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Store

Synopsis

A store is a data structure that holds the state of the application.

Introduction to Cosmos SDK Stores

The Cosmos SDK comes with a large set of stores to persist the state of applications. By default, the main store of Cosmos SDK applications is a multistore, i.e. a store of stores. Developers can add any number of key-value stores to the multistore, depending on their application's needs. The multistore exists to support the modularity of the Cosmos SDK, as it lets each module declare and manage their own subset of the state. Key-value stores in the multistore can only be accessed with a specific capability key, which is typically held in the keeper of the module that declared the store.

flowchart TB
subgraph MainMultistore["Main Multistore"]
KVStore1["KVStore 1 - Managed by keeper of Module 1"]
KVStore2["KVStore 2 - Managed by keeper of Module 2"]
KVStore3["KVStore 3 - Managed by keeper of Module 2"]
KVStore4["KVStore 4 - Managed by keeper of Module 3"]
KVStore5["KVStore 5 - Managed by keeper of Module 4"]
end

MainMultistore --> ApplicationState["Application's State"]

Store Interface

At its very core, a Cosmos SDK store is an object that holds a CacheWrapper and has a GetStoreType() method:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L15-L18

The GetStoreType is a simple method that returns the type of store, whereas a CacheWrapper is a simple interface that implements store read caching and write branching through the Write method:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L287-L303

Branching and cache is used ubiquitously in the Cosmos SDK and required to be implemented on every store type. A storage branch creates an isolated, ephemeral branch of a store that can be passed around and updated without affecting the main underlying store. This is used to trigger temporary state-transitions that may be reverted later should an error occur. Read more about it in context

Commit Store

A commit store is a store that has the ability to commit changes made to the underlying tree or db. The Cosmos SDK differentiates simple stores from commit stores by extending the basic store interfaces with a Committer:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L32-L36

The Committer is an interface that defines methods to persist changes to disk:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L20-L30

The CommitID is a deterministic commit of the state tree. Its hash is returned to the underlying consensus engine and stored in the block header. Note that commit store interfaces exist for various purposes, one of which is to make sure not every object can commit the store. As part of the object-capabilities model of the Cosmos SDK, only baseapp should have the ability to commit stores. For example, this is the reason why the ctx.KVStore() method by which modules typically access stores returns a KVStore and not a CommitKVStore.

The Cosmos SDK comes with many types of stores, the most used being CommitMultiStore, KVStore and GasKv store. Other types of stores include Transient and TraceKV stores.

Multistore

Multistore Interface

Each Cosmos SDK application holds a multistore at its root to persist its state. The multistore is a store of KVStores that follows the Multistore interface:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L123-L155

If tracing is enabled, then branching the multistore will firstly wrap all the underlying KVStore in TraceKv.Store.

CommitMultiStore

The main type of Multistore used in the Cosmos SDK is CommitMultiStore, which is an extension of the Multistore interface:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L163-L227

As for concrete implementation, the rootMulti.Store is the go-to implementation of the CommitMultiStore interface.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/rootmulti/store.go#L55-L77

The rootMulti.Store is a base-layer multistore built around a db on top of which multiple KVStores can be mounted, and is the default multistore store used in baseapp.

CacheMultiStore

Whenever the rootMulti.Store needs to be branched, a cachemulti.Store is used.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/cachemulti/store.go#L20-L33

cachemulti.Store branches all substores (creates a virtual store for each substore) in its constructor and hold them in Store.stores. Moreover caches all read queries. Store.GetKVStore() returns the store from Store.stores, and Store.Write() recursively calls CacheWrap.Write() on all the substores.

Base-layer KVStores

KVStore and CommitKVStore Interfaces

A KVStore is a simple key-value store used to store and retrieve data. A CommitKVStore is a KVStore that also implements a Committer. By default, stores mounted in baseapp's main CommitMultiStore are CommitKVStores. The KVStore interface is primarily used to restrict modules from accessing the committer.

Individual KVStores are used by modules to manage a subset of the global state. KVStores can be accessed by objects that hold a specific key. This key should only be exposed to the keeper of the module that defines the store.

CommitKVStores are declared by proxy of their respective key and mounted on the application's multistore in the main application file. In the same file, the key is also passed to the module's keeper that is responsible for managing the store.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/store.go#L229-L266

Apart from the traditional Get and Set methods, that a KVStore must implement via the BasicKVStore interface; a KVStore must provide an Iterator(start, end) method which returns an Iterator object. It is used to iterate over a range of keys, typically keys that share a common prefix. Below is an example from the bank's module keeper, used to iterate over all account balances:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.52.0-beta.2/x/bank/keeper/view.go#L114-L134

IAVL Store

The default implementation of KVStore and CommitKVStore used in baseapp is the iavl.Store.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/iavl/store.go#L36-L41

iavl stores are based around an IAVL Tree, a self-balancing binary tree which guarantees that:

  • Get and Set operations are O(log n), where n is the number of elements in the tree.
  • Iteration efficiently returns the sorted elements within the range.
  • Each tree version is immutable and can be retrieved even after a commit (depending on the pruning settings).

