Convenience and utility methods for GunDB.
Tested with various Gun versions from 0.2019.930
up to GitHub master commit 5cbd5e3.
Note that this package is in early stages of development and there may be breaking changes within semantically compatible versions. See change log.
- Install using yarn with
yarn add gun-util
or npmnpm install gun-util
. - Install
gun
as a peer dependency. Supported versions:0.2019.930
.>0.2020.520
.- GitHub master commit 7c45ddb or later.
Include dependencies and the UMD bundle dist/index.umd.js
. See an example here.
Table of Contents:
Efficiently distributes and stores data in a tree with nodes using date components as keys up to a specified resolution. The root of the tree is specified as a Gun node reference.
Example (up to hours):
2020 (year)
/ | \
04 ... 11 (month)
/ \ / \
23 .. .. 04 (day)
/ \ / \
.. .. .. .. (hour)
Why not just use a hash table?
Having large nodes is discouraged in a graph database like Gun. If you need to store large lists or tables of data, you need to break them up into smaller nodes to ease synchronization between peers.
For the exaples below, we will use the following setup:
import { DateTree } from 'gun-util';
let gun = Gun();
let treeRoot = gun.get('tree');
let tree = new DateTree(treeRoot, 'day');
Getting a node at a specific date:
Easily find a reference to a node using the date.
tree.get('2020-08-23').put({ event: 'of a lifetime' });
// The above is equivalent to:
treeRoot.get('2020').get('08').get('23').put({ event: 'of a lifetime' });
// This is assuming that UTC is the default time zone. See notes below.
Jump to Notes.
Subscribing to data:
// Subscribe to tree data with a filter
tree.on((data, date) => {
console.log(`${date.toISOString()}: ${JSON.stringify(data)}`);
}, { gte: '2009-02-01' });
// Modify tree data
tree.get('1995-10-04T10:23:54.345Z').put('distant past');
tree.get('2010-04-05T15:34:17.234Z').put('past');
tree.get(new Date()).put('now');
// Output:
// 2010-04-05T15:34:17.234Z: "past"
// 2020-06-29T21:28:59.229Z: "now"
Getting latest data once:
await tree.get(new Date()).put({ event: 'insider info' }).then();
let [latestRef, date] = await tree.latest();
console.log(`Fetching latest event on ${date.toISOString()}...`);
console.log('event: ' + (await latestRef.then()).event);
// Output:
// Fetching latest event on 2020-06-18T00:00:00.000Z...
// event: insider info
Iterating through date references:
You can store data and iterate through only populated nodes without traversing all the nodes.
let tree = new DateTree(treeRoot, 'minute');
tree.get('1995-01-21 14:02').put({ event: 'good times' });
tree.get('2015-08-23 23:45').put({ event: 'ultimate' });
tree.get('2020-01-16 05:45').put({ event: 'earlybird' });
(async () => {
// A naive implementation would have close to a billion
// nodes and would take forever to iterate.
// This takes only a second:
for await (let [ref, date] of tree.iterate({ order: 1 })) {
let event = await ref.get('event').then();
console.log(`${date} event: ${event}`);
}
// Output:
// Sat Jan 21 1995 14:02:00 GMT+0000 event: good times
// Sun Aug 23 2015 23:45:00 GMT+0000 event: ultimate
// Thu Jan 16 2020 05:45:00 GMT+0000 event: earlybird
})();
Filtering by date range and reverse iteration is possible using options:
tree.iterate({
gte: '2020-01-01',
lt: '2020-02-01',
order: -1
})
Watch for changes:
Let's say we want to listen to changes to a blog described by a date tree.
How would we handle a case where we are close to the end of the nodes for the current time period?
For example, we are at 2019-12-31 23:54
, which is the end
of the hour, day, month and year. We may get a message this
minute or next hour or day.
Subscribing to all nodes would be impractical.
Listen to a single path of the tree instead with changesAbout()
.
let tree = new DateTree(treeRoot, 'minute');
tree.get('1995-01-21 14:02').put({ blog: 'good times' });
tree.get('2015-08-23 23:45').put({ blog: 'ultimate' });
tree.get('2019-12-31 23:54').put({ blog: 'almost NY' });
let unsub = tree.changesAbout('2019-12-31 23:54', dateComponents => {
/*
* Whenever a node changes next to the direct path between the root and the
* tree's maximum resolution, the callback is called with the date components
* identifying the node. Note that the date components are partial unless the
* change occured at the maximum resolution.
*/
// Create a date to visualise the data
let date = DateTree.getDateWithComponents(dateComponents);
console.log(date.toISOString());
// Output:
// 1995-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
// 2015-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
// 2019-12-31T23:59:00.000Z
// 2019-12-31T23:59:00.000Z
// 2019-12-31T23:59:00.000Z
// 2019-12-31T23:59:00.000Z
// 2020-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
});
tree.get('2019-12-31 23:59').put({ blog: '3! 2! 1!' });
tree.get('2020-01-01 00:12').put({ blog: 'Happy NY!' });
At each date in the future, we can call tree.latest()
and tree.iterate()
to get the latest data.
When the date gets too far away, for example after 2020-01-01
,
we can call unsub()
and resubscribe to a later date.
Have a look at the examples folder.
