Research
Security News
Malicious npm Package Targets Solana Developers and Hijacks Funds
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
CouchRest is based on CouchDB's couch.js test library, which I find to be concise, clear, and well designed. CouchRest lightly wraps CouchDB's HTTP API, managing JSON serialization, and remembering the URI-paths to CouchDB's API endpoints so you don't have to.
CouchRest is designed to make a simple base for application and framework-specific object oriented APIs. CouchRest is Object-Mapper agnostic, the parsed JSON it returns from CouchDB shows up as subclasses of Ruby's Hash. Naked JSON, just as it was mean to be.
Note: CouchRest only support CouchDB 0.9.0 or newer.
$ sudo gem install couchrest
Alternatively, you can install from Github:
$ gem sources -a http://gems.github.com (you only have to do this once)
$ sudo gem install couchrest-couchrest
CouchRest rests on top of a HTTP abstraction layer using by default Heroku’s excellent REST Client Ruby HTTP wrapper. Other adapters can be added to support more http libraries.
The most complete documentation is the spec/ directory. To validate your
CouchRest install, from the project root directory run rake
, or autotest
(requires RSpec and optionally ZenTest for autotest support).
Quick Start:
# with !, it creates the database if it doesn't already exist
@db = CouchRest.database!("http://127.0.0.1:5984/couchrest-test")
response = @db.save_doc({:key => 'value', 'another key' => 'another value'})
doc = @db.get(response['id'])
puts doc.inspect
Bulk Save:
@db.bulk_save([
{"wild" => "and random"},
{"mild" => "yet local"},
{"another" => ["set","of","keys"]}
])
# returns ids and revs of the current docs
puts @db.documents.inspect
Creating and Querying Views:
@db.save_doc({
"_id" => "_design/first",
:views => {
:test => {
:map => "function(doc){for(var w in doc){ if(!w.match(/^_/))emit(w,doc[w])}}"
}
}
})
puts @db.view('first/test')['rows'].inspect
CouchRest::ExtendedDocument is a DSL/ORM for CouchDB. Basically, ExtendedDocument seats on top of CouchRest Core to add the concept of Model. ExtendedDocument offers a lot of the usual ORM tools such as optional yet defined schema, validation, callbacks, pagination, casting and much more.
Check spec/couchrest/more and spec/fixtures/more for more examples
class Article < CouchRest::ExtendedDocument
use_database DB
unique_id :slug
view_by :date, :descending => true
view_by :user_id, :date
view_by :tags,
:map =>
"function(doc) {
if (doc['couchrest-type'] == 'Article' && doc.tags) {
doc.tags.forEach(function(tag){
emit(tag, 1);
});
}
}",
:reduce =>
"function(keys, values, rereduce) {
return sum(values);
}"
property :date
property :slug, :read_only => true
property :title
property :tags, :cast_as => ['String']
timestamps!
save_callback :before, :generate_slug_from_title
def generate_slug_from_title
self['slug'] = title.downcase.gsub(/[^a-z0-9]/,'-').squeeze('-').gsub(/^\-|\-$/,'') if new?
end
end
CouchRest::ExtendedDocuments
instances have 4 callbacks already defined for you:
:validate
, :create
, :save
, :update
and :destroy
CouchRest::CastedModel
instances have 1 callback already defined for you:
:validate
Define your callback as follows:
set_callback :save, :before, :generate_slug_from_name
CouchRest uses a mixin you can find in lib/mixins/callbacks which is extracted from Rails 3, here are some simple usage examples:
set_callback :save, :before, :before_method
set_callback :save, :after, :after_method, :if => :condition
set_callback :save, :around {|r| stuff; yield; stuff }
Or the aliased short version:
before_save :before_method, :another_method
after_save :after_method, :another_method, :if => :condition
around_save {|r| stuff; yield; stuff }
To halt the callback, simply return a :halt symbol in your callback method.
Check the mixin or the ExtendedDocument class to see how to implement your own callbacks.
property :last_name, :alias => :family_name
property :read_only_value, :read_only => true
property :name, :length => 4...20
property :price, :type => Integer
Often, you will want to store multiple objects within a document, to be able to retrieve your objects when you load the document, you can define some casting rules.
property :casted_attribute, :cast_as => 'WithCastedModelMixin'
property :keywords, :cast_as => ["String"]
property :occurs_at, :cast_as => 'Time', :send => 'parse
property :end_date, :cast_as => 'Date', :send => 'parse
If you want to cast an array of instances from a specific Class, use the trick shown above ["ClassName"]
Pagination is available in any ExtendedDocument classes. Here are some usage examples:
basic usage:
Article.all.paginate(:page => 1, :per_page => 5)
note: the above query will look like: GET /db/_design/Article/_view/all?include_docs=true&skip=0&limit=5&reduce=false
and only fetch 5 documents.
Slightly more advance usage:
Article.by_name(:startkey => 'a', :endkey => {}).paginate(:page => 1, :per_page => 5)
note: the above query will look like: GET /db/_design/Article/_view/by_name?startkey=%22a%22&limit=5&skip=0&endkey=%7B%7D&include_docs=true
Basically, you can paginate through the articles starting by the letter a, 5 articles at a time.
Low level usage:
Article.paginate(:design_doc => 'Article', :view_name => 'by_date',
:per_page => 3, :page => 2, :descending => true, :key => Date.today, :include_docs => true)
CouchRest is compatible with rails and can even be used a Rails plugin. However, you might be interested in the CouchRest companion rails project: http://github.com/hpoydar/couchrest-rails
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that mattetti-couchrest demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
Security News
Research
Socket researchers have discovered malicious npm packages targeting crypto developers, stealing credentials and wallet data using spyware delivered through typosquats of popular cryptographic libraries.
Security News
Socket's package search now displays weekly downloads for npm packages, helping developers quickly assess popularity and make more informed decisions.