db.js is a wrapper for IndexedDB to make it easier to work against, making it look more like a queryable API.
Add a reference to db.js in your application before you want to use IndexedDB:
<script src='/dist/db.js'></script>
Alternatively, db.js includes an optional define
call, and can be loaded
as a module using the AMD
loader of your choice.
Once you have the script included you can then open connections to each different database within your application:
var server;
db.open({
server: 'my-app',
version: 1,
schema: {
people: {
key: {keyPath: 'id', autoIncrement: true},
// Optionally add indexes
indexes: {
firstName: {},
answer: {unique: true}
}
}
}
}).then(function (s) {
server = s;
});
Note that open()
takes an options object with the following properties:
-
version - The current version of the database to open. Should be an integer. You can start with
1
. You must increase theversion
if updating the schema or otherwise theschema
property will have no effect. -
server - The name of this server. Any subsequent attempt to open a server with this name (and with the current version) will reuse the already opened connection (unless it has been closed).
-
schema - Expects an object, or, if a function is supplied, a schema object should be returned). A schema object optionally has store names as keys (these stores will be auto-created if not yet added and modified otherwise). The values of these schema objects should be objects, optionally with the property "key" and/or "indexes". The "key" property, if present, should contain valid createObjectStore parameters (
keyPath
orautoIncrement
). The "indexes" property should contain an object whose keys are the desired index keys and whose values are objects which can include the optional parameters and values available to createIndex (unique
,multiEntry
, and, for Firefox-only,locale
). Note that thekeyPath
of the index will be set to the supplied index key, or if present, akeyPath
property on the provided parameter object. Note also that when a schema is supplied for a new version, any object stores not present on the schema object will be deleted.
A connection is intended to be persisted, and you can perform multiple operations while it's kept open.
In the event a connection has already been opened for modification (whether
in the same instance or in another tab/window), a blocking error will occur,
for which you can listen by adding a Promise.catch
statement and
communicate with blocking instances still holding a connection so that
they may close the connection. You can then return the resume
property
(a promise) to recover to continue the original open
operation and
proceed to the following then
condition.
var server;
db.open({
// ...
}).catch(function (err) {
if (err.type === 'blocked') {
oldConnection.close();
return err.resume;
}
// Handle other errors here
throw err;
}).then(function (s) {
server = s;
// One can add a versionchange handler here to self-close
// the connection upon future upgrade attempts (likely to
// be one made in other tabs) and thereby
// avoid such attempts having to face blocking errors.
});
Check out the /tests/specs
folder for more examples.
Note that by default the methods below (not including close
,
addEventListener
, and removeEventListener
) can be called either as
server.people.xxx( arg1, arg2, ... )
or
server.xxx( 'people', arg1, arg2, ... )
.
To reduce some memory requirements or avoid a however unlikely
potential conflict with server method names, however, one may supply
noServerMethods: true
as part of options supplied to db.open()
and under such conditions, only the second method signature above can be
used.
server.people.add({
firstName: 'Aaron',
lastName: 'Powell',
answer: 42
}).then(function (item) {
// item stored
});
Multiple items can be added as additional arguments to add
. Another way
multiple items can be added is when an array is supplied for any of the
arguments in which case, its top level contents will be treated as separate
items. If you want unambiguous results where the data to be added could
itself be an array, be sure to wrap item supplied in your argument within
an array.
Note also when add
is provided with objects containing a property item
(and optionally a key
property), the value of item
will be treated as the
record to be added, while any key
will be used as the key. To supply
unambiguous items (where you are not sure whether item
may exist on the
record to be added), you may wish to consistently wrap your items within an
object with an item
property even if you are not supplying a key
.
server.people.update({
firstName: 'Aaron',
lastName: 'Powell',
answer: 42
}).then(function (item) {
// item added or updated
});
As with add
, update
shares the same behaviors as far as flattening of
the top level of array arguments and checking of item
/key
properties,
so if you need unambiguous results, please see the discussion above.
