Skip to content
/ sofa Public
forked from cabal7/sofa

Yet Another Elixir CouchDB Client. So alpha, your kittens will cry. Git tags should be usable, and are taken off the /develop/ branch. Use that until we have an actual official release.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

dch/sofa

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

22 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Sofa: idiomatic Elixir module for Apache CouchDB

Sofa is yet another Elixir CouchDB client. Its sole claim to fame is that it's written by a rather average developer with no delusions of grandeur. You should have no trouble understanding it.

The intention is to provide an idiomatic Elixir client, that can play nicely with Ecto, Maps, and in particular, Structs and Protocols. You should be able to store a Struct in CouchDB, and have it come back to you as a Struct again, assuming you're not doing anything too messy, such as nested structs, or trying to store pids, refs, and other distinctly non-JSON things.

Installation

It is recommended to use a Tesla.Adapter. While in principle these are all equivalent, in practice, their patterns for handling query parameters, headers, empty HTTP bodies, IPv6, and generally dealing with nil, true, false and so forth mean that they are not created equal. This library should work, in most cases transparently, and if not, we welcome tests and converters to address any shortcomings.

Sofa makes no guarantees about specific HTTP modules, but should run with:

The package can be installed by adding sofa to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:gun, "~> 2.0.0-rc.1", override: true, optional: true},
    {:sofa, "~> 0.1.0"}
  ]
end
# config/config.exs
import Config

if config_env() == :test do
  config :tesla, adapter: Tesla.Mock
else
  config :tesla, adapter: Tesla.Adapter.Gun
end

Docs, Functionality and Road Map

Sofa really only has 2 important abstractions that live above the CouchDB API:

  • %Sofa{} aka Sofa.t() which is a struct that wraps your HTTP API connection, along with any custom headers & settings you may require, and the returned data from the CouchDB server you connect to, including feature flags and vendor settings. As a convenience, it also doubles as your "database" struct, as that's really only a single additional field to be inserted into the CouchDB URL
  • %Sofa.Doc{} aka Sofa.Doc.t() which is the main struct you'll work with. We've tried to keep it as close to the CouchDB API as possible, so aside from id, rev, and the attachments stubs, all the JSON is contained in a body and Sofa keeps out of your way.

While not yet implemented, Sofa wants to support "native" Elixir struct usage, where you implement the Protocol to convert your custom Struct to/from Sofa, and Sofa will use the type key that is commonly used in CouchDB to detect & marshall your Struct directly to/from CouchDB's JSON API transparently.

  • server: Sofa.*
  • raw HTTP: Sofa.Raw.*
  • database: Sofa.DB.*
  • document: Sofa.Doc.*
  • attachments
  • transparent Struct API
  • view: Sofa.View.*
  • changes: Sofa.Changes.*
  • katipo Tesla Adapter
  • timeouts for requests and inactivity
  • bearer token authorisation
  • runtime tracing filterable by method & URL
  • embeddable within CouchDB BEAM runtime
  • native CouchDB erlang term support

Usage

Connecting to CouchDB

Sofa.init/1 and Sofa.client/1 are effectively static structures, so you can build them at compile time, or store them efficiently in ETS tables, or persistent_term for faster access.

Sofa.connect!/1 needs access to the CouchDB server, to verify that your credentials are sufficient, and to retrieve feature flags and vendor settings.

Exactly how you use this, is dependent on your Tesla.Adapter and supervision trees. Make sure that you're not opening a new TCP connection for every call to the database, and then leave them dangling until your app or the server runs of of connections!

The Sofa.DB.open!/2 call also does similar checks, ensuring you have at least permissions to access the database, in some form. There is nothing that changes over time within this struct, so feel free to cache it "for a while" in your processes if that helps.

# connect to CouchDB and ensure our credentials are valid
iex> sofa = Sofa.init("http://admin:passwd@localhost:5984/")
        |> Sofa.client()
        |> Sofa.connect!()
    #Sofa<
    client: %Tesla.Client{
        adapter: nil,
        fun: nil,
        post: [],
        pre: [{Tesla.Middleware.BaseUrl, ...}, {...}, ...]
    },
    features: ["access-ready", "partitioned", "pluggable-storage-engines",
    "reshard", "scheduler"],
    timeout: nil,
    uri: %URI{
        authority: "admin:passwd@localhost:5984",
        fragment: nil,
        host: "localhost",
        ...
    },
    uuid: "092b8cafefcaeef659beef7b60a5a9",
    vendor: %{"name" => "FreeBSD", ...},
    version: "3.2.0",
    ...
# re-use the same struct, and confirm we can access a specific database
iex> db = Sofa.DB.open!("mydb")
    #Sofa<
    client: %Tesla.Client{ ... },
    database: "mydb",
    ...
    version: "3.2.0"
    >

Basic Doc Usage

There shouldn't be any surprises here - an Elixir Map %{} becomes the body of the %Sofa.Doc{} struct, and the usual CouchDB internal fields are available as additional atom fields off the struct:

iex>  doc = %{"_id" => "smol", "cute" => true} |> Sofa.Doc.from_map()
    %Sofa.Doc{
    attachments: nil,
    body: %{
        "cute" => true
    },
    id: "smol",
    rev: nil,
    type: nil
    }
iex> doc |> Sofa.Doc.to_map()
    %{
        "_id" => "smol",
        "cute" => true
    }
# fetch and retrieve documents works like you'd expect
iex> Sofa.Doc.exists?(db,"missing")
    false

Raw Mode

Sometimes you just want to re-upholster the Couch yourself. That's fine, raw mode is here to help you:

# raw mode gives you direct access to CouchDB API, with JSONification
iex> db = Sofa.init("http://admin:passwd@localhost:5984/")
        |> Sofa.client()
        |> Sofa.connect!()
        |> Sofa.raw("/_membership")
{:ok,
 #Sofa<
   client: %Tesla.Client{...},
   database: nil,
   features: ["access-ready",... "reshard", "scheduler"],
   timeout: nil,
   uri: %URI{...},
   uuid: "092b8cafefcaeef659beef7b60a5a9",
   vendor: %{"name" => "FreeBSD", ...},
   version: "3.2.0",
   ...
 >,
 %Sofa.Response{
   body: %{
     "all_nodes" => ["[email protected]"],
     "cluster_nodes" => ["[email protected]"]
   },
   headers: %{
     cache_control: "must-revalidate",
     content_length: 74,
     content_type: "application/json",
     date: "Wed, 28 Apr 2021 14:11:10 GMT",
     server: "CouchDB/3.2.0 (Erlang OTP/22)"
   },
   method: :get,
   query: [],
   status: 200,
   url: "http://localhost:5984/_membership"
 }}

Development and Testing

If raw mode can't do it, send a PR, and we'll make it so. If you find yourself reaching for raw mode often, consider a PR that extends Sofa itself?

Sofa should pass reasonable credo, and also respect dialyzer. If you run make lint you may wish to softlink ./.mix/plts somewhere permanent, so that your PLT creation is preserved across runs.

Thanks

  • the CouchDB team, who have been a part of my life for more than a decade. Relax.

About

Yet Another Elixir CouchDB Client. So alpha, your kittens will cry. Git tags should be usable, and are taken off the /develop/ branch. Use that until we have an actual official release.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Elixir 98.1%
  • Makefile 1.9%