Coherence JavaScript Client allows Node applications to act as
cache clients to a Coherence Cluster using Google's gRPC
framework for
the network transport.
- Familiar
Map
-like interface for manipulating entries - Cluster-side querying and aggregation of map entries
- Cluster-side manipulation of map entries using
EntryProcessors
- Registration of listeners to be notified of map mutations
- Coherence CE
22.06
or later (or equivalent non-open source editions) with a configured gRPC Proxy - Node
18.15.x
or later - NPM
9.x
or later
Before testing the library, you must ensure a Coherence cluster is available. For local development, we recommend using the Coherence CE Docker image; it contains everything necessary for the client to operate correctly.
docker run -d -p 1408:1408 ghcr.io/oracle/coherence-ce:24.03
or to save some keystrokes/time, use the included npm script, coh-up
to start a two-member Cluster with the gRPC port at 1408"
npm run coh-up
Important! When calling coh-up
or coh-down
, the LTS version of Coherence will be used (22.06.10
).
To use a later Coherence version, such as 24.03
, prefix the calls with, or export COHERENCE_VERSION=<desired-version>
.
For example:
COHERENCE_VERSION=24.03 npm run coh-up
For more details on the image, see the documentation.
To use the Coherence gRPC JavaScript Client, simply declare it as a dependency in your
project's package.json
:
...
"dependencies": {
"@oracle/coherence": "^1.2",
},
...
The following table provides a listing of mappings between Java types and Javascript types when working with
Coherence 23.09
or later. If using Coherence 22.06.x
, these types will be returned as Number. It is recommended
using 23.09
if intentionally using java.math.BigInteger
or java.math.BigDecimal
as part of your application.
Java Type | JavascriptType |
---|---|
java.math.BigInteger | BigInt (ECMA standard) |
java.math.BigDecimal | Decimal (decimal.js) |
NOTE: The following examples assume the Coherence container is running locally. You can start a container by running
npm run coh-up
.
The Coherence uses the concept of a Session
to manage a set of related Coherence resources,
such as maps and/or caches. When using the Coherence JavaScript Client, a Session
connects to a specific
gRPC endpoint and uses a specific serialization format to marshal requests and responses.
This means that different sessions using different serializers may connect to the same server endpoint. Typically,
for efficiency the client and server would be configured to use matching serialization formats to avoid
deserialization of data on the server, but this does not have to be the case. If the server is using a different
serializer for the server-side caches, it must be able to deserialize the client's requests, so there must be
a serializer configured on the server to match that used by the client.
NOTE: Currently, the Coherence JavaScript client only supports JSON serialization
A Session
is constructed using an Options
instance, or a generic object with the same keys and values.
The currently supported properties are:
address
- the address of the Coherence gRPC proxy. This defaults tolocalhost:1408
.requestTimeoutInMillis
- the gRPC request timeout in milliseconds. This defaults to60000
.callOptions
- per-request gRPC call options.tls
- options related to the configuration of TLS.enabled
- determines if TLS is enabled or not. This defaults tofalse
(NOTE: assumestrue
if all threeCOHERENCE_TLS_*
(see subsequent bullets) environment variables are defined)caCertPath
- the path to the CA certificate. This may be configured using the environment variableCOHERENCE_TLS_CERTS_PATH
clientCertPath
- the path to the client certificate. This may be configured with the environment variableCOHERENCE_TLS_CLIENT_CERT
clientKeyPath
- the path to the client certificate key. This may be configured with the environment variableCOHERENCE_TLS_CLIENT_KEY
NOTE: If testing locally generated certificates, set COHERENCE_IGNORE_INVALID_CERTS
to true
to disable
TLS validation of the certificates.
const { Session } = require('@oracle/coherence')
let session = new Session()
This is the simplest invocation which assumes the following defaults:
address
islocalhost:1408
requestTimeoutInMillis
is60000
tls
isdisabled
To use values other than the default, create a new Options
instance, configure as desired,
and pass it to the constructor of the Session
:
const { Session, Options } = require('@oracle/coherence')
const opts = new Options()
opts.address = 'example.com:4444'
let session = new Session(opts)
or instead of an Options
instance, using a generic JavaScript object:
const { Session } = require('@oracle/coherence')
const opts = new Options({address: 'example.com:4444'})
let session = new Session(opts)
It's also possible to control the default address the session will bind to by providing
an address via the COHERENCE_SERVER_ADDRESS
environment variable. The format of the value would
be the same as if you configured it programmatically as the above example shows.