- The dates are stored in UTC time zone, but partial strings (without a time zone) are parsed in the local time zone (to be consistent with the convention). Avoid using partial string dates on trees with a resolution of
day
if this does not suit your use case. Using a resolution ofhour
solves most of the issues, but there are acouple of 30-minute time zones, so if you need perfection, then a resolution ofminute
is the way to go. - Noting the above, consider the scenario where we have a date tree with resolution
day
and the local time zone offset is +12:00:- If you use
tree.get('2020-08-23')
, you will in fact reference the previous date as the partial string parses into2020-08-22T12:00:00.000Z
.- Use
tree.get('2020-08-23T00:00:00Z')
or tree.get(moment.utc('2020-08-23'))
to avoid this.
- Use
- Filtering with
{ gte: '2009-02-01' }
will match dates after and including2009-01-31
.- Use
{ gte: '2009-02-01T00:00:00Z' }
or { gte: moment.utc('2009-02-01') }
to avoid this.
- Use
- If you use
Allows encrypting and decrypting values and objects for the logged in user or for another user (using their epub key).
Encrypting private data:
Only the user can decrypt the value.
let pair = gun.user()._.sea;
let enc = await encrypt('[email protected]', { pair });
let dec = await decrypt(enc, { pair });
assert(dec === '[email protected]');
Encrypting data for someone else:
Only the specified user can decrypt the value.
let frodo = await SEA.pair();
let gandalf = await SEA.pair();
let enc = await encrypt({ whereami: 'shire' }, {
pair: frodo,
recipient: gandalf // Or { epub: gandalf.epub }
});
let dec = await decrypt(enc, {
pair: gandalf,
sender: frodo // Or { epub: frodo.epub }
});
assert(dec.whereami === 'shire');
Other examples
Have a look at the examples folder.
Convenience methods for creating an authenticating a Gun user.
This wrapper provides greater consistency by handling a couple of edge cases, namely:
- In some Gun versions, callbacks are not fired consistently. This wrapper listens to both local and global
auth
and returns in both cases. - When trying to log in to an existing user on an unsynced gun instance, you may get
User does not exist!
errors. This wrapper syncs the necessary data before attempting to login. - Another more troublesome pitfall with unsynced gun instances is if you try to create a user with an alias which has already been user on another Gun instance, you will get different key pairs and will not be able to sync the data of that user between those Gun instances. This wrapper takes extra precautions before creating a user (no guarantees though, it all depends on how long you want to wait for the sync to happen).
See also the Notes section below.
Basics:
let gun = new Gun()
let auth = new Auth(gun);
await auth.create({
alias: 'alice',
pass: 'secret'
});
auth.logout();
await auth.login({
alias: 'alice',
pass: 'secret'
});
Watching for authentication:
// With callback
auth.on(() => {
let publicKey = auth.user();
let pair = auth.pair();
});
// With promise
let publicKey = await auth.on();
Custom authentication recall:
auth.delegate = {
storePair: async (pair, auth) => {
await saveSecret(pair);
},
recallPair: async (auth, opts) => {
await loadSecret(pair);
},
}
Getting a user's public key with an alias:
let publicKey = await auth.getPub({ alias: 'alice' });
Have a look at the examples folder.
- If you use your own
gun.on('auth', cb)
listener, callthis.to.next(...args)
inside of it to allow other listeners to receive a callback. Note that you will need to use the classic function declaration instead of an arrow function for correctthis
binding. You may also need prepend it with// @ts-ignore:
if using TypeScript. - It's been observed that when
Auth#exists()
,Auth#getPub()
orgun.get('~@' + alias)
is used,gun.user().auth()
stops working and fails immediately with an invalid credentials error.Auth#login()
usesgun.user().auth()
with{ wait: <timeout> }
instead.- Avoid using
Auth#exists()
,Auth#getPub()
andgun.get('~@' + alias)
before logging in if this is an issue with your Gun version.
subscribe(ref, callback, opt?)
-
Subscribe to a Gun node
ref
and return a subscription.Unsubscribes automatically on uncaught errors inside the callback and rethrows.
Why not just use
ref.on()
?Calling
ref.off()
unsubscribes all listeners, not just the last one. This method provides a way to unsubscribe only a single listener inline.For example:
let dataRef = gun.get('data'); let sub1 = subscribe(dataRef, data => console.log('sub1: ' + data)); let sub2 = subscribe(dataRef, data => console.log('sub2: ' + data)); dataRef.put('a'); sub1.off(); // sub2 is still active! dataRef.put('b'); // Output: // sub1: a // sub2: a // sub2: b
-
waitForData(ref, { filter?, timeout? })
- Returns a promise, which resolves when data arrives at a node reference.
delay(ms, passthrough?)
- Promisified
setTimeout()
.
- Promisified
errorAfter(ms, error)
- Throw error after
ms
interval.
- Throw error after
timeoutAfter(promise, ms, error?)
- If the promise does not resolve (or error) within
ms
interval, throws a the specifiederror
. If no error is specified, uses aTimeoutError
instead.
- If the promise does not resolve (or error) within
For faster unit tests, create an .env.local
file in the project directory and add a test gun peer:
TEST_GUN_PEERS="https://<your-id>.herokuapp.com/gun"
Alternatively, use export TEST_GUN_PEERS="https://<your-id>.herokuapp.com/gun"
before running unit tests.