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clay.js
version 1.3
DISCLAIMER
clay is being rewritten and its relationship support is not working
yet.
With the most sincer apologies, Gabe
What
Clay is a lightweight active record for Node.js applications. It
leverages the effort of declaring models and its relationships, and
store them in any backend.
Clay comes with builtin support for Redis but has a
very simple interface with storage mechanisms, so that you can write
your own backend.
Hands On !
installation
npm install clay
declaration
Let's go by example:
var redis = require('redis').createConnection();
var models = require('clay');
var User = models.declare("User", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("name", kind.string);
it.has.field("email", kind.email);
it.has.field("password", kind.string);
it.has.method('greet', function() {
return [
"Hello, my name is ", this.name, ", it's nice to meet you"
].join('');
});
});
var Build = models.declare("Build", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("status", kind.numeric);
it.has.field("error", kind.string);
it.has.field("output", kind.string);
it.has.one("author", User, "builds");
});
var BuildInstruction = models.declare("BuildInstruction", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("name", kind.string);
it.has.field("repository_address", kind.string);
it.has.field("build_command", kind.string);
it.validates.uniquenessOf("name");
it.has.index("repository_address");
it.has.many("builds", Build, "instruction");
it.has.one("owner", User, "created_instructions");
});
anatomy
Clay provides syntactic sugar function calls that will help you
declare models in a very classy, fashion and expressive way.
It is possible through the callback passed to the models.declare
call, and it has the arguments it
and kind
. These two will help
you out to declare your model.
field types
Clay's field kinds are no more than just functions responsible to
transform and validate data.
You can implement your own field kind, or use the builtin kinds. They come with valitation out of the box:
alphanumeric
shorthand for the regexp /^[a-zA-z-0-9]+$/
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('example', kind.alphanumeric);
});
numeric
shorthand for the regexp /^[0-9]+$/
also returns an integer through parseInt
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('example', kind.numeric);
});
datetime
returns a new Date(value)
, be aware that clay is date-utils powered
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('birth_day', kind.datetime);
});
auto
auto-assigns a new Date()
to the given field whenever a new Model
is issued
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('created_at', kind.auto);
});
var x = new Foo();
x.created_at.toFormat("DD/MM/YYYY")
email
shorthand for the regexp /^\w+[@]\w+[.]\w{2,}$/
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('example', kind.email);
});
string
any string of any size, although it's trimmed
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('example', kind.string);
});
slug
any string of any size, will me returned as a slug,
for example the input Hello World
turns into hello-world
USAGE:
var Foo = models.declare('Foo', function(it, kind){
it.has.field('example', kind.slug);
});
saving instances
var assert = require('assert');
var lettuce_instructions = new BuildInstruction({
name: 'Lettuce Unit Tests',
repository_address: 'git://github.com/gabrielfalcao/lettuce.git',
build_command: 'make unit'
});
lettuce_instructions.save(function(err, pk, model_instance, storage, redis_connection){
assert.equal(pk, 'clay:BuildInstruction:id:1');
});
relationships
Clay "kind of supports
one-to-many and many-to-one "relationships", in order to declare them
you can just use either: it.has.one()
or it.has.many()
declaration.
Nevertheless there are two important things you must know about how
Clay leverages the relationship feature:
1. Relationships go through both lanes
In my opinion, a snippet is worth than words:
Supposing you have this declaration
var Person = models.declare("Person", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("name", kind.string);
});
var Belonging = models.declare("Belonging", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("description", kind.string);
it.has.one("owner", Person, "belongings");
});
This is telling Clay that a Belonging has an owner, as well as that a Person has many belongings
Technically speaking, it means that internally Clay will make the declaration above idempodent to the example below:
var Belonging = models.declare("Belonging", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("description", kind.string);
});
var Person = models.declare("Person", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("name", kind.string);
it.has.many("belonging", Person, "owner");
});
Now, ain't that so cool?
Now whenever you persist your data, as long as the dynamically
assigned objects were already persisted, their references will be kept
tracked by its related objects.
behavior: methods and properties
Clay provides an object-oriented-friendly object declaration.
So as expected, you can define class-level methods, instance-level
methods, getters and setters.
