This is a demo app used for my dotJS 2019 talk "CRDTs for Mortals".
Slides here: https://jlongster.com/s/dotjs-crdt-slides.pdf
View this app here: https://crdt.jlongster.com
It contains a full implementation of hybrid logical clocks to generate timestamp for causal ordering of messages. Using these timestamps, CRDTs can be easily used to change local data that also syncs to multiple devices. This also contains an implementation of a merkle tree to check consistency of the data to make sure all clients are in sync.
It provides a server to store and retrieve messages, so that clients don't have to connect peer-to-peer.
The entire implementation is tiny, but provides a robust mechanism for writing distributed apps:
- Server: 132 lines of JS
- Client: 639 lines of JS
(This does not include main.js
in the client which is the implementation of the app. This is just showing the tiny size of everything needed to build an app)
Links:
- Actual: https://actualbudget.com/
- Hybrid logical clocks: https://cse.buffalo.edu/tech-reports/2014-04.pdf
- CRDTs: https://bit.ly/2DMk0AD
- Live app: https://crdt.jlongster.com/
You can just open client/index.html
in a browser (i.e., access via file://
URI). Alternatively, you can serve it from a web server (e.g., npx serve
and open http://localhost:5000/client/
).
By default, the UI will sync with the data hosted at https://crdt.jlongster.com/server/sync
. See instructions below for syncing with your own local server.
yarn install
./run
to start the server (this will createserver/db.sqlite
).- Open
server/db.sqlite
in a SQLite client and runserver/init.sql
to create the schema. - Modify the UI to sync with your local server: edit
client/sync.js:post()
to usehttp://localhost:8006/sync
instead ofhttps://crdt.jlongster.com/server/sync
.