Class: PStore
Relationships & Source Files | |
Namespace Children | |
Exceptions:
| |
Inherits: | Object |
Defined in: | lib/pstore.rb |
Overview
PStore implements a file based persistence mechanism based on a Hash. User code can store hierarchies of Ruby objects (values) into the data store by name (keys). An object hierarchy may be just a single object. User code may later read values back from the data store or even update data, as needed.
The transactional behavior ensures that any changes succeed or fail together. This can be used to ensure that the data store is not left in a transitory state, where some values were updated but others were not.
Behind the scenes, Ruby objects are stored to the data store file with Marshal. That carries the usual limitations. Proc objects cannot be marshalled, for example.
There are three important concepts here (details at the links):
-
Store
: a store is an instance of PStore. -
Entries
: the store is hash-like; each entry is the key for a stored object. -
Transactions
: each transaction is a collection of prospective changes to the store; a transaction is defined in the block given with a call to PStore#transaction.
About the Examples
Examples on this page need a store that has known properties. They can get a new (and populated) store by calling thus:
example_store do |store|
# Example code using store goes here.
end
All we really need to know about example_store
is that it yields a fresh store with a known population of entries; its implementation:
require 'pstore'
require 'tempfile'
# Yield a pristine store for use in examples.
def example_store
# Create the store in a temporary file.
Tempfile.create do |file|
store = PStore.new(file)
# Populate the store.
store.transaction do
store[:foo] = 0
store[: ] = 1
store[:baz] = 2
end
yield store
end
end
The Store
The contents of the store are maintained in a file whose path is specified when the store is created (see .new). The objects are stored and retrieved using module Marshal, which means that certain objects cannot be added to the store; see {Marshal.dump
}.
Entries
A store may have any number of entries. Each entry has a key and a value, just as in a hash:
-
Key: as in a hash, the key can be (almost) any object; see
Hash Keys
. You may find it convenient to keep it simple by using only symbols or strings as keys. -
Value: the value may be any object that can be marshalled by Marshal (see
Marshal::dump
) and in fact may be a collection (e.g., an array, a hash, a set, a range, etc). That collection may in turn contain nested objects, including collections, to any depth; those objects must also be Marshal-able. SeeHierarchical Values
.
Transactions
The Transaction Block
The block given with a call to method #transaction# contains a transaction, which consists of calls to PStore methods that read from or write to the store (that is, all PStore methods except #transaction itself, #path, and Pstore.new
):
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz]
store[:bat] = 3
store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz, :bat]
end
end
Execution of the transaction is deferred until the block exits, and is executed atomically (all-or-nothing): either all transaction calls are executed, or none are. This maintains the integrity of the store.
Other code in the block (including even calls to #path and .new) is executed immediately, not deferred.
The transaction block:
-
May not contain a nested call to #transaction.
-
Is the only context where methods that read from or write to the store are allowed.
As seen above, changes in a transaction are made automatically when the block exits. The block may be exited early by calling method #commit or #abort.
-
Method #commit triggers the update to the store and exits the block:
example_store do |store| store.transaction do store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz] store[:bat] = 3 store.commit fail 'Cannot get here' end store.transaction do # Update was completed. store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz, :bat] end end
-
Method #abort discards the update to the store and exits the block:
example_store do |store| store.transaction do store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz] store[:bat] = 3 store.abort fail 'Cannot get here' end store.transaction do # Update was not completed. store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz] end end
Read-Only Transactions
By default, a transaction allows both reading from and writing to the store:
store.transaction do
# Read-write transaction.
# Any code except a call to #transaction is allowed here.
end
If argument read_only
is passed as true
, only reading is allowed:
store.transaction(true) do
# Read-only transaction:
# Calls to #transaction, #[]=, and #delete are not allowed here.
end
Hierarchical Values
The value for an entry may be a simple object (as seen above). It may also be a hierarchy of objects nested to any depth:
deep_store = PStore.new('deep.store')
deep_store.transaction do
array_of_hashes = [{}, {}, {}]
deep_store[:array_of_hashes] = array_of_hashes
deep_store[:array_of_hashes] # => [{}, {}, {}]
hash_of_arrays = {foo: [], bar: [], baz: []}
deep_store[:hash_of_arrays] = hash_of_arrays
deep_store[:hash_of_arrays] # => {:foo=>[], :bar=>[], :baz=>[]}
deep_store[:hash_of_arrays][:foo].push(:bat)
deep_store[:hash_of_arrays] # => {:foo=>[:bat], :bar=>[], :baz=>[]}
end
And recall that you can use dig methods
in a returned hierarchy of objects.
