gun 
Quick getting started guide.
Make sure you already have node and npm installed.
npm install gun
Then require it in your app.
var Gun = require('gun');
Then initialize a gun instance with your AWS S3 credentials.
var gun = Gun({
s3: {
key: '',
secret: '',
bucket: ''
}});
S3 is the default persistence layer, it can be replaced with others.
Currently, gun is only key/value but graph support is coming soon.
Save your first object, and create a reference to it.
gun.set({ hello: 'world' }).key('my/first/data');
Now, altogether, with the node hello world web server that replies with your data.
var Gun = require('gun');
var gun = Gun({
s3: {
key: '',
secret: '',
bucket: ''
}});
gun.set({ hello: 'world' }).key('my/first/data');
var http = require('http');
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
gun.load('my/first/data', function(data){
res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'application/json'});
res.end(JSON.stringify(data));
});
}).listen(1337, '127.0.0.1');
console.log('Server running at http://127.0.0.1:1337/');
Now fire up your browser and hit that URL - you'll see your data, plus some gun specific metadata.
Ahead
- Realtime push to the browser
- Persistence in the browser
- Authorization callbacks
- Graph manipulation
- Server to server communication
- Test more
- Bug fixes
- More via additional module hooks (schema, queries, etc.)