A Seneca.js data storage plugin.
This open source module is sponsored and supported by Voxgig. |
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seneca-knex-store is a [Knex] database/ORM plugin for the [Seneca][seneca] MVP toolkit.
The Seneca framework provides an ActiveRecord-style data storage API. Each supported database has a plugin, such as this one, that provides the underlying Seneca plugin actions required for data persistence.
This plugin is loaded by default by the seneca-entity plugin that also needs the seneca-basic plugin to function properly.
If you're using this module, and need help, you can:
If you are new to Seneca in general, please take a look at senecajs.org. We have everything from tutorials to sample apps to help get you up and running quickly.
For code samples, please see the tests for this plugin.
Supports Seneca versions 2.x and above
All Seneca data store supported functionality is implemented in seneca-store-test as a test suite. The tests represent the store functionality specifications.
npm install seneca
npm install seneca-knex-store
You'll need the seneca toolkit to use this module - it's just a plugin.
var seneca = require('seneca')()
seneca.use('basic')
.use('entity')
// Since knex-store is a default plugin, it does not need to be
// added with .use(). You can just go ahead and use it.
seneca.ready(function () {
var apple = seneca.make$('fruit')
apple.name = 'Pink Lady'
apple.price = 0.99
apple.save$(function (err, apple) {
console.log("apple.id = " + apple.id)
})
})
You don't use this module directly. It provides an underlying data storage engine for the Seneca entity API:
var entity = seneca.make$('typename')
entity.someproperty = "something"
entity.anotherproperty = 100
entity.save$(function (err, entity) { ... })
entity.load$({id: ... }, function (err, entity) { ... })
entity.list$({property: ... }, function (err, entity) { ... })
entity.remove$({id: ... }, function (err, entity) { ... })
The Senecajs org encourages open participation. If you feel you can help in any way, be it with documentation, examples, extra testing, or new features please get in touch.
To run tests, simply use npm:
npm run test
Copyright (c) 2015-2016, Richard Rodger and other contributors. Copyright (c) 2010-2014, Richard Rodger. Licensed under MIT.