Working with the Store
Creating a Store
Use method .new to create a store. The new store creates or opens its containing file:
store = PStore.new('t.store')
Modifying the Store
Use method #[]= to update or create an entry:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store[:foo] = 1 # Update.
store[:bam] = 1 # Create.
end
end
Use method #delete to remove an entry:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store.delete(:foo)
store[:foo] # => nil
end
end
Retrieving Values
Use method #fetch (allows default) or #[] (defaults to nil
) to retrieve an entry:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store[:foo] # => 0
store[:nope] # => nil
store.fetch(:baz) # => 2
store.fetch(:nope, nil) # => nil
store.fetch(:nope) # Raises exception.
end
end
Querying the Store
Use method #key? to determine whether a given key exists:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store.key?(:foo) # => true
end
end
Use method #keys to retrieve keys:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz]
end
end
Use method #path to retrieve the path to the store’s underlying file; this method may be called from outside a transaction block:
store = PStore.new('t.store')
store.path # => "t.store"
Transaction Safety
For transaction safety, see:
-
Optional argument
thread_safe
at method .new. -
Attribute #ultra_safe.
Needless to say, if you’re storing valuable data with PStore, then you should backup the PStore file from time to time.
An Example Store
require "pstore"
# A mock wiki object.
class WikiPage
attr_reader :page_name
def initialize(page_name, , contents)
@page_name = page_name
@revisions = Array.new
add_revision(, contents)
end
def add_revision(, contents)
@revisions << {created: Time.now,
author: ,
contents: contents}
end
def wiki_page_references
[@page_name] + @revisions.last[:contents].scan(/\b(?:[A-Z][a-z]){2,}/)
end
end
# Create a new wiki page.
home_page = WikiPage.new("HomePage", "James Edward Gray II",
"A page about the JoysOfDocumentation..." )
wiki = PStore.new("wiki_pages.pstore")
# Update page data and the index together, or not at all.
wiki.transaction do
# Store page.
wiki[home_page.page_name] = home_page
# Create page index.
wiki[:wiki_index] ||= Array.new
# Update wiki index.
wiki[:wiki_index].push(*home_page.wiki_page_references)
end
# Read wiki data, setting argument read_only to true.
wiki.transaction(true) do
wiki.keys.each do |key|
puts key
puts wiki[key]
end
end
Constant Summary
-
CHECKSUM_ALGO =
Constant for relieving Ruby’s garbage collector.
%w[SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA1 RMD160 MD5].each do |algo| begin break Digest(algo) rescue LoadError end end
-
EMPTY_MARSHAL_CHECKSUM =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 603CHECKSUM_ALGO.digest(EMPTY_MARSHAL_DATA)
-
EMPTY_MARSHAL_DATA =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 602Marshal.dump({})
-
EMPTY_STRING =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 601""
-
RDWR_ACCESS =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 331{mode: IO::RDWR | IO::CREAT | IO::BINARY, encoding: Encoding::ASCII_8BIT}.freeze
-
RD_ACCESS =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 332{mode: IO::RDONLY | IO::BINARY, encoding: Encoding::ASCII_8BIT}.freeze
-
VERSION =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 329"0.1.3"
-
WR_ACCESS =
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 333{mode: IO::WRONLY | IO::CREAT | IO::TRUNC | IO::BINARY, encoding: Encoding::ASCII_8BIT}.freeze
Class Method Summary
-
.new(file, thread_safe = false) ⇒ PStore
constructor
Returns a new PStore object.
Instance Attribute Summary
-
#ultra_safe
rw
Whether PStore should do its best to prevent file corruptions, even when an unlikely error (such as memory-error or filesystem error) occurs:
- #on_windows? ⇒ Boolean readonly private
Instance Method Summary
-
#[](key)
Returns the value for the given
key
if the key exists. -
#[]=(key, value)
Creates or replaces the value for the given
key
: -
#abort
Exits the current transaction block, discarding any changes specified in the
transaction block
. -
#commit
Exits the current transaction block, committing any changes specified in the
transaction block
. -
#delete(key)
Removes and returns the value at
key
if it exists: -
#fetch(key, default = PStore::Error)
Like #[], except that it accepts a default value for the store.
-
#key?(key) ⇒ Boolean
(also: #root?)
Returns
true
ifkey
exists,false
otherwise: -
#keys
(also: #roots)
Returns an array of the existing keys:
-
#path
Returns the string file path used to create the store:
-
#root?(key)
Alias for #key?.
-
#roots
Alias for #keys.
-
#transaction(read_only = false)
Opens a transaction block for the store.
- #empty_marshal_checksum private
- #empty_marshal_data private
-
#in_transaction
private
Raises
Error
if the calling code is not in a #transaction. -
#in_transaction_wr
private
Raises
Error
if the calling code is not in a #transaction or if the code is in a read-only #transaction. -
#load_data(file, read_only)
private
Load the given
PStore
file. -
#open_and_lock_file(filename, read_only)
private
Open the specified filename (either in read-only mode or in read-write mode) and lock it for reading or writing.
