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abstract-nosql
Advanced tools
An abstract prototype for nosql database with sync and streamable (LevelDOWN API)
Abstract-nosql package is modified from abstract-leveldown to enhance the synchronous methods supports for development a node nosql database quickly and using easily. And it make abstract-nosql modularization become possible.
abstract-nosql database can be extended its capabilities by adding different feature addin. and you(database developer) almost have nothing to do, can have these features. The database user can be free to decide whether to add this feature.
abstract-nosql Interface is neutral. There is no bias neither synchronous bias nor asynchronous bias. So that more people choose according to their own manner. For myself, I am not very concerned about the performance of javascript, I am more concerned about the efficiency of its development, as well as through functional programming (functions, closures such a simple concept) extend out of the rich and wonderful world. I still can not help but to think about performance issues. Asynchronous itself produces a small gap, because javascript reason this gap is magnified.
just saying that the asynchronous and synchronous consideration, if a function is only 1% of the opportunity to visit the IO, most of the time (99%) are in memory access. I want to different considerations, have different choices. And this decision is unlikely that done by the interface instead.
Synchronous operation converts into asynchronous operation is easy, and almost no performance loss, in turn, may not. Conversion are many ways, setImmediate is not the best, but it is the simplest one. ES6 generator or node-fibers could be a better way. the coroutine/fiber is lighter and more efficient than thread.
The setImmediate package could be extended to use different implementation(setImmediate, nextTick, ES6 generator, node-fiber) in different environment. So the simulated asynchronous uses this way, if you do not implement the asynchronous methods.
see abstract-error
make it event-able so easy, install it first:
npm install events-ex
add the eventable ability to a database:
eventable = require 'events-ex/eventable'
MyDB = eventable require '...' # derived from AbstractNoSQL
Now the following events added(before and after events):
NOTE: the async callback will be executed after event.
and you can choose which ones are added via this way:
eventable = require 'events-ex/eventable'
MyDB = eventable MyDB,
include: ['open', 'close'] # only include 'open' and 'close' events
or:
eventable = require 'events-ex/eventable'
MyDB = require '...'
MyDB = eventable MyDB,
# only include 'open' and 'close' events
exclude: ['mGet', 'getBuffer', 'put', 'get', 'del', 'batch']
usage:
MyDB = eventable MyDB
mydb = new MyDB(location)
mydb.once 'opening', ->
console.log 'db is opening.'
mydb.on 'ready', ->
console.log 'db is opened.'
mydb.open()
hooked events usage:
var eventable = require 'events-ex/eventable'
var consts = require('events-ex/consts')
var EVENT_DONE = consts.DONE
var EVENT_STOPPED = consts.STOPPED
var MyDB = eventable(require('...'))
mydb = new MyDB(location)
mydb.cache = {
'cached_foo': 'bar'
}
mydb.on 'getting', (key, options)->
if (key === 'stoppedKey') {
return {
state: EVENT_STOPPED,
result: 'halted via stoppedKey found.'
}
} else if (this.cache.hasOwnProperty(key))
return {
state: EVENT_DONE,
// this is as get result.
result: this.cache[key]
}
console.log(mydb.get('cached_foo');
//print 'bar'
mydb.get('stoppedKey');
//throw HookedEventError: 'halted via stoppedKey found.'
Once implements the AbstractIterator:
AbstractIterator._nextSync()
or AbstractIterator._next()
.AbstractIterator._endSync()
or AbstractIterator._end()
.the db should be the streamable.
But, you should install the nosql-stream package first.
npm install nosql-stream
var streamable = require('nosql-stream')
var LevelDB = streamable(require('nosql-leveldb'))
see nosql-stream for more details
nosql-encoding add the encoding ability to the abstract-nosql database.
npm install nosql-encoding
add the encoding ability to a database:
var encodingable = require 'nosql-encoding'
var MyDB = encodingable(require('...')) # derived from AbstractNoSQL
you can use the encoding ability now:
var db = MyDB('location')
// that's all.
db.open({keyEncoding: 'text', valueEncoding: 'json'})
see nosql-encoding for more details
Remember that each of these methods, if you implement them, will receive exactly the number and order of arguments described. Optional arguments will be converted to sensible defaults.
_isExistsSync
(key, options)this is an optional method for performance.
_mGetSync
(keys, options)this is an optional method for performance.
arguments
return
_openSync
(options)_getSync
(key, options)_putSync
(key, value, options)_delSync
(key, options)_batchSync
(array, options)_isExists
(key, options, callback)this is an optional method for performance.
