vectorclock
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A simple implementation of vector clocks in Javascript.
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vectorclock
A simple implementation of vector clocks in Javascript.
API
Vector clocks are represented as plain old objects with a "clock" key (which is a hash). For example: { clock: { a: 1, b: 2 } }
.
Recommended reading:
- Leslie Lamport (1978). "Time, clocks, and the ordering of events in a distributed system". Communications of the ACM 21 (7): 558-565.
- Friedemann Mattern (1988). "Virtual Time and Global States of Distributed Systems". Workshop on Parallel and Distributed Algorithms: pp. 215-226
- Colin Fidge (1988), "Timestamps in Message-Passing Systems That Preserve the Partial Ordering".
API
increment(clock, nodeId)
: increment a vector clock at "nodeId"merge(a, b)
: given two vector clocks, returns a new vector clock with all values greater than those of the merged clockscompare(a, b)
/ascSort(a, b)
: compare two vector clocks, returns -1 for a < b and 1 for a > b; 0 for concurrent and identical values. Can be used to sort an array of objects by their "clock" key via [].sort(VClock.ascSort)descSort(a, b)
: sorts in descending order (N, ... 3, 2, 1)isConcurrent(a, b)
: if A and B are equal, or if they occurred concurrently.isIdentical(a, b)
: if every value in both vector clocks is equal.
Implementing read repair using vector clocks
Here is one way to implement read repair by detecting which clocks are concurrent, and if necessary, returning multiple values:
var responses = [ { clock: ... }, { clock: ... }];
// sort the responses by the vector clocks
responses.sort(VClock.descSort);
// then compare them to the topmost
// (in sequential order, the greatest) item
var repaired = [ responses.shift() ];
responses.forEach(function(item, index) {
// if they are concurrent with that item, then there is a conflict
// that we cannot resolve, so we need to return the item.
if(VClock.isConcurrent(item, repaired[0]) &&
!VClock.isIdentical(item, repaired[0])) {
repaired.push(item);
}
});