Utility to listen to a CouchDB changes feed and automatically insert, update, or delete rows into a relational database from matching key-value conditions of incoming documents.
While CouchDB is awesome, business people probably won't be quite as impressed when they want to play around with the data. Regular SQL is generally accepted as being easy to use and much more widely supported by a larger range of comercial tools.
Couch Tap will listen to incoming documents on a CouchDB's changes stream and automatically update rows of RDBMS tables defined in the conversion schema. The changes stream uses a sequence number allowing synchronisation to be started and stopped at will.
Ruby's fast and simple (sequel)[http://sequel.jeremyevans.net/] library is used to provide the connection to the database. This library can also be used for migrations, important for frequently changing schemas.
Couch tap takes a simple two-step approach converting documents to rows. When a change event is received
for a matching document
definition, each associated row is completely deleted. If the change
is anything other than a delete event, the rows will be re-created with the new data.
This makes things much easier when trying to deal with multi-level documents (i.e. documents of documents)
and one-to-many table relationships.
Couch Tap requires a configuration or filter definition that will allow incoming document changes to be identified and dealt with.
The following example attempts to outline most of the key features of the DSL.
# The couchdb database from which to request the changes feed
changes "http://user:pass@host:port/invoicing" do
# Which database should we connect to?
database "postgres://user:pass@localhost:5432/invoicing"
# Simple automated copy, each property's value in the matching CouchDB
# document will copied to the table field with the same name.
document 'type' => 'User' do
table :users
end
document 'type' => 'Invoice' do
table :invoices, :key => :invoice_id do
# Copy columns from fields with different name
column :updated_at, :updated_on
column :created_at, :created_on
# Manually set a value from document or fixed variable
column :date, doc['date'].to_json
column :added_at, Time.now
# Set column values from a block.
column :total do
doc['items'].inject(0){ |sum,item| sum + item['total'] }
end
# Collections perform special synchronization in order to deal with
# one to one, or indeed many to many relationships.
#
# Rather than attempting a complex syncrhonisation process, the current
# version of Couch Tap will just DELETE all current entries with a
# primary key id that matches that of the parent table.
#
# The foreign id key is assumed to be name of the parent
# table in singular form with `_id` appended.
#
# Each item provided in the array will be made available in the
# `#data` method, and index from `#index`.
# `#document` continues to be the complete source document.
#
# Collections can be nested to create highly complex structures.
#
collection :groups do
table :invoice_groups do
collection :entries do
table :invoice_entries, :key => :entry_id do
column :date, data['date']
column :updated_at, document['updated_at']
end
end
end
end
# Collections can also be used on Many to Many relationships.
collection :label_ids do
table :invoice_labels do
column :label_id, data
end
end
end
end
end
Defines which CouchDB database should be used to request the changes feed.
After loading the rest of the configuration, the service will connect to the database using Event Machine. As new changes come into the system, they will be managed in the background.
The Sequel URL used to connect to the destination database. Behind the scenes,
Couch Tap will check for a table named couchdb_sequence
that contains a single
row for the current changes sequence id, much like a migration id typically
seen in a Rails database.
As changes are received from CouchDB, the current sequence will be updated to match.
When a document is received from the changes feed, it will be passed through each
document
stanza looking for a match. Take the following example:
document :type => 'Invoice' do |doc|
# ...
end
This will match all documents whose type
property is equal to "Invoice". The
document itself will be made available as a hash through the doc
block variable.
document
stanzas may be nested if required to provide further levels of
filtering.
Each table
stanza lets Couch Tap know that all or part of the current document
should be inserted into it. By default, the matching table's schema will be read
and any field names that match a property in the top-level of the document will
be inserted automatically.
One of the limitations of Couch Tap is that all tables must have an id field as their
primary key. In each row, the id's value will be copied from the _id
of the
document being imported. This is the only way that deleted documents can be
reliably found and removed from the relational database.
Synchronising a deleted document is generally a much more complicated operation. Given that the original document no longer exists in the CouchDB database, there is no way to know which document group and table the document was inserted into.
To get around this issue, Couch Tap will search through all the tables defined for the database and delete rows that match the primary or foreign keys.
Obviously, this is very inefficient. Fortunately, CouchDB is not really suited to systems that require lots of document deletion, so hopefully this won't be too much of a problem.
Run tests using rake, or individual tests as follows:
rake test TEST=test/unit/changes_test.rb