Using update
will cause a record to be added if it does not yet exist.
put
is also available as an alias of update
.
server.people.remove(1).then(function (key) {
// item removed
});
delete
is also available as an alias of remove
.
This allows removing all items in a table/collection:
server.people.clear()
.then(function() {
// all table data is gone.
});
server.people.get(5)
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
If more than one match, it will retrieve the first.
With a MongoDB-style range:
server.people.get({gte: 1, lt: 3})
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
With an IDBKeyRange
:
server.people.get(IDBKeyRange.bound(1, 3, false, true))
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
Queries require one or more methods to determine the type of querying
(all items, filtering, applying ranges, limits, distinct values, or
custom mapping--some of which can be combined
with some of the others), any methods for cursor direction, and then a
subsequent call to execute()
(followed by a then
or catch
).
server.people.query()
.all()
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
server.people.query('specialProperty')
.all()
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results (items which possess `specialProperty`)
});
Note that unlike the other methods after a query, filter
can
be executed multiple times.
server.people.query()
.filter('firstName', 'Aaron')
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
server.people.query()
.filter(function(person) {return person.group === 'hipster';})
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
Will return only one record:
server.people
.query('firstName')
.only('Aaron')
.distinct()
.execute()
.then(function (data) {
//
});
All ranges supported by IDBKeyRange
can be used (only
,
bound
, lowerBound
, upperBound
).
server.people.query('firstName')
.only('Aaron')
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
server.people.query('answer')
.bound(30, 50)
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
MongoDB-style ranges (as implemented in idb-range-driven libraries) are also supported:
server.people.query('firstName')
.range({eq: 'Aaron'})
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
server.people.query('answer')
.range({gte: 30, lte: 50})
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
Note that IndexedDB allows you to use array keys within ranges (and
other methods where a key is accepted) as long as you have created
your store with an array keyPath
(and optionally with an index
keyPath
).
// The definition:
schema: {
people: {
key: {
keyPath: ['lastName', 'firstName']
},
indexes: {
name: {
keyPath: ['lastName', 'firstName']
},
lastName: {},
firstName: {}
}
}
}
// ...elsewhere...
// The query:
s.test.query('name')
.only(['Zamir', 'Brett'])
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// do something with the results
});
Unlike key ranges which filter by the range of present values, one may define a cursor range to determine whether to skip through a certain number of initial result items and to select how many items (up to the amount available) should be retrieved from that point in the navigation of the cursor.
server.people
.query('firstName')
.all()
.limit(1, 3)
.execute()
.then(function (data) {
// Skips the first item and obtains the next 3 items (or less if there are fewer)
});
The desc
method may be used to change cursor
direction to descending order:
server.people.query()
.all()
.desc()
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// Array of results will be in descending order
});
Keys may be retrieved with or without an index:
server.people.query('firstName')
.only('Aaron')
.keys()
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// `results` will contain one 'Aaron' value for each
// item in the people store with that first name
});
The map
method allows you to modify the object being returned
without correspondingly modifying the actual object stored:
server.people
.query('age')
.lowerBound(30)
.map(function (value) {
return {
fullName: value.firstName + ' ' + value.lastName,
raw: value
};
})
.execute()
.then(function (data) {
// An array of people objects containing `fullName` and `raw` properties
});
To count while utilizing an index and/or the query
-returned methods,
you can use the following:
server.people.query('firstName')
.only('Aaron')
.count()
.execute()
.then(function (results) {
// `results` will equal the total count of "Aaron"'s
});
If you only need a count of items in a store with only a key or range,
you can utilize server.count
:
// With no arguments (count all items)
server.people.count().then(function (ct) {
// Do something with "ct"
});
// With a key
server.people.count(myKey).then(function (ct) {
// Do something with "ct"
});
// With a MongoDB-style range
server.people.count({gte: 1, lt: 3}).then(function (ct) {
// Do something with "ct"
});
// With an IDBKeyRange range
server.people.count(IDBKeyRange.bound(1, 3, false, true)).then(function (ct) {
// Do something with "ct"
});
Any query that returns a range of results can also be set to modify the
returned records automatically. This is done by adding .modify()
at
the end of the query (right before .execute()
).
modify
only runs updates on objects matched by the query, and still returns
the same results to the Promise
's then()
method (however, the results will
have the modifications applied to them).
