A library for storing graph data in a Clojure map that automatically normalizes nested data and allows querying via EQL, optimized for read (query) performance.
The primary use case this library was developed for was to act as a client side cache for pathom APIs. However, you can imagine any time you might reach for DataScript to store data as entities, but where you need fast nested / recursive querying of many attributes and don't need the full expressive power of datalog, as being a good use case for autonormal.
Another common use case is like a select-keys
on steroids: the ability to do nested selections
on complex maps with nested collections pops up very often in code. Autonormal can take any non-normalized
map and execute an EQL query on it, returning the result.
While feature complete, it has not been used in production yet.
A db
is simply a map with a tabular structure of entities, potentially with
references to other entities.
Autonormal currently makes a default conventional assumption: your entities
are identified by a keyword whose name is "id"
, e.g. :id
, :person/id
,
:my.corp.product/id
, etc.
(require '[autonormal.core :as a])
(def data
{:person/id 0 :person/name "Rachel"
:friend/list [{:person/id 1 :person/name "Marco"}
{:person/id 2 :person/name "Cassie"}
{:person/id 3 :person/name "Jake"}
{:person/id 4 :person/name "Tobias"}
{:person/id 5 :person/name "Ax"}]})
;; you can pass in multiple entities to instantiate a db, so `a/db` gets a vector
(def animorphs (a/db [data]))
;; => {:person/id {0 {:person/id 0
;; :person/name "Rachel"
;; :friend/list [[:person/id 1]
;; [:person/id 2]
;; [:person/id 3]
;; [:person/id 4]
;; [:person/id 5]]}
;; 1 {:person/id 1 :person/name "Marco"}
;; 2 {:person/id 2 :person/name "Cassie"}
;; 3 {:person/id 3 :person/name "Jake"}
;; 4 {:person/id 4 :person/name "Tobias"}
;; 5 {:person/id 5 :person/name "Ax"}}}
The map structure of a db is very efficient for getting info about any
particular entity; it's just a get-in
away:
(get-in animorphs [:person/id 1])
;; => {:person/id 1 :person/name "Marco"}
You can assoc
/dissoc
/update
/etc. this map in whatever way you would like.
However, if you want to accrete more potentially nested data, there's a helpful
add
function to normalize it for you:
;; Marco and Jake are each others best friend
(def animorphs-2
(a/add animorphs {:person/id 1
:friend/best {:person/id 3
:friend/best {:person/id 1}}}))
;; => {:person/id {0 {:person/id 0
;; :person/name "Rachel"
;; :friend/list [[:person/id 1]
;; [:person/id 2]
;; [:person/id 3]
;; [:person/id 4]
;; [:person/id 5]]}
;; 1 {:person/id 1
;; :person/name "Marco"
;; :friend/best [:person/id 3]}
;; 2 {:person/id 2 :person/name "Cassie"}
;; 3 {:person/id 3
;; :person/name "Jake"
;; :friend/best [:person/id 1]}
;; 4 {:person/id 4 :person/name "Tobias"}
;; 5 {:person/id 5 :person/name "Ax"}}}
Note that our animorphs
db is an immutable hash map; add
simply returns the
new value. It's up to you to decide how to track its value and keep it up to
date in your system, e.g. in an atom.
Maps that are add
ed are typically entities, but you can also add arbitrary
maps and add
will merge any non-entities with the database, normalizing and
referencing any nested entities.
Using this capability, you can create additional indexes on your entities. Example:
(def animorphs-3
(a/add animorphs-2 {:species {:andalites [{:person/id 5
:person/species "andalite"}]}}))
;; => {:person/id {,,,
;; 5 {:person/id 5
;; :person/name "Ax"
;; :person/species "andalite"}}
;; :species {:andalites [[:person/id 5]]}}
This library implements a fast EQL engine for Clojure data.
(a/pull animorphs-3 [[:person/id 1]])
;; => {[:person/id 1] {:person/id 1
;; :person/name "Macro"
;; :friend/best {:person/id 3}}}
You can join on idents and keys within entities, and it will resolve any references found in order to continue the query:
(a/pull animorphs-3 [{[:person/id 1] [:person/name
{:friend/best [:person/name]}]}])
;; => {[:person/id 1] {:person/name "Marco"
;; :friend/best {:person/name "Jake"}}}
Top-level keys in the db can also be joined on.
(a/pull animorphs-3 [{:species [{:andalites [:person/name]}]}])
;; => {:species {:andalites [{:person/name "Ax"}]}}
Recursion is supported:
(def query '[{[:person/id 0] [:person/id
:person/name
{:friend/list ...}]}])
(= (-> (a/pull animorphs-3 query)
(get [:person/id 0]))
data)
;; => true
See the EQL docs and tests in this repo for more examples of what's possible!
Collections like vectors, sets and lists should not mix entities and non-entities. Collections are recursively walked to find entities.
To get meta-information about what entities were added or queried, use the
add-report
and pull-report
functions.
To delete an entity and all references to it, use the delete
function.
Data that is add
ed about an existing entity are merged with whatever is in the
db. To replace an entity, dissoc
it first:
(-> (a/db [{:person/id 0 :foo "bar"}])
(update :person/id dissoc 0)
(a/add {:person/id 0 :bar "baz"}))
;; => {:person/id {0 {:person/id 0 :bar "baz"}}}
Since a db is a simple map, you can always use get-in
to get basic info
regarding an entity. However, if your entity contains references, it will not
resolve those for you. Enter EQL!
To write an EQL query to get info about a specific entity, you can use an ident to begin your query:
(a/pull animorphs-3 [[:person/id 1]])
;; => {[:person/id 1]
;; {:person/id 1, :person/name "Marco", :friend/best #:person{:id 3}}}
You can add to the query to resolve references and get information about, e.g. Marco's best friend:
(a/pull animorphs-3 [{[:person/id 1] [:person/name
{:friend/best [:person/name]}]}])
;; => {[:person/id 1] {:person/name "Marco", :friend/best #:person{:name "Jake"}}}
delete
an entityCopyright © 2020 Will Acton. Distributed under the EPL 2.0.
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