Node tarantool driver for 1.7+ support Node.js v.4+.
Based on go-tarantool and implements Tarantool’s binary protocol, for more information you can read them or basic documentation at Tarantool manual.
Code architecture and some features in version 3 borrowed from the ioredis.
msgpack-lite package used as MsgPack encoder/decoder.
- Installation
- Configuration
- Usage example
- Msgpack implementation
- API reference
- Debugging
- Contributions
- Changelog
npm install --save tarantool-driver
new Tarantool([port], [host], [options]) ⇐ EventEmitter
Creates a Tarantool instance, extends EventEmitter.
Connection related custom events:
- "reconnecting" - emitted when the client try to reconnect, first argument is retry delay in ms.
- "connect" - emitted when the client connected and auth passed (if username and password provided), first argument is an object with host and port of the Taranool server.
- "change_host" - emitted when
nonWritableHostPolicy
option is set and write error occurs, first argument is the text of error which provoked the host to be changed.
Param | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
[port] | number | string | Object |
3301 |
Port of the Tarantool server, or a URI string (see the examples in tarantool configuration doc), or the options object(see the third argument). |
[host] | string | Object |
"localhost" |
Host of the Tarantool server, when the first argument is a URL string, this argument is an object represents the options. |
[path] | string | Object |
null |
Unix socket path of the Tarantool server. |
[options] | Object |
Other options, including all from net.createConnection. | |
[options.port] | number |
6379 |
Port of the Tarantool server. |
[options.host] | string |
"localhost" |
Host of the Tarantool server. |
[options.username] | string |
null |
If set, client will authenticate with the value of this option when connected. |
[options.password] | string |
null |
If set, client will authenticate with the value of this option when connected. |
[options.timeout] | number |
0 |
The milliseconds before a timeout occurs during the initial connection to the Tarantool server. |
[options.tls] | Object |
null |
If specified, forces to use tls module instead of the default net . In object properties you can specify any TLS-related options, e.g. from the tls.createSecureContext() |
[options.keepAlive] | boolean |
true |
Enables keep-alive functionality (recommended). |
[options.noDelay] | boolean |
true |
Disables the use of Nagle's algorithm (recommended). |
[options.lazyConnect] | boolean |
false |
By default, When a new Tarantool instance is created, it will connect to Tarantool server automatically. If you want to keep disconnected util a command is called, you can pass the lazyConnect option to the constructor. |
[options.nonWritableHostPolicy] | string |
null |
What to do when Tarantool server rejects write operation, e.g. because of box.cfg.read_only set to true or during snapshot fetching. Possible values are: - null : just rejects Promise with an error - changeHost : disconnect from the current host and connect to the next from reserveHosts . Pending Promise will be rejected. - changeAndRetry : same as changeHost , but after reconnecting tries to run the command again in order to fullfil the Promise |
[options.maxRetriesPerRequest] | number |
5 |
Number of attempts to find the alive host if nonWritableHostPolicy is not null. |
[options.enableOfflineQueue] | boolean |
true |
By default, if there is no active connection to the Tarantool server, commands are added to a queue and are executed once the connection is "ready", meaning the connection to the Tarantool server has been established and auth passed (connect event is also executed at this moment). If this option is false, when execute the command when the connection isn't ready, an error will be returned. |
[options.reserveHosts] | array |
[] | Array of strings - reserve hosts. Client will try to connect to hosts from this array after loosing connection with current host and will do it cyclically. See example below. |
[options.beforeReserve] | number |
2 |
Number of attempts to reconnect before connect to next host from the reserveHosts |
[options.retryStrategy] | function |
See below |
let connection = new Tarantool({
host: 'mail.ru',
port: 33013,
username: 'user'
password: 'secret',
reserveHosts: [
'anotheruser:[email protected]:33033',
'127.0.0.1:3301'
],
beforeReserve: 1
})
// connect to mail.ru:33013 -> dead
// ↓
// trying connect to mail.ru:33033 -> dead
// ↓
// trying connect to 127.0.0.1:3301 -> dead
// ↓
// trying connect to mail.ru:33013 ...etc
By default, node-tarantool-driver client will try to reconnect when the connection to Tarantool is lost
except when the connection is closed manually by tarantool.disconnect()
.
