Network health monitoring tool for the Portal Network
The project is split up into a few different crates.
glados-core
: Contains shared code that is shared by the other crates.glados-web
: The web application that serves the HTML dashboardglados-monitor
: The long running system processes that pull in chain data and audit the portal network.
sea-orm
- ORM and database migrations. Theentity
andmigration
crates are sea-orm conventions.axum
- Web framework for serving HTML.askama
- Templating for HTML pages.web3
- For querying an Ethereum provider for chain datatokio
- Async runtime.tracing
- Structured logging
For our database, we use Postgres in both development and production.
The rough shape of Glados is as follows:
The glados-monitor
crate implements a long running process which continually follows the tip of the chain, and computes the ContentID/ContentKey values for new content as new blocks are added to the canonical chain. These values are inserted into a relational database.
The glados-audit
process then queries the database for content that it will then "audit" to determine whether the content can be successfully retrieved from the network. The audit process will use the Portal Network JSON-RPC api to query the portal network for the given content and then record in the database whether the content could be successfully retrieved. The database is structured such that a piece of content can be audited many times, giving a historical view over the lifetime of the content showing times when it was or was not available.
The glados-web
crate implements a web application to display information from the database about the audits. The goal is to have a dashboard that provides a single high level overview of the network health, as well as the ability to drill down into specific pieces of content to see the individual audit history.
For specific examples, see the SETUP_GUIDE.md.
See the DOCKER_GUIDE.md
Glados needs a postgres database to use. To run a postgres instance locally using docker:
docker run --name postgres -e POSTGRES_DB=glados -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password -d -p 5432:5432 postgres
This postgres instance can be accessed via postgres://postgres:password@localhost:5432/glados
. This value will be referred to as the DATABASE_URL
.
In most cases, you will want to set the environment variable RUST_LOG
to enable some level of debug
level logs. RUST_LOG=glados_monitor=debug
is a good way to only enable the debug logs for a specific crate/namespace.
The glados-monitor
crate can be run as follows to populate a local database with content ids.
The CLI needs a DATABASE_URL to know what relational database to connect to, as well as an HTTP_PROVIDER_URI to connect to an Ethereum JSON-RPC provider (not a portal node).
$ cargo run -p glados-monitor -- --database-url <DATABASE_URL> follow-head --provider-url <HTTP_PROVIDER_URI>
For example, if an Ethereum execution client is running on localhost port 8545:
$ cargo run -p glados-monitor -- --database-url follow-head --provider-url http://127.0.0.1:8545
The CLI needs a DATABASE_URL to know what relational database to connect to.
This has only been tested using the
trin
portal network client.
$ cargo run -p glados-web -- --database-url DATABASE_URL
This must be run from the project root, or static assets will fail to load, with 404 errors.
You should then be able to view the web application at http://127.0.0.1:3001/
in your browser.
First, launch a portal client, like trin, with an HTTP endpoint. Assuming you already launched postgres using Docker, the cartographer command would look like:
cargo run -p glados-cartographer -- --database-url postgres://postgres:password@localhost:5432/glados --transport http --http-url http://localhost:8545 --concurrency 10
First, launch a portal client, like trin, with an HTTP endpoint. Assuming you already launched postgres using Docker, the audit command would look like:
cargo run -p glados-audit -- --database-url postgres://postgres:password@localhost:5432/glados --history-strategy latest --portal-client http://localhost:8545