Garnet is a remote cache-store from Microsoft Research that offers strong performance (throughput and latency), scalability, storage, recovery, cluster sharding, key migration, and replication features. Garnet can work with existing Redis clients.
Garnet is a new remote cache-store from Microsoft Research, that offers several unique benefits:
This repo contains the code to build and run Garnet. For more information and documentation, check out our website at https://microsoft.github.io/garnet.
Garnet implements a wide range of APIs including raw strings (e.g., gets, sets, and key expiration), analytical (e.g., HyperLogLog and Bitmap), and object (e.g., sorted sets and lists)
operations. It can handle multi-key transactions in the form of client-side RESP transactions and our own server-side stored procedures in C# and allows users to define custom
operations on both raw strings and new object types, all in the convenience and safety of C#, leading to a lower bar for developing custom extensions.
Garnet uses a fast and pluggable network layer, enabling future extensions such as leveraging kernel-bypass stacks. It supports secure transport layer security (TLS) communications using
the robust SslStream library of .NET, as well as basic access control. Garnet’s storage layer, called Tsavorite, was
forked from our prior open-source project FASTER, and includes strong database features such as thread scalability, tiered storage support
(memory, SSD, and cloud storage), fast non-blocking checkpointing, recovery, operation logging for durability, multi-key transaction support, and better memory management and reuse.
Finally, Garnet supports a cluster mode of operation with support for sharding, replication, and dynamic key migration.
We illustrate a few key results on our website comparing Garnet to leading open-source cache-stores.
Garnet’s design re-thinks the entire cache-store stack – from receiving packets on the network, to parsing and processing database operations, to performing storage interactions. We build on
top of years of our prior research. Below is Garnet’s overall architecture.
Garnet’s network layer inherits a shared memory design inspired by our prior research on ShadowFax. TLS
processing and storage interactions are performed on the IO completion thread, avoiding thread switching overheads in the common case. This approach allows CPU cache coherence to bring the data to the network, instead of traditional
shuffle-based designs, which require data movement on the server.
Garnet’s storage design consists of two Tsavorite key-value stores whose fates are bound by a unified operation log. The first store, called the “main store,” is optimized for raw string operations and manages memory carefully to
avoid garbage collection. The second, and optional, “object store” is optimized for complex objects and custom data types, including popular types such as Sorted Set, Set, Hash, List, and Geo. Data types in the object store
leverage the .NET library ecosystem for their current implementations. They are stored on the heap in memory (which makes updates very efficient) and in a serialized form on disk. In the future, we plan to investigate using a
unified index and log to ease maintenance.
A distinguishing feature of Garnet’s design is its narrow-waist Tsavorite storage API, which is used to implement the large, rich, and extensible RESP API surface on top. This API consists of read, upsert, delete, and atomic
read-modify-write operations, implemented with asynchronous callbacks for Garnet to interject logic at various points during each operation. Our storage API model allows us to cleanly separate Garnet’s parsing and query
processing concerns from storage details such as concurrency, storage tiering, and checkpointing. Garnet uses two-phase locking for multi-key transactions.
In addition to single-node execution, Garnet supports a cluster mode, which allows users to create and manage a sharded and replicated deployment. Garnet also supports an efficient and dynamic key migration scheme
to rebalance shards. Users can use standard Redis cluster commands to create and manage Garnet clusters, and nodes perform gossip to share and evolve cluster state. Cluster is still work in progress.
Head over to our documentation site, or jump directly to the getting started or
releases section.
This project is licensed under the MIT License, see the LICENSE file.
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