It's very flexible to control how long to wait to reconnect after disconnection
using the retryStrategy
option:
var tarantool = new Tarantool({
// This is the default value of `retryStrategy`
retryStrategy: function (times) {
var delay = Math.min(times * 50, 2000);
return delay;
}
});
retryStrategy
is a function that will be called when the connection is lost.
The argument times
means this is the nth reconnection being made and
the return value represents how long (in ms) to wait to reconnect. When the
return value isn't a number, node-tarantool-driver will stop trying to reconnect, and the connection
will be lost forever if the user doesn't call tarantool.connect()
manually.
This feature is borrowed from the ioredis
We use TarantoolConnection instance and connect before other operations. Methods call return promise(https://developer.mozilla.org/ru/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise). Available methods with some testing: select, update, replace, insert, delete, auth, destroy.
var TarantoolConnection = require('tarantool-driver');
var conn = new TarantoolConnection('notguest:[email protected]:3301');
// select arguments space_id, index_id, limit, offset, iterator, key
conn.select(512, 0, 1, 0, 'eq', [50])
.then(funtion(results){
doSomeThingWithResults(results);
});
You can use any implementation that can be duck typing with next interface:
//msgpack implementation example
/*
@interface
decode: (Buffer buf)
encode: (Object obj)
*/
var exampleCustomMsgpack = {
encode: function(obj){
return yourmsgpack.encode(obj);
},
decode: function(buf){
return yourmsgpack.decode(obj);
}
};
By default use msgpack-lite package.
Resolve if connected. Or reject if not.
An internal method. The connection should be established before invoking.
Auth with using chap-sha1. About authenthication more here: authentication
Method for converting UUID values to Tarantool-compatible format.
If passing UUID without converion via this method, server will accept it as simple String.
Method for converting Numbers (Float or Integer) to Tarantool Decimal type.
If passing number without converion via this method, server will accept it as Integer or Double (for JS Float type).
Method for safely passing numbers up to int64 to bind params
Otherwise msgpack will encode anything bigger than int32 as a double number.
tarantool.select(spaceId: Number or String, indexId: Number or String, limit: Number, offset: Number, iterator: Iterator, key: tuple) ⇒ Promise
Iterators. Available iterators: 'eq', 'req', 'all', 'lt', 'le', 'ge', 'gt', 'bitsAllSet', 'bitsAnySet', 'bitsAllNotSet'.
It's just select. Promise resolve array of tuples.
Some examples:
conn.select(512, 0, 1, 0, 'eq', [50]);
//same as
conn.select('test', 'primary', 1, 0, 'eq', [50]);
You can use space name or index name instead of id, but this way some requests will be made to get and cache metadata. This stored information will be actual for delete, replace, insert, update too.
For tests, we will create a Space named 'users' on the Tarantool server-side, where the 'id' index is of UUID type:
-- example schema of such space
box.schema.space.create("users", {engine = 'memtx'})
box.space.users:format({
{name = 'id', type = 'uuid', is_nullable = false},
{name = 'username', type = 'string', is_nullable = false}
})
And then select some tuples on a client side:
conn.select('users', 'id', 1, 0, 'eq', [conn.packUuid('550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000')]);
tarantool.selectCb(spaceId: Number or String, indexId: Number or String, limit: Number, offset: Number, iterator: Iterator, key: tuple, callback: function(success), callback: function(error))
Same as tarantool.select but with callbacks.
Promise resolve an array of deleted tuples.
Promise resolve an array of updated tuples.
More you can read here: Insert
Promise resolve a new tuple.