Once the session has been constructed, it will now be possible to create maps and caches.
The map (NamedMap
) and cache (NamedCache
) implementations provide the same basic features as the Map provided
by JavaScript except for the following differences:
- key equality isn't restricted to reference equality
- insertion order is not maintained
set()
calls cannot be chained because of the asynchronous nature of the API
NOTE: The only difference between
NamedCache
andNamedMap
is that the 'NamedCache' allows associating atime-to-live
on the cache entry, whileNamedMap
does not
For the following examples, let's assume that we have a Map defined in Coherence named Test
.
To get access to the map from the client:
NOTE: If using the Docker image previously mentioned for testing, you don't need to worry about the details of the map name. Any name will work.
let map = session.getMap('Test')
Once we have a handle to our map, we can invoke the same basic operations as a standard JavaScript Map:
await map.size
// (zero)
await map.set('key1', 'value1')
await map.set('key2', 'value2')
// returns a Promise vs the map itself, so these can't be chained
await map.size
// (two)
await map.get('key1')
// value1
await map.has('key2')
// true
await map.has('key3')
// false
await map.keys()
// ['key1', 'key2']
await map.values()
// ['value1', 'value2']
await map.entries()
// [{key: 'key1', value: 'value1'}, {key: 'key2', value: 'value2'}]
await map.forEach((value, key) => console.log(key + ': ' + value))
// prints all of the entries
Coherence provides a rich set of primitives that allow developers to create advanced queries against a set of entries returning only those keys and/or values matching the specified criteria. See the documentation for details on the Filters provided by this client.
Let's assume we have a NamedMap
in which we're storing string
keys and some objects with the structure of:
{
name: <string>
age: <number>
hobbies: [] // of string
}
First, let's insert a few objects:
await map.set('0001', {name: "Bill Smith", age: 38, hobbies: ["gardening", "painting"]})
await map.set('0002', {name: "Fred Jones", age: 56, hobbies: ["racing", "golf"]})
await map.set('0003', {name: "Jane Doe", age: 48, hobbies: ["gardening", "photography"]})
Using a filter, we can limit the result set returned by the map:
const { Filters } = require('@oracle/coherence')
// ...
await map.entries(Filters.greater('age', 40))
// [{key: '0002', value: {name: "Fred Jones"...}}, {key: '0002', value: {name: "Jane Doe"...}}]
await map.keys(Filters.arrayContains('hobbies', 'gardening'))
// ['0001', '0003']
await map.values(Filters.not(Filters.arrayContains('hobbies', 'gardening')))
// [{name: "Fred Jones", age: 56, hobbies: ["racing", "golf"]}]
Coherence provides developers with the ability to process some subset of the entries in a map, resulting in an aggregated result. See the documentation for aggregators provided by this client.
Assume the same set of keys and values are present from the filtering example above:
const { Aggregators, Filters } = require('@oracle/coherence')
// ...
await map.aggregate(Aggregators.average('age'))
// 47.3
await map.aggregate(Aggregators.sum('age'))
// 142
await map.aggregate(Filters.greater('age', 40), Aggregators.count())
// 2
An entry processor allows mutation of map entries in-place within the cluster instead of bringing the entire object to the client, updating, and pushing the value back. See the documentation for the processors provided by this client.
Assume the same set of keys and values are present from the filtering and aggregation examples:
const { Filters, Processors } = require('@oracle/coherence')
// ...
// targeting a specific entry
await map.invoke('0001', Processors.extract('age'))
// returns: 38
// target all entries across the cluster
await map.invokeAll(Processors.extract('age'))
// returns: [['0001', 38], ['0002', 56], ['0003', 48]]
// target all entries matching filtered critera
await map.invokeAll(Filters.greater('age', 40), Processors.extract('age'))
// returns: [['0002', 56], ['0003', 48]]
// incrementing a number 'in-place'
await map.invokeAll(Filters.greater('age', 40), Processors.increment('age', 1))
// returns [['0002', 57], ['0003', 49]]
// update a value 'in-place'
await map.invoke('0001', Processors.update('age', 100))
// returns true meaning the value was updated
await map.get('0001')
// the value will reflect the new age value
Coherence provides the ability to subscribe to notifications pertaining to a particular map/cache. Registration works similarly to event registration with Node, with some key differences. In addition to listening for specific events, it is possible to listen to events for changes made to a specific key, or using a Filter, it's possible to limit the events raised to be for a subset of the map entries.
