mirror of
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229 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
229 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown
# sineQL
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sineQL is a web API query language that mimics graphQL, designed solely for fun.
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sineQL consists of two languages - the schema language, and the query language. sineQL assumes that the records are related in a non-looping tree-structure, defined by the schema language. Also, each non-scalar type queried is returned as an array.
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The handler's definition is left up to the user.
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## Feature List
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* Easy to use schema language
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* Easy to use query language
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* Simple to set-up a server
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* Each top-level keyword (and queries) is optional
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## Example Server
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A simple express server using sineQL.
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```js
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//express for testing
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const express = require('express');
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const app = express();
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//uses text input
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app.use(express.text());
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//test the library
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const sineQL = require('sineql');
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const schema = require('./schema.js');
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const queryHandler = require('./query-handler.js');
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//omit 'queryHandler', 'createHandler', 'updateHandler' or 'deleteHandler' to disable those methods
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const sine = sineQL(schema, { queryHandler }, { debug: true });
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//open the endpoint
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app.post('/sineql', async (req, res) => {
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const [code, result] = await sine(req.body);
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res.status(code).send(result);
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});
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//startup
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const port = process.env.WEB_PORT || 4000;
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app.listen(port, err => {
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console.log(`listening to *:${port}`);
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});
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```
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```js
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const schema = `
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scalar Date
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type Book {
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String title
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Date published
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}
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type Author {
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String name
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Book books
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}
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`;
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module.exports = schema;
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```
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```js
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//there's a different handler object for query, create, update and delete
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const queryHandler = {
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Author: (query, graph) => {
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//TODO: implement this
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},
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Book: (query, graph) => {
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//TODO: implement this
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},
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};
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module.exports = queryHandler;
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```
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Create a matching client-side function pointing to the server.
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```js
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//create the wave function, wrapping a fetch to the server
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const wave = body => fetch('http://example.com/sineql', {
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method: 'POST',
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headers: {
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'Content-Type': 'text/plain'
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},
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body: body
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});
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//get a list of content
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wave('Author { name books { title } }')
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.then(blob => blob.text())
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.then(text => console.log(text))
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.catch(e => console.error(e))
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;
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```
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## The Schema Language
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The schema language is a layout of how queries should be made, as well as what can be made with them. There are two built-in keywords for the schema language:
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* type
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* scalar
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`type` is used for defining new compound types. `scalar` is for defining new scalar types, such as `Date`.
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The built-in types for the schema language are:
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* String
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* Integer
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* Float
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* Boolean
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These can be combined into compound types as so:
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```
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scalar Date
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type Book {
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String title
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Date published
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}
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type Author {
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String name
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Book books
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}
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```
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## The Query Language
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The query langauge can be used to request data from a server, either in whole or in part by listing its type and its needed fields:
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```
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Author {
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name
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books {
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title
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published
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}
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}
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```
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The fields can be altered as well, using the query language's built-in keywords:
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* create
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* update
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* delete
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* match
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* set
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* typeName
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`create`, `update` and `delete` are still to be defined properly, but they'll probably work as follows.
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### Create
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When using `create`, `match` will find an existing record and associate that with the created values (multiple matches is an error):
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```
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Author {
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match name "Kenneth Grahame"
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create books {
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create title "The Wind in the Willows"
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}
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}
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```
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You can create multiple records at once by surrounding them with `[]`:
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```
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create Book [
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{
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set title "The Philosepher's Kidney Stone"
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}
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{
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set title "The Chamber Pot of Secrets"
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}
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{
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set title "The Prisoner of Aunt Kazban"
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}
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{
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set title "The Goblet of the Fire Cocktail"
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}
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{
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set title "The Order for Kleenex"
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}
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{
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set title "The Half-Priced Pharmacy"
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}
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{
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set title "Yeah, I Got Nothing"
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}
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]
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```
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### Update
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When using `update`, `match` will find all existing records and update those using the `set` keyword:
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```
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update Book {
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match title "The Wind in the Willows"
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set published "15 June 1908"
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}
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```
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```
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update Book {
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match title "The Wind in the Willows"
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set title "The Fart in the Fronds"
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}
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```
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### Delete
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When using `delete`, only `match` is valid, and will delete all matching records:
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```
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delete Book {
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match title "The Fart in the Fronds"
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}
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```
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You can use as many instances of `match` and `set` as you like, as long as the result is valid.
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