Couch Potato
... is a persistence layer written in ruby for CouchDB.
Mission
The goal of Couch Potato is to create a minimal framework in order to store and retrieve Ruby objects to/from CouchDB and create and query views.
It follows the document/view/querying semantics established by CouchDB and won't try to mimic ActiveRecord behavior in any way as that IS BAD.
Code that uses Couch Potato should be easy to test.
Lastly Couch Potato aims to provide a seamless integration with Ruby on Rails, e.g. routing, form helpers etc.
Core Features
- persisting objects by including the CouchPotato::Persistence module
- declarative views with either custom or generated map/reduce functions
- extensive spec suite
Installation
Couch Potato is hosted as a gem on github which you can install like this:
sudo gem source --add http://gems.github.com # if you haven't already
sudo gem install langalex-couch_potato
Using with your ruby application:
require 'rubygems'
gem 'langalex-couch_potato'
require 'couch_potato'
Alternatively you can download or clone the source repository and then require lib/couch_potato.rb.
You MUST specificy the name of the database:
CouchPotato::Config.database_name = 'name of the db'
The server URL will default to http://localhost:5984/ unless specified with:
CouchPotato::Config.database_server = "http://example.com:5984/"
Using with Rails
Add to your config/environment.rb:
config.gem 'langalex-couch_potato', :lib => 'couch_potato', :source => 'http://gems.github.com'
Then create a config/couchdb.yml:
development: development_db_name
test: test_db_name
production: http://db.server/production_db_name
Alternatively you can also install Couch Potato directly as a plugin.
Introduction
This is a basic tutorial on how to use Couch Potato. If you want to know all the details feel free to read the specs.
Save, load objects
First you need a class.
class User
end
To make instances of this class persistent include the persistence module:
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
end
If you want to store any properties you have to declare them:
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
property :name
end
Properties can be of any type:
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
property :address, :type => Address
end
Properties can have a default value
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
property :active, :default => true
end
Now you can save your objects. All database operations are encapsulated in the CouchPotato::Database class. This separates your domain logic from the database access logic which makes it easier to write tests and also keeps you models smaller and cleaner.
user = User.new :name => 'joe'
CouchPotato.database.save_document user # or save_document!
You can of course also retrieve your instance:
CouchPotato.database.load_document "id_of_the_user_document" # => <#User 0x3075>
Properties
You can access the properties you declared above through normal attribute accessors.
user.name # => 'joe'
user.name = {:first => ['joe', 'joey'], :last => 'doe', :middle => 'J'} # you can set any ruby object that responds_to :to_json (includes all core objects)
user._id # => "02097f33a0046123f1ebc0ebb6937269"
user._rev # => "2769180384"
user.created_at # => Fri Oct 24 19:05:54 +0200 2008
user.updated_at # => Fri Oct 24 19:05:54 +0200 2008
user.new? # => false
If you want to have properties that don't map to any JSON type, i.e. other than String, Number, Boolean, Hash or Array you have to define the type like this:
class User
property :date_of_birth, :type => Date
end
The date_of_birth property is now automatically serialized to JSON and back when storing/retrieving objects.
Dirty tracking
CouchPotato tracks the dirty state of attributes in the same way ActiveRecord does:
user = User.create :name => 'joe'
user.name # => 'joe'
user.name_changed? # => false
user.name_was # => nil
You can also force a dirty state:
user.name = 'jane'
user.name_changed? # => true
user.name_not_changed
user.name_changed? # => false
CouchPotato.database.save_document user # does nothing as no attributes are dirty
Object validations
Couch Potato uses the validatable library for vaidation (http://validatable.rubyforge.org/)\
class User
property :name
validates_presence_of :name
end
user = User.new
user.valid? # => false
user.errors.on(:name) # => [:name, 'can't be blank']
Finding stuff
In order to find data in your CouchDB you have to create a view first. Couch Potato offers you to create and manage those views for you. All you have to do is declare them in your classes:
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
property :name
view :all, :key => :created_at
end
This will create a view called "all" in the "user" design document with a map function that emits "created_at" for every user document.
