Add RPC transaction history design
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| # Long term RPC Transaction History | ||||
| There's a need for RPC to serve at least 6 months of transaction history.  The | ||||
| current history, on the order of days, is insufficient for downstream users. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 6 months of transaction data cannot be stored practically in a validator's | ||||
| rocksdb ledger so an external data store is necessary.   The validator's | ||||
| rocksdb ledger will continue to serve as the primary data source, and then will | ||||
| fall back to the external data store. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The affected RPC endpoints are: | ||||
| * [getFirstAvailableBlock](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getfirstavailableblock) | ||||
| * [getConfirmedBlock](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getconfirmedblock) | ||||
| * [getConfirmedBlocks](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getconfirmedblocks) | ||||
| * [getConfirmedSignaturesForAddress](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getconfirmedsignaturesforaddress) | ||||
| * [getConfirmedTransaction](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getconfirmedtransaction) | ||||
| * [getSignatureStatuses](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getsignaturestatuses) | ||||
|  | ||||
| Note that [getBlockTime](https://docs.solana.com/apps/jsonrpc-api#getblocktime) | ||||
| is not supported, as once https://github.com/solana-labs/solana/issues/10089 is | ||||
| fixed then `getBlockTime` can be removed. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Some system design constraints: | ||||
| * The volume of data to store and search can quickly jump into the terabytes, | ||||
|   and is immutable. | ||||
| * The system should be as light as possible for SREs.  For example an SQL | ||||
|   database cluster that requires an SRE to continually monitor and rebalance | ||||
|   nodes is undesirable. | ||||
| * Data must be searchable in real time - batched queries that take minutes or | ||||
|   hours to run are unacceptable. | ||||
| * Easy to replicate the data worldwide to co-locate it with the RPC endpoints | ||||
|   that will utilize it. | ||||
| * Interfacing with the external data store should be easy and not require | ||||
|   depending on risky lightly-used community-supported code libraries | ||||
|  | ||||
| Based on these constraints, Google's BigTable product is selected as the data | ||||
| store. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Table Schema | ||||
| A BigTable instance is used to hold all transaction data, broken up into | ||||
| different tables for quick searching. | ||||
|  | ||||
| New data may be copied into the instance at anytime without affecting the existing | ||||
| data, and all data is immutable.  Generally the expectation is that new data | ||||
| will be uploaded once an current epoch completes but there is no limitation on | ||||
| the frequency of data dumps. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Cleanup of old data is automatic by configuring the data retention policy of the | ||||
| instance tables appropriately, it just disappears.  Therefore the order of when data is | ||||
| added becomes important.  For example if data from epoch N-1 is added after data | ||||
| from epoch N, the older epoch data will outlive the newer data.  However beyond | ||||
| producing _holes_ in query results, this kind of unordered deletion will | ||||
| have no ill effect.  Note that this method of cleanup effectively allows for an | ||||
| unlimited amount of transaction data to be stored, restricted only by the | ||||
| monetary costs of doing so. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The table layout s supports the existing RPC endpoints only.  New RPC endpoints | ||||
| in the future may require additions to the schema and potentially iterating over | ||||
| all transactions to build up the necessary metadata. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Accessing BigTable | ||||
| BigTable has a gRPC endpoint that can be accessed using the | ||||
| [tonic](https://crates.io/crates/crate)] and the raw protobuf API, as currently no | ||||
| higher-level Rust crate for BigTable exists.  Practically this makes parsing the | ||||
| results of BigTable queries more complicated but is not a significant issue. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Data Population | ||||
| The ongoing population of instance data will occur on an epoch cadence through the | ||||
| use of a new `solana-ledger-tool` command that will convert rocksdb data for a | ||||
| given slot range into the instance schema. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The same process will be run once, manually, to backfill the existing ledger | ||||
| data. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ### Block Table: `block` | ||||
|  | ||||
| This table contains the compressed block data for a given slot. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The row key is generated by taking the 16 digit lower case hexadecimal | ||||
| representation of the slot, to ensure that the oldest slot with a confirmed | ||||
| block will always be first when the rows are listed.  eg, The row key for slot | ||||
| 42 would be 000000000000002a. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The row data is a compressed `StoredConfirmedBlock` struct. | ||||
|  | ||||
|  | ||||
| ### Account Address Transaction Signature Lookup Table: `tx-by-addr` | ||||
|  | ||||
| This table contains the transactions that affect a given address. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The row key is `<base58 | ||||
| address>/<slot-id-one's-compliment-hex-slot-0-prefixed-to-16-digits>`.  The row | ||||
| data is a compressed `TransactionByAddrInfo` struct. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Taking the one's compliment of the slot allows for listing of slots ensures that | ||||
| the newest slot with transactions that affect an address will always | ||||
| be listed first. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Sysvar addresses are not indexed.  However frequently used programs such as | ||||
| Vote or System are, and will likely have a row for every confirmed slot. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ### Transaction Signature Lookup Table: `tx` | ||||
|  | ||||
| This table maps a transaction signature to its confirmed block, and index within that block. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The row key is the base58-encoded transaction signature. | ||||
| The row data is a compressed `TransactionInfo` struct. | ||||
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