#2299 [ANN] Morphia Preview Release!

SlimerDude Thu 12 Jun 2014

Morphia Preview Release!

Morphia is a Fantom to MongoDB object mapping library.

Morphia is an extension to the Mongo library that maps Fantom objects and their fields to and from MongoDB collections and documents.

Morphia features include:

  • All Fantom literals and BSON types supported by default,
  • Support for embedded / nested Fantom objects,
  • Extensible mapping - add your own custom Converters.

Quick Start

1). Start up an instance of MongoDB:

C:\> mongod

MongoDB starting
db version v2.6.0
waiting for connections on port 27017

2). Create a text file called Example.fan:

using afMorphia
using afBson
using afIoc
using afIocConfig

@Entity
class User {
    @Property ObjectId _id
    @Property Str      name
    @Property Int      age

    new make(|This|in) { in(this) }
}

class Example {
    @DatastoreType { type=User# }
    @Inject Datastore? datastore

    Void main() {
        reg := RegistryBuilder()
                  .addModulesFromPod(Pod.find("afMorphia"))
                  .addModule(ExampleModule#)
                  .build.startup
        reg.injectIntoFields(this)

        micky := User {
            it._id  = ObjectId()
            it.name = "Micky Mouse"
            it.age  = 42
        }

        // ---- Create ------
        datastore.insert(micky)

        // ---- Read --------
        mouse := (User) datastore.findOne(["age": 42])
        echo(mouse.name)  // --> Micky Mouse

        // ---- Update -----
        mouse.name = "Minny"
        datastore.update(mouse)

        // ---- Delete ------
        datastore.delete(micky)

        reg.shutdown
    }
}

class ExampleModule {
    @Contribute { serviceType=ApplicationDefaults# }
    static Void contributeAppDefaults(MappedConfig config) {
        config[MorphiaConfigIds.mongoUrl] = `mongodb://localhost:27017/exampledb`
    }
}

3). Run Example.fan as a Fantom script from the command line:

[afIoc] Adding module definitions from pod 'afMorphia'
[afIoc] Adding module definition for afMorphia::MorphiaModule
[afIoc] Adding module definition for afIocConfig::IocConfigModule
[afIoc] Adding module definition for afMorphia::ExampleModule
[afMongo]

     Alien-Factory
 _____ ___ ___ ___ ___
|     | . |   | . | . |
|_|_|_|___|_|_|_  |___|
              |___|0.0.4

Connected to MongoDB v2.6.1 (at mongodb://localhost:27017)

[afIoc]
   ___    __                 _____        _
  / _ |  / /_____  _____    / ___/__  ___/ /_________  __ __
 / _  | / // / -_|/ _  /===/ __// _ \/ _/ __/ _  / __|/ // /
/_/ |_|/_//_/\__|/_//_/   /_/   \_,_/__/\__/____/_/   \_, /
                            Alien-Factory IoC v1.6.2 /___/

IoC Registry built in 1,310ms and started up in 247ms

Micky Mouse
[afIoc] IoC shutdown in 12ms
[afIoc] "Goodbye!" from afIoc!

Usage

Mongo Connection URL

A Mongo Connection URL should be contributed as an application default. This supplies the default database to connect to, along with any default user credentials. Example, in your AppModule:

@Contribute { serviceType=ApplicationDefaults# }
static Void contributeAppDefaults(MappedConfig config) {
    url := `mongodb://username:password@localhost:27017/exampledb`
    config[MorphiaConfigIds.mongoUrl] = url
}

Entities

An entity is a top level domain object that is persisted in a MongoDB collection.

Entity objects must be annotated with the @Entity facet. By default, the MongoDB collection name is the same as the (unqualified) entity Type name. Example, if your entity type is acmeExample::User then it maps to a collection named User.

Entity fields are mapped to properties in a MongoDB document. Use the @Property facet to mark fields that should be mapped to / from a Mongo property. Again, the default is to take the property name and type from the field, but it may be overridden by facet values.

