1 unstable release
0.1.9 | Apr 26, 2024 |
---|---|
0.1.8 |
|
#31 in #cdc
400 downloads per month
Used in rust-cdc-validator-client
72KB
1.5K
SLoC
Rust-CDC-Validator
Overview
The rust-cdc-validator
is a Rust-based tool that compares tables in an Amazon RDS (PostgreSQL) database with data migrated to Amazon S3 using AWS Database Migration Service (DMS). It's particularly useful for ensuring data consistency between the RDS database and Parquet files in S3, especially with change data capture (CDC) updates, since DMS validation with S3 as target isn't supported yet.
Features
- Import a snapshot of the CDC parquet data stored in AWS S3 with date-based folder partitioning in a locally deployed Postgres
- Specify a specific time range to replicate the S3 state on a Postgres DB
- Restore the RDS state from S3 in case of data loss
- Compare the state of a specific table in an Amazon RDS database with the data stored in Parquet files in the S3 bucket
- Identify differences at the row level by modifying the validated chunk size
- Use it as a library so as to integrate it in your projects, or as a client so as to use it as a standalone tool
Prerequisites
- Your source DB is a PostgreSQL
- You have a running AWS DMS task in FULL LOAD + CDC Mode
- The target of the task is AWS S3 with:
- Parquet formatted files
- date-based folder partitioning
- Additional column of
Op
injected by DMS
Installation (Client)
In order to use the tool as a client, you can use cargo
.
The tool provides two features for running it, which are Inquire
and Clap
.
Using Clap
Usage: rust-cdc-validator-client validate [OPTIONS] --bucket-name <BUCKET_NAME> --s3-prefix <S3_PREFIX> --source-postgres-url <SOURCE_POSTGRES_URL> --target-postgres-url <TARGET_POSTGRES_URL> --start-date <START_DATE>
Options:
--bucket-name <BUCKET_NAME>
S3 Bucket name where the CDC files are stored
--s3-prefix <S3_PREFIX>
S3 Prefix where the files are stored Example: data/landing/rds/mydb
--source-postgres-url <SOURCE_POSTGRES_URL>
Url of the database to validate the CDC files Example: postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/mydb
--target-postgres-url <TARGET_POSTGRES_URL>
Url of the target database to import the parquet files Example: postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/mydb
--database-schema <DATABASE_SCHEMA>
Schema of database to validate against S3 files [default: public]
--included-tables [<INCLUDED_TABLES>...]
List of tables to include for validatation against S3 files
--excluded-tables [<EXCLUDED_TABLES>...]
List of tables to exclude for validatation against S3 files
--start-date <START_DATE>
Start date to filter the Parquet files Example: 2024-02-14T10:00:00Z [default: 2024-02-14T10:00:00Z]
--stop-date <STOP_DATE>
Stop date to filter the Parquet files Example: 2024-02-14T10:00:00Z
--chunk-size <CHUNK_SIZE>
Datadiff chunk size [default: 1000]
--max-connections <MAX_CONNECTIONS>
Maximum connection pool size [default: 100]
--start-position <START_POSITION>
Datadiff start position [default: 0]
--only-datadiff
Run only the datadiff
--only-snapshot
Take only a snapshot from S3 to target DB
-h, --help
Print help
-V, --version
Print version
Using Inquire
rust-cdc-validator --features="with-inquire"
Installation (Library)
In order to use the tool as a library, you can run:
cargo add rust-cdc-validator
Example
- Spin up the local Postgres DB through Docker Compose:
docker-compose up
psql -h localhost -p 5438 -U postgres -d mydb
- Build and run the Rust tool
cargo fmt --all
cargo clippy --all
cargo build
RUST_LOG=rust_cdc_validator=info,rust_pgdatadiff=info cargo run --features="with-clap" validate --bucket-name my-bucket --s3-prefix prefix/path --source-postgres-url postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/mydb1 --target-postgres-url postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost:5438/mydb --database-schema public --included-tables mytable --start-date 2024-02-14T10:00:00Z --chunk-size 100
For more debugging, you can enable Rust related logs by exporting the following:
export RUST_LOG=rust_cdc_validator=debug,rust_pgdatadiff=debug
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License
Dependencies
~92–130MB
~2.5M SLoC