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Command line interface

This is work in progress and subject to change.

We provide the datahike native executable to access Datahike databases from the command line.

Example usage

First you need to download the precompiled binary, or build it yourself, and put it on your executable path.

To access a database you need to provide the usual configuration for Datahike. Put this into a file myconfig.edn.

{:store  {:backend :file
          :path "/home/USERNAME/dh-shared-db"
          :config {:in-place? true}}
 :keep-history? true
 :schema-flexibility :read}

Now you can invoke some of our core API functions on the database. Let us add a fact to the database (be careful to use single ' if you do not want your shell to substitute parts of your Datalog ;) ):

$ datahike transact db:myconfig.edn '[[:db/add -1 :name "Linus"]]'

And retrieve it:

$ datahike query '[:find ?n . :where [?e :name ?n]]' db:myconfig.edn 
"Linus" # prints the name

By prefixing the path with db: to the query engine you can pass multiple db configuration files and join over arbitrary many databases. Everything else is read in as edn and passed to the query engine as well.

Provided the filestore is configured with {:in-place? true} you can even write to the same database without a dedicated daemon from different shells,

$ datahike benchmark db:myconfig.edn 0 50000 100
"Elapsed time: 116335.589411 msecs"

Here we use a provided benchmark helper which transacts facts of the form [eid :name (random-team-member)] for eid=0,...,50000 into the store. 100 denotes the batch size for each transaction, so here we chunk the 50000 facts into 500 transactions.

In a second shell you can now simultaneously add facts in a different range

$ datahike benchmark db:myconfig.edn 50000 100000 100

To check that everything has been added and no write operations have overwritten each other.

$ datahike query '[:find (count ?e) . :in $ :where [?e :name ?n]]' db:myconfig.edn
100000 # check :)

Memory model

The persistent semantics of Datahike work more like git and less like similar mutable databases such as SQLite or Datalevin. In particular you can always read and retain snapshots (copies) of the database for free, no matter what else is happening in the system. The current version is tested with memory and file storage, but hopefully many other backends will also work with the native-image.

In principle this shared memory access should even work while having a JVM server, e.g. datahike-server, serving the same database. Note that all reads can happen in parallel, only the writers experience congestion around exclusive file locks here. This access pattern does not provide highest throughput, but is extremely flexible and easy to start with.

Forking and pulling

Forking is easy, it is enough to copy the folder of the store (even if the database is currently being written to). The only thing you need to take care of is to copy the DB root first and place it into the target directory last, it is the file 0594e3b6-9635-5c99-8142-412accf3023b.ksv. Then you can use e.g. rsync (or git) to copy all other (immutable) files into your new folder. In the end you copy the root file in there as well, making sure that all files it is referencing are reachable. Note that this will ensure that you only copy new data each time.

Merging

Now here comes the cool part. You do not need anything more for merging than Datalog itself. You can use a query like this to extract all new facts that are in db1 but not in db2 like this:

datahike query '[:find ?e ?a ?v ?t :in $ $2 :where [$ ?e ?a ?v ?t] (not [$2 ?e ?a ?v ?t])]' db:config1.edn db:config2.edn

Since we cannot update transaction metadata, we should filter out :db/txInstants. We can also use a trick to add :db/add to each element in the results, yielding valid transactions that we can then feed into db2.

datahike query '[:find ?db-add ?e ?a ?v ?t :in $ $2 ?db-add :where [$ ?e ?a ?v ?t] [(not= :db/txInstant ?a)] (not [$2 ?e ?a ?v ?t])]' db:config1.edn db:config2.edn ":db/add" | transact db:config2.edn

Note that this very simple strategy assumes that the entity ids that have been added to db1 do not overlap with potentially new ones added to db2. You can encode conflict resolution strategies and id mappings with Datalog as well and we are exploring several such strategies at the moment. This strategy is fairly universal, as CRDTs can be expressed in pure Datalog. While it is not the most efficient way to merge, we plan to provide fast paths for common patterns in Datalog. Feel free to contact us if you are interested in complex merging strategies or have related cool ideas.

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