- #save_data(original_checksum, original_file_size, file) private
- #save_data_with_atomic_file_rename_strategy(data, file) private
- #save_data_with_fast_strategy(data, file) private
-
#dump(table)
private
Internal use only
This method is just a wrapped around
Marshal.dump
to allow subclass overriding used inYAML::Store
. -
#load(content)
private
Internal use only
This method is just a wrapped around
Marshal.load
.
Constructor Details
.new(file, thread_safe = false) ⇒ PStore
Returns a new PStore object.
Argument file
is the path to the file in which objects are to be stored; if the file exists, it should be one that was written by PStore.
path = 't.store'
store = PStore.new(path)
A PStore object is ) reentrant. If argument thread_safe
is given as true
, the object is also thread-safe (at the cost of a small performance penalty):
store = PStore.new(path, true)
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 372
def initialize(file, thread_safe = false) dir = File::dirname(file) unless File::directory? dir raise PStore::Error, format("directory %s does not exist", dir) end if File::exist? file and not File::readable? file raise PStore::Error, format("file %s not readable", file) end @filename = file @abort = false @ultra_safe = false @thread_safe = thread_safe @lock = Thread::Mutex.new end
Instance Attribute Details
#on_windows? ⇒ Boolean
(readonly, private)
[ GitHub ]
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 667
def on_windows? is_windows = RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /mswin|mingw|bccwin|wince/ self.class.__send__(:define_method, :on_windows?) do is_windows end is_windows end
#ultra_safe (rw)
Whether PStore should do its best to prevent file corruptions, even when an unlikely error (such as memory-error or filesystem error) occurs:
-
true
: changes are posted by creating a temporary file, writing the updated data to it, then renaming the file to the given #path. File integrity is maintained. Note: has effect only if the filesystem has atomic file rename (as do POSIX platforms Linux, MacOS, FreeBSD and others). -
false
(the default): changes are posted by rewinding the open file and writing the updated data. File integrity is maintained if the filesystem raises no unexpected I/O error; if such an error occurs during a write to the store, the file may become corrupted.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 355
attr_accessor :ultra_safe
Instance Method Details
#[](key)
Returns the value for the given key
if the key exists. nil
otherwise; if not nil
, the returned value is an object or a hierarchy of objects:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store[:foo] # => 0
store[:nope] # => nil
end
end
Returns nil
if there is no such key.
See also Hierarchical Values
.
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 417
def [](key) in_transaction @table[key] end
#[]=(key, value)
Creates or replaces the value for the given key
:
example_store do |store|
temp.transaction do
temp[:bat] = 3
end
end
See also Hierarchical Values
.
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 459
def []=(key, value) in_transaction_wr @table[key] = value end
#abort
Exits the current transaction block, discarding any changes specified in the transaction block
.
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 535
def abort in_transaction @abort = true throw :pstore_abort_transaction end
#commit
Exits the current transaction block, committing any changes specified in the transaction block
.
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 524
def commit in_transaction @abort = false throw :pstore_abort_transaction end
#delete(key)
Removes and returns the value at key
if it exists:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store[:bat] = 3
store.delete(:bat)
end
end
Returns nil
if there is no such key.
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 476
def delete(key) in_transaction_wr @table.delete key end
#dump(table) (private)
This method is just a wrapped around Marshal.dump
to allow subclass overriding used in YAML::Store
.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 715
def dump(table) # :nodoc: Marshal::dump(table) end
#empty_marshal_checksum (private)
[ GitHub ]# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 728
def empty_marshal_checksum EMPTY_MARSHAL_CHECKSUM end
#empty_marshal_data (private)
[ GitHub ]# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 725
def empty_marshal_data EMPTY_MARSHAL_DATA end
#fetch(key, default = PStore::Error)
Like #[], except that it accepts a default value for the store. If the key
does not exist:
-
Raises an exception if
default
is::PStore::Error
. -
Returns the value of
default
otherwise:example_store do |store| store.transaction do store.fetch(:nope, nil) # => nil store.fetch(:nope) # Raises an exception. end end
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 436
def fetch(key, default=PStore::Error) in_transaction unless @table.key? key if default == PStore::Error raise PStore::Error, format("undefined key `%s'", key) else return default end end @table[key] end
#in_transaction (private)
Raises ::PStore::Error
if the calling code is not in a #transaction.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 388
def in_transaction raise PStore::Error, "not in transaction" unless @lock.locked? end
#in_transaction_wr (private)
Raises ::PStore::Error
if the calling code is not in a #transaction or if the code is in a read-only #transaction.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 395
def in_transaction_wr in_transaction raise PStore::Error, "in read-only transaction" if @rdonly end
#key?(key) ⇒ Boolean
Also known as: #root?
