This change backports the PostgreSQL indexing sink, addressing part of #6828. Development on the main branch has diverged substantially since the v0.34.x release. It includes package moves, breaking API and protobuf schema changes, and new APIs, all of which together have a large footprint on the mapping between the implementation at tip and the v0.34 release branch. To avoid the need to retrofit all of those improvements, this change works by injecting the new indexing sink into the existing (v0.34) indexing interfaces by delegation. This means the backport does _not_ pull in all the newer APIs for event handling, and thus has minimal impact on existing code written against the v0.34 package structure. This change includes the test for the `psql` implementation, and thus updates some Go module dependencies. Because it does not interact with any other types, however, I did not add any unit tests to other packages in this change. Related changes: * Update module dependencies for psql backport. * Update test data to be type-compatible with the old protobuf types. * Add config settings for the PostgreSQL indexer. * Clean up some linter settings. * Hook up the psql indexer in the node main.
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Indexing Transactions
Tendermint allows you to index transactions and blocks and later query or
subscribe to their results. Transactions are indexed by TxResult.Events and
blocks are indexed by Response(Begin|End)Block.Events. However, transactions
are also indexed by a primary key which includes the transaction hash and maps
to and stores the corresponding TxResult. Blocks are indexed by a primary key
which includes the block height and maps to and stores the block height, i.e.
the block itself is never stored.
Each event contains a type and a list of attributes, which are key-value pairs
denoting something about what happened during the method's execution. For more
details on Events, see the
ABCI
documentation.
An Event has a composite key associated with it. A compositeKey is
constructed by its type and key separated by a dot.
For example:
"jack": [
"account.number": 100
]
would be equal to the composite key of jack.account.number.
By default, Tendermint will index all transactions by their respective hashes and height and blocks by their height.
Configuration
Operators can configure indexing via the [tx_index] section. The indexer
field takes a series of supported indexers. If null is included, indexing will
be turned off regardless of other values provided.
[tx-index]
# The backend database to back the indexer.
# If indexer is "null", no indexer service will be used.
#
# The application will set which txs to index. In some cases a node operator will be able
# to decide which txs to index based on configuration set in the application.
#
# Options:
# 1) "null"
# 2) "kv" (default) - the simplest possible indexer, backed by key-value storage (defaults to levelDB; see DBBackend).
# - When "kv" is chosen "tx.height" and "tx.hash" will always be indexed.
# 3) "psql" - the indexer services backed by PostgreSQL.
# indexer = "kv"
Supported Indexers
KV
The kv indexer type is an embedded key-value store supported by the main
underlying Tendermint database. Using the kv indexer type allows you to query
for block and transaction events directly against Tendermint's RPC. However, the
query syntax is limited and so this indexer type might be deprecated or removed
entirely in the future.
PostgreSQL
The psql indexer type allows an operator to enable block and transaction event
indexing by proxying it to an external PostgreSQL instance allowing for the events
to be stored in relational models. Since the events are stored in a RDBMS, operators
can leverage SQL to perform a series of rich and complex queries that are not
supported by the kv indexer type. Since operators can leverage SQL directly,
searching is not enabled for the psql indexer type via Tendermint's RPC -- any
such query will fail.
Note, the SQL schema is stored in state/indexer/sink/psql/schema.sql and operators
must explicitly create the relations prior to starting Tendermint and enabling
the psql indexer type.
Example:
$ psql ... -f state/indexer/sink/psql/schema.sql
Default Indexes
The Tendermint tx and block event indexer indexes a few select reserved events by default.
Transactions
The following indexes are indexed by default:
tx.heighttx.hash
Blocks
The following indexes are indexed by default:
block.height
Adding Events
Applications are free to define which events to index. Tendermint does not
expose functionality to define which events to index and which to ignore. In
your application's DeliverTx method, add the Events field with pairs of
UTF-8 encoded strings (e.g. "transfer.sender": "Bob", "transfer.recipient":
"Alice", "transfer.balance": "100").
Example:
func (app *KVStoreApplication) DeliverTx(req types.RequestDeliverTx) types.Result {
//...
events := []abci.Event{
{
Type: "transfer",
Attributes: []abci.EventAttribute{
{Key: []byte("sender"), Value: []byte("Bob"), Index: true},
{Key: []byte("recipient"), Value: []byte("Alice"), Index: true},
{Key: []byte("balance"), Value: []byte("100"), Index: true},
{Key: []byte("note"), Value: []byte("nothing"), Index: true},
},
},
}
return types.ResponseDeliverTx{Code: code.CodeTypeOK, Events: events}
}
If the indexer is not null, the transaction will be indexed. Each event is
indexed using a composite key in the form of {eventType}.{eventAttribute}={eventValue},
e.g. transfer.sender=bob.
Querying Transactions Events
You can query for a paginated set of transaction by their events by calling the
/tx_search RPC endpoint:
curl "localhost:26657/tx_search?query=\"message.sender='cosmos1...'\"&prove=true"
Check out API docs for more information on query syntax and other options.
Subscribing to Transactions
Clients can subscribe to transactions with the given tags via WebSocket by providing
a query to /subscribe RPC endpoint.
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"method": "subscribe",
"id": "0",
"params": {
"query": "message.sender='cosmos1...'"
}
}
Check out API docs for more information on query syntax and other options.
Querying Blocks Events
You can query for a paginated set of blocks by their events by calling the
/block_search RPC endpoint:
curl "localhost:26657/block_search?query=\"block.height > 10 AND val_set.num_changed > 0\""
Check out API docs for more information on query syntax and other options.