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helenus

NodeJS Bindings for Cassandra

  • 0.3.4
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Helenus

NodeJS Bindings for Cassandra

Currently the driver has full CQL support and a growing support for thrift (non-cql) commands. If you would like to contribute, please contact Russ Bradberry <rbradberry@simplereach.com>

Installation

npm install helenus

Running Tests

Ensure cassandra is running on localhost:9160.

make test

For coverage

make test-cov

Usage

CQL

  var helenus = require('helenus'),
      pool = new helenus.ConnectionPool({
        hosts      : ['localhost:9160'],
        keyspace   : 'helenus_test',
        user       : 'test',
        password   : 'test1233',
        timeout    : 3000
      });

  //if you don't listen for error, it will bubble up to `process.uncaughtException`
  //pools act just like connection objects, so you dont have to worry about api
  //differences when using either the pool or the connection
  pool.on('error', function(err){
    console.error(err.name, err.message);
  });

  //makes a connection to the pool, this will return once there is at least one
  //valid connection, other connections may still be pending
  pool.connect(function(err, keyspace){
    if(err){
      throw(err);
    } else {
      //to use cql, access the pool object once connected
      //the first argument is the CQL string, the second is an `Array` of items
      //to interpolate into the format string, the last is the callback
      //for formatting specific see `http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/util.html#util.format`
      //results is an array of row objects

      pool.cql("SELECT '%s' FROM '%s' WHERE key='%s'", ['col','cf_one','key123'], function(err, results){
        console.log(err, results);
      }); 

      //NOTE:
      //you can also use the ? as a placeholder. eg: "SELECT ? FROM '?' WHERE key='?'"
    }
  });

Thrift

If you do not want to use CQL, you can make calls using the thrift driver

  pool.connect(function(err, keyspace){
    if(err){
      throw(err);
    } 
    
    //first retreive the column family from the server
    //helenus will cache column families it has already seen
    keyspace.get('my_cf', function(err, cf){
      if(err){
        throw(err);
      }
      
      //insert something into the column family
      cf.insert('foo', {'bar':'baz'}, function(err){
        if(err){
          throw(err);
        }
        
        //get what we just put in
        //the driver will return a Helenus.Row object just like CQL
        cf.get('foo', function(err, row){
          if(err){
            throw(err);
          }
          
          row.get('bar').value // => baz  
        });          
      });
    });

  });

Thrift Support

Currently Helenus supports the following command for the thrift side of the driver:

  • connection.createKeyspace
  • connection.dropKeyspace
  • keyspace.createColumnFamily
  • keyspace.dropColumnFamily
  • columnFamily.insert
  • columnFamily.get
  • columnFamily.getIndexed
  • columnFamily.remove

The following support is going to be added in later releases:

  • columnFamily.rowCount
  • columnFamily.columnCount
  • columnfamily.increment
  • columnFamily.truncate
  • SuperColumns
  • CounterColumns
  • Better composite support

Row

The Helenus Row object acts like an array but contains some helper methods to make your life a bit easier when dealing with dynamic columns in Cassandra

row.count

Returns the number of columns in the row

row[N]

This will return the column at index N

results.forEach(function(row){
  //gets the 5th column of each row
  console.log(row[5]);
});

row.get(name)

This will return the column with a specific name

results.forEach(function(row){
  //gets the column with the name 'foo' of each row
  console.log(row.get('foo'));
});

row.slice(start, finish)

Slices columns in the row based on their numeric index, this allows you to get columns x through y, it returns a Helenus row object of columns that match the slice.

results.forEach(function(row){
  //gets the first 5 columns of each row
  console.log(row.slice(0,5));
});

row.nameSlice(start, finish)

Slices the columns based on part of their column name. returns a helenus row of columns that match the slice

results.forEach(function(row){
  //gets all columns that start with a, b, c, or d
  console.log(row.nameSlice('a','e'));
});

Column

Columns are returned as objects with the following structure:

  {
    name: 'Foo',       //The column name
    value: 'bar',      //The column value
    timestamp: Date(), //The date object of the timestamp for the column
    ttl: 123456        //The ttl (in milliseconds) for the columns
  }

Contributors

Russell Bradberry, Matthias Eder

License

(The MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2011 SimpleReach <rbradberry@simplereach.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.

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Package last updated on 25 Mar 2012

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