Pipeline enabled RethinkDB client in pure Elixir. Still a work in progress.
If you are coming here from elixir-rethinkdb, welcome!
If you were expecting Exrethinkdb
you are in the right place. We decided to change the name to just RethinkDB
and the repo to rethinkdb-elixir
. Sorry if it has caused confusion. Better now in the early stages than later!
###Connection
Connections are managed by a GenServer.
####Basic Local Connection
alias RethinkDB.Query
conn = RethinkDB.connect
####Basic Remote Connection
conn = RethinkDB.connect([host: "10.0.0.17", port: 28015])
####Named Connection
conn = RethinkDB.connect([name: :foo]})
####Supervised Connection Start the supervisor with:
worker(RethinkDB.Connection, [[name: :foo]])
worker(RethinkDB.Connection, [[name: :bar, host: 'localhost', port: 28015]])
####Default Connection
An RethinkDB.Connection
does parallel queries via pipelining. It can and should be shared among multiple processes. Because of this, it is common to have one connection shared in your application. To create a default connection, we create a new module and use RethinkDB.Connection
.
defmodule FooDatabase do
use RethinkDB.Connection
end
This connection can be supervised without a name (it will assume the module as the name).
worker(FooConnection, [])
Queries can be run without providing a connection (it will use the name connection).
use RethinkDB.Query
table("people") |> FooDatabase.run
###Query
RethinkDB.run/2
accepts a process as the second argument (to facilitate piping).
####Insert
q = Query.table("people")
|> Query.insert(%{first_name: "John", last_name: "Smith"})
|> RethinkDB.run conn
####Filter
q = Query.table("people")
|> Query.filter(%{last_name: "Smith"})
|> RethinkDB.run conn
####Functions RethinkDB supports RethinkDB functions in queries. There are two approaches you can take:
Use RethinkDB operators
import RethinkDB.Query
make_array([1,2,3]) |> map(fn (x) -> add(x, 1) end)
Use Elixir operators via the lambda macro
require RethinkDB.Lambda
import RethinkDB.Lambda
make_array([1,2,3]) |> map(lambda fn (x) -> x + 1 end)
####Map
require RethinkDB.Lambda
import Query
import RethinkDB.Lambda
conn = RethinkDB.connect
table("people")
|> has_fields(["first_name", "last_name"])
|> map(lambda fn (person) ->
person[:first_name] + " " + person[:last_name]
end) |> RethinkDB.run conn
See query.ex for more basic queries. If you don't see something supported, please open an issue. We're moving fast and any guidance on desired features is helpful.
###Changes
Change feeds can be consumed either incrementally (by calling RethinkDB.next/1
) or via the Enumerable Protocol.
q = Query.table("people")
|> Query.filter(%{last_name: "Smith"})
|> Query.changes
|> RethinkDB.run conn
# get one result
first_change = RethinkDB.next results
# get stream, chunked in groups of 5, Inspect
results |> Stream.chunk(5) |> Enum.each &IO.inspect/1
###Shortcuts
Calling use RethinkDB
will import all functions into the current scope. If you are using a custom connection, using that connection module will import all functions into the current scope. If you use both RethinkDB
and your custom connection, you will have a namespace clash.
###Questions
####Why not use elixir-rethinkdb? The current state of elixir-rethinkdb (https://github.com/azukiapp/elixir-rethinkdb) is incompatible with rethinkdb 2.0. It also doesn't support pipelining (added in 2.0) for parallel queries. These changes are pretty central to the client, so rather than gutting it, I decided to start from scratch.
A lot of the code from elixir-rethinkdb will probably be useful as we go forward.
###Roadmap Version 1.0.0 will be limited to individual connections and implement the entire documented ReQL (as of rethinkdb 2.0)
While not provided by this library, we will also include example code for:
- Connection Pooling
- Supervised Feeds
The goal for 1.0.0 is to be stable. Issues have been filed for work that needs to be completed before 1.0.0 and tagged with the 1.0.0 milestone.
###Contributing
Contributions are welcome. Take a look at the Issues. Anything that is tagged Help Wanted
or Feedback Wanted
is a good candidate for contributions. Even if you don't know where to start, respond to an interesting issue and you will be pointed in the right direction.
####Testing Be intentional. Whether you are writing production code or tests, make sure there is value in the test being writtne.