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trans

trans is a command line tool to convert Tor network server descriptors from The Tor Project's own serialization to more popular formats like JSON and Parquet, thereby making them readily accessible to analytics tools like Tableau, MongoDB or Apache Spark without the need to resort to specialized libraries for accessing them.

Background

Descriptors get emitted by servers in the Tor network every hour. They are collected by the CollecTor service and from there published in hourly, daily or monthly archives. They are cleaned to preserve the privacy properties of the Tor network but still provide a lot of insights into the workings of Tor that are valuable for administration, development and research. The format of these descriptors is optimized for size to allow for efficient transfer over the network. Specialized libraries like metrics-lib (Java) or [stem] (https://stem.torproject.org/) (Python) are used to access them, which makes them hard to access for non programmers. Additionally, since the data format is homegrown, it is not possible to work on them with of the mill data science and big data analytics softwares like Apache Spark, Tableau or the popular MongoDB NoSQL database.

How to build

On the shell navigate to the project directory (same level as build.xml).
For building an executable jar complete with merged dependencies and schemata just enter ant. Look into ./dist for the result. To get everything enter:

ant clean jar bundle

How to use

On the shell enter:

java -jar trans.jar -h

to get a rundwon of available options. A call to convert some descriptors might look like this:

java -jar trans.jar -i=/collector -o=/json -l=/log -cz -g &> log.txt

Note the addition of &> log.txt which writes error messages to a file.

A reasonable setup could be a working directory - let's call it work - in which you put trans.jar and 2 subdirectories, inwith the descriptors to convert and out for the converted descriptors.
Maybe you need them as JSON, pretty printed (because you want to have a look at them yourself), so run:

java -jar trans.jar -i=in/ -o=out/ -p

If you want to start working with them in MomgoDB right away, you've got to omit the pretty printing and are well advised to use compression, e.g. like this:

java -jar trans.jar -i=in/ -o=out/ -cz

Or you need them all as compressed Parquet files to work on them with Spark, plus logging enabled to make sure you don't miss anything:

java -jar trans.jar -i=in/ -o=out/ -f=parquet --snappy --log

Possible parameters are:

-f    --format     <arg>    default: json, optional: parquet, avro
-s    --suffix              a suffix to the file name                                     
-i    --inPath     <arg>    default: current working directory    
-o    --outPath    <arg>    default: current working directory    
-l    --logsPath   <arg>    default: current working directory    
-cs   --snappy              a compression format popular with Parquet
-cz   --zip                 compressing Avro as BZip2, Parquet & JSON as GZip 
-p    --pretty              pretty printed JSON                   
-m    --maxFiles   <arg>    max files to be opened, default: 20                           
-d    --debug               print JSON descriptors to console     
-g    --log                 log to file 'trans.log'           

Caveats

Data might contain double entries. See CollecTor for more details. Pretty printed JSON is primarily intended for human consumption and debugging. Softwares often require every JSON record in one line (eg. Spark otherwise can't ingest it, but MongoDB won't complain).

TODO

The most important issues:

  • make the timespan that converted data files cover configurable
  • a flattened version, less faithful to the structure of the spec
  • tests (dependend on test descriptors from the Tor metrics team)

For a complete overview see TODO.md.

Code overview

Base is the class that contains the main method.

The main method initializes a new Base base, which in turn initializes Args and Writers singletons. Args contains default arguments like input directory, output format etc and evaluates command line arguments. Writers stores fileWriters per descriptor_type and month. It initializes new fileWriters on demand, according to the type and date of incoming descriptor and the configured format.

After initialization main calls runConversion() on the base just created which iterates over the incoming descriptors, converts them according to type, gets the appropriate fileWriter from Writers and appends the converted descriptors to this fileWriter.

Actual converters (ConvertRelay, ConvertBridge etc) are all subclasses of the abstract Class Convert. Actual Writers (WriteAvro, WriteParquet and WriteJson) are all implementations of the interface Writer. Actual descriptor types, their properties and methods are all defined as enums in Types.

Encoding of the converted descriptors is managed in the WriterXXXX classes and relies on the encoder schemata and autogenerated Avro classes in the package encoders.

After all descriptors are converted closeAllWriters() is called to perform some housekeeping, making sure that all writers write to disk before the program exits.

Avro Schemata

trans uses Apache Avro to encode the descriptor data model in JSON serialization. Java classes autogenerated from this model power the conversion from descriptor to Avro, Parquet and JSON. The schemata stored in schema/IDL/*.avdl are the source from which JSON schemata (see schema/*.avsc) and Java classes (see src/trans/encoders) are generated. Modifications to the data model like new fields in descriptors etc most probably require changes to the IDL schemata first and then generating JSON schemata and Java classes. For more details on how to do this see docs/avro.md.

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