vectorclock

A vector clock


Keywords
vector, clock
License
MIT
Install
pip install vectorclock==0.5.3

Documentation

Introduction

A vector clock is a data structure used for determining the partial ordering of events in a distributed system and detecting causality violations.

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_clock.

This implements a vector where each process has its own clock.

A typical description will have the counter start from 1 and increment by 1 every time there is a change.

However, this implementation allows the counter increase by whatever the client asks for. Our processes can set the counter to their own clock, hence allow us to resolve conflicts (unordered changes) by leaning towards later (more recent) object versions.

Using

>>> from vectorclock import VectorClock
>>> vca1 = VectorClock({"A":1})
>>> vca2 = VectorClock.from_string('{"A":2}')
>>> print(vca1 < vca2)
True
>>> print(vca1 != vca2)
True
>>> print(vca1 == vca2)
False
>>> print(vca1 > vca2)
False
>>> print(str(vca1))
{"A":1}

# these two clocks are not ordered
>>> vcb = VectorClock({"B": 1})
>>> print(vca1 == vcb)
False
>>> print(vca1 < vcb)
False
>>> print(vca1 > vcb)
False
# If tie-breaking is off, they are not ordered (but not equal!)
>>> print(vca1.compare(vcb, tiebreak=False))
0
# If tie-breaking is on, we pick an order (deterministically)
>>> print(vca1.compare(vcb, tiebreak=True))
-1

The rest of this README is for vectorclock developers.

Testing

python -m unittest discover -s tests

Building

python -m pip install --upgrade build
python -m build

See also https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/tutorials/packaging-projects/#generating-distribution-archives.

Uploading to pypi

python -m pip install twine
twine check dist/*
twine upload -r testpypi dist/*

Check that the distribution looks as expected. Now:

twine upload -r pypi dist/*