The documentation on the IAVL Tree is located here.

DbAdapter Store

dbadapter.Store is an adapter for corestore.KVStoreWithBatch making it fulfilling the KVStore interface.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/dbadapter/store.go#L13-L16

dbadapter.Store embeds corestore.KVStoreWithBatch, meaning most of the KVStore interface functions are implemented. The other functions (mostly miscellaneous) are manually implemented. This store is primarily used within Transient Stores

Transient Store

Transient.Store is a base-layer KVStore which is automatically discarded at the end of the block.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/transient/store.go#L16-L19

Transient.Store is a dbadapter.Store with a coretesting.NewMemDB(). All KVStore methods are reused. When Store.Commit() is called, a new dbadapter.Store is assigned, discarding previous reference and making it garbage collected.

This type of store is useful to persist information that is only relevant per-block. One example would be to store parameter changes (i.e. a bool set to true if a parameter changed in a block).

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.52.0-beta.2/x/params/types/subspace.go#L23-L33

Transient stores are typically accessed via the context via the TransientStore() method:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.52.0-beta.2/types/context.go#L344-L347

KVStore Wrappers

CacheKVStore

cachekv.Store is a wrapper KVStore which provides buffered writing / cached reading functionalities over the underlying KVStore.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/cachekv/store.go#L26-L35

This is the type used whenever an IAVL Store needs to be branched to create an isolated store (typically when we need to mutate a state that might be reverted later).

Get

Store.Get() firstly checks if Store.cache has an associated value with the key. If the value exists, the function returns it. If not, the function calls Store.parent.Get(), caches the result in Store.cache, and returns it.

Set

Store.Set() sets the key-value pair to the Store.cache. cValue has the field dirty bool which indicates whether the cached value is different from the underlying value. When Store.Set() caches a new pair, the cValue.dirty is set true so when Store.Write() is called it can be written to the underlying store.

Iterator

Store.Iterator() have to traverse on both cached items and the original items. In Store.iterator(), two iterators are generated for each of them, and merged. memIterator is essentially a slice of the KVPairs, used for cached items. mergeIterator is a combination of two iterators, where traverse happens ordered on both iterators.

GasKv Store

Cosmos SDK applications use gas to track resources usage and prevent spam. GasKv.Store is a KVStore wrapper that enables automatic gas consumption each time a read or write to the store is made. It is the solution of choice to track storage usage in Cosmos SDK applications.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/gaskv/store.go#L11-L17

When methods of the parent KVStore are called, GasKv.Store automatically consumes appropriate amount of gas depending on the Store.gasConfig:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/gas.go#L220-L229

By default, all KVStores are wrapped in GasKv.Stores when retrieved. This is done in the KVStore() method of the context:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.52.0-beta.2/types/context.go#L339-L342

In this case, the gas configuration set in the context is used. The gas configuration can be set using the WithKVGasConfig method of the context. Otherwise it uses the following default:

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/types/gas.go#L231-L242

TraceKv Store

tracekv.Store is a wrapper KVStore which provides operation tracing functionalities over the underlying KVStore. It is applied automatically by the Cosmos SDK on all KVStore if tracing is enabled on the parent MultiStore.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/tracekv/store.go#L20-L43

When each KVStore methods are called, tracekv.Store automatically logs traceOperation to the Store.writer. traceOperation.Metadata is filled with Store.context when it is not nil. TraceContext is a map[string]interface{}.

Prefix Store

prefix.Store is a wrapper KVStore which provides automatic key-prefixing functionalities over the underlying KVStore.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/prefix/store.go#L15-L21

When Store.{Get, Set}() is called, the store forwards the call to its parent, with the key prefixed with the Store.prefix.

When Store.Iterator() is called, it does not simply prefix the Store.prefix, since it does not work as intended. In that case, some of the elements are traversed even if they are not starting with the prefix.

ListenKv Store

listenkv.Store is a wrapper KVStore which provides state listening capabilities over the underlying KVStore. It is applied automatically by the Cosmos SDK on any KVStore whose StoreKey is specified during state streaming configuration. Additional information about state streaming configuration can be found in the store/streaming/README.md.

https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/store/v1.1.1/store/listenkv/store.go#L11-L18

When KVStore.Set or KVStore.Delete methods are called, listenkv.Store automatically writes the operations to the set of Store.listeners.

BasicKVStore interface

An interface providing only the basic CRUD functionality (Get, Set, Has, and Delete methods), without iteration or caching. This is used to partially expose components of a larger store.