/coast

Experiments in Streaming

Primary LanguageScalaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

coast

In this dark stream-processing landscape, coast is a ray of light.

Why coast?

  • Simple: coast provides a simple streaming model with strong ordering and exactly-once semantics. This straightforward behaviour extends across multiple machines, state aggregations, and even between independent jobs, making it easier to reason about how your entire system behaves.

  • Easy: Streams are built up and wired together using a concise, idiomatic Scala API. These dataflow graphs can be as small or as large as you like: no need to cram all your logic in one big job, or to write a bunch of single-stage jobs and track their relationships by hand.

  • Kafkaesque: coast's core abstractions are patterned after Kafka's data model, and it's designed to fit comfortably in the middle of a larger Kafka-based infrastructure. By taking advantage of Kafka's messaging guarantees, coast can implement exactly-once semantics for messages and state without a heavy coordination cost.

Quick Introduction

coast's streams are closely patterned after Kafka's topics: a stream has multiple partitions, and each partition has an ordered series of values. A stream can have any number of partitions, each of which has a unique key. You can create a stream by pulling data from a topic, but coast also has a rich API for building derivative streams: applying transformations, merging streams together, regrouping, aggregating state, or performing joins. Once you've defined a stream you like, you can give it a name and publish it out to another topic.

By defining streams and networking them together, it's possible to express arbitrarily-complex dataflow graphs, including cycles and joins. You can use the resulting graphs in multiple ways: print it out as a GraphViz image, unit-test your logic using a simple in-memory implementation, or compile the graph to multiple Samza jobs and run it on a cluster.

Sound promising? You might be interested in:

Getting Started

The 0.2.0 release is published on Bintray. If you're using maven, you'll want to point your pom.xml at the repo:

<repository>
  <id>bintray-coast</id>
  <url>https://dl.bintray.com/bkirwi/maven</url>
</repository>

...and add coast to your dependencies:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.monovore</groupId>
  <artifactId>coast-samza_2.10</artifactId>
  <version>0.2.0</version>
</dependency>

Mutatis mutandis, the same goes for SBT and Gradle.

Mandatory Word Count Example

val Sentences = Topic[Source, String]("sentences")

val WordCounts = Topic[String, Int]("word-counts")

val graph = Flow.build { implicit builder =>

  Sentences.asSource
    .flatMap { _.split("\\s+") }
    .map { _ -> 1 }
    .groupByKey
    .streamTo("words")
    .sum.updates
    .sinkTo(WordCounts)
}

Future Work

If you're interested in what the future holds for coast -- or have questions or bugs to report -- come on over to the issue tracker.