As all MongoDB documents define a unique property named _id, all entities must also define a unique property named _id. Example:

@Entity
class MyEntity {
    @Property
    ObjectId _id
    ...
}

or

@Entity
class MyEntity {
    @Property { name="_id" }
    ObjectId wotever
    ...
}

Note that a Mongo Id does not need to be an ObjectId. Any object may be used, it just needs to be unique.

Datastore

A Datastore wraps a Mongo Collection and is your gateway to reading and saving Fantom objects to the MongoDB.

Each Datastore instance is specific to an Entity type, so to Inject a Datastore you need to specify which Entity it is associated with. Use the @DatastoreType facet to do this. Example:

@DatastoreType { type=User# }
@Inject Datastore datastore

Mapping

At the core of Morphia is a suite of Converters that map Fantom objects to Mongo documents.

Standard Converters

By default, Morphia provides converters for the following Fantom types:

afBson::Binary
   sys::Bool
   sys::Buf
afBson::Code
   sys::Date
   sys::DateTime
   sys::Decimal
   sys::Duration
   sys::Enum
   sys::Float
   sys::Int
   sys::List
   sys::Map
afBson::MaxKey
afBson::MinKey
        null
afBson::ObjectId
   sys::Regex
   sys::Range
   sys::Slot
   sys::Str
afBson::Timestamp
   sys::Type
   sys::Uri

Embedded Objects

Morphia is also able to convert embedded, or nested, Fantom objects. Extending the example in Quick Start, here we substitute the Str name for an embedded Name object:

@Entity
class User {
    @Property ObjectId _id
    @Property Name     name
    @Property Int      age
    new make(|This|in) { in(this) }
}

class Name {
    @Property Str  firstName
    @Property Str  lastName
    new make(|This|in) { in(this) }
}

...

micky := User {
    _id  = ObjectId()
    age  = 42
    name = name {
      firstName = "Micky"
      lastName  = "Mouse"
    }
}
mongoDoc := datastore.toMongoDoc(micky)

echo(mongoDoc) // --> [_id:xxxx, age:42, name:[lastName:Mouse, firstName:Micky]]

Note that embedded Fantom types should not be annotated with @Entity.

Custom Converters

If you want more control over how objects are mapped to and from Mongo, then contribute a custom converter. Do this by implementing Converter and contributing an instance to the Converters service.

Example, to store the Name object as a simple hyphenated string:

const class NameConverter : Converter {

    override Obj? toFantom(Type fantomType, Obj? mongoObj) {
        // decide how you want to handle null values
        if (mongoObj == null) return null

        mong := ((Str) mongoObj).split('-')
        return Name { it.firstName = mong[0]; it.lastName = mong[1] }
    }

    override Obj? toMongo(Obj fantomObj) {
        name := (Name) fantomObj
        return "${name.firstName}-${name.lastName}"
    }
}

Then contribute it in your AppModule:

@Contribute { serviceType=Converters# }
static Void contributeConverters(MappedConfig config) {
    config[Name#] = NameConverter()
}

To see it in action:

micky := User {
    it._id  = ObjectId()
    it.age  = 42
    it.name = Name {
      it.firstName = "Micky"
      it.lastName  = "Mouse"
    }
}
mongoDoc := datastore.toMongoDoc(micky)

echo(mongoDoc) // --> [_id:xxxx, age:42, name:Micky-Mouse]

Storing Nulls in Mongo

When converting Fantom objects to Mongo, the ObjConverter decides what to do if a Fantom field has the value null. Should it store a key in the MongoDb with a null value, or should it not store the key at all?

To conserve storage space in MongoDB, by default ObjConverter does not store the keys.

If you want to store null values, then create a new ObjConverter passing false into the ctor, and contribute it in your AppModule: Example:

@Contribute { serviceType=Converters# }
static Void contributeConverters(MappedConfig config) {
    objConverter := config.createProxy(Converter#, ObjConverter#, [false])
    config.setOverride(Obj#, objConverter, "MyObjConverter" )
}

(A proxy is required due to the circular nature of Converters.)

See Storing null vs not storing the key at all in MongoDB for more details.

Have fun!

:)

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