base data_fabric :replicated => true, :shard_by => :city end
There are four supported modes of operation, depending on the options given to the data_fabric method. The plugin will look for connections in your config/database.yml with the following convention:
No connection topology: #{environment} - this is the default, as with ActiveRecord, e.g. “production”
data_fabric :replicated => true
#{environment}_#{role} - no sharding, just replication, where role is “master” or “slave”, e.g. “production_master”
data_fabric :shard_by => :city
#{group}_#{shard}_#{environment} - sharding, no replication, e.g. “city_austin_production”
data_fabric :replicated => true, :shard_by => :city
#{group}_#{shard}_#{environment}_#{role} - sharding with replication, e.g. “city_austin_production_master”
When marked as replicated, all write and transactional operations for the model go to the master, whereas read operations go to the slave.
Since sharding is an application-level concern, your application must set the shard to use based on the current request or environment. The current shard is set on a thread local variable. For example, you can set the shard in an ActionController around_filter based on the user as follows:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base around_filter :select_shard private def select_shard(&block) DataFabric.activate_shard(:city => @current_user.city, &block) end end
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Sharded models should never be placed in the session store or you will get “Shard not set” errors when the session is persisted.
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DataFabric does not work in development mode with cache_classes = false. You will get an error in ActiveRecord’s clear_reloadable_connections! method.
If you think you’ve found a problem with data_fabric, please use the example23 or example30 application to reproduce the bug and send me the diff.
- Rick Olsen of Rails Core
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for the Masochism plugin, which showed me how to bend AR’s connection handling to my will
- Bradley Taylor of RailsMachine
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for the advice to shard while at acts_as_conference
Mike Perham <mperham@gmail.com> mikeperham.com twitter.com/mperham
Copyright © 2010 Mike Perham
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