Redis Dataloader
Batching and Caching layer using Redis as the Caching layer.
Redis Dataloader wraps Facebook Dataloader,
adding Redis as a caching layer.
Example
const redisClient = require('redis').createClient();
const DataLoader = require('dataloader');
const RedisDataLoader = require('redis-dataloader')({ redis: redisClient });
const loader = new RedisDataLoader(
'redis-key-prefix',
new DataLoader(myBatchLoadFunction, { cache: false }),
{
cache: true,
expire: 60,
serialize: date => date.getTime(),
deserialize: timestamp => new Date(timestamp)
}
);
loader.load(5).then(resp => console.log(resp));
loader.clear(5).then(() => {})
API Documentation
In general, RedisDataLoader has the same API as the Facebook Dataloader Api,
with a few differences. Read through the Facebook Dataloader documentation and then note the differences mentioned here.
clear
returns a promise (waits until redis succeeds at deleting the key). Facebook Dataloader's clear
method is synchronous.clearAll
is not available (redis does not have an efficient way to do this?)prime
will always overwrite the cache. Facebook Dataloader will only write to
its cache if a value is not already present. Prime is asyncronous and returns a Promise.- dataloader results must be either
null
or a JSON object. - two functions:
clearLocal(key)
and clearAllLocal()
allow you to clear the local cache only.
Instantiation
Dependency inject a Redis Connection
const redis = require('redis').createClient();
const RedisDataLoader = require('redis-dataloader')({ redis: redis });
Create a new Dataloader.
Each Dataloader holds its own local in memory cache (Same as Facebook Dataloader),
and additionally caches to your Redis instance.
const loader = new RedisDataLoader('<redis key prefix>', '<Facebook Dataloader>', '<Options>');
Redis Key Prefix
Specify a Prefix that will be appended to each key when storing in Redis.
So for example if your prefix is "bar" and you call loader.load('foo')
, this key
will be stored in Redis as bar:foo
Facebook Dataloader
A regular Facebook Dataloader is passed in as the second parameter. It will be
used to fetch data from your underlying datastore (mongo, sql, whatever).
It is very important to disable the cache on this dataloader. Redis dataloader
will already do local in memory caching (unless you disable it).
Options
All the options available to Facebook Dataloader can be passed in here. An
additional option called expire is also available, and will set a ttl in seconds
on all keys set in redis if this option is passed.
The cacheKeyFn
will default to serialize objects and arrays using json-stable-stringify and allow all other values to pass through unchanged.
Caching
The purpose of Redis Dataloader is to provide a caching layer in redis on top
of the Facebook Dataloader. Facebook's Dataloader provides a local in memory cache.
This may be ok for short lived per-request caches, but may not be sufficient if
you need a long lived cache and/or you have multiple webservers that need to share
data.
Redis Dataloader will additionally use the same local cache that Facebook Dataloader
provides. It will first check the local cache, then check the redis cache, before
finally checking your underlying datastore. This pattern may be desirable if for
example you create a new DataLoader for each request. If your dataloader is long-lived
you may want to disable to the local cache, and just rely on the redis cache instead
const loader = new RedisDataLoader('prefix', new DataLoader(), { cache: false });
Development
- Install Dependencies
npm install
- Start Redis
docker-compose stop && docker-compose rm && docker-compose build && docker-compose up -d
- Run Tests
grunt test