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author | Bryan Newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org> | 2019-01-04 17:41:27 -0800 |
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committer | Bryan Newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org> | 2019-01-04 17:41:27 -0800 |
commit | 084e476957ce80b456dcf0575de4efc7331d34f9 (patch) | |
tree | 5377ef32c140ef6a0b73d67296eeacf17edcabc9 /notes/ideas/thoughts.txt | |
parent | d7b0a156d2a3a21e2bf5afc3e4b97e7cf1044248 (diff) | |
download | fatcat-084e476957ce80b456dcf0575de4efc7331d34f9.tar.gz fatcat-084e476957ce80b456dcf0575de4efc7331d34f9.zip |
clean up notes a tiny bit
Diffstat (limited to 'notes/ideas/thoughts.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | notes/ideas/thoughts.txt | 32 |
1 files changed, 32 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/notes/ideas/thoughts.txt b/notes/ideas/thoughts.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c01c0d37 --- /dev/null +++ b/notes/ideas/thoughts.txt @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ + +Instead of having a separate id pointer table, could have an extra "mutable" +public ID column (unique, indexed) on entity rows. Backend would ensure the +right thing happens. Changelog tables (or special redirect/deletion tables) +would record changes and be "fallen through" to. + +Instead of having merge redirects, could just point all identifiers to the same +revision (and update them all in the future). Don't need to recurse! Need to +keep this forever though, could scale badly if "aggregations" get merged. + +Redirections of redirections should probably simply be disallowed. + +"Deletion" is really just pointing to a special or null entity. + +Trade-off: easy querying for common case (wanting "active" rows) vs. robust +handling of redirects (likely to be pretty common). Also, having UUID handling +across more than one table. + +## Scaling database + +Two scaling issues: size of database due to edits (likely billions of rows) and +desire to do complex queries/reports ("analytics"). The later is probably not a +concern, and could be handled by dumping and working on a cluster (or secondary +views, etc). So just a distraction? Simpler to have all rolled up. + +Cockroach is postgres-like; might be able to use that for HA and scaling? +Bottlenecks are probably complex joins (mitigated by "interleave"?) and bulk +import performance (one-time?). + +Using elastic for most (eg, non-logged-in) views could keep things fast. + +Cockroach seems more resourced/polished than TiDB? |