About operation: Upsert
Promise resolve nothing.
More you can read here: Replace
Promise resolve a new or replaced tuple.
Call a function with arguments.
You can create function on tarantool side:
function myget(id)
val = box.space.batched:select{id}
return val[1]
end
And then use something like this:
conn.call('myget', 4)
.then(function(value){
console.log(value);
});
If you have a 2 arguments function just send a second arguments in this way:
conn.call('my2argumentsfunc', 'first', 'second argument')
And etc like this.
Because lua support a multiple return it's always return array or undefined.
Evaluate and execute the expression in Lua-string. Eval
Promise resolve result:any.
Example:
conn.eval('return box.session.user()')
.then(function(res){
console.log('current user is:' res[0])
})
It's accessible only in 2.1 tarantool.
You can use SQL query that is like sqlite dialect to query a tarantool database.
You can insert or select or create database.
More about it here.
Example:
await connection.insert('tags', ['tag_1', 1])
await connection.insert('tags', ['tag_2', 50])
connection.sql('select * from "tags"')
.then((res) => {
console.log('Successful get tags', res);
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error);
});
P.S. If you using lowercase in your space name you need to use a double quote for their name.
It doesn't work for space without format.
Queue some commands in memory and then send them simultaneously to the server in a single (or several, if request body is too big) network call(s). This way the performance is significantly improved by more than 300% (depending on the number of pipelined commands - the bigger, the better)
Example:
tarantool.pipeline()
.insert('tags', ['tag_1', 1])
.insert('tags', ['tag_2', 50])
.sql('update "tags" set "amount" = 10 where "tag_id" = \'tag_1\'')
.update('tags', 'tag_id', ['tag_2'], [['=', 'amount', 30]])
.sql('select * from "tags"')
.call('truncateTags')
.exec()
Promise resolve true.
Deprecated
Disconnect from Tarantool.
This method closes the connection immediately, and may lose some pending replies that haven't written to client.
Set environment variable "DEBUG" to "tarantool-driver:*"
It's ok you can do whatever you need. I add log options for some technical information it can be help for you. If i don't answer i just miss email :( it's a lot emails from github so please write me to [email protected] directly if i don't answer in one day.
- Added 3 new msgpack extensions: UUID, Datetime, Decimal.
- Connection object now accepts all options of
net.createConnection()
, including Unix socket path. - New
nonWritableHostPolicy
and related options, which improves a high availability capabilities without any 3rd parties. - Ability to disable the offline queue.
- Fixed bug with int32 numbers when it was encoded as floating. Use method
packInteger()
to solve this. selectCb()
now also acceptsspaceId
andindexId
as their String names, not only their IDs.- Some performance improvements by caching internal values.
- TLS (SSL) support.
- New
pipeline()
+exec()
methods kindly borrowed from the ioredis, which lets you to queue some commands in memory and then send them simultaneously to the server in a single (or several, if request body is too big) network call(s). Thanks to the Tarantool, which made this possible. This way the performance is significantly improved by 500-1600% - you can check it yourself by runningnpm run benchmark-read
ornpm run benchmark-write
. Note that this feature doesn't replaces the Transaction model, which has some level of isolation. - Changed
const
declaration tovar
in order to support old Node.JS versions.
Fix in header decoding to support latest Tarantool versions. Update to tests to support latest Tarantool versions.
Remove let for support old nodejs version
Add support SQL
Fix eval and call
Increase request id limit to SMI Maximum
Fix parser thx @tommiv
New version with reconnect in alpha.
Fix test for call changes and remove unuse upsert parameter (critical change API for upsert)
Add clear schema cache on change schema id
Change msgpack5 to msgpack-lite(thx to @arusakov). Add msgpack as option for connection. Bump msgpack5 for work at new version.
Add upsert operation. Key is now can be just a number.
- Streams
- Events and subscriptions
- Graceful shutdown protocol
- Prepared SQL statements