This is an instructional implementation of the Raft distributed consensus algorithm in Go. It's accompanied by a series of blog posts:
- Part 0: Introduction
- Part 1: Elections
- Part 2: Commands and log replication
- Part 3: Persistence and optimizations
Each of the partN
directories in this repository is the complete source code
for Part N of the blog post series (except Part 0, which is introductory and has
no code). There is a lot of duplicated code between the different partN
directories - this is a conscious design decision. Rather than abstracting and
reusing parts of the implementation, I opted for keeping the code as simple
as possible. Each directory is completely self contained and can be read and
undestood in isolation. Using a graphical diff tool to see the deltas between
the parts can be instructional.
You can read the code, but I'd also encourage you to run tests and observe the logs they print out. The repository contains a useful tool for visualizing output. Here's a complete usage example:
$ cd part1
$ go test -v -race -run TestElectionFollowerComesBack |& tee /tmp/raftlog
... logging output
... test should PASS
$ go run ../tools/raft-testlog-viz/main.go < /tmp/raftlog
PASS TestElectionFollowerComesBack map[0:true 1:true 2:true TEST:true] ; entries: 150
... Emitted file:///tmp/TestElectionFollowerComesBack.html
PASS
Now open file:///tmp/TestElectionFollowerComesBack.html
in your browser.
You should see something like this:
Scroll and read the logs from the servers, noticing state changes (highlighted
with colors). Feel free to add your own cm.dlog(...)
calls to the code to
experiment and print out more details.
Each partN
directory is completely independent of the others, and is its own
Go module. The Raft code itself has no external dependencies; the only require
in its go.mod
is for a package that enables goroutine leak testing - it's only
used in tests.
To work on part2
, for example:
$ cd part2
... make code changes
$ go test -race ./...
Depending on the part and your machine, the tests can take up to a minute to
run. Feel free to enable verbose logging with -v
, and/or used the provided
dotest.sh
script to run specific tests with log visualization.
I'm interested in hearing your opinion or suggestions for the code in this repository. Feel free to open an issue if something is unclear, or if you think you found a bug. Code contributions through PRs are welcome as well.