Once again, using code to show the magic:
class methods:
var Animal = models.declare("Animal", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("name", kind.string);
it.has.field("sex", kind.string);
it.has.class_method("create_male", function(name){
return new this({sex: "male", name: name});
});
});
var leo = Animal.create_male("Lion");
assert.equal(leo.name, "Lion");
assert.equal(leo.sex, "male");
instance methods:
var Person = models.declare("Person", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("name", kind.string);
it.has.method("say_hello", function(){
console.log("Hello, I am " + this.name);
});
});
var john = new Person({name: "John Doe"});
john.say_hello();
would produce the output
Hello, I am John Doe
getters:
var BankAccount = models.declare("BankAccount", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("balance", kind.numeric);
it.has.getter("is_positive", function(){
return this.balance > 0;
});
it.has.getter("is_negative", function(){
return this.balance < 0;
});
});
var red = new BankAccount({balance: -5000});
red.is_negative()
var green = new BankAccount({balance: 99});
green.is_positive()
would produce the output
Hello, I am John Doe
setters:
var Person = models.declare("Person", function(it, kind){
it.has.field("first_name", kind.string);
it.has.field("last_name", kind.string);
it.has.setter("name", function(name){
var parts = name.trim().split(/\s+/);
if (parts.length == 2) {
this.first_name = parts[0];
this.last_name = parts[1];
} else {
this.first_name = name;
this.last_name = "";
}
});
it.has.getter("name", function(){
return [this.first_name, this.last_name].join(' ');
});
});
var john = new Person();
john.name = "John Doe";
assert.equal(john.first_name, "John");
assert.equal(john.last_name, "John");
saving instances and its relationships
var assert = require('assert');
var gabrielfalcao = new Build({
name: 'Gabriel Falcão',
email: 'gabriel@yipit.com',
password: '123'
});
var b1 = new Build({
status: 0,
error: '',
output: 'Worked!',
author: gabrielfalcao
});
var b2 = new Build({
status: 32,
error: 'Failed!',
output: 'OOps',
author: gabrielfalcao
});
var lettuce_unit = new BuildInstruction({
name: "Lettuce Unit Tests",
repository_address: 'git://github.com/gabrielfalcao/lettuce.git',
build_command: 'make unit',
owner: gabrielfalcao,
builds: [b1, b2]
});
gabrielfalcao.save(function(e, gabrielfalcao_pk){
b1.save(function(e, b1_pk){
b2.save(function(e, b2_pk){
lettuce_unit.save(function(e4, lettuce_unit_pk){
});
});
});
});
finding by id
BuildInstruction.find_by_id(1, function(e, found){
assert.equal(found.name, 'Lettuce Unit Tests');
assert.equal(found.repository_address, 'git://github.com/gabrielfalcao/lettuce.git');
assert.equal(
"Will now build: {name}".render(found),
"Will now build: Lettuce Unit Tests"
);
});
finding by any field
Clay attempts to be really simple to use, and for the sake of this
fact there is a lot of magic here.
When you declare any model with Clay, you have special class-methods
available right away.
In order to search by any declared field, all you need to do is call
YourModel.find_by_fieldname
, where YourModel
is the return of
models.declare()
and fieldname
is the name of any fields you have
declared. All of them will be available.
It takes just 2 parameters: the RegExp
that will be used to match
against values and a callback.
The callback, takes 2 parameters: an error and an array with instances
of models.
example
var adam = new User({
name: "Adam Nelson",
email: "adam@yipit.com",
password: '123'
});
adam.save(function(e, pk, instance){
User.find_by_email(/yipit.com$/, function(e, found){
assert.equal(found.length, 1);
assert.equal(found.first.name, 'Adam Nelson');
assert.equal(found.first.email, 'adam@yipit.com');
});
});
Hacking / Contributing
1. fork and clone the project
2. install npm
3. install the dependencies with npm:
cd clay.js
npm install
4. install Jake:
npm install -g jshint
5. run the tests
jake unit
jake functional
PS.: you need to have redis running in order to make the functional tests running
6. set up the pre-commit hook:
cd path/to/emerald
ln -s .development/pre-commit-hook .git/hooks/pre-commit
chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit
7. send the pull request
License
<clay - active record for node.js with redis backend>
Copyright (C) <2011> Gabriel Falcão <gabriel@yipit.com>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
restriction, including without limitation the rights to use,
copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following
conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.