Go framework to simplify creating, reading, updating, and deleting arbitrary depth structured data — to make building REST services fast and easy.
Note that the master branch always refers to latest version of Gocrud, which would contain breaking changes. To use stable version of Gocrud APIs, please use the packages released via gopkg.in.
Gocrud version | Install instructions | Godoc | Source |
---|---|---|---|
v1 (stable) | go get -v gopkg.in/manishrjain/gocrud.v1/... |
godoc | source |
master (dev) | go get -v github.com/manishrjain/gocrud/... |
godoc | source |
I primarily use IRC on freenode network. Channel is #gocrud
. I'm mrjn
on the network.
#gocrud on freenode
I also hang out at the gophers.slack.com, at #gocrud
channel.
Although, Slack doesn't have a linux client which is what my workstation runs, and hence, I prefer IRC over Slack.
You can get an invitation to join Slack via this link:
Gopher Slack #.
You can also direct message me, my user id is @manishrjain
.
Courtesy: Monish, co-founder karma.wiki
Having built over 3 different startup backends, I think a lot of time is wasted figuring out and coding CRUD for data structures. In addition, the choice of database has to be made up front, which causes a lot of headache for startup founders. Gocrud was written with the aim to make CRUD easy, and provide the flexibility to switch out both the underlying storage and search engines at any stage of development.
Datastore | Driver Available | Status |
---|---|---|
LevelDB | Yes | Ready |
MySQL | Yes | Needs to implement Iterate func |
PostgreSQL | Yes | Needs to implement Iterate func |
Cassandra | Yes | Ready |
MongoDB | Yes | Needs to implement Iterate func |
Google Datastore | Yes | Needs to implement Iterate func |
RethinkDB | Yes | Needs to implement Iterate func |
Amazon DynamoDB | No | Needs work |
Datastore usage shows how to use and initialize various datastores. One can add support for more by implementing this interface: |
type Store interface {
Init(args ...string)
Commit(its []*x.Instruction) error
IsNew(subject string) bool
GetEntity(subject string) ([]x.Instruction, error)
Iterate(fromId string, num int, ch chan x.Entity) (int, error)
}
Search Engine | Drive Available |
---|---|
Elastic Search | Yes |
Solr | No |
Can be added by implementing these interfaces:
type Engine interface {
Init(args ...string)
Update(x.Doc) error
NewQuery(kind string) Query
}
type Query interface {
Limit(num int) Query
Order(field string) Query
Run() ([]x.Doc, error)
// and few others
}
This framework is built to follow these principles:
- Versioning: Keep track of all edits to the data, including deletion operations.
- Authorship: Be able to track who edited (/deleted) what.
- Retention: On deletion, only mark it as deleted. Never actually delete any data.
The framework makes it easy to have Parent-Child relationships, quite common in today’s CRUD operations. For e.g.
- Posts created by User (User -> Post)
- Comments on Posts (Post -> Comment)
- Likes on Posts (Post -> Like)
- Likes on Comments (Comment -> Like)
And be able to traverse these relationships and retrieve all of the children, grandchildren etc. For e.g. (User -> Post -> [(Comment -> Like), Like])
The framework does this by utilizing Graph operations, but without using a Graph database. This means the framework can be used to quickly build a Go backend to serve arbitrarily complex data, while still using your database of choice. See example usage
Users who import Gocrud into their packages are responsible to organize and maintain all of their dependencies to ensure code compatibility and build reproducibility. Gocrud makes no direct use of dependency management tools like Godep.
For the example, this is what gets stored in the database:
mysql> select * from instructions;
+------------+--------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+---------------------+---------+----+
| subject_id | subject_type | predicate | object | object_id | nano_ts | source | id |
+------------+--------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+---------------------+---------+----+
| uid_oNM | User | Post | NULL | wClGp | 1435408916326573229 | uid_oNM | 1 |
| wClGp | Post | body | "You can search for cat videos here" | | 1435408916326573229 | uid_oNM | 2 |
| wClGp | Post | tags | ["search","cat","videos"] | | 1435408916326573229 | uid_oNM | 3 |
| wClGp | Post | url | "www.google.com" | | 1435408916326573229 | uid_oNM | 4 |
| wClGp | Post | Like | NULL | kStx9 | 1435408916341828408 | uid_qB3 | 5 |
| kStx9 | Like | thumb | 1 | | 1435408916341828408 | uid_qB3 | 6 |
| wClGp | Post | Comment | NULL | 8f78r | 1435408916341828408 | uid_qB3 | 7 |
| 8f78r | Comment | body | "Comment by on the post" | | 1435408916341828408 | uid_qB3 | 8 |
| wClGp | Post | Like | NULL | Gyd7G | 1435408916352622582 | uid_a30 | 9 |
| Gyd7G | Like | thumb | 1 | | 1435408916352622582 | uid_a30 | 10 |
| 8f78r | Comment | Like | NULL | q2IKK | 1435408916357443075 | uid_I5u | 11 |
| q2IKK | Like | thumb | 1 | | 1435408916357443075 | uid_I5u | 12 |
| 8f78r | Comment | Comment | NULL | g8llL | 1435408916357443075 | uid_I5u | 13 |
| g8llL | Comment | body | "Comment xv on comment" | | 1435408916357443075 | uid_I5u | 14 |
| q2IKK | Like | Comment | NULL | oaztb | 1435408916368908590 | uid_SPX | 15 |
| oaztb | Comment | body | "Comment kL on Like" | | 1435408916368908590 | uid_SPX | 16 |
| 8f78r | Comment | censored | true | | 1435408916377065650 | uid_D2g | 17 |
| kStx9 | Like | _delete_ | true | | 1435408916384422689 | uid_2a5 | 18 |
+------------+--------------+-----------+--------------------------------------+-----------+---------------------+---------+----+
18 rows in set (0.00 sec)
The writes are in constant time, where each (entity,predicate) constitutes one row. As the properties per entity grow, more rows need to be read (1 row = 1 edge/predicate) to get the entity, it's predicates and it's children. This however, shouldn't be much of a concern for any standard data, which has limited number of predicates/properties per entity. Gocrud in addition, retrieves all children in parallel via goroutines
, instead of retrieving them one by one.
Property value filtering, sorting, full and partial text matching are now being made available via various search engines. Gocrud provides a search interface, which provides the most common search functionality right out of the box. Thus, there's a clear distinction between data store and search right from the beginning.
The following predicates are reserved by the framework, and shouldn't be used by the caller. Currently, this guideline isn't being hardly enforced by the framework.
Predicate | Meaning |
---|---|
_parent_ |
Stores an edge from child -> parent entity. |
_delete_ |
Marks a particular entity as deleted. |
Feel free to contact me at my Twitter handle @manishrjain for any discussions related to this framework. Also, feel free to send pull requests, they're welcome!