Examples:
// grab all users modified in the last 10 seconds,
server.users.query('last_mod')
.lowerBound(new Date().getTime() - 10000)
.modify({last_mod: new Date.getTime()})
.execute()
.then(function(results) {
// now we have a list of recently modified users
});
// grab all changed records and atomically set them as unchanged
server.users.query('changed')
.only(true)
.modify({changed: false})
.execute()
.then(...)
// use a function to update the results. the function is passed the original
// (unmodified) record, which allows us to update the data based on the record
// itself.
server.profiles.query('name')
.lowerBound('marcy')
.modify({views: function(profile) { return profile.views + 1; }})
.execute()
.then(...)
modify
changes will be seen by any map
functions.
modify
can be used after: all
, filter
, ranges (range
, only
,
bound
, upperBound
, and lowerBound
), desc
, distinct
, and map
.
server.close();
var db = server.getIndexedDB();
var storeNames = db.objectStoreNames;
All of the following are optional.
server.addEventListener('abort', function (e) {
// Handle abort event
});
server.addEventListener('error', function (err) {
// Handle any errors (check err.name)
});
server.addEventListener('versionchange', function (e) {
// Be notified of version changes (can use e.oldVersion and e.newVersion)
});
All of the following shorter equivalent forms (which also work internally
via addEventListener
) are optional and can be chained as desired.
server.abort(function (e) {
// Handle abort event
}).error(function (err) {
// Handle any errors (check err.name)
}).versionchange(function (e) {
// Be notified of version changes (can use e.oldVersion and e.newVersion)
});
See the IndexedDB spec for the possible exceptions.
db.delete(dbName).then(function (ev) {
// Should have been a successful database deletion
}, function (err) {
// Error during database deletion
});
Note that, in line with the behavior of the deleteDatabase
method of
IndexedDB, delete
will not actually produce an error if one attempts
to delete a database which doesn't exist or even if a non-string is
supplied.
However, as with the open
operation, a delete
operation will
produce an error so long as there are already opened blocking connections
(i.e., those allowing for database modification) which are open elsewhere
in the browser. You can nevertheless recover as follows:
db.delete(dbName).catch(function (err) {
if (err.type === 'blocked') {
oldConnection.close();
return err.resume;
}
// Handle other errors here
throw err;
}).then(function (ev) {
// Should have been a successful database deletion
});
See the documentation on open
for more on such recovery from blocking
connections.
Returns 1
if the first key is greater than the second, -1
if the first
is less than the second, and 0
if the first is equal to the second.
db.cmp(key1, key2).then(function (ret) {
// Use `ret`
});
db.js used the ES6 Promise spec to handle asynchronous operations.
All operations that are asynchronous will return an instance of the
ES6 Promise object that exposes a then
method which will take up
to two callbacks, onFulfilled
and onRejected
. Please refer to
the ES6 Promise spec for more information.
As of version 0.7.0
db.js's Promise API is designed to work with
ES6 Promises, please polyfill it if you would like to use another promise
library.
npm install
to install all the dependencies
In browser:
npm run grunt test:local
to run the mocha server- Open (
http://localhost:9999/tests
)[] to run the mocha tests
In Node.js:
npm test
or to avoid Saucelabs if set up:
npm run grunt phantom
or to also avoid PhantomJS:
npm run grunt dev
The MIT License
Copyright (c) 2012-2015 Aaron Powell, Brett Zamir