2026-03-12 08:11:25 +01:00
..
2026-03-12 08:11:25 +01:00
2026-03-12 07:44:20 +01:00
2026-03-12 08:11:25 +01:00

cfgsync

cfgsync is a small library stack for node registration and config artifact delivery.

It is meant for distributed bootstrap flows where nodes register themselves with a config service, wait until artifacts are ready, fetch one payload containing the files they need, and then write those files locally before continuing startup.

The boundary is simple. cfgsync owns transport, registration storage, polling, and artifact serving. The application adapter owns readiness policy and artifact generation. That keeps the library reusable without forcing application-specific bootstrap logic into core crates.

The model

There are two ways to use cfgsync.

The simpler path is static bundle serving. In that mode, all artifacts are known ahead of time and the server just serves a precomputed bundle.

The more general path is registration-backed serving. In that mode, nodes register first, the server builds a stable registration snapshot, and the application materializer decides when artifacts are ready and what should be served.

Both paths use the same client protocol and the same artifact payload shape. The difference is only where artifacts come from.

Crate roles

cfgsync-artifacts

This crate defines the file-level data model. ArtifactFile represents one file and ArtifactSet represents a group of files delivered together. If you only need to talk about files and file groups, this is the crate you use.

cfgsync-core

This crate defines the protocol and the low-level server/client pieces. The central types are NodeRegistration, RegistrationPayload, NodeArtifactsPayload, CfgsyncClient, and the NodeConfigSource implementations used by the server.

It also defines the generic HTTP contract: nodes POST /register, then POST /node to fetch artifacts. The server responds with either a payload, NotReady, or Missing.

cfgsync-adapter

This crate is the application-facing integration layer. The main concepts are RegistrationSnapshot, RegistrationSnapshotMaterializer, MaterializedArtifacts, and MaterializationResult.

The adapter answers one question: given the current registration snapshot, are artifacts ready yet, and if so, what should be served?

The crate also includes reusable wrappers such as CachedSnapshotMaterializer, PersistingSnapshotMaterializer, and RegistrationConfigSource. Static deployment-driven rendering still exists, but it lives under cfgsync_adapter::static_deployment as a secondary helper path. The main cfgsync model is registration-backed materialization.

cfgsync-runtime

This crate provides operational helpers and binaries. It includes client-side fetch/write helpers, server config loading, and direct server entrypoints for materializers. Use this crate when you want to run cfgsync rather than define its protocol or adapter contracts.

Artifact model

cfgsync serves one node request at a time, but the adapter usually thinks in snapshots.

The adapter produces MaterializedArtifacts, which contain node-local artifacts keyed by node identifier plus optional shared artifacts delivered alongside every node. When one node requests config, cfgsync resolves that nodes local files, merges in the shared files, and returns a single payload.

This is why applications do not need separate “node config” and “shared config” endpoints unless they want legacy compatibility.

Registration-backed flow

This is the main integration path.

The node sends a NodeRegistration containing a stable identifier, an IP address, and optional typed application metadata. That metadata is opaque to cfgsync itself and is only interpreted by the application adapter.

The server stores registrations and builds a RegistrationSnapshot. The application implements RegistrationSnapshotMaterializer and decides whether the current snapshot is ready, which node-local artifacts should be produced, and which shared artifacts should accompany them.

If the materializer returns NotReady, cfgsync responds accordingly and the client can retry later. If it returns Ready, cfgsync serves the resolved artifact payload.

Static bundle flow

Static bundle mode still exists because it is useful when artifacts are already known.

That is appropriate for fully precomputed topologies, deterministic fixtures, and test setups where no runtime coordination is needed. In that mode, cfgsync serves from NodeArtifactsBundle through BundleConfigSource.

Bundle mode is useful, but it is not the defining idea of the library anymore. The primary model is registration-backed materialization, and the static helpers are intentionally kept off the main adapter surface.

Example: typed registration metadata

use cfgsync_core::NodeRegistration;

#[derive(serde::Serialize)]
struct MyNodeMetadata {
    network_port: u16,
    api_port: u16,
}

let registration = NodeRegistration::new("node-1", "127.0.0.1".parse().unwrap())
    .with_metadata(&MyNodeMetadata {
        network_port: 3000,
        api_port: 18080,
    })?;

Example: snapshot materializer

use cfgsync_adapter::{
    DynCfgsyncError, MaterializationResult, MaterializedArtifacts, RegistrationSnapshot,
    RegistrationSnapshotMaterializer,
};
use cfgsync_artifacts::{ArtifactFile, ArtifactSet};

struct MyMaterializer;

impl RegistrationSnapshotMaterializer for MyMaterializer {
    fn materialize_snapshot(
        &self,
        registrations: &RegistrationSnapshot,
    ) -> Result<MaterializationResult, DynCfgsyncError> {
        if registrations.len() < 2 {
            return Ok(MaterializationResult::NotReady);
        }

        let nodes = registrations.iter().map(|registration| {
            (
                registration.identifier.clone(),
                ArtifactSet::new(vec![ArtifactFile::new(
                    "/config.yaml",
                    format!("id: {}\n", registration.identifier),
                )]),
            )
        });

        Ok(MaterializationResult::ready(
            MaterializedArtifacts::from_nodes(nodes),
        ))
    }
}

Example: serving cfgsync

use cfgsync_runtime::serve_snapshot_cfgsync;

# async fn run() -> anyhow::Result<()> {
serve_snapshot_cfgsync(4400, MyMaterializer).await?;
# Ok(())
# }

Example: fetching artifacts

use cfgsync_runtime::{ArtifactOutputMap, fetch_and_write_artifacts};

# async fn run(registration: cfgsync_core::NodeRegistration) -> anyhow::Result<()> {
let outputs = ArtifactOutputMap::new()
    .route("/config.yaml", "/node-data/node-1/config.yaml")
    .route("deployment-settings.yaml", "/node-data/shared/deployment-settings.yaml");

fetch_and_write_artifacts(&registration, "http://127.0.0.1:4400", &outputs).await?;
# Ok(())
# }

What belongs in the adapter

The adapter should own the application-specific parts of bootstrap: the registration payload type, the readiness rule, the conversion from registration snapshots into artifacts, and any shared artifact generation your app needs. In practice that means things like waiting for n initial nodes, deriving peer lists from registrations, building node-local config files, or generating one shared deployment file for all nodes.

What does not belong in cfgsync core

Do not push application-specific topology semantics, genesis or deployment generation, command/state-machine logic, or domain-specific ideas of what a node means into generic cfgsync. Those belong in the adapter or the consuming application.

If you are integrating a new app, the shortest sensible path is to define a typed registration payload, implement RegistrationSnapshotMaterializer, return node-local and optional shared artifacts, serve them with serve_snapshot_cfgsync(...), and use CfgsyncClient or the runtime helpers on the node side. That gives you the main library value without forcing extra application logic into cfgsync itself.

Compatibility

The primary supported surface is what is reexported from the crate roots.

Some older names and compatibility paths still exist internally, but they are not the intended public API.