Returns true
if key
exists, false
otherwise:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store.key?(:foo) # => true
end
end
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 505
def key?(key) in_transaction @table.key? key end
#keys Also known as: #roots
Returns an array of the existing keys:
example_store do |store|
store.transaction do
store.keys # => [:foo, :bar, :baz]
end
end
Raises an exception if called outside a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 490
def keys in_transaction @table.keys end
#load(content) (private)
This method is just a wrapped around Marshal.load
. to allow subclass overriding used in YAML::Store
.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 721
def load(content) # :nodoc: Marshal::load(content) end
#load_data(file, read_only) (private)
Load the given PStore
file. If read_only
is true, the unmarshalled Hash will be returned. If read_only
is false, a 3-tuple will be returned: the unmarshalled Hash, a checksum of the data, and the size of the data.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 639
def load_data(file, read_only) if read_only begin table = load(file) raise Error, "PStore file seems to be corrupted." unless table.is_a?(Hash) rescue EOFError # This seems to be a newly-created file. table = {} end table else data = file.read if data.empty? # This seems to be a newly-created file. table = {} checksum = empty_marshal_checksum size = empty_marshal_data.bytesize else table = load(data) checksum = CHECKSUM_ALGO.digest(data) size = data.bytesize raise Error, "PStore file seems to be corrupted." unless table.is_a?(Hash) end data.replace(EMPTY_STRING) [table, checksum, size] end end
#open_and_lock_file(filename, read_only) (private)
Open the specified filename (either in read-only mode or in read-write mode) and lock it for reading or writing.
The opened File object will be returned. If read_only is true, and the file does not exist, then nil will be returned.
All exceptions are propagated.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 614
def open_and_lock_file(filename, read_only) if read_only begin file = File.new(filename, **RD_ACCESS) begin file.flock(File::LOCK_SH) return file rescue file.close raise end rescue Errno::ENOENT return nil end else file = File.new(filename, **RDWR_ACCESS) file.flock(File::LOCK_EX) return file end end
#path
Returns the string file path used to create the store:
store.path # => "flat.store"
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 515
def path @filename end
#root?(key)
Alias for #key?.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 509
alias root? key?
#roots
Alias for #keys.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 494
alias roots keys
#save_data(original_checksum, original_file_size, file) (private)
[ GitHub ]# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 675
def save_data(original_checksum, original_file_size, file) new_data = dump(@table) if new_data.bytesize != original_file_size || CHECKSUM_ALGO.digest(new_data) != original_checksum if @ultra_safe && !on_windows? # Windows doesn't support atomic file renames. save_data_with_atomic_file_rename_strategy(new_data, file) else save_data_with_fast_strategy(new_data, file) end end new_data.replace(EMPTY_STRING) end
#save_data_with_atomic_file_rename_strategy(data, file) (private)
[ GitHub ]# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 690
def save_data_with_atomic_file_rename_strategy(data, file) temp_filename = "#{@filename}.tmp.#{Process.pid}.#{rand 1000000}" temp_file = File.new(temp_filename, **WR_ACCESS) begin temp_file.flock(File::LOCK_EX) temp_file.write(data) temp_file.flush File.rename(temp_filename, @filename) rescue File.unlink(temp_file) rescue nil raise ensure temp_file.close end end
#save_data_with_fast_strategy(data, file) (private)
[ GitHub ]# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 706
def save_data_with_fast_strategy(data, file) file.rewind file.write(data) file.truncate(data.bytesize) end
#transaction(read_only = false)
Opens a transaction block for the store. See Transactions
.
With argument read_only
as false
, the block may both read from and write to the store.
With argument read_only
as true
, the block may not include calls to #transaction
, #[]=, or #delete.
Raises an exception if called within a transaction block.
# File 'lib/pstore.rb', line 551
def transaction(read_only = false) # :yields: pstore value = nil if !@thread_safe raise PStore::Error, "nested transaction" unless @lock.try_lock else begin @lock.lock rescue ThreadError raise PStore::Error, "nested transaction" end end begin @rdonly = read_only @abort = false file = open_and_lock_file(@filename, read_only) if file begin @table, checksum, original_data_size = load_data(file, read_only) catch(:pstore_abort_transaction) do value = yield(self) end if !@abort && !read_only save_data(checksum, original_data_size, file) end ensure file.close end else # This can only occur if read_only == true. @table = {} catch(:pstore_abort_transaction) do value = yield(self) end end ensure @lock.unlock end value end