CouchPotato.database.view User.all
This will load all user documents in your database sorted by created_at.
CouchPotato.database.view User.all(:key => (Time.now- 10)..(Time.now), :descending => true)
Any options you pass in will be passed onto CouchDB.
Composite keys are also possible:
class User
property :name
view :all, :key => [:created_at, :name]
end
The creation of views is based on view specification classes (see the CouchPotato::View module). The above code uses the ModelViewSpec class which is used to find models by their properties. For more sophisticated searches you can use other view specifications (either use the built-in or provide your own) by passing a type parameter:
If you have larger structures and you only want to load some attributes you can use the PropertiesViewSpec (the full class name is automatically derived):
class User
property :name
property :bio
view :all, :key => :created_at, :properties => [:name], :type => :properties
end
CouchPotato.database.view(User.everyone).first.name # => "joe"
CouchPotato.database.view(User.everyone).first.bio # => nil
You can also pass in custom map/reduce functions with the custom view spec:
class User
view :all, :map => "function(doc) { emit(doc.created_at, null)}", :include_docs => true, :type => :custom
end
If you don't want the results to be converted into models the raw view is your friend:
class User
view :all, :map => "function(doc) { emit(doc.created_at, doc.name)}", :type => :raw
end
When querying this view you will get the raw data returned by CouchDB which looks something like this: {'total_entries': 2, 'rows': [{'value': 'alex', 'key': '2009-01-03 00:02:34 +000', 'id': '75976rgi7546gi02a'}]}
To process this raw data you can also pass in a results filter:
class User
view :all, :map => "function(doc) { emit(doc.created_at, doc.name)}", :type => :raw, :results_filter => lambda {|results| results['rows'].map{|row| row['value']}}
end
In this case querying the view would only return the emitted value for each row.
You can pass in your own view specifications by passing in :type => MyViewSpecClass. Take a look at the CouchPotato::View::*ViewSpec classes to get an idea of how this works.
Associations
Not supported. Not sure if they ever will be. You can implement those yourself using views and custom methods on your models.
Callbacks
Couch Potato supports the usual lifecycle callbacks known from ActiveRecord:
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
before_create :do_something_before_create
before_update {|user| user.do_something_on_update}
end
This will call the method do_something_before_create before creating an object and run the given lambda before updating one. Lambda callbacks get passed the model as their first argument. Method callbacks don't receive any arguments.
Supported callbacks are: :before_validation, :before_validation_on_create, :before_validation_on_update, :before_validation_on_save, :before_create, :after_create, :before_update, :after_update, :before_save, :after_save, :before_destroy, :after_destroy.
If you need access to the database in a callback: Couch Potato automatically assigns a database instance to the model before saving and when loading. It is available as database accessor from within your model instance.
Testing
To make testing easier and faster database logic has been put into its own class, which you can replace and stub out in whatever way you want:
class User
include CouchPotato::Persistence
end
# RSpec
describe 'save a user' do
it 'should save' do
couchrest_db = stub 'couchrest_db',
database = CouchPotato::Database.new couchrest_db
user = User.new
couchrest_db.should_receive(:save_doc).with(...)
database.save_document user
end
end
By creating you own instances of CouchPotato::Database and passing them a fake CouchRest database instance you can completely disconnect your unit tests/spec from the database.
Helping out
Please fix bugs, add more specs, implement new features by forking the github repo at http://github.com/langalex/couch_potato.
You can run all the specs by calling 'rake spec_unit' and 'rake spec_functional' in the root folder of Couch Potato. The specs require a running CouchDB instance at http://localhost:5984
I will only accept patches that are covered by specs - sorry.
Contact
If you have any questions/suggestions etc. please contact me at alex at upstream-berlin.com or @langalex on twitter.