_mGet
(keys, options, callback)this is an optional method for performance.
arguments
_open
(options, callback)_close
(callback)_get
(key, options, callback)_put
(key, value, options, callback)_del
(key, options, callback)_batch
(array, options, callback)If batch()
is called without argument or with only an options object then it should return a Batch
object with chainable methods. Otherwise it will invoke a classic batch operation.
the batch should be rename to transact more accurate.
batch()
can be used for very fast bulk-write operations (both put and delete). The array
argument should contain a list of operations to be executed sequentially, although as a whole they are performed as an atomic operation inside LevelDB. Each operation is contained in an object having the following properties: type
, key
, value
, where the type is either 'put'
or 'del'
. In the case of 'del'
the 'value'
property is ignored. Any entries with a 'key'
of null
or undefined
will cause an error to be returned on the callback
and any 'type': 'put'
entry with a 'value'
of null
or undefined
will return an error.
var ops = [
{ type: 'del', key: 'father' }
, { type: 'put', key: 'name', value: 'Yuri Irsenovich Kim' }
, { type: 'put', key: 'dob', value: '16 February 1941' }
, { type: 'put', key: 'spouse', value: 'Kim Young-sook' }
, { type: 'put', key: 'occupation', value: 'Clown' }
]
db.batch(ops, function (err) {
if (err) return console.log('Ooops!', err)
console.log('Great success dear leader!')
})
_chainedBatch
()By default an batch()
operation without argument returns a blank AbstractChainedBatch
object. The prototype is available on the main exports for you to extend. If you want to implement chainable batch operations then you should extend the AbstractChaindBatch
and return your object in the _chainedBatch()
method.
_approximateSize
(start, end, callback)You can override the IteratorClass
to your Iterator.
After override this, it is not necessary to implement the "_iterator()"
method.
_iterator
(options)By default an iterator()
operation returns a blank AbstractIterator
object. The prototype is available on the main exports for you to extend. If you want to implement iterator operations then you should extend the AbstractIterator
and return your object in the _iterator(options)
method.
AbstractIterator
implements the basic state management found in LevelDOWN. It keeps track of when a next()
is in progress and when an end()
has been called so it doesn't allow concurrent next()
calls, it does it allow end()
while a next()
is in progress and it doesn't allow either next()
or end()
after end()
has been called.
arguments
'gt'
(greater than), 'gte'
(greater than or equal) define the lower bound of the range to be streamed. Only records where the key is greater than (or equal to) this option will be included in the range. When reverse=true
the order will be reversed, but the records streamed will be the same.'lt'
(less than), 'lte'
(less than or equal) define the higher bound of the range to be streamed. Only key/value pairs where the key is less than (or equal to) this option will be included in the range. When reverse=true
the order will be reversed, but the records streamed will be the same.'reverse'
(boolean, default: false
): a boolean, set true and the stream output will be reversed. Beware that due to the way LevelDB works, a reverse seek will be slower than a forward seek.'keys'
(boolean, default: true
): whether contain keys.'values'
(boolean, default: true
): whether contain values.'limit'
(number, default: -1
): limit the number of results collected by this stream. This number represents a maximum number of results and may not be reached if you get to the end of the data first. A value of -1
means there is no limit. When reverse=true
the highest keys will be returned instead of the lowest keys.'fillCache'
(boolean, default: false
): wheather LevelDB's LRU-cache should be filled with data read.Provided with the current instance of AbstractNoSql
by default.
_put
(key, value)_del
(key)_clear
()_write
(options, callback)A simplistic in-memory LevelDOWN replacement
use sync methods will be very simple:
the coffee-script implementation is more natural:
inherits = require('inherits-ex')
AbstractNoSql = require('abstract-nosql')
class FakeNoSqlDatabase
inherits FakeNoSqlDatabase, AbstractNoSql
_openSync: (options)-> @_store = {}
_putSync: (key, value, options)->
key = '%' + key # safety, to avoid key='__proto__'-type skullduggery
@_store[key] = value
true
_getSync: (key, options)->
result = @_store['%' + key]
throw new Error('NotFound') if result is undefined
result
_delSync: (key, options)->delete @_store['%' + key]
#the _isExistsSync is optional:
_isExistsSync: (key, options)->@_store.hasOwnProperty('%' + key)
the js implementation:
var inherits = require('inherits-ex')
, AbstractNoSql = require('abstract-nosql')
// constructor, passes through the 'location' argument to the AbstractNoSql constructor
function FakeNoSqlDatabase (location) {
AbstractNoSql.call(this, location)
}
// our new prototype inherits from AbstractNoSql
inherits(FakeNoSqlDatabase, AbstractNoSql)
// implement some methods
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._openSync = function (options) {
this._store = {}
return true
}
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._putSync = function (key, value, options) {
key = '%' + key // safety, to avoid key='__proto__'-type skullduggery
this._store[key] = value
return true
}
//the isExists is an optional method:
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._isExistsSync = function (key, options) {
return this._store.hasOwnProperty('%' + key)
}
