1
0
mirror of https://github.com/oceanprotocol/docs.git synced 2024-11-02 16:25:37 +01:00
docs/content/concepts/components.md
2019-04-10 15:19:00 +02:00

83 lines
3.6 KiB
Markdown

---
title: Software Components
description: The Ocean Protocol network is brought to life by many interacting symbiotic software components.
---
Before reading this page, you should understand some [Ocean-specific terminology](/concepts/terminology/).
## Keeper
A computer running a blockchain client
(such as [Parity Ethereum](https://www.parity.io/ethereum/))
where the associated blockchain network is running the Ocean Protocol
[keeper-contracts](https://github.com/oceanprotocol/keeper-contracts)
(smart contracts).
<repo name="keeper-contracts"></repo>
See also: [Run a Keeper](/setup/keeper/)
## Secret Store
A [Parity Secret Store](https://wiki.parity.io/Secret-Store): software for distributed key pair generation, distributed key storage, and threshold retrieval. It's used to store [asset](/concepts/terminology/#asset-or-data-asset) access-control keys.
There are several clients for integrating the Parity Secret Store into Ocean:
<repo name="secret-store-client-js"></repo>
<repo name="secret-store-client-py"></repo>
<repo name="secret-store-client-java"></repo>
## Aquarius
Marketplaces run Aquarius to store and manage metadata about the [assets](/concepts/terminology/#asset-or-data-asset) available in their marketplace. It provides an HTTP API for interacting with an off-chain database (sometimes called "OceanDB").
<repo name="aquarius"></repo>
### OceanDB Drivers
Aquarius supports several options for the off-chain database (OceanDB), including MongoDB, Elasticsearch and BigchainDB. One can add support for another off-chain database by creating a new driver similar to the existing OceanDB drivers.
<repo name="oceandb-mongodb-driver"></repo>
<repo name="oceandb-bigchaindb-driver"></repo>
<repo name="oceandb-elasticsearch-driver"></repo>
## Brizo
Publishers run Brizo to manage interactions with marketplaces and consumers.
It interacts with the publisher's cloud and/or on-premise infrastructure.
The most basic scenario for a publisher is to provide access to the [assets](/concepts/terminology/#asset-or-data-asset) the publisher owns or manages, but [Brizo can do much more](/concepts/architecture/#brizo).
<repo name="brizo"></repo>
### Osmosis Drivers
Brizo supports several options for file storage, including Azure Storage, Amazon S3 and on-premise storage. One can add support for another file storage option by creating a new driver similar to one of the existing Osmosis drivers.
<repo name="osmosis-azure-driver"></repo>
<repo name="osmosis-aws-driver"></repo>
<repo name="osmosis-on-premise-driver"></repo>
## Squid Libraries
Client libraries used by applications (such as Pleuston or Jupyter notebooks) to interact with Ocean components, including Keepers, Aquarius nodes, Brizo nodes, etc.
![How Squid is Used](images/ocean-squid-ecosystem.png)
<repo name="squid-js"></repo>
<repo name="squid-py"></repo>
<repo name="squid-java"></repo>
## Pleuston
An example marketplace/publisher front-end for developers to explore, download, and publish [assets](/concepts/terminology/#asset-or-data-asset) in an Ocean Protocol network. Implemented using [React](https://reactjs.org/) and [squid-js](https://github.com/oceanprotocol/squid-js).
<repo name="pleuston"></repo>
## Commons Marketplace
An online example marketplace/publisher for consumers to explore, download, and publish open data sets in the [Nile Testnet](/concepts/testnets/#the-nile-testnet). Implemented using [React](https://reactjs.org/) and [squid-js](https://github.com/oceanprotocol/squid-js).
For more information, see [the blog post about Commons Marketplace](https://blog.oceanprotocol.com/the-commons-data-marketplace-c57a44288314).
<repo name="commons"></repo>