Fixes #1434. ## Problem The ingestor's `Checkpoint()` (`PRAGMA wal_checkpoint(TRUNCATE)`) was only called on shutdown. SQLite's built-in auto-checkpoint runs in PASSIVE mode which cannot truncate the WAL while the server holds an active read connection. Result: the WAL grows at ~40–50 MB/hour and is never reset during a running instance. Observed on analyzer.on8ar.eu: **183.4 MB WAL** after ~4h uptime. ## Changes **`cmd/ingestor/main.go`** - Add a periodic goroutine that calls `Checkpoint()` every hour, staggered 30s after startup - Hoist `walCheckpointTicker` to function scope so it is stopped cleanly at shutdown alongside all other tickers **`cmd/ingestor/db.go`** - Switch `Checkpoint()` from `Exec` to `QueryRow(...).Scan` to capture SQLite's 3-column result (`busy`, `log`, `checkpointed`) - Return the checkpointed frame count (callers that discard it are unaffected) - Log only when `walFrames > 0` — silent when WAL is already empty, avoiding log spam - Log `blocked=true/false` instead of raw `busy` integer to make it clear when the server's read lock is preventing full truncation ## Behaviour after fix Each hourly tick flushes all WAL frames not held by an active server reader. Worst-case WAL size is now bounded to roughly one hour of write traffic (~45 MB) instead of unbounded growth. If the server holds a read lock at checkpoint time, the log shows `blocked=true` and remaining frames are retried on the next tick. ## Test plan - [x] `go build ./...` (ingestor module) - [x] `go test ./...` passes - [x] Code review addressed (ticker stop on shutdown, log message clarity) 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) --------- Co-authored-by: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
MeshCore MQTT Ingestor (Go)
Standalone MQTT ingestion service for CoreScope. Connects to MQTT brokers, decodes raw MeshCore packets, and writes to the same SQLite database used by the Node.js web server.
This is the first step of a larger Go rewrite — separating MQTT ingestion from the web server.
Architecture
MQTT Broker(s) → Go Ingestor → SQLite DB ← Node.js Web Server
(this binary) (shared)
- Single static binary — no runtime dependencies, no CGO
- SQLite via
modernc.org/sqlite(pure Go) - MQTT via
github.com/eclipse/paho.mqtt.golang - Runs alongside the Node.js server — they share the DB file
- Does NOT serve HTTP/WebSocket — that stays in Node.js
Build
Requires Go 1.22+.
cd cmd/ingestor
go build -o corescope-ingestor .
Cross-compile for Linux (e.g., for the production VM):
GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go build -o corescope-ingestor .
Run
./corescope-ingestor -config /path/to/config.json
The config file uses the same format as the Node.js config.json. The ingestor reads the mqttSources array (or legacy mqtt object) and dbPath fields.
Environment Variables
| Variable | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
DB_PATH |
SQLite database path | data/meshcore.db |
MQTT_BROKER |
Single MQTT broker URL (overrides config) | — |
MQTT_TOPIC |
MQTT topic (used with MQTT_BROKER) |
meshcore/# |
CORESCOPE_INGESTOR_STATS |
Path to the per-second stats JSON file consumed by the server's /api/perf/io and /api/perf/write-sources endpoints (#1120) |
/tmp/corescope-ingestor-stats.json |
Stats file (CORESCOPE_INGESTOR_STATS)
Every second the ingestor publishes a JSON snapshot of its counters
(tx_inserted, obs_inserted, walCommits, backfillUpdates.*, etc.) plus
a procIO block sampled from /proc/self/io (read/write/cancelled bytes per
second + syscall counts). The server reads this file and surfaces the data on
the Perf page so operators can self-diagnose write-volume anomalies.
The writer uses O_NOFOLLOW | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC mode 0o600, so a
pre-planted symlink at the path cannot be used to clobber an arbitrary file.
Security note: the default lives in /tmp, which is world-writable on
most hosts (sticky bit only protects deletion, not creation). On
shared/multi-tenant hosts, override CORESCOPE_INGESTOR_STATS to point at a
private directory (e.g. /var/lib/corescope/ingestor-stats.json) that only
the corescope user can write to.
Minimal Config
{
"dbPath": "data/meshcore.db",
"mqttSources": [
{
"name": "local",
"broker": "mqtt://localhost:1883",
"topics": ["meshcore/#"]
}
]
}
Full Config (same as Node.js)
The ingestor reads these fields from the existing config.json:
mqttSources[]— array of MQTT broker connectionsname— display name for loggingbroker— MQTT URL (mqtt://,mqtts://)username/password— auth credentialstopics— array of topic patterns to subscribeiataFilter— optional regional filter
mqtt— legacy single-broker config (auto-converted tomqttSources)dbPath— SQLite DB path (default:data/meshcore.db)
Test
cd cmd/ingestor
go test -v ./...
What It Does
- Connects to configured MQTT brokers with auto-reconnect
- Subscribes to mesh packet topics (e.g.,
meshcore/+/+/packets) - Receives raw hex packets via JSON messages (
{ "raw": "...", "SNR": ..., "RSSI": ... }) - Decodes MeshCore packet headers, paths, and payloads (ported from
decoder.js) - Computes content hashes (path-independent, SHA-256-based)
- Writes to SQLite:
transmissions+observationstables - Upserts
nodesfrom decoded ADVERT packets (with validation) - Upserts
observersfrom MQTT topic metadata
Schema Compatibility
The Go ingestor creates the same v3 schema as the Node.js server:
transmissions— deduplicated by content hashobservations— per-observer sightings withobserver_idx(rowid reference)nodes— mesh nodes discovered from advertsobservers— MQTT feed sources
Both processes can write to the same DB concurrently (SQLite WAL mode).
What's Not Ported (Yet)
- Companion bridge format (Format 2 —
meshcore/advertisement, channel messages, etc.) - Channel key decryption (GRP_TXT encrypted payload decryption)
- WebSocket broadcast to browsers
- In-memory packet store
- Cache invalidation
These stay in the Node.js server for now.
Files
cmd/ingestor/
main.go — entry point, MQTT connect, message handler
decoder.go — MeshCore packet decoder (ported from decoder.js)
decoder_test.go — decoder tests (25 tests, golden fixtures)
db.go — SQLite writer (schema-compatible with db.js)
db_test.go — DB tests (schema validation, insert/upsert, E2E)
config.go — config struct + loader
util.go — shared utilities
go.mod / go.sum — Go module definition