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._getSync = function (key, options) {
var value = this._store['%' + key]
if (value === undefined) {
// 'NotFound' error, consistent with LevelDOWN API
throw new Error('NotFound')
}
return value
}
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._delSync = function (key, options) {
delete this._store['%' + key]
return true
}
//use it directly
var db = new FakeNoSqlDatabase()
//sync:
db.put('foo', 'bar')
var result = db.get('foo')
//async:
db.put('foo', 'bar', function (err) {
if (err) throw err
db.get('foo', function (err, value) {
if (err) throw err
console.log('Got foo =', value)
db.isExists('foo', function(err, isExists){
if (err) throw err
console.log('isExists foo =', isExists)
})
})
})
//stream:
db.readStream().on('data', function(data){
})
// Or use it in LevelUP
var levelup = require('levelup')
var db = levelup('/who/cares/', {
// the 'db' option replaces LevelDOWN
db: function (location) { return new FakeNoSqlDatabase(location) }
})
//async:
db.put('foo', 'bar', function (err) {
if (err) throw err
db.get('foo', function (err, value) {
if (err) throw err
console.log('Got foo =', value)
db.isExists('foo', function(err, isExists){
if (err) throw err
console.log('isExists foo =', isExists)
})
})
})
//sync:
db.put('foo', 'bar')
console.log(db.get('foo'))
console.log(db.isExists('foo'))
use async methods(no sync supports):
var util = require('util')
, AbstractNoSql = require('./').AbstractNoSql
// constructor, passes through the 'location' argument to the AbstractNoSql constructor
function FakeNoSqlDatabase (location) {
AbstractNoSql.call(this, location)
}
// our new prototype inherits from AbstractNoSql
util.inherits(FakeNoSqlDatabase, AbstractNoSql)
// implement some methods
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._open = function (options, callback) {
// initialise a memory storage object
this._store = {}
// optional use of nextTick to be a nice async citizen
process.nextTick(function () { callback(null, this) }.bind(this))
}
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._put = function (key, value, options, callback) {
key = '_' + key // safety, to avoid key='__proto__'-type skullduggery
this._store[key] = value
process.nextTick(callback)
}
//the isExists is an optional method:
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._isExists = function (key, options, callback) {
var value = this._store.hasOwnProperty('_' + key)
process.nextTick(function () {
callback(null, value)
})
}
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._get = function (key, options, callback) {
var value = this._store['_' + key]
if (value === undefined) {
// 'NotFound' error, consistent with LevelDOWN API
return process.nextTick(function () { callback(new Error('NotFound')) })
}
process.nextTick(function () {
callback(null, value)
})
}
FakeNoSqlDatabase.prototype._del = function (key, options, callback) {
delete this._store['_' + key]
process.nextTick(callback)
}
// now use it in LevelUP
var levelup = require('levelup')
var db = levelup('/who/cares/', {
// the 'db' option replaces LevelDOWN
db: function (location) { return new FakeNoSqlDatabase(location) }
})
db.put('foo', 'bar', function (err) {
if (err) throw err
db.get('foo', function (err, value) {
if (err) throw err
console.log('Got foo =', value)
})
})
See nosql-memdb if you are looking for a complete in-memory replacement for AbstractNoSql database.
broken changes
) remove the streamable feature from buildin. this is a plugin now.broken changes
) defaults to disable asBuffer option.
getBuffer
method to get as buffer._getBuffer
implemented._get
/_getSync
method if no _isExists
or _isExistsSync
implemented'open'
and 'ready'
event after the database is opened.'closed'
event after the database is closed._get
/_getSync
method if no _mGet
or _mGetSync
implemented._mGet
/_mGetSync
return the plain array: [key1, value1, key2, value2, ...]_nextSync
return the array: [key, value]Abstract LevelDOWN is an OPEN Open Source Project. This means that:
Individuals making significant and valuable contributions are given commit-access to the project to contribute as they see fit. This project is more like an open wiki than a standard guarded open source project.
See the CONTRIBUTING.md file for more details.
Abstract LevelDOWN/NoSQL is only possible due to the excellent work of the following contributors:
Riceball LEE | GitHub/snowyu | |
---|---|---|
Rod Vagg | GitHub/rvagg | Twitter/@rvagg |
John Chesley | GitHub/chesles | Twitter/@chesles |
Jake Verbaten | GitHub/raynos | Twitter/@raynos2 |
Dominic Tarr | GitHub/dominictarr | Twitter/@dominictarr |
Max Ogden | GitHub/maxogden | Twitter/@maxogden |
Lars-Magnus Skog | GitHub/ralphtheninja | Twitter/@ralphtheninja |
David Björklund | GitHub/kesla | Twitter/@david_bjorklund |
Julian Gruber | GitHub/juliangruber | Twitter/@juliangruber |
Paolo Fragomeni | GitHub/hij1nx | Twitter/@hij1nx |
Anton Whalley | GitHub/No9 | Twitter/@antonwhalley |
Matteo Collina | GitHub/mcollina | Twitter/@matteocollina |
Pedro Teixeira | GitHub/pgte | Twitter/@pgte |
James Halliday | GitHub/substack | Twitter/@substack |
Thomas Watson Steen | GitHub/watson | Twitter/@wa7son |
Copyright (c) 2012-2015 Abstract LevelDown/NoSQL contributors (listed above).
Abstract NoSQL is licensed under the MIT license. All rights not explicitly granted in the MIT license are reserved. See the included LICENSE.md file for more details.
FAQs
An abstract prototype for nosql database with sync and streamable (LevelDOWN API)
We found that abstract-nosql demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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