Now, let's register a listener:
import { event } from '@oracle/coherence'
const MapEventType = event.MapEventType
const MapListener = event.MapListener
const handler = (event: MapEvent) => {
console.log('Event: ' + event.description
+ ', Key: ' + JSON.stringify(event.key)
+ ', New Value: ' + JSON.stringify(event.newValue)
+ ', Old Value: ' + JSON.stringify(event.oldValue))
}
const listener = new MapListener()
.on(MapEventType.INSERT, handler)
.on(MapEventType.UPDATE, handler)
.on(MapEventType.DELETE, handler)
// register to receive all event types for all entries within the map
await map.addMapListener(listener)
await map.set('a', 'b')
// Event: insert, Key: a, New Value: b, Old Value: null
await map.set('a', 'c')
// Event: update, Key: a, New Value: c, Old Value: b
await map.delete('a')
// Event: delete, Key: a, New Value: null, Old Value: c
// remove the listeners
await map.removeMapListener(listener)
// =======================================
// Assume the previous listener as well as the following key and values
// ['0001', {name: "Bill Smith", age: 38, hobbies: ["gardening", "painting"]}]
// ['0002', {name: "Fred Jones", age: 56, hobbies: ["racing", "golf"]}]
// ['0003', {name: "Jane Doe", age: 48, hobbies: ["gardening", "photography"]}]
// Add handlers for updates to '0001'
await map.addMapListener(listener, '0001')
await map.update('0002', '0002')
// does not generate any events
await map.invoke('0001', Processors.increment('age', 1))
// Event: update, Key: 0001, New Value: {name: "Bill Smith", age: 39, hobbies: ["gardening", "painting"]}, Old Value: {name: "Bill Smith", age: 38, hobbies: ["gardening", "painting"]}
await map.delete('0001')
// does not generate any events
// remove the key listener
await map.removeMapListener(listener, '0001')
// =======================================
// Assume the same setup as the previous example, except instead of listening to events for a single key,
// we'll instead listen for events raised for entries that match the filtered criteria.
const filter = Filters.event(Filters.greater('age', 40), filter.MapEventFilter.UPDATED)
// Listen to all updates to entries where the age property of the entry value is greater than 40
await map.addMapListener(listener, filter)
await map.invokeAll(Processors.increment('age', 1));
// Event: update, Key: 0002, New Value: {name: "Fred Jones", age: 57, hobbies: ["racing", "golf"]}, Old Value: {name: "Fred Jones", age: 56, hobbies: ["racing", "golf"]}
// Event: update, Key: 0003, New Value: "Jane Doe", age: 49, hobbies: ["gardening", "photography"]}, Old Value: "Jane Doe", age: 48, hobbies: ["gardening", "photography"]}
// remove the filter listener
await map.removeMapListener(listener, filter)
Here's an example that can be pasted into a new node project that is using this library:
const { Session } = require('@oracle/coherence')
let session = new Session()
let map = session.getMap('Test')
setImmediate(async () => {
console.log("Map size is " + (await map.size))
console.log("Inserting entry (key=1, value=One)")
await map.set(1, "One")
console.log("Inserting entry (key=2, value=Two)")
await map.set(2, "Two")
let entries = await map.entries();
console.log("All entries")
for await (const entry of entries) {
console.log(entry.key + '=' + entry.value)
}
console.log("Key 1 is " + (await map.get(1)))
console.log("Key 2 is " + (await map.get(2)))
console.log("Deleting entry (key=1)")
await map.delete(1)
console.log("Map size is " + (await map.size))
await session.close()
})
When run, it produces:
Map size is 0
Inserting entry (key=1, value=One)
Map entry is One
Deleting entry (key=1)
Map size is 0
- Oracle Coherence JavaScript Client - https://oracle.github.io/coherence-js-client/
- Oracle Coherence CE Documentation - https://coherence.community/23.09/docs/#/docs/about/01_overview
This project welcomes contributions from the community. Before submitting a pull request, please review our contribution guide
Please consult the security guide for our responsible security vulnerability disclosure process
Copyright (c) 2020, 2023 Oracle and/or its affiliates.
Released under the Universal Permissive License v1.0 as shown at https://oss.oracle.com/licenses/upl/.