Easily craft and deploy different distributed caching topologies in Elixir.
Nebulex is an in-process and distributed caching framework with a set of useful and powerful features such as:
-
Inspired by Ecto; simple and fluent API, flexible and pluggable architecture (based on adapters).
-
Built-in adapters: local (generational cache), distributed and multi-level.
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Support for different distributed caching topologies, such as: Partitioned, Near, Replicated, etc.
-
Different eviction mechanisms, such as: time-based eviction through the expiry time property (
expire_at) on the cached objects, multi-queue or generational caching (built-in adapter), etc. -
Object versioning (via
:versionproperty); enabling Optimistic offline locks. -
Transactions and key-locking (
Nebulex.Adapter.Transaction).
See the getting started guide and the online documentation.
You need to add nebulex as a dependency to your mix.exs file. However,
in the case you want to use an external (non built-in) cache adapter, you
also have to add the proper dependency to your mix.exs file.
The supported caches and their adapters are:
| Cache | Nebulex Adapter | Dependency |
|---|---|---|
| Generational | Nebulex.Adapters.Local | Built-In |
| Partitioned | Nebulex.Adapters.Dist | Built-In |
| Multi-level | Nebulex.Adapters.Multilevel | Built-In |
| Redis | NebulexRedisAdapter | nebulex_redis_adapter |
| Memcached | NebulexMemcachedAdapter | nebulex_memcached_adapter |
For example, if you want to use a built-in cache, you just need to add
nebulex to your mix.exs file:
def deps do
[
{:nebulex, "~> 1.0"}
]
endThen run mix deps.get in your shell to fetch the dependencies. If you want to
use another cache adapter, just choose the proper dependency from the table
above.
Finally, in the cache definition, you will need to specify the adapter
respective to the chosen dependency. For the local built-in cache it is:
defmodule MyApp.Cache do
use Nebulex.Cache,
otp_app: :my_app,
adapter: Nebulex.Adapters.Local
...
Check out the getting started guide to learn more about it.
Testing by default spawns nodes internally for distributed tests.
To run tests that do not require clustering, exclude the clustered tag:
$ mix test --exclude clustered
If you have issues running the clustered tests try running:
$ epmd -daemon
before running the tests.
Some basic benchmarks were added using benchee; to learn more, check out the benchmarks directory.
To run the benchmarks:
$ mix run benchmarks/benchmark.exs
If you are interested to run more sophisticated load tests, perhaps you should checkout the Nebulex Load Tests example, it allows you to run your own performance/load tests against Nebulex, and it also comes with load tests results.
Contributions to Nebulex are very welcome and appreciated!
Use the issue tracker for bug reports or feature requests. Open a pull request when you are ready to contribute.
When submitting a pull request you should not update the CHANGELOG.md, and also make sure you test your changes thoroughly, include unit tests alongside new or changed code.
Before to submit a PR it is highly recommended to run:
mix testto run testsmix coveralls.html && open cover/excoveralls.htmlto run tests and check out code coverage (expected 100%).mix format && mix credo --strictto format your code properly and find code style issuesmix dialyzerto run dialyzer for type checking; might take a while on the first invocation
Copyright (c) 2017, Carlos Bolaños.
Nebulex source code is licensed under the MIT License.