Add NetworkDB docs
This is based on reading the code in the `networkdb` directory. Signed-off-by: Thomas Leonard <thomas.leonard@docker.com>
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libnetwork/docs/networkdb.md
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libnetwork/docs/networkdb.md
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NetworkDB
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=========
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There are two databases used in libnetwork:
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- A persistent database that stores the network configuration requested by the user. This is typically the SwarmKit managers' raft store.
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- A non-persistent peer-to-peer gossip-based database that keeps track of the current runtime state. This is NetworkDB.
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NetworkDB is based on the [SWIM][] protocol, which is implemented by the [memberlist][] library.
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`memberlist` manages cluster membership (nodes can join and leave), as well as message encryption.
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Members of the cluster send each other ping messages from time to time, allowing the cluster to detect when a node has become unavailable.
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The information held by each node in NetworkDB is:
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- The set of nodes currently in the cluster (plus nodes that have recently left or failed).
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- For each peer node, the set of networks to which that node is connected.
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- For each of the node's currently-in-use networks, a set of named tables of key/value pairs.
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Note that nodes only keep track of tables for networks to which they belong.
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Updates spread through the cluster from node to node, and nodes may have inconsistent views at any given time.
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They will eventually converge (quickly, if the network is operating well).
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Nodes look up information using their local networkdb instance. Queries are not sent to remote nodes.
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NetworkDB does not impose any structure on the tables; they are just maps from `string` keys to `[]byte` values.
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Other components in libnetwork use the tables for their own purposes.
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For example, there are tables for service discovery and load balancing,
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and the [overlay](overlay.md) driver uses NetworkDB to store routing information.
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Updates to a network's tables are only shared between nodes that are on that network.
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All libnetwork nodes join the gossip cluster.
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To do this, they need the IP address and port of at least one other member of the cluster.
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In the case of a SwarmKit cluster, for example, each Docker engine will use the IP addresses of the swarm managers as the initial join addresses.
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The `Join` method can be used to update these bootstrap IPs if they change while the system is running.
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When joining the cluster, the new node will initially synchronise its cluster-wide state (known nodes and networks, but not tables) with at least one other node.
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The state will be mostly kept up-to-date by small UDP gossip messages, but each node will also periodically perform a push-pull TCP sync with another random node.
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In a push-pull sync, the initiator sends all of its cluster-wide state to the target, and the target then sends all of its own state back in response.
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Once part of the gossip cluster, a node will also send a `NodeEventTypeJoin` message, which is a custom message defined by NetworkDB.
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This is not actually needed now, but keeping it is useful for backwards compatibility with nodes running previous versions.
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While a node is active in the cluster, it can join and leave networks.
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When a node wants to join a network, it will send a `NetworkEventTypeJoin` message via gossip to the whole cluster.
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It will also perform a bulk-sync of the network-specific state (the tables) with every other node on the network being joined.
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This will allow it to get all the network-specific information quickly.
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The tables will mostly be kept up-to-date by UDP gossip messages between the nodes on that network, but
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each node in the network will also periodically do a full TCP bulk sync of the tables with another random node on the same network.
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Note that there are two similar, but separate, gossip-and-periodic-sync mechanisms here:
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1. memberlist-provided gossip and push-pull sync of cluster-wide state, involving all nodes in the cluster.
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2. networkdb-provided gossip and bulk sync of network tables, for each network, involving just those nodes in that network.
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When a node wishes to leave a network, it will send a `NetworkEventTypeLeave` via gossip. It will then delete the network's table data.
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When a node hears that another node is leaving a network, it deletes all table entries belonging to the leaving node.
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Deleting an entry in this case means marking it for deletion for a while, so that we can detect and ignore any older events that may arrive about it.
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When a node wishes to leave the cluster, it will send a `NodeEventTypeLeave` message via gossip.
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Nodes receiving this will mark the node as "left".
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The leaving node will then send a memberlist leave message too.
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If we receive the memberlist leave message without first getting the `NodeEventTypeLeave` one, we mark the node as failed (for a while).
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Every node periodically attempts to reconnect to failed nodes, and will do a push-pull sync of cluster-wide state on success.
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On success we also send the node a `NodeEventTypeJoin` and then do a bulk sync of network-specific state for all networks that we have in common.
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[SWIM]: http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1028914/
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[memberlist]: https://github.com/hashicorp/memberlist
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@ -352,7 +352,7 @@ func (nDB *NetworkDB) reconnectNode() {
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nDB.bulkSync([]string{node.Name}, true)
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}
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// For timing the entry deletion in the repaer APIs that doesn't use monotonic clock
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// For timing the entry deletion in the reaper APIs that doesn't use monotonic clock
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// source (time.Now, Sub etc.) should be avoided. Hence we use reapTime in every
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// entry which is set initially to reapInterval and decremented by reapPeriod every time
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// the reaper runs. NOTE nDB.reapTableEntries updates the reapTime with a readlock. This
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