Mocking and forking Datomic connections in-memory.
Notes:
- This library is not an in-memory re-implementation of Datomic - just a thin wrapper on top of the Datomic Peer Library. All the heavy lifting is done by Datomic's 'speculative writes' (a.k.a
db.with(tx)
) and Clojure's managed references (atoms) - Only for Peers, not Clients.
Project maturity: beta quality. Note that you will probably not need to use this library in production.
(require '[datomic.api :as d])
(require '[datomock.core :as dm])
(def my-conn (d/connect "datomic:mem://hello-world"))
;; ... create a mock connection from a Database value:
(def starting-point-db (d/db my-conn))
(def mocked-conn (dm/mock-conn starting-point-db))
;; which is essentially the same as:
(def mocked-conn (dm/fork-conn my-conn))
;; dm/fork-conn is likely what you'll use most.
Mocked connections use Datomic's speculative writes (db.with()
) and Clojure's managed references to emulate a Datomic connection locally.
The main benefit is the ability to 'fork' Datomic connections.
More precisely, if conn1
is forked from conn2
:
- at the time of forking,
conn1
andconn2
hold the same database value; - subsequent writes to
conn1
will leaveconn2
unaffected - subsequent writes to
conn2
will leaveconn1
unaffected
Because Datomic database values are persistent data structures, forking is extremely cheap in both space and time.
- Write expressive tests: write tests as a tree of scenarios exploring various alternatives. In particular, this makes it very easy to write system-level tests that run fast. Forget about setup and teardown phases: they are respectively replaced by forking and garbage-collection.
- Cheap, safe debugging: instantly reproduce your production environment on your local machine. Save and re-use as many checkpoints of your state as you need as you debug. Dry-run data patches and migrations safely before committing them to production.
- Explore new database schemas: in particular, you can experiment with changes to your database schema without committing to them.
- Staging environments / QA / CI: want one staging environment (Peer) for each pull-request on your app? Just have each of them use an in-memory fork of a shared database (or even your production database).
- Ephemeral demos: want to let people experiment with your app without accumulating their manual changes? Just have them work on a fork, and discard it afterwards.
- Ephemeral dev environments: similarly, it's usually better to always work on the same data when developing, and have the manual changes you've made while experimented be discarded at the end of the session.
- Application architecture with Datomic: branching reality: a blog post providing a more in-depth analysis of forkability and its applications.
- Full Stack Teleport Testing with Om Next & Datomic: a Clojure/West 2017 talk about how Ladder implement system-level testing using Om and Datomic.
Essentially, by putting a Datomic Database value in a Clojure Managed Reference (currently an Atom, may evolve to use an Agent instead) and using db.with()
to update the state of that reference.
That's it, you now know how to re-implement Datomock yourself!
Actually, there are a few additional complications to make this work smoothly:
- Log: the reference needs to hold not only a Database Value, but also a Log Value (for some strange reason, in Datomic, Log Values are not part of Database values).
- Futures-based API: to match the interface of Datomic Connections, the library needs to provide a Futures-based API, which requires some additional work on top of Clojure references.
- txReportQueue: the library needs to provide an implementation of that as well.
How is this different than using Datomic memory databases, as in
(d/connect "datomic:mem://my-db")
?
Mocked connections differ from Datomic's memory connections in several ways:
- you create a memory connection from scratch, whereas you create a mocked connection from a starting-point database value
- a mocked connection is not accessible via a global URI
This library requires Datomic 0.9.4470 or higher, in order to provide an implementation of the most recent methods of datomic.Connection
.
However, if you need to work with a lower version, forking this library and removing the implementation of the syncSchema()
, syncExcise()
and syncIndex()
should work just fine.
This library works with Datomic 1.0.6527, but mock connections do not support
transaction io-stats.
A call like (d/transact mock-conn :io-context true)
will not include an
:io-stats
key in the result.
Query io-stats
are supported insofar as return value shapes will be correct,
but the underlying Datomic mem database doesn't provide any useful
information in :io-stats
:reads
.
Copyright © 2016 Valentin Waeselynck and contributors.
Distributed under the MIT License.