lib-onyx is a utilities library to make working with Onyx's extensibility features easier out of the box.
On Clojars:
[org.onyxplatform/lib-onyx "0.13.3.0-alpha4"]
View every update to the Onyx Log as it happens. Just supply your peer configuration:
(require '[lib-onyx.log-subscriber :as s])
(def subscriber (s/start-log-subscriber your-peer-config))
(println (:replica @(:state subscriber))
(println (:as-of-entry @(:state subscriber)))
(println (:as-of-timestamp @(:state subscriber)))
(s/stop-log-subscriber subscriber)
See the API docs listed above for more information.
Given a log subscriber, use convenience functions to query the replica state. All functions take a dereferenced replica so that they can operate on a stable, immutable value:
(require '[lib-onyx.replica-query :as rq])
(require '[lib-onyx.log-subscriber :as s])
(def subscriber (s/start-log-subscriber your-peer-config))
(def replica (rq/deref-replica subscriber)
(println (rq/jobs replica))
(println (rq/peers replica))
(s/stop-log-subscriber subscriber)
See the API docs listed above for more information.
lib-onyx exposes an HTTP server to service replica and cluster queries across languages.
(require '[lib-onyx.lib-onyx.replica-query-server :as rqs])
(def server-port 3000)
(def server (rqs/start-replica-query-server peer-config server-port)
Then query it:
$ http --json http://localhost:3000/replica/peers
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 197
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2016 03:35:08 GMT
Server: Jetty(9.2.10.v20150310)
{
"as-of-entry": 12,
"as-of-timestamp": 1456108757818,
"result": [
"e52df81d-38c9-44e6-9e3d-177d3e83292b",
"fd4725f9-3429-49eb-840d-6c3e29cecc41",
"fc933dda-7260-4547-93fc-241a02ca599a"
],
"status": "success"
}
See the HTTP docs listed at the top of this page for all the endpoints.
And bring it back it down with:
(rqs/stop-replica-query-server server)
lib-onyx add's support for using Joplin db migrations as a prerequisite for job start. This will ensure that your target database is in the correct state before Onyx starts reading/writing to it. You must include your specific database dependency and the relevant config. These are listed on the https://github.com/juxt/joplin README.md.
From there, provide a joplin config. This is an example if you're using
Aero. If not, the #path
tags are just get-in
ks
syntax for config file traversal.
:joplin-config
{:databases {:sql {:type :sql
:url "jdbc:mysql://192.168.99.100:3306/onyx?user=admin&password=mypass"
:migrations-table "ragtime_migrations"}}
:migrators {:sql-migrator "resources/migrators/sql"}
:seeds {:sql-seed "my.seed.namespace/run"
:environments {:dev [{:db #path [:joplin-config :databases :sql]
:migrator #path [:joplin-config :migrators :sql-migrator]
:seed #path [:joplin-config :seeds :sql-seed}]}}
Then, either use the lib-onyx.migrations.sql/joplin
lifecycle with the
:joplin/config
and :joplin/environment
keys set in either your catalog or
lifecycle map, or use the provided task-bundle middleware with-joplin-migrations
to handle the lifecycle and config instrumentation for you.
:joplin/config
corresponds to the above config map. Really all you need is the
:environments
key specified and :joplin/environment
will simply ensure up
to date migrations for all the environment maps inside the specified environment's
vector. In the above case, the {:joplin/environment :dev}
would be your only
choice.
Copyright © 2016 Distributed Masonry
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.
Can you improve this documentation?Edit on GitHub
cljdoc is a website building & hosting documentation for Clojure/Script libraries
× close